6bc5671491
Apply: git diff --full-index --binary anaconda-23.19.10-1..anaconda-25.20.9-1 And resolve conflicts. QubesOS/qubes-issues#2574
428 lines
18 KiB
Markdown
428 lines
18 KiB
Markdown
# Driver Update Disks Developer Documentation
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_v1.0, Mon Feb 15 2016_
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This document describes implementation details of how Driver Update Disks
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(usually abbreviated DUD or DD) are loaded and used by the installer, as a
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reference for developers working on the code.
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**_NOTE: This is not a specification. Filenames, paths, and procedures may
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change without warning. Avoid contact with eyes and skin and avoid inhaling
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fumes. Keep out of reach of children and customers. Any resemblance to real
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code, living or dead is purely coincidental._**
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Most of the important code is in `driver_updates.py`, which uses the utilities
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from `utils/dd` to actually handle driver RPMs. There's also support code
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sprinkled through this directory and in the installer itself, which will be
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described below. But first...
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# A Quick Overview
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## What is a DUD?
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A DUD (Driver Update Disk) is a disk (or disk image - typically a `.iso` file)
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that contains some _metadata_ and one or more _repos_ which contain
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_driver RPMs_ and/or _installer enhancement RPMs_.
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## What are they for?
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These are used to add kernel modules and/or userspace programs to the installer
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*before* the installer's second stage is loaded. This is most commonly needed
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when trying to install onto a system whose disk (or network) controllers are
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not supported by the existing installer.
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## How does it work?
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Here's a short summary; please see below for important technical details of
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each part of the process.
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1. **Boot argument**: `inst.dd=<driverdisk>` specifies where to look for
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driver disks.
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2. **Automatic DUD handling**: If a disk partition labeled `OEMDRV` is found
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during startup (before `udev` settles) it's assumed to be a driver disk.
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3. **Interactive DUD selection**: The user may pass the argument `inst.dd`
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by itself to request interactive driver disk selection via a text menu.
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The user can choose a device to examine, pick an `.iso` image to load from
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(if multiple images are present), and choose individual drivers to load.
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4. **Driver RPM selection**: `dd_list` is used to list the contents of a DUD
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repo; it will only list RPMs that have one of these headers, matching the current kernel/installer version:
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* `Provides: kernel-modules <version-expr>`
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* `Provides: installer-enhancement <version-expr>`
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5. **Driver extraction**: For all matching RPMs, `dd_extract` extracts
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kernel modules and firmware (if the `kernel-modules` header was present)
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and binaries and libraries (if `installer-enhancement` was present)
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into the initrd and installer environment.
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6. **Driver loading**: After processing each DUD, `driver_updates.py` runs
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`depmod` and tries to manually `modprobe` all extracted drivers.
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7. **Repo copying and package listing**: `driver_updates.py` saves
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a list of the extracted package names and a copy of each DUD repo used into
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the installer environment. When `anaconda` runs, it enables any DUD repos
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it finds and adds all the named packages to the install transaction.
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# Overall design notes
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Here are a few things to keep in mind about the overall design of the DUD code.
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1. **The real action happens in the dracut initqueue**
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We need both `udev` and `dracut` to be processing events so that other
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dependent events are handled as usual.
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It's tempting to think that we should just handle DUDs *before* the
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initqueue mainloop so that the devices will magically already be present
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when we start the initqueue, as if we had started with them loaded.
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Except then you need to start running `udevadm trigger` and `udevadm settle`
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yourself to make the DUD devices appear, and then handle them manually, and
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now you've gone and re-written the dracut mainloop.
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Too clever is stupid. Just use initqueue.
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*Any long-running action that's going to be performed inside
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one of the dracut scriptlets should be using `/sbin/initqueue` to add items
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to the initqueue instead of executing the code itself in-place.*
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(See, for example, the way `driver-updates-genrules.sh` handles DUDs that
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are already present inside the initramfs.)
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2. **Let `dracut` handle devices and downloads**
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`dracut`'s main purpose in life is to bring up and initialize the devices
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needed to start the system (or, in this case, the installer image).
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Dracut's far better at handling disks and image mounting than Python is,
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and in general we want upstream dracut to be responsible for handling as
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much as possible of the bootup process. (That's kind of its job, after all.)
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*Anything that directly handles probing devices, downloading images,
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calling udev, etc. should be done in dracut scriptlets, not `driver_updates.py`.*
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(The current invocation of `udevadm` that's in there should be moved to a
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dracut scriptlet as soon as we can get away with changing it.)
