#!/bin/bash # # template script for generating CentOS container for LXC # # lxc: linux Container library # Authors: # Daniel Lezcano # Ramez Hanna # Fajar A. Nugraha # Michael H. Warfield # This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or # modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public # License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either # version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. # This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, # but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of # MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU # Lesser General Public License for more details. # You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public # License along with this library; if not, write to the Free Software # Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA #Configurations default_path=@LXCPATH@ # Some combinations of the tuning knobs below do not exactly make sense. # but that's ok. # # If the "root_password" is non-blank, use it, else set a default. # This can be passed to the script as an environment variable and is # set by a shell conditional assignment. Looks weird but it is what it is. # # If the root password contains a ding ($) then try to expand it. # That will pick up things like ${name} and ${RANDOM}. # If the root password contains more than 3 consecutive X's, pass it as # a template to mktemp and take the result. # # If root_display_password = yes, display the temporary root password at exit. # If root_store_password = yes, store it in the configuration directory # If root_prompt_password = yes, invoke "passwd" to force the user to change # the root password after the container is created. # If root_expire_password = yes, you will be prompted to change the root # password at the first login. # # These are conditional assignments... The can be overridden from the # preexisting environment variables... # # Make sure this is in single quotes to defer expansion to later! # :{root_password='Root-${name}-${RANDOM}'} : ${root_password='Root-${name}-XXXXXX'} # Now, it doesn't make much sense to display, store, and force change # together. But, we gotta test, right??? : ${root_display_password='no'} : ${root_store_password='yes'} # Prompting for something interactive has potential for mayhem # with users running under the API... Don't default to "yes" : ${root_prompt_password='no'} # Expire root password? Default to yes, but can be overridden from # the environment variable : ${root_expire_password='yes'} # These are only going into comments in the resulting config... lxc_network_type=veth lxc_network_link=lxcbr0 # is this CentOS? # Alow for weird remixes like the Raspberry Pi # # Use the Mitre standard CPE identifier for the release ID if possible... # This may be in /etc/os-release or /etc/system-release-cpe. We # should be able to use EITHER. Give preference to /etc/os-release for now. # Detect use under userns (unsupported) for arg in "$@"; do [ "$arg" = "--" ] && break if [ "$arg" = "--mapped-uid" -o "$arg" = "--mapped-gid" ]; then echo "This template can't be used for unprivileged containers." 1>&2 echo "You may want to try the \"download\" template instead." 1>&2 exit 1 fi done # Make sure the usual locations are in PATH export PATH=$PATH:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin if [ -e /etc/os-release ] then # This is a shell friendly configuration file. We can just source it. # What we're looking for in here is the ID, VERSION_ID and the CPE_NAME . /etc/os-release echo "Host CPE ID from /etc/os-release: ${CPE_NAME}" fi if [ "${CPE_NAME}" = "" -a -e /etc/system-release-cpe ] then CPE_NAME=$(head -n1 /etc/system-release-cpe) CPE_URI=$(expr ${CPE_NAME} : '\([^:]*:[^:]*\)') if [ "${CPE_URI}" != "cpe:/o" ] then CPE_NAME= else # Probably a better way to do this but