Metal³ introduces the concept of BareMetalHost resource, which defines a physical host and its properties. The BareMetalHost embeds two well differentiated sections, the bare metal host specification and its current status.
The BareMetalHost's spec defines the desire state of the host. It contains mainly, but not only, provisioning details.
The bmc
fields contain the connection information for the BMC
(Baseboard Management Controller) on the host.
The sub-fields are
- address -- The URL for communicating with the BMC controller, based on the provider being used.
- credentialsName -- A reference to a secret containing the username and password for the BMC.
- disableCertificateVerification -- A boolean to skip certificate validation when true.
BMC URLs vary based on the type of BMC and the protocol used to communicate with them. See supported hardware guide for details.
A boolean indicating whether the host should be powered on (true) or off (false). Changing this value will trigger a change in power state on the physical host.
The MAC address of the NIC used for provisioning the host.
The boot mode of the host, defaults to UEFI
, can also be set
to legacy
for BIOS boot, or UEFISecureBoot
.
A reference to another resource that is using the host, it could be empty if the host is not being currently used. For example, a Machine resource when the host is being used by the machine-api.
A boolean indicating whether the host provisioning and deprovisioning are managed externally. When set:
- Power status can still be managed using the
online
field. - Hardware inventory will be monitored, but no provisioning or deprovisioning operations are performed on the host.
Holds details for the image to be deployed on a given host.
The sub-fields are
- url -- The URL of an image to deploy to the host.
- checksum -- The actual checksum or a URL to a file containing the checksum for the image at image.url.
- checksumType -- Checksum algorithms can be specified. Currently
only
md5
,sha256
,sha512
are recognized. Useauto
to auto-detect the algorithm from the value. If nothing is specified,md5
is assumed. - format -- This is the disk format of the image. It can be one of
raw
,qcow2
,vdi
,vmdk
,live-iso
or be left unset. Setting it to raw enables raw image streaming in Ironic agent for that image. Setting it to live-iso enables iso images to live boot without deploying to disk, in this case the checksum fields are ignored.
Even though the image sub-fields are required by Ironic,
when the host provisioning is managed externally via externallyProvisioned: true
,
and power control isn't needed, the fields can be left empty.
A reference to the Secret containing the cloudinit user data and its namespace, so it can be attached to the host before it boots for configuring different aspects of the OS (like networking, storage, ...).
A reference to the Secret containing the network configuration data (e.g. network_data.json) and its namespace, so it can be attached to the host before it boots to set network up
A human-provided string to help identify the host.
This field is deprecated. See rootDeviceHints instead.
The name of the hardware profile to use. The following are the current
supported hardwareProfile
settings and their corresponding root
devices.
hardwareProfile | Root Device |
---|---|
unknown |
/dev/sda |
libvirt |
/dev/vda |
dell |
HCTL: 0:0:0:0 |
dell-raid |
HCTL: 0:2:0:0 |
openstack |
/dev/vdb |
NOTE: These are subject to change.
This field contains the information about the RAID configuration for bare metal servers.
The sub-fields are:
- hardwareRAIDVolumes -- It contains the list of logical disks for hardware
RAID. If rootDeviceHints isn't used, the first volume is the root volume.
Furthermore, it defines the desired configuration of volume in hardware RAID.
- level -- RAID level for the logical disk. The following levels are
supported:
0
,1
,2
,5
,6
,1+0
,5+0
,6+0
. - name -- Name of the volume. Should be unique within the server. If not specified, volume name will be auto-generated.
- numberOfPhysicalDisks -- Integer, number of physical disks to use for the logical disk. Defaults to minimum number of disks required for the particular RAID level.
- physicalDisks -- List of names of physical disks (Strings). This is an
optional field. If specified, the
controller
field must be specified too. - controller -- String, Name of the RAID controller to be used in the hardware RAID volume. Optional field.
- rotational -- If true, select only rotational disks, if false - only solid-state and NVMe. Any disk types are used by default.
- sizeGibibytes -- Size (Integer) of the logical disk to be created in GiB. If unspecified or set to 0, the maximum capacity of disk will be used for logical disk.
- level -- RAID level for the logical disk. The following levels are
supported:
- softwareRAIDVolumes -- It contains the list of logical disks for software
RAID. If rootDeviceHints isn't used, the first volume is the root volume. If
HardwareRAIDVolumes is set this item will be invalid. The number of created
Software RAID devices must be 1 or 2. If there is only one Software RAID
device, it has to be a RAID-1. If there are two, the first one has to be a
RAID-1, while the RAID level for the second one can be 0, 1, or 1+0. As the
first RAID device will be the deployment device, enforcing a RAID-1 reduces
the risk of ending up with a non-booting node in case of a disk failure.
