diskimage-builder/elements/source-repositories
Ben Nemec 0eccd2808c Allow source-repositories to be disabled completely
In our official image builds we are only allowed to use resources
that are "blessed" by the build system.  This means that external
things like git repos and tar files are not allowed.  Currently,
even in offline mode source-repositories expects those things to
be available in the cache, so we need a way to disable it entirely.

This change adds an environment variable NO_SOURCE_REPOSITORIES
that does so.  It can be set in an environment.d script so elements
that might rely on a source repository will know it's not available.
The 02-lsb script in redhat-common is one such example and is
updated to handle this case.

Change-Id: I0de63bee6ad79733d6711478c707a9b41593e85f
2014-10-15 12:24:50 -04:00
..
extra-data.d Allow source-repositories to be disabled completely 2014-10-15 12:24:50 -04:00
install.d Use package-installs in more elements 2014-09-08 15:16:14 -04:00
README.md Allow source-repositories to be disabled completely 2014-10-15 12:24:50 -04:00
element-deps Use package-installs in more elements 2014-09-08 15:16:14 -04:00

README.md

With this element other elements can register their installation source by placing their details in the file source-repository-*. An example of an element "custom-element" that wants to retrieve the ironic source from git and pbr from a tarball would be

File : elements/custom-element/source-repository-ironic

#<name> <type> <destination> <location> [<ref>]
# <ref> defaults to master if not specified
ironic git /usr/local/ironic git://git.openstack.org/openstack/ironic.git

File : elements/custom-element/source-repository-pbr

# <ref> is defined as "*" by default, although this behavior is deprecated.
# A value of "." extracts the entire contents of the tarball.
# A value of "*" extracts the contents within all its subdirectories.
# A value of a subdirectory path may be used to extract only its contents.
# A value of a specific file path within the archive is not supported.
pbr tar /usr/local/pbr http://tarballs.openstack.org/pbr/pbr-master.tar.gz .

diskimage-builder will then retrieve the sources specified and place them at the directory <destination>

A number of environment variables can be set by the process calling diskimage-builder which can change the details registered by the element, these are

DIB_REPOTYPE_<name>     : change the registered type
DIB_REPOLOCATION_<name> : change the registered location
DIB_REPOREF_<name>      : change the registered reference

For example if you would like diskimage-builder to get ironic from a local mirror you could set DIB_REPOLOCATION_ironic=git://localgitserver/ironic.git

As you can see above, the <name> of the repo is used in several bash variables. In order to make this syntactically feasible, any characters not in the set [A-Za-z0-9_] will be converted to _

For instance, a repository named "diskimage-builder" would set a variable called "DIB_REPOTYPE_diskimage_builder"

Alternatively if you would like to use the keystone element and build an image with keystone from a stable branch then you would set DIB_REPOREF_keystone=stable/grizzly

If you wish to build an image using code from a gerrit review, you can set DIB_REPOLOCATION_ and DIB_REPOREF_ to the values given by gerrit in the fetch/pull section of a review. For example:

DIB_REPOLOCATION_nova=https://review.openstack.org/openstack/nova
DIB_REPOREF_nova=refs/changes/72/61972/8

Additionally, the lines in the source-repository scripts are eval'd, so they may contain environment variables.

Git sources will be cloned to <destination>

Tarballs will be extracted to <destination>.

The package type indicates the element should install from packages onto the root filesystem of the image build during the install.d phase.

Git and Tarballs are treated as source installs. If the element provides an -source-install directory under it's install.d hook directory, symlinks to the scripts in that directory will be created under install.d for the image build. Alternatively for the package install type, if the element provides an -package-install directory, symlinks will be created for those scripts instead.

For example, the nova element would provide:

nova/install.d/nova-package-install/74-nova
nova/install.d/nova-source-install/74-nova

source-repositories will create the following symlink for the package install type:

install.d/74-nova -> nova-package-install/74-nova

Or, for the source install type:

install.d/74-nova -> nova-source-install/74-nova

All other scripts that exist under install.d for an element will be executed as normal. This allows common install code to live in a script outside of -package-install or -source-install.

If multiple elements register a source location with the same then source-repositories will exit with an error. Care should therefore be taken to only use elements together that download source to different locations.

The repository paths built into the image are stored in etc/dib-source-repositories, one repository per line. This permits later review of the repositories (by users or by other elements).

The repository names and types are written to an environment.d hook script at 01-source-repositories-environment. This allows later hook scripts during the install.d phase to know which install type to use for the element.

The base url for all git repositories can be set by use of:

DIB_GITREPOBASE

So setting DIB_GITREPOBASE=https://github.com/ when the repo location is set to http://git.openstack.org/openstack/nova.git will result in use of the https://github.com/openstack/nova.git repository.

When doing image builds in environments where external resources are not allowed, it is possible to disable fetching of all source repositories by including an element in the image that sets NO_SOURCE_REPOSITORIES=1 in an environment.d script.