ansible: zfs tuning
[lttng-ci.git] / automation / preseed.cfg
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1### Localization
2# Preseeding only locale sets language, country and locale.
3d-i debian-installer/language string en
4d-i debian-installer/country string CA
5d-i debian-installer/locale string en_US.UTF-8
6# Optionally specify additional locales to be generated.
7#d-i localechooser/supported-locales en_US.UTF-8, nl_NL.UTF-8
8
9# Keyboard selection.
10# Disable automatic (interactive) keymap detection.
11d-i console-setup/ask_detect boolean false
12#d-i keyboard-configuration/modelcode string pc105
13d-i keyboard-configuration/layoutcode string us
14# To select a variant of the selected layout (if you leave this out, the
15# basic form of the layout will be used):
16#d-i keyboard-configuration/variantcode string dvorak
17
18### Network configuration
19# Disable network configuration entirely. This is useful for cdrom
20# installations on non-networked devices where the network questions,
21# warning and long timeouts are a nuisance.
22#d-i netcfg/enable boolean false
23
24# netcfg will choose an interface that has link if possible. This makes it
25# skip displaying a list if there is more than one interface.
26d-i netcfg/choose_interface select auto
27
28# To pick a particular interface instead:
29#d-i netcfg/choose_interface select eth1
30
31# If you have a slow dhcp server and the installer times out waiting for
32# it, this might be useful.
33#d-i netcfg/dhcp_timeout string 60
34
35# If you prefer to configure the network manually, uncomment this line and
36# the static network configuration below.
37#d-i netcfg/disable_autoconfig boolean true
38
39# If you want the preconfiguration file to work on systems both with and
40# without a dhcp server, uncomment these lines and the static network
41# configuration below.
42#d-i netcfg/dhcp_failed note
43#d-i netcfg/dhcp_options select Configure network manually
44
45# Static network configuration.
46#d-i netcfg/get_nameservers string 192.168.1.1
47#d-i netcfg/get_ipaddress string 192.168.1.42
48#d-i netcfg/get_netmask string 255.255.255.0
49#d-i netcfg/get_gateway string 192.168.1.1
50#d-i netcfg/confirm_static boolean true
51
52# Any hostname and domain names assigned from dhcp take precedence over
53# values set here. However, setting the values still prevents the questions
54# from being shown, even if values come from dhcp.
55d-i netcfg/get_hostname string unassigned-hostname
56d-i netcfg/get_domain string unassigned-domain
57d-i netcfg/get_hostname seen true
58d-i netcfg/get_domain seen true
59
60# Disable that annoying WEP key dialog.
61d-i netcfg/wireless_wep string
62# The wacky dhcp hostname that some ISPs use as a password of sorts.
63#d-i netcfg/dhcp_hostname string radish
64
65# If non-free firmware is needed for the network or other hardware, you can
66# configure the installer to always try to load it, without prompting. Or
67# change to false to disable asking.
68#d-i hw-detect/load_firmware boolean true
69
70### Network console
71# Use the following settings if you wish to make use of the network-console
72# component for remote installation over SSH. This only makes sense if you
73# intend to perform the remainder of the installation manually.
74#d-i anna/choose_modules string network-console
75#d-i network-console/password password r00tme
76#d-i network-console/password-again password r00tme
77# Use this instead if you prefer to use key-based authentication
78#d-i network-console/authorized_keys_url http://host/authorized_keys
79
80### Mirror settings
81# If you select ftp, the mirror/country string does not need to be set.
82#d-i mirror/protocol string ftp
83d-i mirror/country string manual
84d-i mirror/http/hostname string ca.archive.ubuntu.com
85d-i mirror/http/directory string /ubuntu
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86
87# Alternatively: by default, the installer uses CC.archive.ubuntu.com where
88# CC is the ISO-3166-2 code for the selected country. You can preseed this
89# so that it does so without asking.
90#d-i mirror/http/mirror select CC.archive.ubuntu.com
91
92# Suite to install.