Furthermore, SoftwareRAIDVolume defines the desired configuration of volume
in software RAID.
- level -- RAID level for the logical disk. The following levels are
supported:
0
,1
,1+0
. - physicalDisks -- A list of device hints, the number of items should be greater than or equal to 2.
- sizeGibibytes -- Size (Integer) of the logical disk to be created in GiB. If unspecified or set to 0, the maximum capacity of disk will be used for logical disk.
- level -- RAID level for the logical disk. The following levels are
supported:
If you do not set the RAID field, we will keep the current RAID configuration.
You can set the hardwareRAIDVolume
as an empty slice to clear the hardware
RAID configuration, for example:
spec:
raid:
hardwareRAIDVolume: []
NOTE: Currently the 'raid' field is only supported by ilo5/idrac/irmc.
NOTE: Do not try to simultaneously delete hardware RAID volumes and add software RAID volumes. Delete hardware RAID first, wait for the host to settle down, add software volumes afterwards.
NOTE: If you got following error message:
- raid settings are defined, but the node's driver %s does not support RAID.
- node's driver %s does not support hardware RAID.
You can solve it by:
- Keep raid field is nil.
- Keep hardwareRAIDVolumes field is nil.
If the error message you get isn't included the above, you may need to check whether the BM has a RAID controller and keep the raid field blank.
This field contains the information about the BIOS configuration for bare metal servers.
The sub-fields are:
- simultaneousMultithreadingEnabled -- Allows a single physical processor core to appear as several logical processors. This supports following options: true, false.
- sriovEnabled -- SR-IOV support enables a hypervisor to create virtual instances of a PCI-express device, potentially increasing performance. This supports following options: true, false.
- virtualizationEnabled -- Supports the virtualization of platform hardware. This supports following options: true, false.
NOTE: Currently the firmware
field is only supported by ilo4/ilo5/irmc
/idrac.
Guidance for how to choose the device to receive the image being provisioned. The storage devices are examined in the order they are discovered during inspection and the hint values are compared to the inspected values. The first discovered device that matches is used. Hints can be combined, and if multiple hints are provided then a device must match all hints in order to be selected.
The sub-fields are
- deviceName -- A string containing a Linux device name like
/dev/vda
. The hint must match the actual value exactly. - hctl -- A string containing a SCSI bus address like
0:0:0:0
. The hint must match the actual value exactly. - model -- A string containing a vendor-specific device identifier. The hint can be a substring of the actual value.
- vendor -- A string containing the name of the vendor or manufacturer of the device. The hint can be a substring of the actual value.
- serialNumber -- A string contianing the device serial number. The hint must match the actual value exactly.
- minSizeGigabytes -- An integer representing the minimum size of the device in Gigabytes.
- wwn -- A string containing the unique storage identifier. The hint must match the actual value exactly.
- wwnWithExtension -- A string containing the unique storage identifier with the vendor extension appended. The hint must match the actual value exactly.
- wwnVendorExtension -- A string containing the unique vendor storage indentifier. The hint must match the actual value exactly.
- rotational -- A boolean indicating whether the device should be
a rotating disk (
true
) or not (false
).
An interface to enable/disable automated cleaning during provisioning
and deprovisioning. When set to disabled
, automated cleaning will be
skipped, where metadata
(default value) enables it.
An advanced alternative to using image. Set the subfield method
to the name of a custom deploy step that is provided by your deployment
ramdisk. Most users will want to use image instead.
NOTE: setting either customDeploy.method
or image.url
triggers provisioning
of the host.
Moving onto the next block, the BareMetalHost's status which represents the host's current state. Including tested credentials, current hardware details, etc.
A reference to the secret and its namespace holding the last set of BMC credentials the system was able to validate as working.
A reference to the secret and its namespace holding the last set of BMC credentials that were sent to the provisioning backend.
The timestamp of the last time the status of the host was updated.
The status of the server. Value is one of the following:
- OK -- Indicates all the details for the host are known and working, meaning the host is correctly configured and manageable.
- discovered -- Implies some of the host's details are either not working correctly or missing. For example, the BMC address is known but the login credentials are not.