sill remain posix # compatible but this works, shrug... # Must be nice and not introduce convenient bashisms here. # # According to the official registration at Mitre and NIST, # this should have been something like this for CentOS: # cpe:/o:centos:centos:6 # or this: # cpe:/o:centos:centos:6.5 # ID=$(expr ${CPE_NAME} : '[^:]*:[^:]*:[^:]*:\([^:]*\)') # The "enterprise_linux" is a bone toss back to RHEL. # Since CentOS and RHEL are so tightly coupled, we'll # take the RHEL version if we're running on it and do the # equivalent version for CentOS. if [ ${ID} = "linux" -o ${ID} = "enterprise_linux" ] then # Instead we got this: cpe:/o:centos:linux:6 ID=$(expr ${CPE_NAME} : '[^:]*:[^:]*:\([^:]*\)') fi VERSION_ID=$(expr ${CPE_NAME} : '[^:]*:[^:]*:[^:]*:[^:]*:\([^:]*\)') echo "Host CPE ID from /etc/system-release-cpe: ${CPE_NAME}" fi fi if [ "${CPE_NAME}" != "" -a "${ID}" = "centos" -a "${VERSION_ID}" != "" ] then centos_host_ver=${VERSION_ID} is_centos=true elif [ "${CPE_NAME}" != "" -a "${ID}" = "redhat" -o "${ID}" = "rhel" -a "${VERSION_ID}" != "" ] then # RHEL 7+ /etc/os-release ID = 'rhel', which doesn't enter this elif without the added OR statement redhat_host_ver=${VERSION_ID} is_redhat=true elif [ -e /etc/centos-release ] then # Only if all other methods fail, try to parse the redhat-release file. centos_host_ver=$( sed -e '/^CentOS /!d' -e 's/CentOS.*\srelease\s*\([0-9][0-9.]*\)\s.*/\1/' < /etc/centos-release ) if [ "$centos_host_ver" != "" ] then is_centos=true fi fi force_mknod() { # delete a device node if exists, and create a new one rm -f $2 && mknod -m $1 $2 $3 $4 $5 } configure_centos() { # disable selinux in CentOS mkdir -p $rootfs_path/selinux echo 0 > $rootfs_path/selinux/enforce # Also kill it in the /etc/selinux/config file if it's there... if [ -f $rootfs_path/etc/selinux/config ] then sed -i '/^SELINUX=/s/.*/SELINUX=disabled/' $rootfs_path/etc/selinux/config fi # Nice catch from Dwight Engen in the Oracle template. # Wantonly plagerized here with much appreciation. if [ -f $rootfs_path/usr/sbin/selinuxenabled ]; then mv $rootfs_path/usr/sbin/selinuxenabled $rootfs_path/usr/sbin/selinuxenabled.lxcorig ln -s /bin/false $rootfs_path/usr/sbin/selinuxenabled fi # This is a known problem and documented in RedHat bugzilla as relating # to a problem with auditing enabled. This prevents an error in # the container "Cannot make/remove an entry for the specified session" sed -i '/^session.*pam_loginuid.so/s/^session/# session/' ${rootfs_path}/etc/pam.d/login sed -i '/^session.*pam_loginuid.so/s/^session/# session/' ${rootfs_path}/etc/pam.d/sshd if [ -f ${rootfs_path}/etc/pam.d/crond ] then sed -i '/^session.*pam_loginuid.so/s/^session/# session/' ${rootfs_path}/etc/pam.d/crond fi # In addition to disabling pam_loginuid in the above config files # we'll also disable it by linking it to pam_permit to catch any # we missed or any that get installed after the container is built. # # Catch either or both 32 and 64 bit archs. if [ -f ${rootfs_path}/lib/security/pam_loginuid.so ] then ( cd ${rootfs_path}/lib/security/ mv pam_loginuid.so pam_loginuid.so.disabled ln -s pam_permit.so pam_loginuid.so ) fi if [ -f ${rootfs_path}/lib64/security/pam_loginuid.so ] then ( cd ${rootfs_path}/lib64/security/ mv pam_loginuid.so pam_loginuid.so.disabled ln -s pam_permit.so pam_loginuid.so ) fi # Set default localtime to the host localtime if not set... if [ -e /etc/localtime -a ! -e ${rootfs_path}/etc/localtime ] then # if /etc/localtime is a symlink, this should preserve it. cp -a /etc/localtime ${rootfs_path}/etc/localtime fi # Deal with some dain bramage in the /etc/init.d/halt script. # Trim it and make it our own and link it in before the default # halt script so we can intercept it. This also preventions package # updates from interferring with our interferring with it. # # There's generally