Questions
Assuming at least some of packages we need to ship with SIMP already belong to modular repository streams, how can/should we handle:
Building SIMP RPM distributions (pkglist.txt + packages.yaml, repositories, ISOs, etc.,)
80% Confidence it’s Possible — but it will be complicated and hacky
The current methods of downloading external packages AND pruning OS ISOs down to a minimal set packages will both result in broken modular repositories.
This could be solved by recreating the RPM’s module streams with exactly the same NVSCA values as the source repository—but practically every step of that will be hacky and require unsupported tooling or several workarounds.
The repo manipulation methods (createrepo, repoclosure) aren’t module-aware
Current methods of building/sourcing RPM packages
A SIMP RPM distribution is a self-contained collection of RPM packages:
SIMP packages are built by the SIMP team, from the repos under
src/
in Puppetfile.pinned.Minimal Base OS packages are filtered from a base OS’s installation media (usually a DVD ISO), down to the files
DVD/<os.release.major>-
pkglist.txt.External packages are RPMs downloaded based on the data in
yum_data/
packages.yaml, and come from additional sources (e.g., EPEL, Puppet, base OS extras, various vendors).(Optionally): Custom packages placed manually into either the directory
yum_data/packages/
(which locates a yum source like External packages) oryum_data/packages/aux_packages/
(included but not checked).
These packages are distributed by the SIMP ISO. Together, these RPMs MUST self-resolve (enough) to install a basic SIMP system on a network-isolated host.
Current process to build and distribute SIMP ISO release
Here’s a quick summary of the build process to point out where the problems are
Build a DVD overlay directory (and tarball) containing the SIMP packages.
1️⃣ Download External packages (
rake build:yum:sync
) intoyum_data/packages/
Unpack the base OS installation media into an ISO staging directory.
1️⃣ Prune the unpacked ISO RPMs down to the Minimal Base OS packages.
Merge the DVD overlay contents & External packages on top of the files already in the ISO staging directory.
2️⃣ Create new yum repositories using createrepo
3️⃣ Verify that all ISO staging directory’s RPMs can self-resolve by running repoclosure (
rake pkg:repoclosure
).
Build a SIMP distribution ISO from the contents of the ISO staging directory
1️⃣ Host yum mirrors containing subsets of External package repositories (like EPEL) on the SIMP download service (ex: https://download.simp-project.com/SIMP/yum/releases/6.5.0-1/el/7/x86_64/epel/).
Pain points with modularity + the current process
1️⃣: You can’t simply [download the modular RPMs you want/remove the modular RPMS you don’t need/throw a bunch of modular RPMs together] and run
createrepo
to re-host them. You also need the correct metadata for all downloaded modular RPMs' streams, and special new commands.AFAICT, this metadata can only be obtained from the source repo.
There isn’t a complete “roll-your-own” solution to create modular repositories yet. Most of the tooling is meant to mirror existing repositories. There are community tools, but they are incomplete, unsupported, and buggy.
2️⃣: createrepo_c is needed to create a useable modular repository.
However, we need quite a few things before that:⚠4️⃣ The correct modulemd data (see format specs) for
modules.yaml
from the original repository.5️⃣ Some way of generating the modulemd YAML data for each module.
6️⃣ The ability to add all the modules' modulemd data into a single
modules.yaml
file for the entire repository.⚠7️⃣The correct tools to create/merge the repo and the module metadata (
createrepo_mod
or the *_c commands it runs)
3️⃣:
yum-utils
provides a CLI compatibility layer with the newer DNF sub-commands (includingrepoclosure
), but may require specific arguments (documented further below)dnf repoclosure
is sort of module-aware (bz#1547041), and may need extra logic tomodule enable
non-default streams that need to be considered while depsolving.
Creating repos with useable modularity streams
⚠8️⃣ We can use tools like dir2module and repo2module[1] to re-package specific packages into slimmer versions of their source modules and then use mergerepo_c (or creatrepo_mod) to collect them into a slimmed-down AppStream/ repo (based on pkglist.txt) or SIMP/ (based on packages.yml). However, there are several issues that make this complicated:
RPM packages from repo modules contain a
ModularityLabel
header that is unique to the module’s name + stream + version + context + architecture (NVSCA). DNF must install these RPMs from modules (with modular metadata)—and will refuse to install them as ursine packages.dir2module and repo2modules require a complete NVSCA string generating module metadata for a directory of RPMs.