93#d-i mirror/suite string squeeze
94# Suite to use for loading installer components (optional).
95#d-i mirror/udeb/suite string squeeze
96# Components to use for loading installer components (optional).
97#d-i mirror/udeb/components multiselect main, restricted
98
99### Clock and time zone setup
100# Controls whether or not the hardware clock is set to UTC.
101d-i clock-setup/utc boolean true
102
103# You may set this to any valid setting for $TZ; see the contents of
104# /usr/share/zoneinfo/ for valid values.
105d-i time/zone string US/Eastern
106
107# Controls whether to use NTP to set the clock during the install
108d-i clock-setup/ntp boolean true
109# NTP server to use. The default is almost always fine here.
110#d-i clock-setup/ntp-server string ntp.example.com
111
112### Partitioning
113## Partitioning example
114# If the system has free space you can choose to only partition that space.
115# This is only honoured if partman-auto/method (below) is not set.
116# Alternatives: custom, some_device, some_device_crypto, some_device_lvm.
117#d-i partman-auto/init_automatically_partition select biggest_free
118
119# Alternatively, you may specify a disk to partition. If the system has only
120# one disk the installer will default to using that, but otherwise the device
121# name must be given in traditional, non-devfs format (so e.g. /dev/hda or
122# /dev/sda, and not e.g. /dev/discs/disc0/disc).
123# For example, to use the first SCSI/SATA hard disk:
124d-i partman-auto/disk string
125# In addition, you'll need to specify the method to use.
126# The presently available methods are:
127# - regular: use the usual partition types for your architecture
128# - lvm: use LVM to partition the disk
129# - crypto: use LVM within an encrypted partition
130d-i partman-auto/method string regular
131
132# If one of the disks that are going to be automatically partitioned
133# contains an old LVM configuration, the user will normally receive a
134# warning. This can be preseeded away...
135d-i partman-lvm/device_remove_lvm boolean true
136# The same applies to pre-existing software RAID array:
137d-i partman-md/device_remove_md boolean true
138# And the same goes for the confirmation to write the lvm partitions.
139d-i partman-lvm/confirm boolean true
140
141# For LVM partitioning, you can select how much of the volume group to use
142# for logical volumes.
143#d-i partman-auto-lvm/guided_size string max
144#d-i partman-auto-lvm/guided_size string 10GB
145#d-i partman-auto-lvm/guided_size string 50%
146
147# You can choose one of the three predefined partitioning recipes:
148# - atomic: all files in one partition
149# - home: separate /home partition
150# - multi: separate /home, /usr, /var, and /tmp partitions
151#d-i partman-auto/choose_recipe select atomic
152
153# Or provide a recipe of your own...
154# If you have a way to get a recipe file into the d-i environment, you can
155# just point at it.
156#d-i partman-auto/expert_recipe_file string /hd-media/recipe
157
158d-i partman-basicfilesystems/no_swap boolean false
159
160# If not, you can put an entire recipe into the preconfiguration file in one
161# (logical) line. This example creates a small /boot partition, suitable
162# swap, and uses the rest of the space for the root partition:
163d-i partman-auto/expert_recipe string \
164 boot-root :: \
165 500 10000 1000000000 ext4 \
166 method{ format } format{ } \
167 use_filesystem{ } filesystem{ ext4 } \
168 mountpoint{ / } \
169 . \
170
171# If you just want to change the default filesystem from ext3 to something
172# else, you can do that without providing a full recipe.
173#d-i partman/default_filesystem string ext4
174
175# The full recipe format is documented in the file partman-auto-recipe.txt
176# included in the 'debian-installer' package or available from D-I source
177# repository. This also documents how to specify settings such as file
178# system labels, volume group names and which physical devices to include
179# in a volume group.
180
181# This makes partman automatically partition without confirmation, provided
182# that you told it what to do using one of the methods above.
183d-i partman-partitioning/confirm_write_new_label boolean true
184d-i partman/choose_partition select finish
185d-i partman/confirm boolean true
186d-i partman/confirm_nooverwrite boolean true
187
188## Partitioning using RAID
189# The method should be set to "raid".
