Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
|
|
|
This just records in 'self.seedfrom' each of the locations that
seed data was read from.
|
|
get_data was returning True before it set self.user_data_raw and
self.user_data.
|
|
|
|
using read_optional_seed in DataSourceEc2 and DataSourceNoCloud.
change parse_cmdline_data to fill a dictionary that is supplied by
caller. It then returns strictly true or false based on whether
or not it was specified in cmdline
|
|
read_optional_seed should return true or false based on whether or not
the seed existed. It is useful to easily say read this if its there,
but it might not be.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The new classes 'DataSourceNoCloud' and 'DataSourceNoCloudNet'
implement a way to get data from the filesystem, or (very minimal)
data from the kernel command line. This allows the user to seed data to
these sources.
There are now 2 "cloud-init" jobs, cloud-init-local that runs on
mounted MOUNTPOINT=/
and 'cloud-init' that runs on
start on (mounted MOUNTPOINT=/ and net-device-up IFACE=eth0 and
stopped cloud-init-local )
The idea is that cloud-init-local can actually function without network.
The last thing in this commit is "uncloud-init".
This tool can be invoked as 'init=/usr/lib/cloud-init/uncloud-init'
It will "uncloudify" things in the image, generally making it easier
to use for a simpler environment, and then it will exec /sbin/init.
|
|
device names presented in the metadata service may not be what the kernel
has named them. This can be for more than 1 reason. But some examples:
- device is virtio, metadata named 'sd'
- device is xvdX, metadata named sd
Those are the two situations that are covered here. More complex, but
not covered are possibly:
- metadata service named device 'sda1', but it should actually be 'vdb1'
LP: #611137
|
|
|
|
Previously, all you would get was a warning to the console on config
module failure. This changes to get a stack trace of the failure to the
console, which is much easier for debugging.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
ec2-run-instances
--block-device-mapping /dev/sdd=:1
--block-device-mapping /dev/sde=snap-4cda7b24
--block-device-mapping sdf=snap-d4d90bbc
resulted in:
'block-device-mapping': {'ami': '/dev/sda1',
'ebs1': '/dev/sdd',
'ebs2': '/dev/sde',
'ebs3': 'sdf',
'ephemeral0': '/dev/sda2',
'root': '/dev/sda1',
'swap': 'sda3'}
|
|
|
|
It just seems like for cloud instances, getting /etc/fstab written
incorrectly with the result of non-booting system is worth avoiding.
|
|
What caused this was having an open ended list on what "names" might be
found in the metadata service. That list is now trimmed down to the
the following values:
ephemeral*
root
ami
swap
The above list was found from crawled medata data services in the latest
maverick tests I did. The following is the complete list of entries that
were there:
'ami': '/dev/sda1',
'ami': 'sda1',
'ephemeral0': '/dev/sda2'
'ephemeral0': '/dev/sdb'
'ephemeral0': 'sda2'
'ephemeral0': 'sdb'
'ephemeral1': 'sdc'
'ephemeral2': 'sdd'
'ephemeral3': 'sde'
'root': '/dev/sda1'
'root': '/dev/sda1'
'swap': 'sda3'
Also, this limits which devices will have "/dev/" prepended to them to
sda, sda1, xvda, xvda1, hda1, hda, vda.
LP: #603329
|
|
|
|
|
|
On EBS instances, a shutdown and later start would end up with a
different IP address.
In the case where the user has not modified /etc/hostname from its
original value (seeded by metadata's 'local-hostname'), then cloud-init
will again set the hostname and update /etc/hostname.
In the case where the user *has* modified /etc/hostname, it will remain
user managed.
Additionally, if /etc/cloud/cloud.cfg contains 'preserve_hostname' value
set to a True value, then /etc/hostname will not ever be touched.
LP: #596993
|
|
The starts-with determination of mime type was overriding an explicit
setting in the mime-type. This was evident when the mime type specified
boothook, but the content began with '#!'. In that case, the content
would run as a user script rather than boothook.
LP: #600799
|
|
|
|
The goal was to remove '#cloud-boothook' from a part if the part
started that way. This was to allow user data of
#cloud-boothook
#!/usr/bin/perl
...
to be handled correctly. That had 2 bugs
1.) the prefix string was wrong
2.) was checking for '\r' in the wrong location
|
|
|
|
If user gives bad cloud-config syntax, its not very useful to die, as
that is most likely to leave the system unreachable. This instead
logs the error and continues as if it no cloud-config was given.
|
|
nobootwait is likely important if the user is attempting to set up ebs
volume mount points via this mechanism. See 'man fstab' for more
inforation on this option
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
LP: #582667
|
|
|
|
The previous syntax was either
cloud-init-cfg all
or
cloud-init-cfg <name> args
Ie, you could not specify the frequency if you gave a name. Now, you can.
Something like:
sudo cloud-init-cfg ssh always
|
|
to be debug (with traceback). The exception is still raised, but
no reason for the whole traceback to be on error
|
|
This is useful for getting a config option that is either string or a
list as a list
|
|
568139 was fixed because the test for "always" was using "is"
instead of "=="
LP: #568139
|
|
|
|
Previously, most of the config semaphores were prefixed with 'config-'.
Ie, a sem/ list would look like:
apt-update-upgrade.i-7c908817
config-misc.i-7c908817
config-mounts.i-7c908817
config-puppet.i-7c908817
config-ssh.i-7c908817
consume_userdata.i-7c908817
disable-ec2-metadata.always
set_defaults.i-7c908817
set_hostname.i-7c908817
With the last release (0.5.11), those config- would have been removed.
I'll handle this correctly yuckyness in the ubuntu package upgrade
(avoiding re-running scripts that were already ran)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
passing the instance-id of this instance to a boothook will give it
the unique id that is needed to implement run-once-per-instance.
|