Seeing any snap via snap_preseed will evaluate the base for each snap
and seed the appropriate base. There should be no reason to explicitly
seed the 'core' snap and with snaps moving to 'core18' this will add
'core' without need.
The _snap_post_process function is meant to install snapd if core18 is the
only core snap installed or removed snapd if core is installed and snapd
was not explicitly installed. But the current logic in _snap_preseed
will never call _snap_post_process. $core_name will never be empty
with the existing logic, but even if it were that would only be for the
'core' snap and we'd miss using the 'core18' logic that pulls in snapd.
Given the case statement in _snap_post_process can handle doing the
right thing given any snap we can just call it unconditionally.
With the removal of snap-tool failures are seen in image builds that do
not have the 'core' snap included by the seed. This is the case for the
minimized subproject of the ubuntu-cpc project where lxd/core is removed.
In that subproject, any binary hook which adds a snap that is based
on 'core' will not add 'core' and fail 'snap debug validate-seed'.
snap-tool included the following logic in the 'snap-tool info' when
determining snap bases:
# Have "base" initialized to something meaningful.
if self.is_core_snap():
snap_data["snap"]["base"] = ""
elif snap_data["snap"].get("base") is None:
snap_data["snap"]["base"] = "core"
The snap store does not return a base if the base is core which makes
this necessary. This patch looks for the base in 'snap info' output
and if none is found (and the snap is not snapd or core) it assumes the
base is 'core' and installs it. This restores the behavior lost in the
migration from snap-tool to snap cli.
snap-tool was added to support a deprecate cohort-key feature of the
snap store. Recent changes in snap assertions have added additional
fields which snap-tool is not retrieving. This resulted in snap install
failures on first boot.
This patch removes snap-tool and returns to using the snap cli.
This ensures snap downloads will function without odd incompatibilities.
Subiquity images mount /usr/lib/modules from a squashfs, which systemd
tries to unmount on shutdown, whilst they are still being in use. As
systemd-udevd kmod built-in's libkmod has modules.* files
memorymapped. This produces an warning on shutdown, flooding the
screen with messages as systemd switches to a more verbose
output. Specify LazyUnmount=yes on that mount, such that unmount call
succeeds without flooding the shutdown log.
When we encounter a failure in 'lb binary' the launchpad builders can
only surface the build output from stdout. If the binary hook failure
implicates the archive we can not determine fault without the apt
proxy log. This patch will dump the proxy log to stdout to aid in
debugging these failures.
As discussed and explained to Jibel and Didier on 17th of June, based
on canary image build logs, it showed clearly that lb controlled
initrd was only built once at the very first layer by
chroot_hacks. However, that is the wrong layer to build the final
initrd at, as at this point casper is not present yet and is not part
of the build.
Thus insure that chroot_hacks only runs at the live layer.
Ideally a subset of chroot_hacks should run on every layer, as each
layer should be squeaky clean, and most of layers without
initrds. However, jibel & didrocks are still implementing requested
patches to unbreak layer images and make each layer smaller. Hence
this minimal portion of the overall required work.
Signed-off-by: Dimitri John Ledkov <xnox@ubuntu.com>
When getting the list of snaps to include on an image via germinate, we
process the snaps in alphabetical order. Currently we seed several
packages `gnome-foo` and also `gtk-common-themes`, the default provider
of `gtk-3-themes`. Since `gtk-common-themes` is alphabetically after
`gnome-foo`, the `seed.yaml` we generate is invalid when we are part way
through generating.
What we really care about, though, is not that the `seed.yaml` is always
valid at every step, but it is that it is valid at the *end* of seeding.
So for the germinate case, let's defer validation to happen once at the
end. Other callsites of `snap_preseed`, where callers are careful to
seed snaps in the right order, are unaffected by this.
Chroot deconfiguration should happen in the opposite order from chroot
configuration, so, for symmetry, undivert_grub should be called between
"lb chroot_debianchroot remove" and "lb chroot_sysfs remove".