From f215e02bf85f68d3a6106c2a1f4f7f063f819064 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Daniel Baumann Date: Thu, 11 Apr 2024 10:17:27 +0200 Subject: Adding upstream version 7.0.14-dfsg. Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann --- src/VBox/ValidationKit/docs/TestBoxImaging.txt | 368 +++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 368 insertions(+) create mode 100644 src/VBox/ValidationKit/docs/TestBoxImaging.txt (limited to 'src/VBox/ValidationKit/docs/TestBoxImaging.txt') diff --git a/src/VBox/ValidationKit/docs/TestBoxImaging.txt b/src/VBox/ValidationKit/docs/TestBoxImaging.txt new file mode 100644 index 00000000..9468d944 --- /dev/null +++ b/src/VBox/ValidationKit/docs/TestBoxImaging.txt @@ -0,0 +1,368 @@ + +Testbox Imaging (Backup / Restore) +================================== + + +Introduction +------------ + +This document is explores deploying a very simple drive imaging solution to help +avoid needing to manually reinstall testboxes when a disk goes bust or the OS +install seems to be corrupted. + + +Definitions / Glossary +====================== + +See AutomaticTestingRevamp.txt. + + +Objectives +========== + + - Off site, no admin interaction (no need for ILOM or similar). + - OS independent. + - Space and bandwidth efficient. + - As automatic as possible. + - Logging. + + +Overview of the Solution +======================== + +Here is a brief summary: + + - Always boot testboxes via PXE using PXELINUX. + - Default configuration is local boot (hard disk / SSD) + - Restore/backup action triggered by machine specific PXE config. + - Boots special debian maintenance install off NFS. + - A maintenance service (systemd style) does the work. + - The service reads action from TFTP location and performs it. + - When done the service removes the TFTP machine specific config + and reboots the system. + +Maintenance actions are: + - backup + - backup-again + - restore + - refresh-info + - rescue + +Possible modifier that indicates a subset of disk on testboxes with other OSes +installed. Support for partition level backup/restore is not explored here. + + +How to use +---------- + +To perform one of the above maintenance actions on a testbox, run the +``testbox-pxe-conf.sh`` script:: + + /mnt/testbox-tftp/pxeclient.cfg/testbox-pxe-conf.sh 10.165.98.220 rescue + +Then trigger a reboot. The box will then boot the NFS rooted debian image and +execute the maintenance action. On success, it will remove the testbox hex-IP +config file and reboot again. + + +Storage Server +============== + +The storage server will have three areas used here. Using NFS for all three +avoids extra work getting CIFS sharing right too (NFS is already a pain). + + 1. /export/testbox-tftp - TFTP config area. Read-write. + 2. /export/testbox-backup - Images and logs. Read-write. + 3. /export/testbox-nfsroot - Custom debian. Read-only, no root squash. + + +TFTP (/export/testbox-tftp) +============================ + +The testbox-tftp share needs to be writable, root squashing is okay. + +We need files from both PXELINUX and SYSLINUX to make this work now. On a +debian system, the ``pxelinux`` and ``syslinux`` packages needs to be +installed. We actually do this further down when setting up the nfsroot, so +it's possible to get them from there by postponing this step a little. On +debian 8.6.0 the PXELINUX files are found in ``/usr/lib/PXELINUX`` and the +SYSLINUX ones in ``/usr/lib/syslinux``. + +The initial PXE image as well as associated modules comes in three variants, +BIOS, 32-bit EFI and 64-bit EFI. We'll only need the BIOS one for now. +Perform the following copy operations:: + + cp /usr/lib/PXELINUX/pxelinux.0 /mnt/testbox-tftp/ + cp /usr/lib/syslinux/modules/*/ldlinux.* /mnt/testbox-tftp/ + cp -R /usr/lib/syslinux/modules/bios /mnt/testbox-tftp/ + cp -R /usr/lib/syslinux/modules/efi32 /mnt/testbox-tftp/ + cp -R /usr/lib/syslinux/modules/efi64 /mnt/testbox-tftp/ + + +For simplicity, all the testboxes boot using good old fashioned BIOS, no EFI. +However, it doesn't really hurt to be prepared. + +The PXELINUX related files goes in the root of the testbox-tftp share. (As +mentioned further down, these can be installed on a debian system by running +``apt-get install pxelinux syslinux``.) We need the ``*pxelinux.0`` files +typically found in ``/usr/lib/PXELINUX/`` on debian systems (recent ones +anyway). It is possible we may need one ore more fo the modules [1]_ that +ships with PXELINUX/SYSLINUX, so do copy ``/usr/lib/syslinux/modules`` to +``testbox-tftp/modules`` as well. + + +The directory layout related to the configuration files is dictated by the +PXELINUX configuration