not much in the halt script that useful but what's # in there from resetting the hardware clock down is generally very bad. # So we just eliminate the whole bottom half of that script in making # ourselves a copy. That way a major update to the init scripts won't # trash what we've set up. if [ -f ${rootfs_path}/etc/init.d/halt ] then sed -e '/hwclock/,$d' \ < ${rootfs_path}/etc/init.d/halt \ > ${rootfs_path}/etc/init.d/lxc-halt echo '$command -f' >> ${rootfs_path}/etc/init.d/lxc-halt chmod 755 ${rootfs_path}/etc/init.d/lxc-halt # Link them into the rc directories... ( cd ${rootfs_path}/etc/rc.d/rc0.d ln -s ../init.d/lxc-halt S00lxc-halt cd ${rootfs_path}/etc/rc.d/rc6.d ln -s ../init.d/lxc-halt S00lxc-reboot ) fi # configure the network using the dhcp cat < ${rootfs_path}/etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-eth0 DEVICE=eth0 BOOTPROTO=dhcp ONBOOT=yes HOSTNAME=${utsname} NM_CONTROLLED=no TYPE=Ethernet MTU=${MTU} DHCP_HOSTNAME=\`hostname\` EOF # set the hostname cat < ${rootfs_path}/etc/sysconfig/network NETWORKING=yes HOSTNAME=${utsname} EOF # set minimal hosts cat < $rootfs_path/etc/hosts 127.0.0.1 localhost $name EOF # set minimal fstab cat < $rootfs_path/etc/fstab /dev/root / rootfs defaults 0 0 EOF # create lxc compatibility init script if [ "$release" = "6" ]; then cat < $rootfs_path/etc/init/lxc-sysinit.conf start on startup env container pre-start script if [ "x\$container" != "xlxc" -a "x\$container" != "xlibvirt" ]; then stop; fi rm -f /var/lock/subsys/* rm -f /var/run/*.pid [ -e /etc/mtab ] || ln -s /proc/mounts /etc/mtab mkdir -p /dev/shm mount -t tmpfs -o nosuid,nodev tmpfs /dev/shm initctl start tty TTY=console telinit 3 exit 0 end script EOF elif [ "$release" = "5" ]; then cat < $rootfs_path/etc/rc.d/lxc.sysinit #! /bin/bash rm -f /etc/mtab /var/run/*.{pid,lock} /var/lock/subsys/* rm -rf {/,/var}/tmp/* echo "/dev/root / rootfs defaults 0 0" > /etc/mtab exit 0 EOF chmod 755 $rootfs_path/etc/rc.d/lxc.sysinit sed -i 's|si::sysinit:/etc/rc.d/rc.sysinit|si::bootwait:/etc/rc.d/lxc.sysinit|' $rootfs_path/etc/inittab # prevent mingetty from calling vhangup(2) since it fails with userns. # Same issue as oracle template: prevent mingetty from calling vhangup(2) # commit 2e83f7201c5d402478b9849f0a85c62d5b9f1589. sed -i 's|^1:|co:2345:respawn:/sbin/mingetty --nohangup console\n1:|' $rootfs_path/etc/inittab sed -i 's|^\([56]:\)|#\1|' $rootfs_path/etc/inittab fi dev_path="${rootfs_path}/dev" rm -rf $dev_path mkdir -p $dev_path mknod -m 666 ${dev_path}/null c 1 3 mknod -m 666 ${dev_path}/zero c 1 5 mknod -m 666 ${dev_path}/random c 1 8 mknod -m 666 ${dev_path}/urandom c 1 9 mkdir -m 755 ${dev_path}/pts mkdir -m 1777 ${dev_path}/shm mknod -m 666 ${dev_path}/tty c 5 0 mknod -m 666 ${dev_path}/tty0 c 4 0 mknod -m 666 ${dev_path}/tty1 c 4 1 mknod -m 666 ${dev_path}/tty2 c 4 2 mknod -m 666 ${dev_path}/tty3 c 4 3 mknod -m 666 ${dev_path}/tty4 c 4 4 mknod -m 600 ${dev_path}/console c 5 1 mknod -m 666 ${dev_path}/full c 1 7 mknod -m 600 ${dev_path}/initctl p mknod -m 666 ${dev_path}/ptmx c 5 2 # setup console and tty[1-4] for login. note that /dev/console and # /dev/tty[1-4] will be symlinks to the ptys /dev/lxc/console and # /dev/lxc/tty[1-4] so that package updates can overwrite the symlinks. # lxc will maintain these links and bind mount ptys over /dev/lxc/* # since lxc.tty.dir is specified in the config. # allow root login on console, tty[1-4], and pts/0 for libvirt echo "# LXC (Linux Containers)" >>${rootfs_path}/etc/securetty echo "lxc/console" >>${rootfs_path}/etc/securetty echo "lxc/tty1" >>${rootfs_path}/etc/securetty echo "lxc/tty2" >>${rootfs_path}/etc/securetty echo "lxc/tty3" >>${rootfs_path}/etc/securetty echo "lxc/tty4" >>${rootfs_path}/etc/securetty echo "# For libvirt/Virtual Machine Monitor" >>${rootfs_path}/etc/securetty echo "pts/0" >>${rootfs_path}/etc/securetty # prevent mingetty from calling vhangup(2) since it fails with userns. # Same issue as oracle template: prevent mingetty from calling vhangup(2) # commit 2e83f7201c5d402478b9849f0a85c62d5b9f1589. sed -i 's|mingetty|mingetty --nohangup|' $rootfs_path/etc/init/tty.conf if [ ${root_display_password} = "yes" ] then echo "Setting root password to '$root_password'" fi if [ ${root_store_password} = "yes" ] then touch ${config_path}/tmp_root_pass chmod 600 ${config_path}/tmp_root_pass echo ${root_password} > ${config_path}/tmp_root_pass echo "Storing root password in '${config_path}/tmp_root_pass'" fi echo "root:$root_password" | chroot $rootfs_path chpasswd if [ ${root_expire_password} = "yes" ] then # Also set this password as expired to force the user to change it! chroot $rootfs_path passwd -e root fi # This will need to be enhanced for CentOS 7 when systemd # comes into play... /\/\|=mhw=|\/\/ return 0 } configure_centos_init() { sed -i 's|.sbin.start_udev||' ${rootfs_path}/etc/rc.sysinit sed -i 's|.sbin.start_udev||' ${rootfs_path}/etc/rc.d/rc.sysinit if [ "$release" = "6" ]; then chroot ${rootfs_path} chkconfig udev-post off fi chroot ${rootfs_path} chkconfig network on if [ -d ${rootfs_path}/etc/init ] then # This is to make upstart honor SIGPWR cat <${rootfs_path}/etc/init/power-status-changed.conf # power-status-changed - shutdown on SIGPWR # start on power-status-changed exec /sbin/shutdown -h now "SIGPWR received" EOF fi } download_centos() { # check the mini CentOS was not already downloaded INSTALL_ROOT=$cache/partial mkdir -p $INSTALL_ROOT if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then echo "Failed to create '$INSTALL_ROOT' directory" return 1 fi # download a mini CentOS into a cache echo "Downloading CentOS minimal ..." YUM0="yum --installroot $INSTALL_ROOT -y --nogpgcheck" if yum -h | grep -q 'releasever=RELEASEVER'; then YUM="$YUM0 --releasever=$release" else YUM="$YUM0" fi PKG_LIST="yum initscripts passwd rsyslog vim-minimal openssh-server openssh-clients dhclient chkconfig rootfiles policycoreutils cronie" # use temporary repository definition # always prefer the repo given by the user # if no repo given, use mirrorlist.centos.org for i386 and x86_64 # and http://mirror.centos.org/altarch/ otherwise REPO_FILE=$INSTALL_ROOT/etc/yum.repos.d/lxc-centos-temp.repo mkdir -p $(dirname $REPO_FILE) if [ -n "$repo" ]; then cat < $REPO_FILE [base] name=local repository baseurl="$repo" EOF elif [ ${basearch} = 'i386' ] || [ ${basearch} = 'x86_64' ]; then cat < $REPO_FILE [base] name=CentOS-$release - Base mirrorlist=http://mirrorlist.centos.org/?release=$release&arch=$basearch&repo=os [updates] name=CentOS-$release - Updates mirrorlist=http://mirrorlist.centos.org/?release=$release&arch=$basearch&repo=updates EOF else cat < $REPO_FILE [base] name=CentOS-$release - Base baseurl=http://mirror.centos.org/altarch/7/os/$basearch/ [updates] name=CentOS-$release - Updates baseurl=http://mirror.centos.org/altarch/7/updates/$basearch/ EOF fi # create minimal device nodes, needed for "yum install" and "yum update" process mkdir -p $INSTALL_ROOT/dev force_mknod 666 $INSTALL_ROOT/dev/null c 1 3 force_mknod 666 $INSTALL_ROOT/dev/urandom c 1 9 $YUM install $PKG_LIST # create symlink for /var/run -> ../run if [ "$release" = "7" ]; then mv $INSTALL_ROOT/var/run/* $INSTALL_ROOT/run/ rmdir $INSTALL_ROOT/var/run ln -sf ../run $INSTALL_ROOT/var/run fi if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then echo "Failed to download the rootfs, aborting." return 1 fi # use same nameservers as hosts, needed for "yum update later" cp /etc/resolv.conf $INSTALL_ROOT/etc/ # check whether rpmdb is under $HOME if [ ! -e $INSTALL_ROOT/var/lib/rpm/Packages -a -e $INSTALL_ROOT/$HOME/.rpmdb/Packages ]; then echo "Fixing rpmdb location ..." mv $INSTALL_ROOT/$HOME/.rpmdb/[A-Z]* $INSTALL_ROOT/var/lib/rpm/ rm -rf $INSTALL_ROOT/$HOME/.rpmdb chroot $INSTALL_ROOT rpm --rebuilddb 2>/dev/null fi # check whether rpmdb version is correct chroot $INSTALL_ROOT rpm --quiet -q yum 2>/dev/null ret=$? # if "rpm -q" doesn't work due to rpmdb version difference, # then we need to redo the process using the newly-installed yum if [ $ret -gt 0 ]; then echo "Reinstalling packages ..." mv $REPO_FILE $REPO_FILE.tmp mkdir $INSTALL_ROOT/etc/yum.repos.disabled mv $INSTALL_ROOT/etc/yum.repos.d/*.repo $INSTALL_ROOT/etc/yum.repos.disabled/ mv $REPO_FILE.tmp $REPO_FILE mkdir -p $INSTALL_ROOT/$INSTALL_ROOT/etc cp /etc/resolv.conf $INSTALL_ROOT/$INSTALL_ROOT/etc/ mkdir -p $INSTALL_ROOT/$INSTALL_ROOT/dev mknod -m 666 $INSTALL_ROOT/$INSTALL_ROOT/dev/null c 1 3 mknod -m 666 $INSTALL_ROOT/$INSTALL_ROOT/dev/urandom c 1 9 mkdir -p $INSTALL_ROOT/$INSTALL_ROOT/var/cache/yum cp -al $INSTALL_ROOT/var/cache/yum/* $INSTALL_ROOT/$INSTALL_ROOT/var/cache/yum/ chroot $INSTALL_ROOT $YUM0 install $PKG_LIST if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then echo "Failed to download the rootfs, aborting." return 1 fi mv $INSTALL_ROOT/$INSTALL_ROOT $INSTALL_ROOT.tmp rm -rf $INSTALL_ROOT mv $INSTALL_ROOT.tmp $INSTALL_ROOT fi rm -f $REPO_FILE rm -rf $INSTALL_ROOT/var/cache/yum/* mv "$INSTALL_ROOT" "$cache/rootfs" echo "Download complete." return 0 } copy_centos() { # make a local copy of the mini CentOS echo -n "Copying rootfs to $rootfs_path ..." #cp -a $cache/rootfs-$arch $rootfs_path || return 1 # i prefer rsync (no reason really) mkdir -p $rootfs_path rsync -SHaAX $cache/rootfs/ $rootfs_path/ echo return 0 } update_centos() { YUM="chroot $cache/rootfs yum -y --nogpgcheck" $YUM update if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then return 1 fi $YUM clean packages } install_centos() { mkdir -p /var/lock/subsys/ ( flock -x 9 if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then echo "Cache repository is busy." return 1 fi echo "Checking cache download in $cache/rootfs ... " if [ ! -e "$cache/rootfs" ]; then download_centos if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then echo "Failed to download 'CentOS base'" return 1 fi else echo "Cache found. Updating..." update_centos if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then echo "Failed to update 'CentOS base', continuing with last known good cache" else echo "Update finished" fi fi echo "Copy $cache/rootfs to $rootfs_path ... " copy_centos if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then echo "Failed to copy rootfs" return 1 fi return 0 ) 9>/var/lock/subsys/lxc-centos return $? } create_hwaddr() { openssl rand -hex 5 | sed -e 's/\(..\)/:\1/g; s/^/fe/' } copy_configuration() { mkdir -p $config_path grep -q "^lxc.rootfs.path" $config_path/config 2>/dev/null || echo " lxc.rootfs.path = $rootfs_path " >> $config_path/config # The following code is to create static MAC addresses for each # interface in the container. This code will work for multiple # interfaces in the default config. mv $config_path/config $config_path/config.def while read LINE do # This should catch variable expansions from the default config... if expr "${LINE}" : '.*\$' > /dev/null 2>&1 then LINE=$(eval "echo \"${LINE}\"") fi # There is a tab and a space in the regex bracket below! # Seems that \s doesn't work in brackets. KEY=$(expr "${LINE}" : '\s*\([^ ]*\)\s*=') if [[ "${KEY}" != "lxc.net.0.hwaddr" ]] then echo ${LINE} >> $config_path/config if [[ "${KEY}" == "lxc.net.0.link" ]] then echo "lxc.net.0.hwaddr = $(create_hwaddr)" >> $config_path/config fi fi done < $config_path/config.def rm -f $config_path/config.def if [ -e "@LXCTEMPLATECONFIG@/centos.common.conf" ]; then echo " # Include common configuration lxc.include = @LXCTEMPLATECONFIG@/centos.common.conf " >> $config_path/config fi # Append things which require expansion here... cat <> $config_path/config