diskimage-builder/diskimage_builder/elements/simple-init
Ian Wienand 8ec3750dda simple-init: allow for NetworkManager support
This plumbs through an "--use-nm" flag to glean which instructs it to
setup interface bringup with NetworkManager rather than legacy network
enablement scripts.

In this case, install the NetworkManager package.  In the non-nm case,
also install the network-scripts for Fedora 29 -- this has stopped
being installed by default (it's been deprecated since forever).

As noted in the docs, this is currently really only relevant on the
supported rpm distros which are using the ifcfg-rh NetworkManager
plugin to effectively re-use old config files.  However,
NetworkManager has similar plugins for other platforms, so support can
be expanded if changes are proposed.

Depends-On: https://review.openstack.org/618964
Change-Id: I4d76e88ce25e5675fd5ef48924acd09915a62a4b
2018-11-30 10:02:47 +11:00
..
environment.d simple-init: allow for NetworkManager support 2018-11-30 10:02:47 +11:00
install.d simple-init: allow for NetworkManager support 2018-11-30 10:02:47 +11:00
post-install.d simple-init: allow for NetworkManager support 2018-11-30 10:02:47 +11:00
README.rst simple-init: allow for NetworkManager support 2018-11-30 10:02:47 +11:00
element-deps Have simple-init enable network.service 2017-03-28 19:28:51 +11:00
package-installs.yaml simple-init: allow for NetworkManager support 2018-11-30 10:02:47 +11:00
pkg-map simple-init: allow for NetworkManager support 2018-11-30 10:02:47 +11:00
source-repository-simple-init Move elements & lib relative to diskimage_builder package 2016-11-01 17:27:41 -07:00

README.rst

simple-init

Basic network and system configuration that can't be done until boot

Unfortunately, as much as we'd like to bake it in to an image, we can't know in advance how many network devices will be present, nor if DHCP is present in the host cloud. Additionally, in environments where cloud-init is not used, there are a couple of small things, like mounting config-drive and pulling ssh keys from it, that need to be done at boot time.

Autodetect network interfaces during boot and configure them

The rationale for this is that we are likely to require multiple network interfaces for use cases such as baremetal and there is no way to know ahead of time which one is which, so we will simply run a DHCP client on all interfaces with real MAC addresses (except lo) that are visible on the first boot.

The script /usr/local/sbin/simple-init.sh will be called early in each boot and will scan available network interfaces and ensure they are configured properly before networking services are started.

Processing startup information from config-drive

On most systems, the DHCP approach desribed above is fine. But in some clouds, such as Rackspace Public cloud, there is no DHCP. Instead, there is static network config via config-drive. simple-init will happily call glean which will do nothing if static network information is not there.

Finally, glean will handle ssh-keypair-injection from config drive if cloud-init is not installed.

Chosing glean installation source

By default glean is installed using pip using the latest release on pypi. It is also possible to install glean from a specified git repository location. This is useful for debugging and testing new glean changes for example. To do this you need to set these variables:

DIB_INSTALLTYPE_simple_init=repo
DIB_REPOLOCATION_glean=/path/to/glean/repo
DIB_REPOREF_glean=name_of_git_ref

For example to test glean change 364516 do:

git clone https://git.openstack.org/openstack-infra/glean /tmp/glean
cd /tmp/glean
git review -d 364516
git checkout -b my-test-ref

Then set your DIB env vars like this before running DIB:

DIB_INSTALLTYPE_simple_init=repo
DIB_REPOLOCATION_glean=/tmp/glean
DIB_REPOREF_glean=my-test-ref

NetworkManager

By default, this uses the "legacy" scripts on each platform. To use NetworkManager instead, set DIB_SIMPLE_INIT_NETWORKMANAGER to non-zero. See the glean documentation for what the implications for this are on each platform.

This is currently only implemented for CentOS and Fedora platforms.