- error -- Indicates the system found some sort of irrecuperable error. Refer to the errorMessage field in the status section for more details.
Details of the last error reported by the provisioning backend, if any.
The details for hardware capabilities discovered on the host. These are filled in by the provisioning agent when the host is registered.
The sub-fields are
- nics -- List of network interfaces for the host.
- name -- A string identifying the network device, e.g. nic-1.
- mac -- The MAC address of the NIC.
- ip -- The IP address of the NIC, if one was assigned when the discovery agent ran.
- speedGbps -- The speed of the device in Gbps.
- vlans -- A list holding all the VLANs available for this NIC.
- vlanId -- The untagged VLAN ID.
- pxe -- Whether the NIC is able to boot using PXE.
- storage -- List of storage (disk, SSD, etc.) available to the host.
- name -- A string identifying the storage device, e.g. disk 1 (boot).
- rotational -- Either true or false, indicates whether the disk is rotational.
- sizeBytes -- Size of the storage device.
- serialNumber -- The device's serial number.
- cpu -- Details of the CPU(s) in the system.
- arch -- The architecture of the CPU.
- model -- The model string.
- clockMegahertz -- The speed in MHz of the CPU.
- flags -- List of CPU flags, e.g. 'mmx','sse','sse2','vmx', ...
- count -- Amount of these CPUs available in the system.
- firmware -- Contains BIOS information like for instance its vendor and version.
- systemVendor -- Contains information about the host's manufacturer, the productName and serialNumber.
- ramMebibytes -- The host's amount of memory in Mebibytes.
This field is deprecated. See rootDeviceHints instead.
The name of the hardware profile that matches the hardware discovered
on the host based on the details saved to the Hardware section. If
the hardware does not match any known profile, the value unknown
will be set on this field and is used by default. In practice, this
only affects which device the OS image will be written to. The
following are the current supported hardwareProfile
settings and
their corresponding root devices.
hardwareProfile | Root Device |
---|---|
unknown |
/dev/sda |
libvirt |
/dev/vda |
dell |
HCTL: 0:0:0:0 |
dell-raid |
HCTL: 0:2:0:0 |
openstack |
/dev/vdb |
NOTE: These are subject to change.
Boolean indicating whether the host is powered on.
See online on the BareMetalHost's Spec.
Settings related to deploying an image to the host.
- state -- The current state of any ongoing provisioning operation.
The following are the currently supported ones:
- <empty string> -- There is no provisioning happening, at the moment.
- unmanaged -- There is an insufficient information available to register the host.
- registering -- The host's BMC details are being checked.
- match profile -- The discovered hardware details on the host are being compared against known profiles.
- available -- The host is available to be consumed. (This state was previously known as ready.)
- preparing -- The existing configuration will be removed, and the new configuration will be set on the host.
- provisioning -- An image is being written to the host's disk(s).
- provisioned -- An image has been completely written to the host's disk(s).
- externally provisioned -- Metal³ does not manage the image on the host.
- deprovisioning -- The image is being wiped from the host's disk(s).
- inspecting -- The hardware details for the host are being collected by an agent.
- deleting -- The host is being deleted from the cluster.
- id -- The unique identifier for the service in the underlying provisioning tool.
- image -- The image most recently provisioned to the host.
- raid -- The list of hardware or software RAID volumes recently set.
- firmware -- The BIOS configuration for bare metal server.
- rootDeviceHints -- The root device selection instructions used for the most recent provisioning operation.
The following is a complete example from a running cluster of a BareMetalHost resource (in YAML), it includes its specification and status sections:
apiVersion: metal3.io/v1alpha1
kind: BareMetalHost
metadata:
creationTimestamp: "2019-09-20T06:33:35Z"
finalizers:
- baremetalhost.metal3.io
generation: 2
name: bmo-controlplane-0
namespace: bmo-project
resourceVersion: "22642"
selfLink: /apis/metal3.io/v1alpha1/namespaces/bmo-project/baremetalhosts/bmo-controlplane-0
uid: 92b2f77a-db70-11e9-9db1-525400764849
spec:
bmc:
address: ipmi://10.10.57.19
credentialsName: bmo-controlplane-0-bmc-secret
bootMACAddress: 98:03:9b:61:80:48
consumerRef:
apiVersion: machine.openshift.io/v1beta1
kind: Machine
name: bmo-controlplane-0
namespace: bmo-project
externallyProvisioned: true
hardwareProfile: default
image:
checksum: http://172.16.1.100/images/myOSv1/myOS.qcow2.md5sum
url: http://172.16.1.100/images/myOSv1/myOS.qcow2
online: true
raid:
hardwareRAIDVolumes:
- level: "1"
sizeGibibytes: 200
rotational: true
firmware:
virtualizationEnabled: true
userData:
name: bmo-controlplane-user-data
namespace: bmo-project
networkData:
name: bmo-controlplane-network-data
namespace: bmo-project
metaData:
name: bmo-controlplane-meta-data
namespace: bmo-project
status:
errorMessage: ""
goodCredentials:
credentials:
name: bmo-controlplane-0-bmc-secret
namespace: bmo-project
credentialsVersion: "5562"
hardware:
cpu:
arch: x86_64
clockMegahertz: 2000
count: 40
flags: []
model: Intel(R) Xeon(R) Gold 6138 CPU @ 2.00GHz
firmware:
bios:
date: 12/17/2018
vendor: Dell Inc.
