Why I did it
The current lazy installer relies on a filename sort for both unpack and configuration steps. When systemd services are configured [started] by multiple packages the order is by filename not by the declared package dependencies. This can cause the start order of services to differ between first-boot and subsequent boots. Declared systemd service dependencies further exacerbate the issue (e.g. blocking the first-boot script).
The current installer leaves packages un-configured if the package dependency order does not match the filename order.
This also fixes a trivial bug in [Build]: Support to use symbol links for lazy installation targets to reduce the image size #10923 where externally downloaded dependencies are duplicated across lazy package device directories.
How I did it
Changed the staging and first-boot scripts to use apt-get:
dpkg -i /host/image-$SONIC_VERSION/platform/$platform/*.deb
becomes
apt-get -y install /host/image-$SONIC_VERSION/platform/$platform/*.deb
when dependencies are detected during image staging.
How to verify it
Apt-get critical rules
Add a Depends= to the control information of a package. Grep the syslog for rc.local between images and observe the configuration order of packages change.
Why I did it
nameserver and domain entries from build system fsroot gets into sonic image.
How I did it
Clear /etc/resolv.conf before building image
How to verify it
Built image with it and verified with install that /etc/resolv.conf is empty
* Fix to improve hostname handling
If config_db.json is missing hostname entry, hostname-config.sh ends
up deleting existing entry too and hostname changes to default 'localhost'
* default hostname to 'sonic` if missing in config file
Why I did it
Change the path of sonic submodules that point to "Azure" to point to "sonic-net"
How I did it
Replace "Azure" with "sonic-net" on all relevant paths of sonic submodules
Pick up fix for CS00012263713 (mirrored packet with extra VLAN Tag) BRCM SAI 4.3.7.1-1
Preliminary tests look fine. BGP neighbors were all up with proper routes programmed
interfaces are all up
Manually ran the following test cases on 7050CX3 (TD3) T0 DUT and all passed:
fib/test_fib.py
acl/test_acl.py
arp/test_neighbor_mac_noptf.py
fdb/test_fdb.py
decap/test_decap.py
pc/test_lag_2.py
pc/test_po_cleanup.py
pc/test_po_update.py
everflow/test_everflow_ipv6.py
everflow/test_everflow_testbed.py
route/test_default_route.py
ipfwd/test_dip_sip.py
copp/test_copp.py
crm/test_crm.py
* [mux] skip mux operations during warm shutdown
- Enhance write_standby.py script to skip actions during warm shutdown.
- Expand the support to BGP service.
- MuX support was added by a previous PR.
- don't skip action during warm recovery
Signed-off-by: Ying Xie <ying.xie@microsoft.com>
* Make client indentity by AME cert
* Join k8s cluster by ipv6
* Change join test cases
* Test case bug fix
* Improve read node label func
* Configure kubelet and change test cases
* For kubernetes version 1.22.2
* Fix undefine issue
Signed-off-by: Yun Li <yunli1@microsoft.com>
After pinging any failed IPv6 neighbor entries, set the remaining failed/incomplete entries to a permanent INCOMPLETE state. This manual setting to INCOMPLETE prevents these entries from automatically transitioning to FAILED state, and since they are now incomplete any subsequent NA messages for these neighbors is able to resolve the entry in the cache.
Signed-off-by: Lawrence Lee <lawlee@microsoft.com>
Why I did it
The initial value has to be present for the state machines to work. In active-standby dual-tor scenario, or any hardware mux scenario, the value will be updtaed eventually with a delay.
However, in active-active dual-tor scenario, there is no other mechanism to initialize the value and get state machines started.
So this script will have to write something at start up time.
For active-active dualtor, 'active' is a more preferred initial value, the state machine will switch the state to standby soon if
link prober found link not in good state.
How I did it
Update the script to always provide initial values.
How to verify it
Tested on active-active dual-tor testbed.
Signed-off-by: Ying Xie ying.xie@microsoft.com
Avoid write_standby in warm restart context.
sign-off: Jing Zhang zhangjing@microsoft.com
Why I did it
In warm restart context, we should avoid mux state change.
How I did it
Check warm restart flag before applying changes to app db.
How to verify it
Ran write_standby in table missing, key missing, field missing scenarios.
Did a warm restart, app db changes were skipped. Saw this in syslog:
WARNING write_standby: Taking no action due to ongoing warmrestart.