Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
|
Conflicts:
cloudinit/sources/DataSourceAzure.py
config/cloud.cfg.tmpl
integration-requirements.txt
tools/read-version
|
|
|
|
Rework check to see which part of ssh key is which
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Bump the version in cloudinit/version.py to be 18.4 and update ChangeLog.
LP: #1795741
|
|
Relax expectation on path to lxc and lxd. The deb path still does
install them in /usr/bin/ but that is overly pedantic.
Add a 'lxd waitready' (present since lxd 0.5) to wait until lxd
is ready before operating on it.
|
|
|
|
OpenStack ironic references Infiniband interfaces via a 6 byte 'MAC
address' formed from bytes 13-15 and 18-20 of interface's hardware
address. This address is used as the ethernet_mac_address of Infiniband
links in network_data.json in configdrives generated by OpenStack nova.
We can use this address to map links in network_data.json to their
corresponding interface names.
When generating interface configuration files, we need to use the
interface's full hardware address as the HWADDR, rather than the 6 byte
MAC address provided by network_data.json.
This change allows IB interfaces to be referenced in this dual mode - by
MAC address and hardware address, depending on the context.
Support TYPE=InfiniBand for sysconfig configuration of IB interfaces.
|
|
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
|
|
Distro subclasses arch, freebsd and debian still have a path with an
implemented _write_network method which has a return value. Can drop
this pylint ignore when _write_network is dropped from arch, freebsd
and debian.
|
|
The Init object had a bug/odd side effect where when retrieving a distro
object it would update the datasources's sys_cfg. That was probably
intended to refresh the possibly stale config stored there. Unfortunately
what it actually did limit the config there to the 'system_info' top level
key where initially it had the whole config.
LP: #1787459
|
|
Any distro that has a '_write_nework_config' method should no
longer get their _write_network called at all. So lets drop
that code and raise a RuntimeError any time we got there.
Replace the one caller of 'apply_network' (legacy openstack path)
with a call to apply_network_config after converting the ENI to
network config.
|
|
If a DataSource provides a network configuration in version 2 and runs
on a distro which does not have a network renderer class in use, then
the conversion of V2 to eni results in static ip configurations with
subnet prefix-length (192.168.23.1/24) rather than explicit netmask
value.
When sending such a config to net_util.translate_network the resulting
dictionary is missing the 'netmask' key for static configured addresses
breaking network configurations on multiple distributions.
This patch detects static ip configurations using prefix-length and
converts the format into the previous 'address' and 'netmask' parts
to keep compatibility for these distribtuions until they move to
the v2 network configuration.
LP: #1792454
|
|
If the user has removed the default configuration file or does
not set the syslog_fix_perms config option the user still ends
up with a warning on SUSE distributions. Add root:root to the
default builtin config.
|
|
Fix a bug where setting of mac address on a bond device was
ignored when provided in OpenStack network_config.json.
LP: #1682064
|
|
On OpenStack based OVH public cloud, we got DHCP response with
fixed-address 54.36.113.86;
option subnet-mask 255.255.255.255;
option routers 54.36.112.1;
The router clearly is not on the subnet. So 'ip' would fail when
we tried to add the default route.
The solution here is to add an explicit route on that interface
to the router and then add the default route.
Also add 'bgpovs' to the list of 'physical' types for OpenStack
network configuration. That type is used on OVH public cloud.
LP: #1792415
|
|
Mark as supported for reading some newer versions of openstack metadata:
2016-06-30 : Newton one
2016-10-06 : Newton two
2017-02-22 : Ocata
2018-08-27 : Rocky
|
|
Cloud-init was reading a list of versions from the OpenStack metadata
service (http://169.254.169.254/openstack/) and attempt to select the
newest known supported version. The problem was that the list
of versions was not being decoded, so we were comparing a list of
bytes (found versions) to a list of strings (known versions).
LP: #1792157
|
|
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
|
|
Cloud config can now disable ssh access to non-root users.
When defining the 'users' list in cloud-configuration a boolean
'ssh_redirect_user: true' can be provided to disable ssh logins for
that user. Any ssh 'public-keys' defined in cloud meta-data will be added
and disabled in .ssh/authorized_keys. Any attempts to ssh as this user
using acceptable ssh keys will be presented with a message like the
following:
Please login as the user "ubuntu" rather than the user "youruser".
|
|
|
|
In many cases, cloud-init uses 'util.subp' to run a subprocess.
This is not really desirable in our unit tests as it makes the tests
dependent upon existance of those utilities.
The change here is to modify the base test case class (CiTestCase) to
raise exception any time subp is called. Then, fix all callers.