version: 1.6.13
hostname: bmo-controlplane-0.localdomain
nics:
- ip: 172.22.135.105
mac: "00:00:00:00:00:00"
model: unknown
name: eno1
pxe: true
speedGbps: 25
vlanId: 0
ramMebibytes: 0
storage: []
systemVendor:
manufacturer: Dell Inc.
productName: PowerEdge r460
serialNumber: ""
hardwareProfile: ""
lastUpdated: "2019-09-20T07:03:23Z"
operationalStatus: OK
poweredOn: true
provisioning:
ID: a4438010-3fc6-4c5c-b570-900bbe85da57
image:
checksum: ""
url: ""
state: externally provisioned
triedCredentials:
credentials:
name: bmo-controlplane-0-bmc-secret
namespace: bmo-project
credentialsVersion: "5562"
And here is the secret bmo-controlplane-0-bmc-secret
holding the host's
BMC credentials, base64 encoded:
$echo -n 'admin' | base64
YWRtaW4=
$echo -n 'password' | base64
cGFzc3dvcmQ=
Copy the above base64 encoded username and password pair and paste it into the yaml as mentioned below.
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: bmo-controlplane-0-bmc-secret
type: Opaque
data:
username: YWRtaW4=
password: cGFzc3dvcmQ=
NOTE: After decoding the secret content, whitespace is stripped from the beginning and end before the username and password values are used.
Several conditions must be met in order to initiate provisioning.
- The host
spec.image.url
field must contain a URL for a valid image file that is visible from within the cluster and from the host receiving the image. - The host must have
online
set totrue
so that the operator will keep the host powered on. - The host must have all of the BMC details.
To initiate deprovisioning, clear the image URL from the host spec.
Hosts created without BMC details will be left in the unmanaged
state until the details are provided. Unmanaged hosts cannot be
provisioned and their power state is undefined.
It is possible to pause the reconciliation of a BareMetalHost object by adding
an annotation baremetalhost.metal3.io/paused
. Metal³ provider sets the
value of this annotation as metal3.io/capm3
when the cluster to which the
BareMetalHost belongs, is paused and removes it when the cluster is
not paused. If you want to pause the reconciliation of BareMetalHost you can
put any value on this annotation other than metal3.io/capm3
. Please make
sure that you remove the annotation only if the value of the annotation is
not metal3.io/capm3
, but another value that you have provided. Removing the
annotation will enable the reconciliation again.
It is possible to prevent management of a BareMetalHost object by adding
an annotation baremetalhost.metal3.io/detached
. This removes the host from
the provisioner, which prevents any management of the physical host (e.g
changing power state, or deprovisioning), but still allows the BMH status
to be updated unlike the paused
annotation. While in this state the
OperationalStatus field will be detached
but the provisioning state will
be unmodified. This API only has any effect for BareMetalHost resources
that are in either Provisioned
, ExternallyProvisioned
or Ready
/Available
state.
Please note only the existence of the annotation is important to treat the BMH as detached and the value of the annotation is always ignored.
A HostFirmwareSettings resource is used to manage BIOS settings for a host,
there is a one-to-one mapping with BareMetalHosts. A
HostFirmwareSettings resource is created when BIOS settings are read from
Ironic as the host moves to the Ready state. These settings are the complete
actual BIOS configuration names returned from the BMC, typically 100-200
settings per host, as compared to the three vendor-independent fields stored in
the BareMetalHosts firmware
field.
