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# TL;DR
~~~
# download packer_x.x.x_linux_amd64.zip from https://www.packer.io/downloads.html
unzip packer_x.x.x_linux_amd64.zip
./packer build -only=qemu -var headless=true vtp.json
~~~
# Overview
The VTP virtual machine is built using a scripted install process. This
results in an image which can be distributed to trainers and either run on
their local hardware or in a third-party cloud.
The final flow is expected to be something like this:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
v
Build Ubuntu
16.04+ZFS image
|
v
Local
configuration
(bridges, DNS,
dynamips etc)
|
v
Pull in LXD
master image
|
v
Make master clones
|
v
Customise masters
| | |
v v v
Nagios Smokeping etc...
| | |
v v v
Clones Clones Clones
\ | /
v v v
Bootable raw image
|
v
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
# Packer
The build-from-ISO process is driven by [packer](https://www.packer.io/)
[Download](https://www.packer.io/downloads.html) the binary into the top
level of this repo and unzip it. Then run using:
~~~
./packer build [-force] [-only=qemu] [-var headless=true] vtp.json
* `-force` will delete the previous build if it still exists
* `-only=qemu` is if there are multiple [builders](https://www.packer.io/docs/templates/builders.html)
defined and you only want to run one. For example, in future we could include
additional builders for EC2 and GCE.
* `-var headless=true` is required if you are running on a system with no
graphics (e.g. ssh to remote box without -X for X11 forwarding)
The configuration consists of a json file which controls packer, and a
preseed file which controls the ubuntu installer. The files here are
derived from:
* The puppetlabs [ubuntu 16.04 templates](https://github.com/puppetlabs/puppetlabs-packer/tree/master/templates/ubuntu-16.04), in particular the vmware-iso one
* The packer [qemu builder](https://www.packer.io/docs/builders/qemu.html) example config
* The ubuntu [example preseed](https://help.ubuntu.com/lts/installation-guide/example-preseed.txt) file
## Viewing progress at the console
If you have an X11 environment (either you are working at a graphical console, or
you used ssh -X to enable X11 forwarding) then a console window is created
automatically.
If this doesn't work, then you can set `-var headless=true` and it will run in
a disconnected VNC session. If you wish to monitor the progress, look through the
output for this message:
~~~
==> qemu: Found available VNC port: 5915
~~~
(the number is dynamic), and then from a laptop run
~~~
vncviewer -Shared <hostname>:<display>
~~~
e.g. `vncviewer -Shared 10.10.0.241:15`.
## Debugging
If things go wrong with packer, see the [debugging guide](https://www.packer.io/docs/other/debugging.html)
You get more information if you run:
~~~
PACKER_LOG=1 ./packer build foo.json
~~~
## Disk usage
After an initial build of just the OS, the qcow2 file was around 2GB.
Examining the image showed that only 1.2GB was used for the root filesystem;
there may be temporary files which were deleted, or there may be data in the
swap space.
The default install used 512MB of RAM and created 512MB of swap. This can be
increased with e.g. `"qemuargs": [ [ "-m", "768M" ] ]`
TODO: minimise the image size by running zerofree on all filesystems (this
cannot be done while root is mounted read-write), and wiping the swap space.
Normally packer runs a qemu-img convert pass to remove empty space in the image.
This can be disabled by `"skip_compaction": true`: this speeds up the build a
bit, but increases the qcow2 file size from 2GB to 2.8GB
Adding `"disk_compression": true` reduces the size of the qcow2 image to
about 800MB, at the cost of slowing down the build.
# Ubuntu ISO installation
For an [automated Ubuntu install](https://help.ubuntu.com/lts/installation-guide/amd64/ch04s06.html)
there are two options: [preseeding](https://help.ubuntu.com/lts/installation-guide/amd64/apb.html)
or [kickstart](https://help.ubuntu.com/community/KickstartCompatibility)
The kickstart files are simpler and can be created using
[system-config-kickstart](http://packages.ubuntu.com/xenial/system-config-kickstart)
on an Ubuntu 16.04 desktop machine. However the Ubuntu kickstart implementation offers
only a subset of features and is really just a frontend to selected preseed variables.
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Hence we are using preseeding directly.
## Preseeding
If a question pops up during the installation, answer it manually to allow
the installation to continue. Then when you have booted into the system,
run:
debconf-get-selections --installer >installer.log
(from package `debconf-utils`) to find the preseed option name; then you can
update preseed.cfg to answer the question automatically.
Example: after adding the empty zfs partition, I got the following dialog:
~~~
[!!] Partition disks
No file system is specified for partition #3 of Virtual disk 1 (vda).
If you do not go back to the partitioning menu and assign a file
system to this partition, it won't be used at all.
Go back to the menu? <Yes> <No>
~~~
The desired behaviour is to enter `<No>`. This one actually required going
through the debian-installer [source code](https://wiki.debian.org/DebianInstaller/CheckOut) to find:
~~~
d-i partman-basicmethods/method_only boolean false
~~~
## Filesystems
Installing Ubuntu with zfs root filesystem is not yet supported by the installer:
[1](https://github.com/zfsonlinux/pkg-zfs/wiki/HOWTO-install-Ubuntu-16.04-to-a-Native-ZFS-Root-Filesystem)
[2](https://github.com/zfsonlinux/zfs/wiki/Ubuntu-16.04-Root-on-ZFS)
[3](http://dotfiles.tnetconsulting.net/articles/2016/0327/ubuntu-zfs-native-root.html)
For our purposes it's sufficient to have an ext4 root filesystem and create
a separate ZFS partition for LXD. We lose the ability to snapshot the root
and to have compression on the root.
## Examining the image
QCOW2 images can be loopback-mounted with a bit of help from nbd:
modprobe nbd
qemu-nbd -c /dev/nbd0 output-qemu/vtp.qcow2
mount /dev/nbd0p1 /mnt
...
umount /mnt
qemu-nbd -d /dev/nbd0
More details at <http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/QEMU/Images>
## Speed
The initial packer build-from-ISO phase is slow. If you have to start from
scratch it can easily take 10-15 minutes. Normally, packer would be used to
make a "plain" OS image which some other tool would provision, e.g.
[vagrant](https://www.vagrantup.com/docs/). However, vagrant doesn't have
support for qemu out-of-the-box (it can use libvirt with a plugin), so for
now we are building the entire final VTP image in packer.
# Provisioners
[Provisioners](https://www.packer.io/docs/templates/provisioners.html) perform
post-installation changes.
Some initial steps (such as configuring zfs and lxd) are most easily done as
a shell command run within the guest.
For the remaining changes we prefer to use ansible: since ansible is
idempotent, it is relatively easy to iterate development of the
configuration without always having to rebuild the VM image from scratch.
We "git clone" the ansible configuration inside the VM, so that it is easy
to make adjustments and commit them back.