5️⃣ The dir2module script provided by the EPEL8 RPM
modulemd-tools-0.7-1.el8.noarch
does not create a default (or any) profile for the module it creates; it is effectively useless; use repo2module instead (which is still missing the Arch in NVCSA).
A repackaged (slim) module’s name and stream and context and architecture must match the values in the source repo’s metadata for the original module.
This is required so the packages maintain continuity with the complete upstream repo (e.g., receiving update from the complete AppStream repo, epel-modular, etc)
The version number must evaluate to more than the earlier (module versions) and less than the version of later modules in the full source repository. This number (like stream and context) is an arbitrary string set by the build platform, so we have to get it
For practical purposes, you need to mirror the repo’s metadata YAML at the same time as you retrieve the packages—it might be updated later, even if the packages you see hosted there are the same
The
ModularityLabel
header is string unique to a module builds' NVSC for a particular platform. The header data in RPMs packaged by RHEL/CentOS build system looks useful because a string it’s in NVSC format, however this data is actually arbitrary and cannot be relied upon to provide accurate NVSC data for the module.The only canonical source for a module’s correct NVSCA/P data is the source repo’s metadata (generally under
repodata/{XXXXX}-modules.yaml.gz
, and defined byrepodata/repomd.xml
under<data type="modules">
`)🎉 I’ve tested a repacked “slim” repo alongside a repo with the full module w/identical NVSCA details, and it successfully resolved its metadata/packages with the full module.
This should also behave correctly with updated modules, but I haven’t been able to stage that yet.
Testing ISO RPMs' completeness with a repoclosure
Recommendation: Use dnf repoclosure
(see below for arguments)
To run a repoclosure against ISO-bound/based repos that are staged on the local filesystem:
dnf repoclosure --disablerepo=\* \ --repofrompath=base,/mnt/BaseOS \ --repofrompath=test1,/opt/dnf_reposync_from_iso \ --arch x86_64 \ --check base \ --check tes1
Notes:
Make sure there is a
--repofrompath=
for each local repository directory that should be considered during resolution.Using
--disablerepo=\* --repofrompath=
, the repoclosure doesn’t require purpose-built*.repo
files and doesn’t have to run inside a chroot/container/mock.The
--arch x86_64
may be needed to keep the closure focused on the ISO’s target arch.As released, the EL 8.3 ISO’s AppStream/ repo doesn’t close without it.
Impacts to the ISO installation
Recommendation: A minimum, change the createrepo . line in auto.cfg on systems installing modular repositories
This is effectively impossible to test until we have a SIMP ISO with modular repositories.
Impacts to unpack_dvd & self-hosted DNF repositories (for kickstarts, etc)
How should unpack_dvd handle repos that do/may contain modules?
Recommendation: The unpack_dvd tool should assume that all ISO DNF repositories are complete enough to mirror.
Prerequisites:
Any necessary dnf module surgery MUST be completed during the tarball/ISO’s build process (described above)
Any “slimmed” dnf modules SHOULD be upgrade-compatible with an unpacked repository than contains the complete modules
If these recommendations are implemented, then a site’s unpack_dvd tool should only need to copy/reposync the files on the ISO.
This has been tested by mounting an ISO as a loopback device and syncing everything (including module metadata) with dnf reposync --download-metadata […] .
On a stock EL8 server,
dnf reposync
requires the dnf-plugins-core packageOn a stock EL7 server,
dnf reposync
requires the dnf and dnf-plugins-core packages
How does SELinux support this?
Where do the policies for the packages in various module streams come from?