190#d-i partman-auto/method string raid
191# Specify the disks to be partitioned. They will all get the same layout,
192# so this will only work if the disks are the same size.
193#d-i partman-auto/disk string /dev/sda /dev/sdb
194
195# Next you need to specify the physical partitions that will be used.
196#d-i partman-auto/expert_recipe string \
197# multiraid :: \
198# 1000 5000 4000 raid \
199# $primary{ } method{ raid } \
200# . \
201# 64 512 300% raid \
202# method{ raid } \
203# . \
204# 500 10000 1000000000 raid \
205# method{ raid } \
206# .
207
208# Last you need to specify how the previously defined partitions will be
209# used in the RAID setup. Remember to use the correct partition numbers
210# for logical partitions. RAID levels 0, 1, 5, 6 and 10 are supported;
211# devices are separated using "#".
212# Parameters are:
213# <raidtype> <devcount> <sparecount> <fstype> <mountpoint> \
214# <devices> <sparedevices>
215
216#d-i partman-auto-raid/recipe string \
217# 1 2 0 ext3 / \
218# /dev/sda1#/dev/sdb1 \
219# . \
220# 1 2 0 swap - \
221# /dev/sda5#/dev/sdb5 \
222# . \
223# 0 2 0 ext3 /home \
224# /dev/sda6#/dev/sdb6 \
225# .
226
227# For additional information see the file partman-auto-raid-recipe.txt
228# included in the 'debian-installer' package or available from D-I source
229# repository.
230
231# This makes partman automatically partition without confirmation.
232d-i partman-md/confirm boolean true
233d-i partman-partitioning/confirm_write_new_label boolean true
234d-i partman/choose_partition select finish
235d-i partman/confirm boolean true
236d-i partman/confirm_nooverwrite boolean true
237
238## Controlling how partitions are mounted
239# The default is to mount by UUID, but you can also choose "traditional" to
240# use traditional device names, or "label" to try filesystem labels before
241# falling back to UUIDs.
242#d-i partman/mount_style select uuid
243
244### Base system installation
245# Configure APT to not install recommended packages by default. Use of this
246# option can result in an incomplete system and should only be used by very
247# experienced users.
248#d-i base-installer/install-recommends boolean false
249
250# The kernel image (meta) package to be installed; "none" can be used if no
251# kernel is to be installed.
252#d-i base-installer/kernel/image string linux-generic
253
254### Account setup
255# Skip creation of a root account (normal user account will be able to
256# use sudo). The default is false; preseed this to true if you want to set
257# a root password.
258d-i passwd/root-login boolean false
259# Alternatively, to skip creation of a normal user account.
260d-i passwd/make-user boolean true
261
262# Root password, either in clear text
263#d-i passwd/root-password password r00tme
264#d-i passwd/root-password-again password r00tme
265# or encrypted using an MD5 hash.
266#d-i passwd/root-password-crypted password
267
268# To create a normal user account.
269d-i passwd/user-fullname string Jenkins User
270d-i passwd/username string jenkins
271# Normal user's password, either in clear text
272#d-i passwd/user-password password insecure
273#d-i passwd/user-password-again password insecure
274# or encrypted using an MD5 hash.
275d-i passwd/user-password-crypted password $1$svkdd48V$/ovKt1dnK18UIZAA4xt6/1
276# Create the first user with the specified UID instead of the default.
277#d-i passwd/user-uid string 1010
278# The installer will warn about weak passwords. If you are sure you know
279# what you're doing and want to override it, uncomment this.
280d-i user-setup/allow-password-weak boolean true
281
282# The user account will be added to some standard initial groups. To
283# override that, use this.
284#d-i passwd/user-default-groups string audio cdrom video
285
286# Set to true if you want to encrypt the first user's home directory.
287d-i user-setup/encrypt-home boolean false
288
289### Apt setup
290# You can choose to install restricted and universe software, or to install
291# software from the backports repository.