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3. **Let `dd_list`/`dd_extract` handle driver RPMs**
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Neither `dracut` nor `driver_updates.py` should be messing with RPM headers,
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unpacking individual RPMs, etc.
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*Use `dd_list` to list the driver RPMs that are available in a repo, and
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use `dd_extract` to extract their contents. Don't mess with RPMs directly.*
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4. **Use as little Python as possible in initrd**
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If you know Python better than dracut or C, it might be tempting to solve
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problems by hacking on the Python parts of the DUD code.
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This leads to redundant code - and more code for us to maintain.
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`driver_updates.py`'s purpose is basically just to mount disks or disk
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images and find valid DUD repos therein (either automatically or
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interactively), and to save needed data to places where the installer
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can find it later.
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*Any other tasks should be handled in dracut scriptlets,
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the C utilities, or the main installer program.*
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(If you must add Python code, avoid pulling in new libraries. It
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makes building images much more fragile and bloats the initramfs.)
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# Boot arguments
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The `inst.dd` (or `dd`) boot argument is used to specify the location of a
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DUD to use, or to start interactive mode. It has three forms:
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1. Network URLs
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* example: `inst.dd=http://host.fake.domain/path/to/dd.iso`
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* Target should be a `.iso` (or other disk image) or driver `.rpm`
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* Target will be downloaded and then handled appropriately
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2. Block devices
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* examples: `inst.dd=cdrom:/dev/cdrom`, `inst.dd=hd:LABEL=DRIVERZ`
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* The `hd:` or `cdrom:` prefix is stripped
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* `TAG=VALUE` pairs are looked up using `blkid`
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3. Interactive mode
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* `inst.dd` (or `dd`)
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* Brings up text-based menu:
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1. Choose from a list of disk devices
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2. (if device contains multiple `.iso` images) Choose an `.iso`
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3. Choose from a list of drivers found in the DUD
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If one (or more) of these are specified, dracut will wait until all specified
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`inst.dd` items have been handled before starting the main installer image.
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# Automatic DUD handling (`OEMDRV`)
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If no `inst.dd` boot argument is specified, dracut watches for a readable
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disk partition labeled `OEMDRV`. If one appears before dracut finishes waiting
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for required devices, it is automatically handled like a normal DUD.
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## NOTE: device autodetection limitations
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Once the kernel's device probing finishes, `udev` waits for and processes
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responses from devices. Once every response has been handled and no more new
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responses arrive for a short period of time (no less than 500ms), dracut assumes
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all devices have been found and declares the system "settled".
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If there's no response from any `OEMDRV` device by then, the installer starts
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normally.
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_If the `OEMDRV` device is present but too slow to be autodetected, the user
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can boot with an argument like `inst.dd=hd:LABEL=OEMDRV` to indicate that
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dracut should expect an `OEMDRV` device and not start the installer until it
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appears._
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# DUD filesystem layout
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A driver updates disk may contain one or more driver repos, which are usually
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laid out as follows:
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/
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|rhdd3 - DD marker, contains the DD's description string
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/rpms
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| /i686 - contains RPMs for this arch and acts as package repo
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| /x86_64
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| /ppc64
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| /... - any other architecture the DD provides drivers for
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In other words, a DUD is a directory containing:
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1. a file named `rhdd3` (which contains the description for that DUD), and
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2. a directory named `rpms/`, under which there is at least one directory
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which matches the output of `uname -m`. Under there are RPMs that contain
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the special DUD headers (see the next section for more info).
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By convention, the "repos" under `rpms/` usually have yum metadata, but this is
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not required or enforced by the tools. If there's no metadata present,
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anaconda will run `createrepo` (or whatever the backend requires to make
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that directory usable).
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# Driver Updates RPM Headers
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When `dd_list` examines a driver disk, it checks the `Provides:` headers of
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each RPM to see if it provides either `kernel-modules` or
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`installer-enhancement`. RPMs that contain kernel modules or firmware must
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provide `kernel-modules`, and RPMs that contain libraries or binaries must
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provide `installer-enhancement`.
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## RPM header version matching
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Usually the packages will have a header like one of
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these:
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Provides: kernel-modules >= 3.6.9
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Provides: installer-enhancement >= 19
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The given version comparison expression is compared against either the running
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kernel or the installer version; if the kernel or installer matches the
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expression, then the RPM is considered valid for use inside this installer
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environment, and it will be listed by `dd_list`. Otherwise, `dd_list` (and,
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therefore, the rest of the DUD code) will ignore that RPM.
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Note that RPM operations are handled entirely by `dd_list` and `dd_extract`.