For cases where subp is necessary or actually desired, we can use it
via
a.) context hander CiTestCase.allow_subp(value)
b.) class level self.allowed_subp = value
Both cases the value is a list of acceptable executable names that
will be called (essentially argv[0]).
Some cleanups in AltCloud were done as the code was being updated.
|
|
Multiple distros use sysconfig format but have different content
and paths to certain files. Update distros to specify these
template paths in their renderer_configs dictionary.
|
|
These tests focus on the apply_credentials method and the ssh setup for
root and a distro default user.
|
|
this version uses unittest2 skipIf which is present in our python 2.6
environment.
|
|
Switch the implementation to a daemon thread which uses a
blocking get from the Queue. No additional locking or flag checking
is needed since the Queue itself handles acquiring the lock as needed.
cloud-init only has a single producer (the main thread calling publish)
and the consumer will read all events in the queue and write them out.
Using the daemon mode of the thread handles flushing the queue on
main exit in python3; in python2.7 we handle the EOFError that results
when the publish thread calls to get() fails indicating the main thread
has exited.
The result is that the handler is no longer spawing a thread on each
publish event but rather creates a single thread when we start up
the reporter and we remove any additional use of separate locks and
flags as we only have a single Queue object and we're only calling
queue.put() from main thread and queue.get() from consuming thread.
|
|
The issue is when customize a VM with static IPv4 and without gateway, it
will still extend route list and will loop a gateways list which is None.
This fix is to make sure when no gateway is here, it will not extend route
list.
LP: #1766538
|
|
Linux guests can provide information to Hyper-V hosts via KVP.
KVP allows the guests to provide any string key-value-pairs back to the
host's registry. On linux, kvp communication pools are presented as pool
files in /var/lib/hyperv/.kvp_pool_#.
The following reporting configuration can enable this kvp reporting in
addition to default logging if the pool files exist:
reporting:
logging:
type: log
telemetry:
type: hyperv
|
|
This adds a Oracle specific datasource that functions with OCI.
It is a simplified version of the OpenStack metadata server
with support for vendor-data.
It does not support the OCI-C (classic) platform.
Also here is a move of BrokenMetadata to common 'sources'
as this was the third occurrence of that class.
|
|
Azure datasource now queries IMDS metadata service for network
configuration at link local address
http://169.254.169.254/metadata/instance?api-version=2017-12-01. The
azure metadata service presents a list of macs and allocated ip addresses
associated with this instance. Azure will now also regenerate network
configuration on every boot because it subscribes to EventType.BOOT
maintenance events as well as the 'first boot'
EventType.BOOT_NEW_INSTANCE.
For testing add azure-imds --kind to cloud-init devel net_convert tool
for debugging IMDS metadata.
Also refactor _get_data into 3 discrete methods:
- is_platform_viable: check quickly whether the datasource is
potentially compatible with the platform on which is is running
- crawl_metadata: walk all potential metadata candidates, returning a
structured dict of all metadata and userdata. Raise InvalidMetaData on
error.
- _get_data: call crawl_metadata and process results or error. Cache
instance data on class attributes: metadata, userdata_raw etc.
|
|
DEP_NETWORK is removed since the network_config must
run at each boot. New EventType.BOOT event is used
for that.
Network is brought up early to fetch the metadata which
is required to configure the network (ipv4 and/or v6).
Adds unittests for the following and fixes test_common for
LOCAL and NETWORK sets.
|
|
When converting network config v1 to netplan, we were not correctly
rendering the 'macaddress' key on a bond. Not that the difference
in spelling between v1 'mac_address' and v2 'macaddress' is intentional.
Also fixed here is rendering of the macaddress for bridges.
LP: #1784699
|
|
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
|
|
The OpenNebula data source generates an invalid netplan yaml file
if the IPv6 gateway is not defined in context.sh.
LP: #1768547
|
|
The OpenStack datasource in 18.3 changed to detect data in the
init-local stage instead of init-network and attempted to redetect
OpenStackLocal datasource on Oracle across reboots. The function
detect_openstack was added to quickly detect whether a platform is
OpenStack based on dmi product_name or chassis_asset_tag and it was
a bit too strict for Oracle in checking for 'OpenStack Nova'/'Compute'
DMI product_name.
Oracle's DMI product_name reports 'SAtandard PC (i440FX + PIIX, 1996)'
and DMI chassis_asset_tag is 'OracleCloud.com'.
detect_openstack function now adds 'OracleCloud.com' as a supported value
'OracleCloud.com' to valid chassis-asset-tags for the OpenStack
datasource.
LP: #1784685
|
|
The comment in update_metadata() that explains how a datasource should
enable network reconfig on every boot presumes that
EventType.BOOT_NEW_INSTANCE is a subset of EventType.BOOT. That's not
the case, and as such a datasource that needs to configure networking
when it is a new instance and every boot needs to include both event
types.