The HostFirmwareSettings's spec defines the desired BIOS settings. These settings will be sent to Ironic as part of clean-steps for update to the BMC when the host goes through cleaning, i.e. when the BareMetalHosts go through the Preparing state.
The settings
are an array of name/value pairs for the BIOS settings.
The names must match the names read from Ironic and stored in the status
field. The values must be within the limits as defined in the FirmwareSchema.
Only settings which are not defined as ReadOnly
or Unique
(such as
SerialNumbers) will be accepted.
The HostFirmwareSettings's status defines the actual BIOS settings read from Ironic.
Schema
is a reference to a FirmwareSchema resource that describes each
BIOS setting by type and configurable limits for the type.
The settings
are an array of name/value pairs listing the complete set
of BIOS settings retrieved from Ironic.
conditions
reflects the status of the fields in the spec. Possible
conditions are:
- Valid -- When set to True indicates that all settings in the spec are correct for names and values. This is also set to True when nothing is set in the spec. When set to False indicates that one or more names or values in the spec are incorrect, the actual error will be shown in the Events field.
- ChangeDetected -- Indicates whether or not settings in the spec are different than settings in the status. When set to True the settings that are different will be included in the clean-steps that are written to Ironic as part of cleaning.
The following is a complete example from a running cluster of a HostFirmwareSettings resource (in YAML), it includes its spec and status sections:
apiVersion: metal3.io/v1alpha1
kind: HostFirmwareSettings
metadata:
creationTimestamp: "2021-11-03T21:21:02Z"
generation: 1
name: ostest-worker-0
namespace: openshift-machine-api
ownerReferences:
- apiVersion: metal3.io/v1alpha1
blockOwnerDeletion: true
controller: true
kind: BareMetalHost
name: ostest-worker-0
uid: 87b08d19-b94c-4a29-901a-67890d9eb843
resourceVersion: "24688"
uid: 293a351b-1743-437d-abed-da53d41d8804
spec:
settings: {}
status:
conditions:
- lastTransitionTime: "2021-11-03T21:21:54Z"
message: ""
observedGeneration: 1
reason: Success
status: "False"
type: ChangeDetected
- lastTransitionTime: "2021-11-03T21:21:54Z"
message: ""
observedGeneration: 1
reason: Success
status: "True"
type: Valid
schema:
name: schema-dc98d7c8
namespace: openshift-machine-api
settings:
BootMode: Uefi
EmbeddedSata: Raid
L2Cache: 10x256 KB
NicBoot1: NetworkBoot
NumCores: "10"
ProcTurboMode: Enabled
QuietBoot: "true"
SecureBootStatus: Enabled
SerialNumber: QPX12345
A FirmwareSchema resource contains the limits each setting, specific to each host. This data comes directly from the BMC via Ironic. It can be used to prevent misconfiguration of the HostFirmwareSettings spec field so that invalid values are not sent to the host. The FirmwareSchema has a unique identifier derived from its settings and limits. Multiple hosts may therefore have the same FirmwareSchema identifier so its likely that more than one HostFirmwareSettings reference the same FirmwareSchema when hardware of the same vendor and model are used.
A map of settings names and limits. The values returned in the limits depend on the type of the setting. The following fields are included:
- attribute_type -- The type of setting -
Enumeration
,Integer
,String
,Boolean
, orPassword
- allowable_values -- A list of allowable values when the
attribute_type
isEnumeration
- lower_bound -- The lowest allowed value when attribute_type is
Integer
- upper_bound -- The highest allowed value when attribute_type is
Integer
- min_length -- The shortest string length that the value can have when
attribute_type is
String
- max_length -- The longest string length that the value can have when
attribute_type is
String
- read_only -- The setting is ready only and cannot be modified
- unique -- The setting is specific to this host
The name of the vendor that this schema corresponds to.
The hardware model that this schema corresponds to.