292#d-i apt-setup/restricted boolean true
293#d-i apt-setup/universe boolean true
294#d-i apt-setup/backports boolean true
295# Uncomment this if you don't want to use a network mirror.
296#d-i apt-setup/use_mirror boolean false
297# Select which update services to use; define the mirrors to be used.
298# Values shown below are the normal defaults.
299#d-i apt-setup/services-select multiselect security
300#d-i apt-setup/security_host string security.ubuntu.com
301#d-i apt-setup/security_path string /ubuntu
302
303# Additional repositories, local[0-9] available
304#d-i apt-setup/local0/repository string \
305# http://local.server/ubuntu squeeze main
306#d-i apt-setup/local0/comment string local server
307# Enable deb-src lines
308#d-i apt-setup/local0/source boolean true
309# URL to the public key of the local repository; you must provide a key or
310# apt will complain about the unauthenticated repository and so the
311# sources.list line will be left commented out
312#d-i apt-setup/local0/key string http://local.server/key
313
314# By default the installer requires that repositories be authenticated
315# using a known gpg key. This setting can be used to disable that
316# authentication. Warning: Insecure, not recommended.
317#d-i debian-installer/allow_unauthenticated boolean true
318
319### Package selection
320#tasksel tasksel/first multiselect ubuntu-desktop
321#tasksel tasksel/first multiselect lamp-server, print-server
322#tasksel tasksel/first multiselect kubuntu-desktop
323tasksel tasksel/first multiselect
324
325# Individual additional packages to install
326d-i pkgsel/include string openssh-server
327# Whether to upgrade packages after debootstrap.
328# Allowed values: none, safe-upgrade, full-upgrade
329#d-i pkgsel/upgrade select none
330
331# Language pack selection
332#d-i pkgsel/language-packs multiselect de, en, zh
333
334# Policy for applying updates. May be "none" (no automatic updates),
335# "unattended-upgrades" (install security updates automatically), or
336# "landscape" (manage system with Landscape).
337d-i pkgsel/update-policy select none
338
339# Some versions of the installer can report back on what software you have
340# installed, and what software you use. The default is not to report back,
341# but sending reports helps the project determine what software is most
342# popular and include it on CDs.
343#popularity-contest popularity-contest/participate boolean false
344
345# By default, the system's locate database will be updated after the
346# installer has finished installing most packages. This may take a while, so
347# if you don't want it, you can set this to "false" to turn it off.
348#d-i pkgsel/updatedb boolean true
349
350### Boot loader installation
351# Grub is the default boot loader (for x86). If you want lilo installed
352# instead, uncomment this:
353#d-i grub-installer/skip boolean true
354# To also skip installing lilo, and install no bootloader, uncomment this
355# too:
356#d-i lilo-installer/skip boolean true
357
358# With a few exceptions for unusual partitioning setups, GRUB 2 is now the
359# default. If you need GRUB Legacy for some particular reason, then
360# uncomment this:
361#d-i grub-installer/grub2_instead_of_grub_legacy boolean false
362
363# This is fairly safe to set, it makes grub install automatically to the MBR
364# if no other operating system is detected on the machine.
365d-i grub-installer/only_debian boolean true
366
367# This one makes grub-installer install to the MBR if it also finds some other
368# OS, which is less safe as it might not be able to boot that other OS.
369d-i grub-installer/with_other_os boolean true
370
371# Alternatively, if you want to install to a location other than the mbr,
372# uncomment and edit these lines:
373#d-i grub-installer/only_debian boolean false
374#d-i grub-installer/with_other_os boolean false
375#d-i grub-installer/bootdev string (hd0,0)
376# To install grub to multiple disks:
377#d-i grub-installer/bootdev string (hd0,0) (hd1,0) (hd2,0)
378
379# Optional password for grub, either in clear text
380#d-i grub-installer/password password r00tme
381#d-i grub-installer/password-again password r00tme
382# or encrypted using an MD5 hash, see grub-md5-crypt(8).
