On Thu, Oct 27, 2016 at 3:57 PM, Martin Pitt <martin.p...@ubuntu.com> wrote:
> > cloud-init expects networking to be up, like 'networking.service' > before it runs.. > > > I think it needs to make up its mind -- why does it want to run > Before=network-online.target then? I thought the idea was that cloud-init > is able to *provide* a network configuration (through the YAML). It seems > to me that this might have to be split into two parts then -- one that can > provide network config which runs early and does not require networking, > and one that can use the network to configure other bits? > we have to do both. In the case that we have a local config which provides networking configuration, we can emit it, and then we want to "bring it up" In other cases, we may need to bring up fallback networking (ie, dhcp on eth0) to look for a metadata service on the network which also may provide network configuration (which we writeout) and then want to "bring it up" > > > So why shouldn't we use networkd-wait-online ? > > You can use the program. I said that it might not be the best idea to > use After=s-n-wait-online.service, as that would block the entire cloud- > init.service and with it the entire boot (as cloud-init.service has very > strong dependencies) if there is no network available. > cloud-init.service *requires* network; it's designed to block until then otherwise you just timeout trying to reach network endpoints like Openstack metadata service. The "hang" in UbuntuCore was primarily related to *not* providing a nocloud seed in the image; when it was booted without a seed and not disabled, it goes an *looks* for a seed, first local, then over the net. > > -- > You received this bug notification because you are subscribed to the bug > report. > https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1636912 > > Title: > systemd-networkd runs too late for cloud-init.service (net) > > To manage notifications about this bug go to: > https://bugs.launchpad.net/systemd/+bug/1636912/+subscriptions > -- You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu Touch seeded packages, which is subscribed to systemd in Ubuntu. https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1636912 Title: systemd-networkd runs too late for cloud-init.service (net) Status in systemd: Unknown Status in cloud-init package in Ubuntu: Triaged Status in systemd package in Ubuntu: Triaged Status in cloud-init source package in Xenial: New Status in systemd source package in Xenial: Triaged Bug description: Ubuntu Core 16 images using cloud-init fail to function when the DataSource is over the network (Like OpenStack) as networking is not yet available when cloud-init.service runs. cloud-init service unit deps look like this: [Unit] Description=Initial cloud-init job (metadata service crawler) DefaultDependencies=no Wants=cloud-init-local.service Wants=local-fs.target Wants=sshd-keygen.service Wants=sshd.service After=cloud-init-local.service After=networking.service Requires=networking.service Before=basic.target Before=dbus.socket Before=network-online.target Before=sshd-keygen.service Before=sshd.service Before=systemd-user-sessions.service Conflicts=shutdown.target Here's networkd unit deps: [Unit] Description=Network Service Documentation=man:systemd-networkd.service(8) ConditionCapability=CAP_NET_ADMIN DefaultDependencies=no # dbus.service can be dropped once on kdbus, and systemd-udevd.service can be # dropped once tuntap is moved to netlink After=systemd-udevd.service dbus.service network-pre.target systemd-sysusers.service systemd-sysctl.service Before=network.target multi-user.target shutdown.target Conflicts=shutdown.target Wants=network.target # On kdbus systems we pull in the busname explicitly, because it # carries policy that allows the daemon to acquire its name. Wants=org.freedesktop.network1.busname After=org.freedesktop.network1.busname And a critical-chain output: root@snap-test7:~# systemd-analyze critical-chain systemd-networkd Failed to get ID: Unit name systemd-networkd is not valid. The time after the unit is active or started is printed after the "@" character. The time the unit takes to start is printed after the "+" character. root@snap-test7:~# systemd-analyze critical-chain systemd-networkd.service The time after the unit is active or started is printed after the "@" character. The time the unit takes to start is printed after the "+" character. systemd-networkd.service +440ms └─dbus.service @11.461s └─basic.target @11.403s └─sockets.target @11.401s └─dbus.socket @11.398s └─cloud-init.service @10.127s +1.266s └─networking.service @9.305s +799ms └─network-pre.target @9.295s └─cloud-init-local.service @3.822s +5.469s └─local-fs.target @3.813s └─run-cgmanager-fs.mount @12.687s └─local-fs-pre.target @1.393s └─systemd-tmpfiles-setup-dev.service @1.116s +195ms └─kmod-static-nodes.service @887ms +193ms └─system.slice @783ms └─-.slice @721ms cloud-init would need networkd to run at or before 'networking.service' so it can raise networking to then find and use network-based datasources. # grep systemd /usr/share/snappy/dpkg.list ii libnss-resolve:amd64 229-4ubuntu11 amd64 nss module to resolve names via systemd-resolved ii libpam-systemd:amd64 229-4ubuntu11 amd64 system and service manager - PAM module ii libsystemd0:amd64 229-4ubuntu11 amd64 systemd utility library ii systemd 229-4ubuntu11 amd64 system and service manager ii systemd-sysv 229-4ubuntu11 amd64 system and service manager - SysV links # grep cloud-init /usr/share/snappy/dpkg.list ii cloud-init 0.7.8-201610260005-gf7a5756-0ubuntu1~trunk~ubuntu16.04.1 all Init scripts for cloud instances To manage notifications about this bug go to: https://bugs.launchpad.net/systemd/+bug/1636912/+subscriptions -- Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~touch-packages Post to : touch-packages@lists.launchpad.net Unsubscribe : https://launchpad.net/~touch-packages More help : https://help.launchpad.net/ListHelp