Important
This repository is being moved to a new location https://github.com/OpenNebula/one-apps During the transition the repository is in read-only mode
This addon provides contextualization packages for the Linux (and, other Unix-like) guest virtual machines running in the OpenNebula cloud. Based on the provided contextualization parameters, the packages prepare the networking in the running guest virt. machine, configure SSH keys, set passwords, run custom start scripts, and many others.
Latest versions can be downloaded from the release page. Check the supported OpenNebula versions for each release.
Documentation on packages installation and guest contextualization can be found in the latest stable OpenNebula Operation Guide. For beta releases, refer to the latest development documentation.
List of tested platforms only:
Platform | Versions |
---|---|
AlmaLinux | 8, 9 |
Alpine Linux | 3.15, 3.16, 3.17 |
ALT Linux | 9, 10 |
Amazon Linux | 2 |
CentOS | 7, 8 Stream |
Debian | 10, 11 |
Devuan | 3, 4 |
Fedora | 37 |
FreeBSD | 12, 13 |
openSUSE | 15 |
Oracle Linux | 7, 8, 9 |
Red Hat Enterprise Linux | 7, 8, 9 |
Rocky Linux | 8, 9 |
Ubuntu | 20.04, 22.04 |
Ubuntu Minimal | 20.04, 22.04 |
(the packages might work on other versions or flavours, but those aren't tested)
NOTE: Available since context packages version 6.2.0.
The context scripts support selectable guest network management service (a component in guest OS responsible for assigning IP addresses, routes, and bringing interfaces up). Following network configuration types can be selected by setting the context variable NETCFG_TYPE
(empty default fallbacks to autodetection of the most suitable one for a particular platform):
bsd
for FreeBSD network configuration,interfaces
for Debian-style configuration in/etc/network/interfaces
,netplan
for Netplan with following renders set in context variableNETCFG_NETPLAN_RENDERER
:- empty or
networkd
for systemd-network (default), NetworkManager
for NetworkManager
- empty or
networkd
for systemd-networkd,nm
for NetworkManager,scripts
for legacy Red Hat-style configuration via/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-ethX
files.
Interface IP address configuration method can be customized as well. Following IPv4 configuration methods are supported via NIC attribute METHOD
:
- empty or
static
for static address assignment based on context variables, dhcp
for DHCPv4,skip
to skip IPv4 configuration.
Following IPv6 configuration methods are supported via NIC attribute IP6_METHOD
:
- empty or
static
for static address assignment based on context variables, auto
for SLAAC,dhcp
for SLAAC and DHCPv6,disable
to disable IPv6 in guest,skip
to skip IPv6 configuration.
Selectable configuration types and IP configuration methods are supported only on the following platforms:
Platform | Network Type (NETCFG_TYPE ) |
---|---|
Alpine Linux 3.15+ | interfaces |
ALT Linux p10, Sisyphus | networkd , nm |
Amazon Linux 2 | scripts |
Debian 10+ | interfaces , netplan , nm , networkd |
Devuan 3 | interfaces |
Fedora 36+ | scripts , nm , networkd |
FreeBSD 12+ | bsd |
openSUSE 15 | scripts |
RHEL-like 7 (CentOS, Oracle Linux) | scripts |
RHEL-like 8 (CentOS, Oracle/Rocky/AlmaLinux) | scripts , nm , networkd |
RHEL-like 9 (CentOS Stream 9, Oracle/Rocky/AlmaLinux) | nm , networkd |
Ubuntu 18.04, 20.04, 22.04 | interfaces , netplan , nm , networkd |
(other than listed platforms are not supported for using NETCFG_TYPE
nor METHOD
/IP6_METHOD
!):
Known Issues:
- Alpine Linux:
IP6_METHOD=dhcp
runs DHCPv4 client instead of DHCPv6, - Debian 10:
NETCFG_TYPE=netplan
with networkd doesn't configure IPv6 (only) SLAAC (IP6_METHOD=auto
) when no IPv4 is configured, - Debian/Ubuntu:
NETCFG_TYPE=netplan
with NetworkManager might not configure IPv6 SLAAC (IP6_METHOD=auto
) for hot-plugged interfaces, - Debian 10 and Ubuntu 18.04, 20.04: might trigger DHCPv6 with
IP6_METHOD=auto
- on
NETCFG_TYPE=netplan
with networkd, - on
NETCFG_TYPE=networkd
.
- on
Packages for each release for supported guests are available in the release page. Also, any version can be built by the scripts provided in this repository.
- Linux host
- Ruby >= 1.9
- gem fpm >= 1.10.0
- dpkg utils for deb package creation
- rpm utils for rpm package creation
The script generate.sh
is able to create all package types and can be
configured to include more files in the package or change some of
its parameters. Package type and content are configured by the env. variable
TARGET
, the corresponding target must be defined in target.sh
. Target
describes the package format, name, dependencies, and files. Files are
selected by the tags. Set of required tags is defined for the target
(in targets.sh
), each file has a list of corresponding tags right in its
filename (divided by the regular name by 2 hashes ##
, dot-separated).
Package name or version can be overridden by env. variables NAME
and VERSION
.
Examples:
$ TARGET=deb ./generate.sh
$ TARGET=el7 NAME=my-one-context ./generate.sh
$ TARGET=alpine ./generate.sh
$ TARGET=freebsd VERSION=5.7.85 ./generate.sh
NOTE: The generator must be executed from the same directory it resides.
Check generate.sh
for general package metadata and targets.sh
for the list
of targets and their metadata. Most of the parameters can be overriden by
the appropriate environment variable.
To contribute bug patches or new features, you can use the github Pull Request model. It is assumed that code and documentation are contributed under the Apache License 2.0.
More info:
- How to Contribute
- Support: OpenNebula user forum
- Development: OpenNebula developers forum
- Issues Tracking: Github issues (https://github.com/OpenNebula/addon-context-linux/issues)
All code is located under src/
and structure follows the installation
directory structure. Files for different environments/targets are picked
by the tag, tags are part of the filename separated from the installation
name by 2 hashes (##
). Tags are dot-separated.
Examples:
script
- non-tagged file for all targetsscript##systemd
- file tagged with systemdscript##systemd.rpm
- file tagged with systemd and rpm
Contextualization scripts, which are executed on every boot and during
the reconfiguration, are located in src/etc/one-context.d/
. Scripts are
divided into following 2 parts:
- local - pre-networking, prefixed with
loc-
- post-networking, prefixed with
net-
All other scripts, which are not prefixed with loc-
or net-
, are
executed as a first during the post-networking contextualization stage.
Copyright 2002-2022, OpenNebula Project, OpenNebula Systems (formerly C12G Labs)
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.