#!/usr/bin/env bash # **fixup_stuff.sh** # fixup_stuff.sh # # All distro and package specific hacks go in here # # - prettytable 0.7.2 permissions are 600 in the package and # pip 1.4 doesn't fix it (1.3 did) # # - httplib2 0.8 permissions are 600 in the package and # pip 1.4 doesn't fix it (1.3 did) # # - Fedora: # - set selinux not enforcing # - uninstall firewalld (f20 only) # If ``TOP_DIR`` is set we're being sourced rather than running stand-alone # or in a sub-shell if [[ -z "$TOP_DIR" ]]; then set -o errexit set -o xtrace # Keep track of the current directory TOOLS_DIR=$(cd $(dirname "$0") && pwd) TOP_DIR=$(cd $TOOLS_DIR/..; pwd) # Change dir to top of DevStack cd $TOP_DIR # Import common functions source $TOP_DIR/functions FILES=$TOP_DIR/files fi # Keystone Port Reservation # ------------------------- # Reserve and prevent ``KEYSTONE_AUTH_PORT`` and ``KEYSTONE_AUTH_PORT_INT`` from # being used as ephemeral ports by the system. The default(s) are 35357 and # 35358 which are in the Linux defined ephemeral port range (in disagreement # with the IANA ephemeral port range). This is a workaround for bug #1253482 # where Keystone will try and bind to the port and the port will already be # in use as an ephemeral port by another process. This places an explicit # exception into the Kernel for the Keystone AUTH ports. function fixup_keystone { keystone_ports=${KEYSTONE_AUTH_PORT:-35357},${KEYSTONE_AUTH_PORT_INT:-35358} # Only do the reserved ports when available, on some system (like containers) # where it's not exposed we are almost pretty sure these ports would be # exclusive for our DevStack. if sysctl net.ipv4.ip_local_reserved_ports >/dev/null 2>&1; then # Get any currently reserved ports, strip off leading whitespace reserved_ports=$(sysctl net.ipv4.ip_local_reserved_ports | awk -F'=' '{print $2;}' | sed 's/^ //') if [[ -z "${reserved_ports}" ]]; then # If there are no currently reserved ports, reserve the keystone ports sudo sysctl -w net.ipv4.ip_local_reserved_ports=${keystone_ports} else # If there are currently reserved ports, keep those and also reserve the # Keystone specific ports. Duplicate reservations are merged into a single # reservation (or range) automatically by the kernel. sudo sysctl -w net.ipv4.ip_local_reserved_ports=${keystone_ports},${reserved_ports} fi else echo_summary "WARNING: unable to reserve keystone ports" fi } # Ubuntu Repositories #-------------------- # We've found that Libvirt on Xenial is flaky and crashes enough to be # a regular top e-r bug. Opt into Ubuntu Cloud Archive if on Xenial to # get newer Libvirt. # Make it possible to switch this based on an environment variable as # libvirt 2.5.0 doesn't handle nested virtualization quite well and this # is required for the trove development environment. # Also enable universe since it is missing when installing from ISO. function fixup_ubuntu { if [[ "$DISTRO" != "xenial" && "$DISTRO" != "bionic" ]]; then return fi # This pulls in apt-add-repository install_package "software-properties-common" # Enable universe sudo add-apt-repository -y universe if [[ "${ENABLE_UBUNTU_CLOUD_ARCHIVE}" == "False" || "$DISTRO" != "xenial" ]]; then return fi # Use UCA for newer libvirt. if [[ -f /etc/ci/mirror_info.sh ]] ; then # If we are on a nodepool provided host and it has told us about where # we can find local mirrors then use that mirror. source /etc/ci/mirror_info.sh sudo apt-add-repository -y "deb $NODEPOOL_UCA_MIRROR xenial-updates/queens main" else # Otherwise use upstream UCA sudo add-apt-repository -y cloud-archive:queens fi # Disable use of libvirt wheel since a cached wheel build might be # against older libvirt binary. Particularly a problem if using # the openstack wheel mirrors, but can hit locally too. # TODO(clarkb) figure out how to use upstream wheel again. iniset -sudo /etc/pip.conf "global" "no-binary" "libvirt-python" # Force update our APT repos, since we added UCA above. REPOS_UPDATED=False apt_get_update } # Python Packages # --------------- # get_package_path python-package # in import notation function get_package_path { local package=$1 echo $(python -c "import os; import $package; print(os.path.split(os.path.realpath($package.__file__))[0])") } # Pre-install affected packages so we can fix the permissions # These can go away once we are confident that pip 1.4.1+ is available everywhere function fixup_python_packages { # Fix prettytable 0.7.2 permissions # Don't specify --upgrade so we use the existing package if present pip_install 'prettytable>=0.7' PACKAGE_DIR=$(get_package_path prettytable) # Only fix version 0.7.2 dir=$(echo $PACKAGE_DIR/prettytable-0.7.2*) if [[ -d $dir ]]; then sudo chmod +r $dir/* fi # Fix httplib2 0.8 permissions # Don't specify --upgrade so we use the existing package if present pip_install httplib2 PACKAGE_DIR=$(get_package_path httplib2) # Only fix version 0.8 dir=$(echo $PACKAGE_DIR-0.8*) if [[ -d $dir ]]; then sudo chmod +r $dir/* fi } function fixup_fedora { if ! is_fedora; then return fi # Disable selinux to avoid configuring to