lxc.arch = $arch lxc.uts.name = $utsname # When using LXC with apparmor, uncomment the next line to run unconfined: #lxc.apparmor.profile = unconfined # example simple networking setup, uncomment to enable #lxc.net.0.type = $lxc_network_type #lxc.net.0.flags = up #lxc.net.0.link = $lxc_network_link #lxc.net.0.name = eth0 # Additional example for veth network type # static MAC address, #lxc.net.0.hwaddr = 00:16:3e:77:52:20 # persistent veth device name on host side # Note: This may potentially collide with other containers of same name! #lxc.net.0.veth.pair = v-$name-e0 EOF if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then echo "Failed to add configuration" return 1 fi return 0 } clean() { if [ ! -e $cache ]; then exit 0 fi # lock, so we won't purge while someone is creating a repository ( flock -x 9 if [ $? != 0 ]; then echo "Cache repository is busy." exit 1 fi echo -n "Purging the download cache for CentOS-$release..." rm --preserve-root --one-file-system -rf $cache && echo "Done." || exit 1 exit 0 ) 9>@LOCALSTATEDIR@/lock/subsys/lxc-centos } usage() { cat < [-p|--path=] [-c|--clean] [-R|--release=] [-a|--arch=] [-h|--help] Mandatory args: -n,--name container name, used to as an identifier for that container from now on Optional args: -p,--path path to where the container rootfs will be created, defaults to /var/lib/lxc/name. -c,--clean clean the cache -R,--release CentOS release for the new container. If the host is CentOS, then it will default to the host's release. --fqdn fully qualified domain name (FQDN) for DNS and system naming --repo repository to use (url) -a,--arch Define what arch the container will be [i686,x86_64] -h,--help print this help EOF return 0 } options=$(getopt -o a:hp:n:cR: -l help,path:,rootfs:,name:,clean,release:,repo:,arch:,fqdn: -- "$@") if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then usage $(basename $0) exit 1 fi arch=$(uname -m) eval set -- "$options" while true do case "$1" in -h|--help) usage $0 && exit 0;; -p|--path) path=$2; shift 2;; --rootfs) rootfs_path=$2; shift 2;; -n|--name) name=$2; shift 2;; -c|--clean) clean=1; shift 1;; -R|--release) release=$2; shift 2;; --repo) repo="$2"; shift 2;; -a|--arch) newarch=$2; shift 2;; --fqdn) utsname=$2; shift 2;; --) shift 1; break ;; *) break ;; esac done if [ ! -z "$clean" -a -z "$path" ]; then clean || exit 1 exit 0 fi basearch=${arch} # Map a few architectures to their generic CentOS repository archs. # The two ARM archs are a bit of a guesstimate for the v5 and v6 # archs. V6 should have hardware floating point (Rasberry Pi). # The "arm" arch is safer (no hardware floating point). So # there may be cases where we "get it wrong" for some v6 other # than RPi. case "$arch" in i686) basearch=i386 ;; armv3l|armv4l|armv5l) basearch=arm ;; armv6l|armv7l|armv8l) basearch=armhfp ;; *) ;; esac # Somebody wants to specify an arch. This is very limited case. # i386/i586/i686 on i386/x86_64 # - or - # x86_64 on x86_64 if [ "${newarch}" != "" -a "${newarch}" != "${arch}" ] then case "${newarch}" in i386|i586|i686) if [ "${basearch}" = "i386" -o "${basearch}" = "x86_64" ] then # Make the arch a generic x86 32 bit... arch=${newarch} basearch=i386 else basearch=bad fi ;; *) basearch=bad ;; esac if [ "${basearch}" = "bad" ] then echo "You cannot build a ${newarch} CentOS container on a ${arch} host. Sorry!" exit 1 fi fi # Allow the cache base to be set by environment variable cache_base=${LXC_CACHE_PATH:-"@LOCALSTATEDIR@/cache/lxc"}/centos/$basearch # Let's do something better for the initial root password. # It's not perfect but it will defeat common scanning brute force # attacks in the case where ssh is exposed. It will also be set to # expired, forcing the user to change it at first login. if [ "${root_password}" = "" ] then root_password=Root-${name}-${RANDOM} else # If it's got a ding in it, try and expand it! if [ $(expr "${root_password}" : '.