apiVersion: metal3.io/v1alpha1
kind: FirmwareSchema
metadata:
creationTimestamp: "2021-11-03T21:21:54Z"
generation: 1
name: schema-dc98d7c8
namespace: openshift-machine-api
ownerReferences:
- apiVersion: metal3.io/v1alpha1
kind: HostFirmwareSettings
name: ostest-controlplane-1
uid: a991875d-9897-49f1-9d86-16ea9ed6c84f
- apiVersion: metal3.io/v1alpha1
kind: HostFirmwareSettings
name: ostest-worker-0
uid: 650c291c-3da7-4902-be6e-61979daea254
- apiVersion: metal3.io/v1alpha1
kind: HostFirmwareSettings
name: ostest-controlplane-0
uid: afc8f76c-0200-431c-ace0-9a6195d16fcd
- apiVersion: metal3.io/v1alpha1
kind: HostFirmwareSettings
name: ostest-controlplane-2
uid: f0c49fec-d493-40ac-9a86-56504cd47a74
- apiVersion: metal3.io/v1alpha1
kind: HostFirmwareSettings
name: ostest-worker-1
uid: 5fe2c773-5499-4a37-a26d-6f17dc02382f
resourceVersion: "19141"
uid: b442e01f-3724-4f14-a578-f0b99d296c95
spec:
hardwareModel: KVM (8.2.0)
hardwareVendor: Red Hat
schema:
BootMode:
allowable_values:
- Bios
- Uefi
attribute_type: Enumeration
read_only: false
EmbeddedSata:
allowable_values:
- Ata
- Ahci
- Raid
- "Off"
attribute_type: Enumeration
read_only: false
L2Cache:
attribute_type: String
max_length: 16
min_length: 0
read_only: false
unique: false
NicBoot1:
allowable_values:
- NetworkBoot
- Disabled
attribute_type: Enumeration
read_only: false
NumCores:
attribute_type: Integer
lower_bound: 10
read_only: true
unique: false
upper_bound: 20
ProcTurboMode:
allowable_values:
- Enabled
- Disabled
attribute_type: Enumeration
read_only: false
QuietBoot:
attribute_type: Boolean
read_only: false
unique: false
SecureBootStatus:
allowable_values:
- Enabled
- Disabled
attribute_type: Enumeration
read_only: true
SerialNumber:
attribute_type: String
max_length: 16
min_length: 0
read_only: false
unique: true
A HardwareData resource contains hardware specifications data of a specific host and it is tightly coupled to its owner resource BareMetalHost. The data in the HardwareData comes from Ironic after a successful inspection phase. As such, operator will create HardwareData resource for a specific BareMetalHost during transitioning phase from inspecting into available state of the BareMetalHost. HardwareData gets deleted automatically by the operator whenever its BareMetalHost is deleted. Deprovisioning of the BareMetalHost should not trigger the deletion of HardwareData, but during next provisioning it can be re-created (with the same name and namespace) with the latest inspection data retrieved from Ironic. HardwareData holds the same name and namespace as its corresponding BareMetalHost resource. Currently, HardwareData doesn't have Status subresource but only the Spec, which we cover next.
As you probably already noticed, the Spec of HardwareData is the same as .Status.hardware of the BareMetalHost. However, this behaviour is temporary and eventually we will drop .Status.hardware from BareMetalHost and only rely on HardwareData Spec. The reason for having duplication of inspection data at the moment is to avoid breaking the existing deployments.
A PreprovisioningImage resource is automatically created by baremetal-operator for each BareMetalHost to ensure creation of a preprovisioning image for it. In this context, a preprovisioning image is an ISO or initramfs file that contains the Ironic agent. The relevant parts of BareMetalHost are copied to the PreprovisioningImage Spec, the resulting image is expected to appear in the Status.
The baremetal-operator project contains a simple controller for
PreprovisioningImages that uses images provided in the environment
variables DEPLOY_ISO_URL
and DEPLOY_RAMDISK_URL
. More sophisticated
controllers may be written downstream (for example, the OpenShift
image-customization-controller).
The PreprovisioningImage's spec provides input for the image building process.
-
acceptFormats
: a list of accepted image formats:iso
orinitrd
. -
architecture
: the CPU architecture to build the image for, e.g.x86_64
. The default PreprovisioningImage controller does not use this field. -
networkData
: the name of a Secret with the network configuration for the image. The default PreprovisioningImage controller does not use this field.
The PreprovisioningImage's status provides information about the resulting image.
-
architecture
: the CPU architecture of the image, e.g.x86_64
. -
extraKernelParams
: additional kernel parameters that baremetal-operator will add to the node when PXE booting the initramfs image. Has no meaning for ISO images. -
format
: format of the image:iso
orinitrd
. Must be one of the formats provided inacceptFormats
. -
imageUrl
: the URL of the resulting image. -
kernelUrl
: the URL of the kernel to use together with the initramfs image. If not provided, baremetal-operator uses the default kernel image from the environment variables. Has no meaning for ISO images. -
networkData
: the name of a Secret with the network configuration of the image.