383#d-i grub-installer/password-crypted password [MD5 hash]
384
385# Use the following option to add additional boot parameters for the
386# installed system (if supported by the bootloader installer).
387# Note: options passed to the installer will be added automatically.
388#d-i debian-installer/add-kernel-opts string nousb
389
390### Finishing up the installation
391# During installations from serial console, the regular virtual consoles
392# (VT1-VT6) are normally disabled in /etc/inittab. Uncomment the next
393# line to prevent this.
394#d-i finish-install/keep-consoles boolean true
395
396# Avoid that last message about the install being complete.
397d-i finish-install/reboot_in_progress note
398
399# This will prevent the installer from ejecting the CD during the reboot,
400# which is useful in some situations.
401#d-i cdrom-detect/eject boolean false
402
403# This is how to make the installer shutdown when finished, but not
404# reboot into the installed system.
405#d-i debian-installer/exit/halt boolean true
406# This will power off the machine instead of just halting it.
407#d-i debian-installer/exit/poweroff boolean true
408
409### Preseeding other packages
410# Depending on what software you choose to install, or if things go wrong
411# during the installation process, it's possible that other questions may
412# be asked. You can preseed those too, of course. To get a list of every
413# possible question that could be asked during an install, do an
414# installation, and then run these commands:
415# debconf-get-selections --installer > file
416# debconf-get-selections >> file
417
418
419#### Advanced options
420### Running custom commands during the installation
421# d-i preseeding is inherently not secure. Nothing in the installer checks
422# for attempts at buffer overflows or other exploits of the values of a
423# preconfiguration file like this one. Only use preconfiguration files from
424# trusted locations! To drive that home, and because it's generally useful,
425# here's a way to run any shell command you'd like inside the installer,
426# automatically.
427
428# This first command is run as early as possible, just after
429# preseeding is read.
430#d-i preseed/early_command string anna-install some-udeb
431# This command is run immediately before the partitioner starts. It may be
432# useful to apply dynamic partitioner preseeding that depends on the state
433# of the disks (which may not be visible when preseed/early_command runs).
434#d-i partman/early_command \
435# string debconf-set partman-auto/disk "$(list-devices disk | head -n1)"
436# This command is run just before the install finishes, but when there is
437# still a usable /target directory. You can chroot to /target and use it
438# directly, or use the apt-install and in-target commands to easily install
439# packages and run commands in the target system.
440#d-i preseed/late_command string apt-install zsh; in-target chsh -s /bin/zsh
441d-i preseed/late_command string \
442mkdir /target/root/.ssh; \
443chmod 700 /target/root/.ssh; \
444wget http://tftp.internal.efficios.com/authorized_keys -O /target/root/.ssh/authorized_keys; \
445mkdir /target/home/jenkins/.ssh; \
446chmod 700 /target/home/jenkins/.ssh; \
447echo "ssh-rsa AAAAB3NzaC1yc2EAAAADAQABAAABAQDA3fwpioVLDoCQsQkYK5bOwPb8N0EXeYm2MleBQTfqxtKaqWWbmUtFXAiyclKHRspjcAiIKwwqLyhPopHBqJzmXnB0GsfGmxXJ6wSBgKJ4kdBVRM+nKlK0wCl1oQkFeV/Xl3jzt1Ey96XiNWlesfkvgcMCpsJzQ7/xRb9IcghskzlQbLOwDNir/156JgAYUYvOLqNCcE+xcgPxJGanfZDXTLkfBYxaeaB8isBPeEU6fhPvu/W055M1uB7E0qhcbFtuKCBu1Fg4jzsW4yDU8+ZB1b5mAXwEAuMbVGMrOf4rjtTpGpQd6XFsXpFT28NU1u5j2cUbtANJalkNDX/UY6XJ jenkins@ci-master-02" > /target/home/jenkins/.ssh/authorized_keys; \
448chown -R 1000:1000 /target/home/jenkins/.ssh;
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