To make the situation above easier to debug, update_metadata() now
logs when it returns false.
To make it so that datasources do not need to test before appending to
the update_events['network'], it is changed from a list to a set.
test_update_metadata_only_acts_on_supported_update_events is updated
to allow datasources to support EventType.BOOT.
Author: Mike Gerdts <mike.gerdts@joyent.com>
|
|
Pylint 2.0.0 was recently released and complains more about
logging-not-lazy than it used to. I've fixed those warnings, here.
The changes in rh_subscription are more extensive. pylint may be
complaining incorrectly there, but the tests were not correctly un-doing
all of their mock/patching. This cleans those up and makes pylint happy.
|
|
Add examples and tests for RHEL values of redhat-release and os-release.
These examples were collected from IBMCloud images.
on rhel systems 'platform.dist()' returns 'redhat' rather than 'rhel'
so we have adjusted the response to align there.
|
|
An empty /etc/os-release exists on some redhat images, most notably
the COPR build images of centos6 and rawhide. On platforms missing
/etc/os-release or having an empty /etc/os-release file, use
_parse_redhat_release on rhel-based images to obtain distribution and
release codename information.
LP: #1781229
|
|
LP: #1727876
|
|
A recent commit added get_linux_distro to replace the deprecated python
platform.dist module behavior before it is dropped from python. It added
behavior that was compliant on OpenSuSE and SLES, by returning
(<distro_name>, <distro_version>, <cpu-arch>).
Fix get_linux_distro to behave more like the specific distribution's
platform.dist on ubuntu, centos and debian, which will return the
distribution release codename as the third element instead of <cpu-arch>.
SLES and OpenSUSE will retain their current behavior.
Examples follow:
('sles', '15', 'x86_64')
('opensuse', '42.3', 'x86_64')
('debian', '9', 'stretch')
('ubuntu', '16.04', 'xenial')
('centos', '7', 'Core')
LP: #1780481
|
|
Very basic type definitions are now defined to distinguish 'boot'
events from 'new instance (first boot)'. Event types will now be handed
to a datasource.update_metadata method which can determine whether
to refresh its metadata and re-render configuration based on that
source event.
A datasource can 'subscribe' to an event by setting up the update_events
attribute on the datasource class which describe what config scope is
updated by a list of matching events. By default datasources will have
the following update_events: {'network': [EventType.BOOT_NEW_INSTANCE]}
This setting says the datasource will re-write network configuration only
on first boot of a new instance or when the instance id changes.
New methods are now present on the datasource:
- clear_cached_attrs: Resets cached datasource attributes to values
listed in datasource.cached_attr_defaults. This is performed prior to
processing a fresh metadata process to avoid keeping old/invalid
cached data around.
- update_metadata: accepts source_event_types to determine if the
metadata should be crawled again and processed
|
|
When cloud-init tries to read a key from a keyserver, it will now
retry twice with 1 second in between each.
Retries of import are done by default because keyservers can be
unreliable. Additionally, there is no way to determine the difference
between a non-existant key and a failure. In both cases gpg (at least
2.2.4) exits with status 2 and stderr: "keyserver receive failed: No data"
It is assumed that a key provided to cloud-init exists on the keyserver so
re-trying makes better sense than failing.
Examples of things that made receive keys particularly unreliable:
https://bitbucket.org/skskeyserver/sks-keyserver/issues/57
https://bitbucket.org/skskeyserver/sks-keyserver/issues/60
There is also a change here from 'gpg --recv' to the longer
'gpg --recv-keys'. That option is functional and working back to
centos 6 (gpg 2.0.14) and ubuntu 14.04 (gpg 1.4.16).
|
|
standargs -> standards.
|
|
Bump the version in cloudinit/version.py to be 18.3 and update ChangeLog.
LP: #1777743
|
|
|
|
To deny a user elevated access, you can omit the `sudo` key from the
`users` dictionary. This works fine however it's implicitly defined
based on defaults of `cloud-init`. If the project moves to have `sudo`
access allowed for all by default (quite unlikely but still possible)
this will catch a few people out.
This introduces the ability to define an explicit `sudo: False` in the
`users` dictionary and it will prevent `sudo` access. The behaviour is
identical to omitting the key.
LP: #1771468
|
|
Newer versions (3.0.1+) of lxd create the 'lxdbr0' network when
'lxd init --auto' is invoked.
When cloud-init is given a network configuration to pass on to
lxc and that config had no name specified or 'lxdbr0', then cloud-init
would fail to create the network as it already exists.
Similarly, we need to remove the device from the default profile
so that the attach code can work.
Also, add a _lxc method and use it to make sure we're getting the
--force-local flag everywhere.
LP: #1776958
|