allow Apache access # to Horizon files (LP#1175444) if selinuxenabled; then sudo setenforce 0 fi FORCE_FIREWALLD=$(trueorfalse False FORCE_FIREWALLD) if [[ $FORCE_FIREWALLD == "False" ]]; then # On Fedora 20 firewalld interacts badly with libvirt and # slows things down significantly (this issue was fixed in # later fedoras). There was also an additional issue with # firewalld hanging after install of libvirt with polkit [1]. # firewalld also causes problems with neturon+ipv6 [2] # # Note we do the same as the RDO packages and stop & disable, # rather than remove. This is because other packages might # have the dependency [3][4]. # # [1] https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1099031 # [2] https://bugs.launchpad.net/neutron/+bug/1455303 # [3] https://github.com/redhat-openstack/openstack-puppet-modules/blob/master/firewall/manifests/linux/redhat.pp # [4] https://docs.openstack.org/devstack/latest/guides/neutron.html if is_package_installed firewalld; then sudo systemctl disable firewalld # The iptables service files are no longer included by default, # at least on a baremetal Fedora 21 Server install. install_package iptables-services sudo systemctl enable iptables sudo systemctl stop firewalld sudo systemctl start iptables fi fi if [[ "$os_VENDOR" == "Fedora" ]] && [[ "$os_RELEASE" -ge "22" ]]; then # requests ships vendored version of chardet/urllib3, but on # fedora these are symlinked back to the primary versions to # avoid duplication of code on disk. This is fine when # maintainers keep things in sync, but since devstack takes # over and installs later versions via pip we can end up with # incompatible versions. # # The rpm package is not removed to preserve the dependent # packages like cloud-init; rather we remove the symlinks and # force a re-install of requests so the vendored versions it # wants are present. # # Realted issues: # https://bugs.launchpad.net/glance/+bug/1476770 # https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1253823 base_path=$(get_package_path requests)/packages if [ -L $base_path/chardet -o -L $base_path/urllib3 ]; then sudo rm -f $base_path/{chardet,urllib3} # install requests with the bundled urllib3 to avoid conflicts pip_install --upgrade --force-reinstall requests fi fi # Since pip10, pip will refuse to uninstall files from packages # that were created with distutils (rather than more modern # setuptools). This is because it technically doesn't have a # manifest of what to remove. However, in most cases, simply # overwriting works. So this hacks around those packages that # have been dragged in by some other system dependency sudo rm -rf /usr/lib/python2.7/site-packages/enum34*.egg-info sudo rm -rf /usr/lib/python2.7/site-packages/ipaddress*.egg-info sudo rm -rf /usr/lib/python2.7/site-packages/ply-*.egg-info sudo rm -rf /usr/lib/python2.7/site-packages/typing-*.egg-info } function fixup_suse { if ! is_suse; then return fi # Disable apparmor profiles in openSUSE distros # to avoid issues with haproxy and dnsmasq if [ -x /usr/sbin/aa-enabled ] && sudo /usr/sbin/aa-enabled -q; then sudo systemctl disable apparmor sudo /usr/sbin/aa-teardown fi # Since pip10, pip will refuse to uninstall files from packages # that were created with distutils (rather than more modern # setuptools). This is because it technically doesn't have a # manifest of what to remove. However, in most cases, simply # overwriting works. So this hacks around those packages that # have been dragged in by some other system dependency sudo rm -rf /usr/lib/python3.6/site-packages/ply-*.egg-info } # The version of pip(1.5.4) supported by python-virtualenv(1.11.4) has # connection issues under proxy so re-install the latest version using # pip. To avoid having pip's virtualenv overwritten by the distro's # package (e.g. due to installing a distro package with a dependency # on python-virtualenv), first install the distro python-virtualenv # to satisfy any dependencies then use pip to overwrite it. # ... but, for infra builds, the pip-and-virtualenv [1] element has # already done this to ensure the latest pip, virtualenv and # setuptools on the base image for all platforms. It has also added # the packages to the yum/dnf ignore list to prevent them being # overwritten with old versions. F26 and dnf 2.0 has changed # behaviour that means re-installing python-virtualenv fails [2]. # Thus we do a quick check if we're in the infra environment by # looking for the mirror config script before doing this, and just # skip it if so. # [1] https://opendev.org/openstack/diskimage-builder/src/branch/master/ \ # diskimage_builder/elements/pip-and-virtualenv/ \ # install.d/pip-and-virtualenv-source-install/04-install-pip # [2] https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1477823 function fixup_virtualenv { if [[ ! -f /etc/ci/mirror_info.sh ]]; then install_package python-virtualenv pip_install -U --force-reinstall virtualenv fi } function fixup_all { fixup_keystone fixup_ubuntu fixup_python_packages fixup_fedora fixup_suse fixup_virtualenv }