*$.') != 0 ] then root_password=$(eval echo "${root_password}") fi # If it has more than 3 consecutive X's in it, feed it # through mktemp as a template. if [ $(expr "${root_password}" : '.*XXXX') != 0 ] then root_password=$(mktemp -u ${root_password}) fi fi if [ -z "${utsname}" ]; then utsname=${name} fi # This follows a standard "resolver" convention that an FQDN must have # at least two dots or it is considered a local relative host name. # If it doesn't, append the dns domain name of the host system. # # This changes one significant behavior when running # "lxc_create -n Container_Name" without using the # --fqdn option. # # Old behavior: # utsname and hostname = Container_Name # New behavior: # utsname and hostname = Container_Name.Domain_Name if [ $(expr "$utsname" : '.*\..*\.') = 0 ]; then if [[ "$(dnsdomainname)" != "" && "$(dnsdomainname)" != "localdomain" ]]; then utsname=${utsname}.$(dnsdomainname) fi fi type yum >/dev/null 2>&1 if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then echo "'yum' command is missing" exit 1 fi if [ -z "$path" ]; then path=$default_path/$name fi if [ -z "$release" ]; then if [ "$is_centos" -a "$centos_host_ver" ]; then release=$centos_host_ver elif [ "$is_redhat" -a "$redhat_host_ver" ]; then # This is needed to clean out bullshit like 6workstation and 6server. release=$(expr $redhat_host_ver : '\([0-9.]*\)') else echo "This is not a CentOS or Red Hat host and release is missing, defaulting to 7, use -R|--release to specify release" release=7 fi fi if [ "$(id -u)" != "0" ]; then echo "This script should be run as 'root'" exit 1 fi if [ -z "$rootfs_path" ]; then rootfs_path=$path/rootfs # check for 'lxc.rootfs.path' passed in through default config by lxc-create if grep -q '^lxc.rootfs.path' $path/config 2>/dev/null ; then rootfs_path=$(sed -e '/^lxc.rootfs.path\s*=/!d' -e 's/\s*#.*//' \ -e 's/^lxc.rootfs.path\s*=\s*//' -e q $path/config) fi fi config_path=$path cache=$cache_base/$release revert() { echo "Interrupted, so cleaning up" lxc-destroy -n $name # maybe was interrupted before copy config rm -rf $path echo "exiting..." exit 1 } trap revert SIGHUP SIGINT SIGTERM copy_configuration if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then echo "failed write configuration file" exit 1 fi install_centos if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then echo "failed to install CentOS" exit 1 fi configure_centos if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then echo "failed to configure CentOS for a container" exit 1 fi configure_centos_init if [ ! -z "$clean" ]; then clean || exit 1 exit 0 fi echo " Container rootfs and config have been created. Edit the config file to check/enable networking setup. " if [ ${root_display_password} = "yes" ] then echo "The temporary password for root is: '$root_password' You may want to note that password down before starting the container. " fi if [ ${root_store_password} = "yes" ] then echo "The temporary root password is stored in: '${config_path}/tmp_root_pass' " fi if [ ${root_prompt_password} = "yes" ] then echo "Invoking the passwd command in the container to set the root password. chroot ${rootfs_path} passwd " chroot ${rootfs_path} passwd else if [ ${root_expire_password} = "yes" ] then if ( mountpoint -q -- "${rootfs_path}" ) then echo "To reset the root password, you can do: lxc-start -n ${name} lxc-attach -n ${name} -- passwd lxc-stop -n ${name} " else echo " The root password is set up as "expired" and will require it to be changed at first login, which you should do as soon as possible. If you lose the root password or wish to change it without starting the container, you can change it from the host by running the following command (which will also reset the expired flag): chroot ${rootfs_path} passwd " fi fi fi