Armhf images install the `generic-lpae` kernel, while other ARCHes use the
standard `generic` kernel when building the "virtual" image flavour.
Code was looking for a kernel binary ending with -generic in armhf
builds, and failed. Add a special condition to handle armhf builds'
kernel ending with `generic-lpae`
References:
[1] https://bugs.launchpad.net/cloud-images/+bug/2029527
During Realtime kernel image build, there was an error during
validating snap seed which derivative images copied 5.19
apparmor feature and can't validate when Realtime kernel (5.15)
installed [0].
To prevent this, bind correct apparmor feature with kernel
version.
[0] https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/livecd-rootfs/+bug/2024639
(cherry picked from commit 6b54faa6be)
With the switch to the ubuntu-cloud-minimal seed, we
don't really need to purge anything now. On the contrary,
the purging of packages if not installed, fails with the
exit code of 100.
EDK II is available for the StarFive VisionFive 2 board. As it is larger
than U-Boot we need to increase the size of the loader 2 partition to
accommodate it.
Signed-off-by: Heinrich Schuchardt <heinrich.schuchardt@canonical.com>
Now that we have the cloud-minimal seed for minimized cloud
image builds, we should drop all the workarounds and hacks
we once needed when we were using the server seed. We can
directly use the new metapackage and get rid of the tasks and
other autoremoves, et al.
classic ubuntu-image builds will build the gadget from a repository
using make, and the reference pc-gadget snap uses chdist to pull the
latest GRUB/shim from the proper series x pocket; NB: chdist was used
instead of the more convenient pull-lp-debs as devscripts is in main
while ubuntu-dev-tools is in universe. It's inelegant for livecd-rootfs
to pick up dependencies needed to build gadgets, even if it's for the
official ones as other gadgets might want other dependencies, rather
this should be expressed as part of the build contract of the gadget, or
livecd-rootfs should only consume pre-built gadgets built in a standard
way (e.g. snap build, deb build etc.).