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### `installer-enhancement` versioning
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The DUD code does _not_ use the actual running installer version; instead it
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hardcodes the value `19`. I think (at some point) there _were_ DUDs in
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the wild that required this fact, and so it's just been left as-is.
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If the Anaconda Add-on API changes, this version should *definitely* be changed.
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# `dracut` component details
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This section describes all the various bits of driver update support code that
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live in `dracut` and how they get called or call each other.
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## cmdline: `parse-anaconda-dd.sh`
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If any `inst.dd=...` (or `dd=...`) arguments are found, this scriptlet parses
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their values and writes appropriate values to `/tmp/dd_disk`, `/tmp/dd_net`, or
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`/tmp/dd_interactive`, as follows:
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1. Values that start with `http:`, `https:`, `ftp:`, or `nfs:` are assumed to
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be network URLs and get written to `/tmp/dd_net`.
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2. Values of the form `hd:<dev>`, `cdrom:<dev>`, `file:<path>`, or `path:<path>`
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will have the `<dev>` or `<path>` part written to `/tmp/dd_disk`.
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3. Any other value is assumed to be a disk device, and therefore also gets
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written to `/tmp/dd_disk`.
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4. If a plain `dd` or `inst.dd` boot argument (without a value) is found, the
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word "menu" is written to `/tmp/dd_interactive`.
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Finally, the contents of all three files are combined to create `/tmp/dd_todo`.
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## pre-trigger: `driver-updates-genrules.sh`
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This sets up the udev rules and dracut scriptlets that will handle any DUDs
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that appear. Specifically:
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1. If `/tmp/dd_todo` exists, call `anaconda-lib.sh:wait_for_dd()` so that
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dracut will not start the installer until `/tmp/dd.done` exists.
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2. If `/tmp/dd_interactive` exists, add an initqueue item to start
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`driver-updates@.service` once the initqueue starts.
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3. If `/tmp/dd_interactive` does *not* exist, add a udev rule to automatically
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handle any `OEMDRV` devices that appear.
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4. For each item specified in `/tmp/dd_disk`, either:
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* create a udev rule that will execute `driver-updates --disk` when that
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disk appears, or
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* if the item is a DUD image that already exists in the initrd: add an
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initqueue item to run `driver-updates --disk` once the initqueue starts.
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5. Set up a `initqueue/finished` scriptlet to force dracut to stay in the
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initqueue until `initqueue/settled` runs at least once.
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## initqueue/online: `fetch-driver-net.sh`
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This script runs every time a network device comes online and tries to handle
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each image URL listed in in `/tmp/dd_net`, as follows:
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1. If the URL is listed in `/tmp/dd_net.done`, it is skipped
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2. The URL is fetched using dracut's `fetch_url` function
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3. If the image is successfully downloaded:
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* append URL to `/tmp/dd_net.done`
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* run `driver-updates --net URL IMAGE`
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4. Otherwise: if the fetch failed, warn the user and exit
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## `parse-kickstart`
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When `parse-kickstart` handles a `driverdisk` command it emits the appropriate
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`inst.dd=` argument, which will then get parsed and handled as usual when
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the `run_kickstart` function does its thing (see `anaconda-lib.sh` for
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details on how `run_kickstart` works).
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There's two valid forms for the `driverdisk` command - here's how those get
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handled by `parse-kickstart`:
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| kickstart command | `parse-kickstart` output
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|--------------------------------|--------------------------
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| `driverdisk <partition>` | `inst.dd=hd:<partition>`
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| `driverdisk --source=<url>` | `inst.dd=<url>`
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Check the [kickstart documentation] for more info.
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[kickstart documentation]: https://github.com/rhinstaller/pykickstart/blob/master/docs/kickstart-docs.rst#driverdisk
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## initqueue: `driver-updates@.service`
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This service launches the interactive driver update menu.
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It handles hiding the `plymouth` splash screen, quieting kernel messages,
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and connecting the menu to the tty so that the user can select drivers.
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This gets started from the initqueue by `driver-updates-genrules.sh`,
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if interactive mode was requested.
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## initqueue: `driver_updates.py`
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Handles a single DUD request: extract and load drivers, save the DUD repo(s)
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for later use, and keep track of which requests have been handled. (Also
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handles the interactive mode - more on that below.)
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**NOTE:** inside the initrd environment this file is named
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`/bin/driver-updates`. (See `module-setup.sh` if you want to know more about
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what files get put where inside the initrd.)
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### Invocation
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For disk devices, `driver-updates-genrules.sh` sets up a udev rule that will
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run `/sbin/initqueue` to add an initqueue job which will run `driver-updates`.
