Clean up some implementation aspects of the Fedora distro definition:
- Do not have default Fedora distro version and use `fedora` as the
package name in all places that use it, instead of `fedora33`.
- Fix bugs when wrong (Fedora 33) values were returned by `OSTreeRef()`
and `Releasever()` for newer Fedora releases.
- Test Fedora 35 in package unit tests.
- Add unit test for `OSTreeRef()` method.
- Use architecture name constants from `distro` package, instead of
string literals.
Fix#1802
Signed-off-by: Tomas Hozza <thozza@redhat.com>
The service is started via systemd activation sockets.
The service serves http POST requests, the same json as before is
expected as the body of the request, and the same json as before is sent
as the response of the request.
The problem: osbuild-composer used to have a rather uncomplete logic for
selecting client certificates and keys while fetching data from
repositories that use the "subscription model". In this scenario, every
repo requires the user to use a client-side TLS certificate. The problem
is that every repo can use its own CA and require a different pair of
a certificate and a key. This case wasn't handled at all in composer.
Furthermore, osbuild-composer can use remote workers which complicates
things even more.
Assumptions: The problem outlined above is hard to solve in the general
case, but Red Hat Subscription Manager places certain limitations on how
subscriptions might be used. For example, a subscription must be tight to
a host system, so there is no way to use such a repository in osbuild-composer
without it being available on the host system as well.
Also, if a user wishes to use a certain repository in osbuild-composer it
must be available on both hosts: the composer and the worker. It will come
with different pair of a client certificate and a key but otherwise, its
configuration remains the same.
The solution: Expect all the subscriptions to be registered in the
/etc/yum.repos.d/redhat.repo file. Read the mapping of URLs to certificates
and keys from there and use it. Don't change the manifest format and let
osbuild guess the appropriate subscription to use.
This replaces Packages() and BuildPackages() by returning a map of
package sets, the semantics of which is up to the distro to define.
They are meant to be depsolved and the result returned back as a
map to Manifest(), with the same keys.
No functional change.
Signed-off-by: Tom Gundersen <teg@jklm.no>
Imagine this situation: You have a RHEL system booted from an image produced
by osbuild-composer. On this system, you want to use osbuild-composer to
create another image of RHEL.
However, there's currently something funny with partitions:
All RHEL images built by osbuild-composer contain a root xfs partition. The
interesting bit is that they all share the same xfs partition UUID. This might
sound like a good thing for reproducibility but it has a quirk.
The issue appears when osbuild runs the qemu assembler: it needs to mount all
partitions of the future image to copy the OS tree into it.
Imagine that osbuild-composer is running on a system booted from an imaged
produced by osbuild-composer. This means that its root xfs partition has this
uuid:
efe8afea-c0a8-45dc-8e6e-499279f6fa5d
When osbuild-composer builds an image on this system, it runs osbuild that
runs the qemu assembler at some point. As I said previously, it will mount
all partitions of the future image. That means that it will also try to
mount the root xfs partition with this uuid:
efe8afea-c0a8-45dc-8e6e-499279f6fa5d
Do you remember this one? Yeah, it's the same one as before. However, the xfs
kernel driver doesn't like that. It contains a global table[1] of all xfs
partitions that forbids to mount 2 xfs partitions with the same uuid.
I mean... uuids are meant to be unique, right?
This commit changes the way we build RHEL 8.4 images: Each one now has a
unique uuid. It's now literally a unique universally unique identifier. haha
[1]: a349e4c659/fs/xfs/xfs_mount.c (L51)
Rather than getting a set of base packages from the ImageType, and then
appending the requested packages from the blueprint, pass the blueprint
into the new Packages() function, and return the full set of packages to
be depsolved.
This allows us to also append packages based on other customizations
too, and use that to append chrony when the timezone is set. This
matches the behavior anaconda had, and there was a TODO item to do this,
which had been overlooked.
Fixes#787.
Signed-off-by: Tom Gundersen <teg@jklm.no>
Previously, all the osbuild-composer tools must be run from a directory with
dnf-json. This was often confusing, especially with the dnf-json-tests. This
commit changes the path to be absolute, so this is no longer an issue.
RPMMD had hardcoded path to dnf-json helper. This required all executables
using RPMMD to be run in the directory where dnf-json was located. This commit
makes RPMMD take the path to dnf-json as an argument. This allows its
consumers to specify whichever path they want.
Not a functional change
The new tool osbuild-store-dump saves store.json to the current working
directory, with more or less arbitrary data in it.
This has been executed on osubild-composer-{12,13} (mutatis mutandis),
and the results are saved in `internal/store/test`. A new test is added
which loads these stores and does very basic verification on them having
been loaded correctly.
This is mostly meant to catch regressions that means old stores are able
to make composer crash, or lose all its data. It would not catch minor
errors that leave the stores syntactically correct.
Signed-off-by: Tom Gundersen <teg@jklm.no>