#!/bin/bash if [ "${DIB_DEBUG_TRACE:-0}" -gt 0 ]; then set -x fi set -eu set -o pipefail # grub2 isn't available on rhel6/centos6; they are setup to use # extlinux. skip this # you would think we could match on $DISTRO or something else; but # we can't because the rhel/centos elements are a bit mixed up; # centos-minimal for example sets distro to "centos". so the best # check is just for the original "grub-install" script if [ -f /sbin/grub-install ]; then exit 0 fi # remove grub2 package. As described in # elements/ubuntu/pre-install.d/00-remove-grub; the grub post-kernel # install hook will barf if the block device can't be found (as # happens in a chroot). # # XXX : it is not clear this is necessary for fedora/centos7 and it's # install hooks. Investigation is required. if rpm -q grub2; then install-packages -e grub-pc fi # now configure things to re-install grub at the end. We don't want # to rely on vm/finalise.d/51-bootloader to simply reinstall the # package via the package-manager, because at that point (during # finalise) the build-time yum-cache has been unmounted (hence the # local-cache looks empty) and yum may try to repopulate the # local-cache with all the grub2 dependencies. This is slow, and # potentially fills up the disk. # # XXX : At this point, keepcache=0 *should* probably be set for # yum/dnf. We have not standarised/documented that this will be done, # however. This would *probably* stop dependencies being populated # into the cache. We could investigate this, and possibly remove this # all together if we standardise some of these behaviours. # So we download the latest grub2 package and setup the install script # to just install the single-package, which will be called later by # vm/finalise.d/51-bootloader install-packages -d /tmp/grub grub-pc echo "rpm -i /tmp/grub/*.rpm" > /tmp/grub/install