This moves the default symlinking logic into build image as well.
This assumes that a torcx store is available locally with all images
referenced in the torcx manifest.
This is accomplished with a highly-indented double-for-loop, but I think
it's still decently readable.
This adds the option --torcx_store to specify the path to a
directory containing torcx images to be baked into the OS image. A
blank string can be given instead of a path to restore the previous
behavior and leave an empty vendor store.
The default value is the default path created by build_torcx_store,
which is used when build_packages updates torcx images. This means
that the current pattern "./build_packages && ./build_image prod"
should result in a fully updated OS image with all torcx images
available in the vendor store.
To clean things up and prepare for arrm64 support move
all the enable_rootfs_verification processing into one
location and add some comments.
Signed-off-by: Geoff Levand <geoff@infradead.org>
To make verity work both enable_rootfs_verification and enable_verity
need to be set. Without one verity just gets half enabled. Remove
the enable_verity flag and do the full verity setup when
enable_rootfs_verification is set.
Signed-off-by: Geoff Levand <geoff@infradead.org>
The Xen loader in GRUB never received support for our hacky scheme of
adding the verity hash to the kernel cmdline. Disable till that's fixed.
Partially reverts 2016567 and 533b1b9.
Consolidates two very similar flags into one and fix an issue where
verity could get enabled in the GRUB config when rootfs verification was
turned off (e.g. on arm64 which cannot use verity yet).
PROD_IMAGE is a flag that indicates a production image should be
built, and will be set for dev builds if the user specifies that
both dev and prod images should be built. build_image was
incorrectly using the PROD_IMAGE variable to conditionaly do some
setup depending on the image type.
Add a new variable IMAGE_BUILD_TYPE that can be tested for the type
of image currently being built and replace the PROD_IMAGE usage.
Signed-off-by: Geoff Levand <geoff@infradead.org>
Allows build_image to be used without first running build_packages.
Note: setup_board --force is required before build_packages will work
properly after doing this since baselayout won't be installed otherwise.
This variable was semi-deprecated ages ago so `version.txt` could follow
a similar variable naming pattern to `os-release`. Finally drop usage of
it here in favor of `$COREOS_VERSION`.
The generation of version.txt was the only thing depending on sourcing
the deprecated BUILD, BRANCH, and PATCH values from version.txt which
common.sh no longer does since 0b6acf86. Derive them instead.
- "./build_image prod" already has the ability to specify which package will specify all the packages that should be pulled in and built into an image by specifying a package name using the --base_pkg command line flag. This creates an equivalent option for "./build_image dev" creating a --base_dev_pkg flag that passes a package name into the create_dev_img() function in dev_image_util.sh the same way that --base_pkg is passed into create_prod_image() inside prod_image_util.sh.
This uses our new GRUB2 features to handle GPT priority partition
selection, terminal selection, OEM tweaks, etc. The old SYSLINUX and
PV-GRUB configs are now unused except for maintaining compatibility
with older installs. Of the old configs only the ones that
coreos-postinst copies are needed. The new setup supports using GRUB2
under Xen, giving us automatic fallback support on all of our platforms
for the very first time!
Since grub.cfg is copied into place instead of generated, build_image's
--boot_args option is no longer supported. It could be re-added later
with some sed goo but for now it is easy enough to just edit grub.cfg.
Using parallel_emerge has been disabled by default for all commands
except build_image for quite a while now, build_image kept it just
because it was still a bit faster than normal emerge. Keeping
parallel_emerge complicates future changes to build_image so it needs to
drop it entirely. Since that means nothing uses it by default we might
as well just rip out support for it entirely.
Missed this in 7231b95a, the update zip should still be built when the
usr partition is extracted for generating updates but build_image itself
is not generating and signing the update.
The current generate_update function is now less useful, the important
part that we need is just the partition image now. Also by defaulting to
extracting the partition the old cors_generate_update which is still in
use by devserver can be removed entirely, devserver will just expect the
extracted partition image instead.
- Automated builds drop SDK and binary packages into
gs://builds.developer.core-os.net/ and the new download URL is
http://builds.developer.core-os.net/ (COREOS_DEV_BUILDS)
- Change default upload path to gs://users.developer.core-os.net/ for
misc developer builds. Official builds go elsewhere and will just be
configured in buildbot/jenkins so some COREOS_OFFICIAL stuff is gone.
- Automated builds of images go to a private bucket,
gs://builds.release.core-os.net which later gets copied to
gs://alpha.release.core-os.net and friends by core_promote.
The new --developer_data option can be used to specify a path to a cloud
config to bundle into the image. If none is provided but a shared user
password (for core) is set then generate a config to set that password.
This lets us use the same mechanism for setting the default password for
both disk and PXE images.
This image type is the same as the developer image except that it is a
single root filesystem and is bootable via systemd-nspawn. This may
become obsolete eventually when it becomes possible to boot the normal
disk images under nspawn but it is useful for testing until then.
The partition type is defined by the Discoverable Partitions Spec.
http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Specifications/DiscoverablePartitionsSpec/
Use what was the base image build function as setup/finalize steps in
the dev and prod build functions. This eliminates duplicate code
that mounted and unmounted the filesystem images.
We need some more control over exactly what lands in dev vs prod images
which will require letting them diverge in what is currently the common
base image step. There isn't any real need for the base image in the
first place other than to speed up building both dev and prod images at
the same time but that isn't common enough to worry about.
As part of this cleanup also remove references to CHROMEOS_* variables
and the recovery image that never actually existed in CoreOS.
For generating images for groups other than the one given to build_image
run this script along with the usual image_to_vm.sh commands. To avoid
ambiguity with the 'latest' symlink, this script creates $group-latest
symlinks instead. build_image creates the new symlink too.
The existing version.txt is kinda annoying. The common case of referring
to the current version requires joining three values and the names of
those values only make sense in ChromeOS. Instead just use version as a
string, using VERSION, VERSION_ID, and BUILD_ID just as they appear in
os-release. It is up to the few scripts that need the individual parts
to break the version apart.
The old values remain for the sake of compatibility.
This makes build_image and image_to_vm behave like build_packages, where
if you call the script outside of the SDK's chroot it will automatically
reexecute itself inside of the chroot.
- Remove custom COREOS_* attributes from /etc/lsb-release
- Move dev image logic to dev_image_util
For extra fun fix detection of local host URL for devserver.
- Remove weirdly verbose "DESCRIPTION" format.
- Add COREOS_RELEASE_BOARD back to /usr/share/coreos/release
This is mostly just so update_engine and gmerge report the correct
board name to devserver, informative-only on prod images.
- Remove version info from /etc/gentoo-release
- Switch from 'track' to 'group' terminology.