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Cloud-init caches any cloud metadata crawled during boot in the file
/run/cloud-init/instance-data.json. Cloud-init also standardizes some of
that metadata across all clouds. The command 'cloud-init query' surfaces a
simple CLI to query or format any cached instance metadata so that scripts
or end-users do not have to write tools to crawl metadata themselves.
Since 'cloud-init query' is runnable by non-root users, redact any
sensitive data from instance-data.json and provide a root-readable
unredacted instance-data-sensitive.json. Datasources can now define a
sensitive_metadata_keys tuple which will redact any matching keys
which could contain passwords or credentials from instance-data.json.
Also add the following standardized 'v1' instance-data.json keys:
- user_data: The base64encoded user-data provided at instance launch
- vendor_data: Any vendor_data provided to the instance at launch
- underscore_delimited versions of existing hyphenated keys:
instance_id, local_hostname, availability_zone, cloud_name
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A syntax error creeped in with commit c7555762f3a3.
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Allow users to provide '## template: jinja' as the first line or their
#cloud-config or custom script user-data parts. When this header exists,
the cloud-config or script will be rendered as a jinja template.
All instance metadata keys and values present in
/run/cloud-init/instance-data.json will be available as jinja variables
for the template. This means any cloud-config module or script can
reference any standardized instance data in templates and scripts.
Additionally, any standardized instance-data.json keys scoped below a
'<v#>' key will be promoted as a top-level key for ease of reference in
templates. This means that '{{ local_hostname }}' is the same as using the
latest '{{ v#.local_hostname }}'.
Since instance-data is written to /run/cloud-init/instance-data.json, make
sure it is persisted across reboots when the cached datasource opject is
reloaded.
LP: #1791781
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Move the tools/net-convert.py to be exposed as part of 'cloud-init devel'
subcommands.
It can now be called like:
$ cloud-init devel net-convert
Or, if you just have checked out source (and no cli executable):
$ python3 -m cloudinit.cmd.devel.net_convert
or
$ python3 -m cloudinit.cmd.main devel net-convert
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In bash shells with bash_completion enabled, now the cloud-init
sub commands and parameters/flags will be shown.
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