This document contains basic trouble shooting information for IPA.
In order to access a running IPA instance a user must be added or enabled on the image. Below we will cover several ways to do this.
To enable the core user on pre-built or CoreOS images a ssh public key will need to added. To do this you will need to:
SSH access can be added to DIB built IPA images with the dynamic-login [0] or the devuser element [1]
The dynamic-login element allows the operator to inject a SSH key when the image boots. Kernel command line parameters are used to do this.
dynamic-login element example:
devuser element example:
export DIB_DEV_USER_USERNAME=username
export DIB_DEV_USER_PWDLESS_SUDO=yes
export DIB_DEV_USER_AUTHORIZED_KEYS=$HOME/.ssh/id_rsa.pub
disk-image-create -o /path/to/custom-ipa debian ironic-agent devuser
If you need to use console access, passwords must be enabled there are a couple ways to enable this depending on how the IPA image was created:
CoreOS has support for auto login on the console [4]. This can be enabled by:
If you do not wish to enable auto login users can be added to CoreOS by editing the cloud-config.yml file and adding the following [2]:
users:
- name: username
passwd: $6$5s2u6/jR$un0AvWnqilcgaNB3Mkxd5... <example password hash>
groups:
- sudo
If using a pre-built image the cloud-config.yml must first be extracted:
mkdir tmp_folder
cd tmp_folder
zcat ../coreos_production_pxe_image-oem-stable-mitaka.cpio | cpio --extract --make-directories
To create a password hash the mkpasswd command can be used:
mkpasswd --method=SHA-512 --rounds=4096
After adding the user block with your favorite editor recompress the image:
find . | cpio --create --format='newc' |gzip -c -9 > ../coreos_production_pxe_image-oem-stable-mitaka.cpio.NEW.gz
An alternative to editing the embedded cloud-config.yml [4] file is to pass a new one on the kernel command line by:
Users wishing to use password access can be add the dynamic-login [0] or the devuser element [1]
The dynamic-login element allows the operator to change the root password dynamically when the image boots. Kernel command line parameters are used to do this.
dynamic-login element example:
Generate a ENCRYPTED_PASSWORD with the openssl passwd -1 command
Add rootpwd="$ENCRYPTED_PASSWORD" value on the pxe_append_params setting in /etc/ironic/ironic.conf
Restart the ironic-conductor with the command service ironic-conductor restart
Users can also be added to DIB built IPA images with the devuser element [1]
Example:
export DIB_DEV_USER_USERNAME=username
export DIB_DEV_USER_PWDLESS_SUDO=yes
export DIB_DEV_USER_PASSWORD=PASSWORD
disk-image-create -o /path/to/custom-ipa debian ironic-agent devuser
Debug logging can be enabled a several different ways. The easiest way is to add ipa-debug=1 to the kernel command line. To do this:
Another method is to edit the cloud-config.yml file. IPA’s instructions on building a custom image can be found at [3].
This essentially boils down to the following steps:
If the the system is ruuning and uses systemd then editing the services file will be required.
Retrieving the IPA logs will differ depending on which base image was used.
Operating system that do not use systemd (ie Ubuntu 14.04)
Operating system that do use systemd (ie Fedora 22, CoreOS)
Note
sudo is not required with the CoreOS images.
In some cases it is helpful to enable debug mode on a running node. If the system does not use systemd then IPA can be restarted directly:
sudo /usr/local/bin/ironic-python-agent [--debug]
If the system uses systemd then systemctl can be used to restart the service:
sudo systemctl restart ironic-python-agent.service
[0] | (1, 2) Dynamic-login DIB element: https://github.com/openstack/diskimage-builder/tree/master/elements/dynamic-login |
[1] | (1, 2, 3) DevUser DIB element: https://github.com/openstack/diskimage-builder/tree/master/elements/devuser |
[2] | Add User to CoreOS: https://coreos.com/os/docs/latest/adding-users.html |
[3] | IPA image build refference: https://github.com/openstack/ironic-python-agent/tree/master/imagebuild/coreos/README.rst |
[4] | (1, 2, 3) Booting CoreOS via PXE: https://coreos.com/os/docs/latest/booting-with-pxe.html |
[5] | Install docker engine: https://docs.docker.com/engine/installation/ |