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For initrd-embedded images, `driver-updates-genrules.sh` skips udev and runs
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`/sbin/initqueue` itself to add the job to the initqueue.
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For network images, `fetch-driver-net.sh` (in the `initqueue/online` hook) runs
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`driver-updates` itself.
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### Arguments
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* `driver-updates --disk PART DEVNODE`
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* `driver-updates --net URL LOCALFILE`
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In both cases, the first argument is the string provided by the user - either
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the partition specifier (like `LABEL=DRIVERS`) or the URL. This string will
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also be in `/tmp/dd_net` or `/tmp/dd_disk`, and `/tmp/dd_todo`.
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The second argument is the actual image or device node to be mounted and
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processed. Dracut is responsible for downloading images or finding the disk
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device and passing that to `driver-updates` here.
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In the case of `inst.dd=file:/dd.img`, both items will be `/dd.img`.
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### Driver Updates Disk Handling
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Here, roughly, is how `driver-updates` handles a DUD:
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1. Mount the disk (the `DEVNODE` or `LOCALFILE` argument above)
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2. For all valid `rhdd3` repos found, list the RPMs using `dd_list`
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* A valid repo is a directory containing a file named `rhdd3` and a
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subdirectory named `rpms/$ARCH`.
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(See [DUD filesystem layout](#dud-filesystem-layout), above)
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3. For all matching RPMs found, `dd_extract` the RPM into `/updates`
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* `/updates` is overlaid onto the installer image when we switch there
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4. If the package contains drivers, write the name of the package to
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`/run/install/dd_packages`
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5. If the current repo had any driver RPMs, copy it to
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`/run/install/DD-1` (`DD-2`, `DD-3`, etc.)
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6. Load all the drivers that were extracted:
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1. Copy the drivers and firmware to the `updates/` dirs:
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* `/lib/modules/$(uname -r)/updates/`
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* `/lib/firmware/updates/`
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2. Run `depmod -a` and then `modprobe -a <module names>`
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4. Append the `PART` or `URL` argument string to `/tmp/dd_finished`
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5. If every item in `/tmp/dd_todo` is now also in `/tmp/dd_finished`,
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create `/tmp/dd.done` so dracut knows it can exit the initqueue.
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### Bash helper scripts called from driver_updates.py
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* anaconda-ifdown
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* This script sets the interface down and removes all flags in dracut for
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future re-setting. This is useful for replacing existing network drivers.
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* find-net-intfs-by-driver
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* Find all network interfaces which depend on the given driver (command
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line argument), then return a list of the network interfaces.
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## pre-pivot: `anaconda-depmod.sh`
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If any drivers were installed or downloaded, run depmod on `$NEWROOT` so we can
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load the drivers later, if needed.
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(To determine whether drivers were installed it simply checks to see if
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`/run/install/DD-1` exists.)
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# Testing
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Testing the DUD code is a little tricky, since it's pretty hardware dependent.
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Here are some tools and resources that should help if you're trying to test the
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DUD code.
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## Integration tests & unit tests
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There are unit tests for `driver_updates.py` in
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`tests/dracut_tests/test_driver_updates.py`. Please do add test cases for
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any bugs that are found or new methods that get added.
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There are also some tests for `dd_list` and `dd_extract`, in
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`tests/dd_tests/dd_test.py`. These tests ensure that the utilities behave the
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way that `driver_updates.py` expects them to.
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(These tests run as part of the normal suite of tests that run during
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`make check`.)
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Finally, the [kickstart-tests] repo has at least one functional/integration
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test for the `driverdisk` command. It also contains a helper program,
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`mkdud.py`, which can be used to generate (fake) DUD images for test purposes.
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[kickstart-tests]: https://github.com/rhinstaller/kickstart-tests
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## Real-world DUD images
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Here's a Red Hat Knowledgebase article that links to some Red Hat-provided
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images: https://access.redhat.com/articles/64322 (Sadly, you have to log in to
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download them)
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# References
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Old driverdisc docs from the RHEL7 [anaconda source]:
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* [docs/driverdisc.rst]: describes the driver disc format and motivations for
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its design.
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* [dracut/README-dd]: developer documentation on the dd code in dracut.
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[anaconda source]: https://github.com/rhinstaller/anaconda
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[docs/driverdisc.rst]: https://github.com/rhinstaller/anaconda/blob/rhel7-branch/docs/driverdisc.rst
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[dracut/README-dd]: https://github.com/rhinstaller/anaconda/blob/rhel7-branch/dracut/README-dd
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