Notes:
So far, the selinux-*policy RPMs have handled whatever I’ve tried
Ancient policy wikis at (last updated late 2018):
Modularity CLI examples
Simple dnf module commands
View all modules
dnf module list --all
View a module’s available streams
# dnf module list --available nodejs Waiting for process with pid 79896 to finish. Last metadata expiration check: 0:00:01 ago on Fri 12 Mar 2021 02:03:02 AM UTC. CentOS Linux 8 - AppStream Name Stream Profiles Summary nodejs 10 [d] common [d], development, minimal, s2i Javascript runtime nodejs 12 common [d], development, minimal, s2i Javascript runtime nodejs 14 common [d], development, minimal, s2i Javascript runtime Extra Packages for Enterprise Linux Modular 8 - x86_64 Name Stream Profiles Summary nodejs 13 default, development, minimal Javascript runtime Hint: [d]efault, [e]nabled, [x]disabled, [i]nstalled
View packages in a module
dnf module repoquery nodejs
It looks dnf module repoquery
only reports on the default stream, regardless of the module-spec specified (tested on EL8.3)
View modules/profiles that provide a package
dnf module provides nodejs
This is one of the few (two?) module commands that reports which DNF Repo hosts the module
View the packages in each profile (for a specific stream)
]# dnf module info --profile nodejs:12 Last metadata expiration check: 2:59:10 ago on Thu 11 Mar 2021 11:02:32 PM UTC. Name : nodejs:12:8030020210304194546:30b713e6:x86_64 common : nodejs : npm development : nodejs : nodejs-devel : npm minimal : nodejs s2i : nodejs : nodejs-nodemon : npm
Find all modular RPM files that under a directory and print their module headers
This could identify dnf modules that would need to be re-created when shipping modular RPMs independently from their base repos:
find "$DIR_WITH_RPMS" -name \*.rpm \ -exec rpm -qp {} --qf '%{NVRA} %{ModularityLabel}\n' \; \ | grep -v '(none)' \ | tee modular_rpms.txt
The %{ModularityLabel}
macro is returned in (module)name:stream:version:context:arch
(NSVCA) format , so the result looks like this:
389-ds-base-1.4.3.8-5.module_el8.3.0+473+53682548.x86_64 389-ds:1.4:8030020200831174107:618f7055 389-ds-base-devel-1.4.3.8-5.module_el8.3.0+473+53682548.x86_64 389-ds:1.4:8030020200831174107:618f7055 389-ds-base-legacy-tools-1.4.3.8-5.module_el8.3.0+473+53682548.x86_64 389-ds:1.4:8030020200831174107:618f7055 389-ds-base-libs-1.4.3.8-5.module_el8.3.0+473+53682548.x86_64 389-ds:1.4:8030020200831174107:618f7055 389-ds-base-snmp-1.4.3.8-5.module_el8.3.0+473+53682548.x86_64 389-ds:1.4:8030020200831174107:618f7055 HdrHistogram-2.1.11-2.module_el8.2.0+460+6583c1d0.noarch jmc:rhel8:8020020200731165725:21dc74c6 HdrHistogram-javadoc-2.1.11-2.module_el8.2.0+460+6583c1d0.noarch jmc:rhel8:8020020200731165725:21dc74c6 Judy-1.0.5-18.module_el8.1.0+217+4d875839.x86_64 mariadb:10.3:8010020191115015915:cdc1202b ant-1.10.5-1.module_el8.0.0+47+197dca37.noarch ant:1.10:8000020190624202340:f7e686af ant-lib-1.10.5-1.module_el8.0.0+47+197dca37.noarch ant:1.10:8000020190624202340:f7e686af aopalliance-1.0-17.module_el8.0.0+39+6a9b6e22.noarch maven:3.5:8000020190624140656:f7e686af aopalliance-1.0-20.module_el8.3.0+568+0c23fd64.noarch maven:3.6:8030020201104064112:a623df05
It may be possible to re-create specific module/streams based on the RPM’s unique headers. However, there will need to be a second data source, because the RPM ModularityLabel
has significant limitations:
By convention, RPMs' ModularityLabel
string is in NVSC format, which doesn’t include profile information. Any module streams constructed solely on the RPM header would lose all the original streams' profiles.
Note that the repo2module tool just creates a default profile called everything
.
We can’t rely on RPMs' ModularityLabel
string to be in NVSC format, either!
“The ModularityLabel
can be any string at all. In Fedora, we have a convention to use name:stream:version:context
to indicate from which build the RPM originally came from, but this is not to be relied upon. It may change at any time and it also may not be accurately reflective of the module in which it currently resides, due to component-reuse in the Module Build System.”
— https://sgallagh.wordpress.com/2019/08/14/sausage-factory-modules-fake-it-till-you-make-it/
Identify all unique modules/streams from a collection of RPM files
find "$DIR_WITH_RPMS" -name \*.rpm \ -exec rpm -qp {} --qf '%{ModularityLabel}\n' \; \ | grep -v '^(none)' | sort | uniq -c \ | sort -nk1,1 \ | tee unique_rpm_module_streams.txt
Mirror the contents of a DNF repository, preserving all modules and package groups.