file searching algorithm [2]_. Create a subdirectory +``pxelinux.cfg/`` under ``testbox-tftp`` and create the world readable file +``default`` with the following content:: + + PATH bios + DEFAULT local-boot + LABEL local-boot + LOCALBOOT + +This will make the default behavior to boot the local disk system. + +Copy the ``testbox-pxe-conf.sh`` script file found in the same directory as +this document to ``/mnt/testbox-tftp/pxelinux.cfg/``. Edit the copy to correct +the IP addresses near the top, as well as any linux, TFTP and PXE details near +the bottom of the file. This script will generate the PXE configuration file +when performing maintenance on a testbox. + + +Images and logs (/export/testbox-backup) +========================================= + +The testbox-backup share needs to be writable, root squashing is okay. + +In the root there must be a file ``testbox-backup`` so we can easily tell +whether we've actually mounted the share or are just staring at an empty mount +point directory. + +The ``testbox-maintenance.sh`` script maintains a global log in the root +directory that's called ``maintenance.log``. Errors will be logged there as +well as a ping and the action. + +We use a directory layout based on dotted decimal IP addresses here, so for a +server with the IP 10.40.41.42 all its file will be under ``10.40.41.42/``: + +```` + The name of the testbox (empty file). Help finding a testbox by name. + +``testbox-info.txt`` + Information about the testbox. Starting off with the name, decimal IP, + PXELINUX style hexadecimal IP, and more. + +``maintenance.log`` + Maintenance log file recording what the maintenance service does. + +``disk-devices.lst`` + Optional list of disk devices to consider backuping up or restoring. This is + intended for testboxes with additional disks that are used for other purposes + and should touched. + +``sda.raw.gz`` + The gzipped raw copy of the sda device of the testbox. + +``sd[bcdefgh].raw.gz`` + The gzipped raw copy sdb, sdc, sde, sdf, sdg, sdh, etc if any of them exists + and are disks/SSDs. + + +Note! If it turns out we can be certain to get a valid host name, we might just + switch to use the hostname as the directory name instead of the IP. + + +Debian NFS root (/export/testbox-nfsroot) +========================================== + +The testbox-nfsroot share should be read-only and must **not** have root +squashing enabled. Also, make sure setting the set-uid-bit is allowed by the +server, or ``su` and ``sudo`` won't work + +There are several ways of creating a debian nfsroot, but since we've got a +tool like VirtualBox around we've just installed it in a VM, prepared it, +and copied it onto the NFS server share. + +As of writing debian 8.6.0 is current, so a minimal 64-bit install of it was +done in a VM. After installation the following modifications was done: + + - ``apt-get install pxelinux syslinux initramfs-tools zip gddrescue sudo joe`` + and optionally ``apt-get install smbclient cifs-utils``. + + - ``/etc/default/grub`` was modified to set ``GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT`` to + ``""`` instead of ``"quiet"``. This allows us to see messages during boot + and perhaps spot why something doesn't work on a testbox. Regenerate the + grub configuration file by running ``update-grub`` afterwards. + + - ``/etc/sudoers`` was modified to allow the ``vbox`` user use sudo without + requring any password. + + - Create the directory ``/etc/systemd/system/getty@tty1.service.d`` and create + the file ``noclear.conf`` in it with the following content:: + + [Service] + TTYVTDisallocate=no + + This stops getty from clearing VT1 and let us see the tail of the boot up + messages, which includes messages from the testbox-maintenance service. + + - Mount the testbox-nfsroot under ``/mnt/`` with write privileges. (The write + privileges are temporary - don't forget to remove them later on.):: + + mount -t nfs myserver.com:/export/testbox-nfsroot + + Note! Adding ``-o nfsvers=3`` may help with some NTFv4 servers. + + - Copy the debian root and dev file system onto nfsroot. If you have ssh + access to the NFS server, the quickest way to do it is to use ``tar``:: + + tar -cz --one-file-system -f /mnt/testbox-maintenance-nfsroot.tar.gz . dev/ + + An alternative is ``cp -ax . /mnt/. && cp -ax dev/. /mnt/dev/.