The current state of CentOS 8 createrepo_c + modulemd-tools (EPEL8) allow us to:
(Works from CentOS 8.3 and CentOS 7.8, requires packages dnf
and dnf-plugin-core
)
An example of this mirroring a mounted CentOS 8.3 ISO’s AppStream repository:
PATH_TO_LOCAL_MIRROR=/path/to/Appstream PATH_TO_SOURCE_REPO=/mnt/AppStream dnf reposync \ --download-metadata --downloadcomps \ --download-path "$PATH_TO_LOCAL_MIRROR" \ --repofrompath iso,"$PATH_TO_SOURCE_REPO" \ --repoid iso # Useful EL8-only options: --remote-time --norepopath
dnf reposync
should probably be the only kind of modular-capable mirroring that on-site tools like unpack_dvd should use.
DNF repoclosure
The ISO build process (really the tar build process) runs repoclosure to make sure the packages on the ISO will be self-contained.
dnf repoclosure --repofrompath iso,"$PWD" --repo appstream --repo baseos
Judging by the bug report at https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1547041, dnf repoclosure
is not module-aware, in the sense that its resolver does not consider packages in all available modules/streams.
The current behavior only resolves module packages using default or enabled streams & profiles.
Clean DNF install --downloadonly with all deps
Make sure you enable/disable the repos to match what you intend for resolution; --config is an option, too.
DNF_DLONLY_TARGET_PACKAGE=httpd DNF_DLONLY_INSTALL_ROOT=/root/fake-install-dir DNF_DLONLY_PACKAGE_DIR=/root/downloadonly dnf install --downloadonly \ --setopt=install_weak_deps=False \ --installroot="$DNF_DLONLY_INSTALL_ROOT" \ --downloaddir="$DNF_DLONLY_PACKAGE_DIR" \ --disablerepo=\* \ --enablerepo=baseos \ --enablerepo=appstream \ --releasever=8 \ "$DNF_DLONLY_TARGET_PACKAGE"
Notes:
An an
--enablerepo=
for each repo to consider during resolution.Pointing to an empty
--installroot=
will causednf install --downloadonly
to download EVERY dependency, including the packages for the baseos.In this case,
--setopt=install_weak_deps=False
may be useful to ignore weak RPM dependencies and cut down on the download size.
Create initial repo with ursine modules
mkdir -p $NEW_REPO_DIR/Packages/ursine cp "${URSINE_PACKAGE_FILES[@]}" "$NEW_REPO_DIR/Packages/ursine/" cd "$NEW_REPO_DIR" createrepo_c .
Create a modular repo from packages that already have a common module header
WARNING The approach of taking NSVCA from the RPM headers below is a.) incomplete and b.) cannot be relied upon to be accurate or available—theModularityLabel
header can contain any StringDO NOT PRODUCTIZE Use another means of obtaining this data; preferably from the repo itself (the data is sourced from the source repository’s
{XXXXX}-modules.yaml.gz
file)# Get the ModularityLabel from the RPMs ########################################################## #### UPDATE: DO NOT USE OR PRODUCTIZE THIS TECHNIQUE ##### ########################################################## # Notes: # - All RPMs in the module must have a SINGLE and IDENTICAL ModularityLabel # - The only thing required of this String is that it is unique to RPMs # from other modules (and different versions/contexts of this module) find "$DIR_WITH_RPMS" -name \*.rpm \ -exec rpm -qp {} --qf '%{ModularityLabel}\n' \; \ | sort -u ### WARNING: the ModularityLabel headers in RPMs build by EL and EPEL #### are (currently) in N:S:V:C format by convention, but in ##### reality this string is arbitrary and cannot be relied upon ##### to reflect the actual source module's metadata. ##### The actual NVSCA/P data can *ONLY* be obtained from the ##### original repo's metadata MODULE_HEADER=nodejs:10:8020020200707141642:6a468ee4
Documentation
https://sgallagh.wordpress.com/2019/08/14/sausage-factory-modules-fake-it-till-you-make-it/
Notes on building modules independently of Fedora’s hosted build system
https://pagure.io/modularity/issue/141
> * AGREED: Profiles cannot be removed during the lifetime of the stream in order to avoid breaking scripts. Options may exist for exceptional cases on an individual basis. (contyk, 15:41:06)