`` but this + is quite a bit slower, obviously. + + - Edit ``/etc/ssh/sshd_config`` setting ``PermitRootLogin`` to ``yes`` so we can ssh + in as root later on. + + - chroot into the nfsroot: ``chroot /mnt/`` + + - ``mount -o proc proc /proc`` + + - ``mount -o sysfs sysfs /sys`` + + - ``mkdir /mnt/testbox-tftp /mnt/testbox-backup`` + + - Recreate ``/etc/fstab`` with:: + + proc /proc proc defaults 0 0 + /dev/nfs / nfs defaults 1 1 + 10.42.1.1:/export/testbox-tftp /mnt/testbox-tftp nfs tcp,nfsvers=3,noauto 2 2 + 10.42.1.1:/export/testbox-backup /mnt/testbox-backup nfs tcp,nfsvers=3,noauto 3 3 + + We use NFS version 3 as that works better for our NFS server and client, + remove if not necessary. The ``noauto`` option is to work around mount + trouble during early bootup on some of our boxes. + + - Do ``mount /mnt/testbox-tftp && mount /mnt/testbox-backup`` to mount the + two shares. This may be a good time to execute the instructions in the + sections above relating to these two shares. + + - Edit ``/etc/initramfs-tools/initramfs.conf`` and change the ``MODULES`` + value from ``most`` to ``netboot``. + + - Append ``aufs`` to ``/etc/initramfs-tools/modules``. The advanced + multi-layered unification filesystem (aufs) enables us to use a + read-only NFS root. [3]_ [4]_ [5]_ + + - Create ``/etc/initramfs-tools/scripts/init-bottom/00_aufs_init`` as + an executable file with the following content:: + + #!/bin/sh + # Don't run during update-initramfs: + case "$1" in + prereqs) + exit 0; + ;; + esac + + modprobe aufs + mkdir -p /ro /rw /aufs + mount -t tmpfs tmpfs /rw -o noatime,mode=0755 + mount --move $rootmnt /ro + mount -t aufs aufs /aufs -o noatime,dirs=/rw:/ro=ro + mkdir -p /aufs/rw /aufs/ro + mount --move /ro /aufs/ro + mount --move /rw /aufs/rw + mount --move /aufs /root + exit 0 + + - Update the init ramdisk: ``update-initramfs -u -k all`` + + Note! It may be necessary to do ``mount -t tmpfs tmpfs /var/tmp`` to help + this operation succeed. + + - Copy ``/boot`` to ``/mnt/testbox-tftp/maintenance-boot/``. + + - Copy the ``testbox-maintenance.sh`` file found in the same directory as this + document to ``/root/scripts/`` (need to create the dir) and make it + executable. + + - Create the systemd service file for the maintenance service as + ``/etc/systemd/system/testbox-maintenance.service`` with the content:: + + [Unit] + Description=Testbox Maintenance + After=network.target + Before=getty@tty1.service + + [Service] + Type=oneshot + RemainAfterExit=True + ExecStart=/root/scripts/testbox-maintenance.sh + ExecStartPre=/bin/echo -e \033%G + ExecReload=/bin/kill -HUP $MAINPID + WorkingDirectory=/tmp + Environment=TERM=xterm + StandardOutput=journal+console + + [Install] + WantedBy=multi-user.target + + - Enable our service: ``systemctl enable /etc/systemd/system/testbox-maintenance.service`` + + - xxxx ... more ??? + + - Before leaving the chroot, do ``mount /proc /sys /mnt/testbox-*``. + + + - Testing the setup from a VM is kind of useful (if the nfs server can be + convinced to accept root nfs mounts from non-privileged clinet ports): + + - Create a VM using the 64-bit debian profile. Let's call it "pxe-vm". + - Mount the TFTP share somewhere, like M: or /mnt/testbox-tftp. + - Reconfigure the NAT DHCP and TFTP bits:: + + VBoxManage setextradata pxe-vm VBoxInternal/PDM/DriverTransformations/pxe/AboveDriver NAT + VBoxManage setextradata pxe-vm VBoxInternal/PDM/DriverTransformations/pxe/Action mergeconfig + VBoxManage setextradata pxe-vm VBoxInternal/PDM/DriverTransformations/pxe/Config/TFTPPrefix M:/ + VBoxManage setextradata pxe-vm VBoxInternal/PDM/DriverTransformations/pxe/Config/BootFile pxelinux.0 + + - Create the file ``testbox-tftp/pxelinux.cfg/0A00020F`` containing:: + + PATH bios + DEFAULT maintenance + LABEL maintenance + MENU LABEL Maintenance (NFS) + KERNEL maintenance-boot/vmlinuz-3.16.0-4-amd64 + APPEND initrd=maintenance-boot/initrd.img-3.16.0-4-amd64 ro ip=dhcp aufs=tmpfs \ + boot=nfs root=/dev/nfs nfsroot=10.42.1.1:/export/testbox-nfsroot + LABEL local-boot + LOCALBOOT + + +Troubleshooting +=============== + +``PXE-E11`` or something like ``No ARP reply`` + You probably got the TFTP and DHCP on different machines. Try move the TFTP + to the same machine as the DHCP, then the PXE stack won't have to do any + additional ARP resolving. Google results suggest that a congested network + could use the ARP reply to get lost. Our suspicion is that it might also be + related to the PXE stack shipping with the NIC. + + + +----- + +.. [1] See http://www.syslinux.org/wiki/index.php?title=Category:Modules +.. [2] See http://www.syslinux.org/wiki/index.php?title=PXELINUX#Configuration +.. [3] See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aufs +.. [4] See http://shitwefoundout.com/wiki/Diskless_ubuntu +.. [5] See http://debianaddict.com/2012/06/19/diskless-debian-linux-booting-via-dhcppxenfstftp/ + + +----- + +:Status: $Id: TestBoxImaging.txt $ +:Copyright: Copyright (C) 2010-2023 Oracle Corporation. -- cgit v1.2.3