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Andrew Childs bd61216f55 ec2/create-amis.sh: register root device as /dev/xvda
For the case of blkfront drives, there appears to be no difference
between /dev/sda1 and /dev/xvda: the drive always appears as the
kernel device /dev/xvda.

For the case of nvme drives, the root device typically appears as
/dev/nvme0n1.  Amazon provides the 'ec2-utils' package for their first
party linux ("Amazon Linux"), which configures udev to create symlinks
from the provided name to the nvme device name. This name is
communicated through nvme "Identify Controller" response, which can be
inspected with:

  nvme id-ctrl --raw-binary /dev/nvme0n1 | cut -c3073-3104 | hexdump -C

On Amazon Linux, where the device is attached as "/dev/xvda", this
creates:

- /dev/xvda  -> nvme0n1
- /dev/xvda1 -> nvme0n1p1

On NixOS where the device is attach as "/dev/sda1", this creates:

- /dev/sda1  -> nvme0n1
- /dev/sda11 -> nvme0n1p1

This is odd, but not inherently a problem.

NixOS unconditionally configures grub to install to `/dev/xvda`, which
fails on an instance using nvme storage. With the root device name set
to xvda, both blkfront and nvme drives are accessible as /dev/xvda,
either directly or by symlink.
2019-11-02 05:58:58 +09:00
..
azure maintainers/create-azure.sh: remove hydra.nixos.org as binary cache (#41883) 2018-06-12 14:21:56 +02:00
cloudstack nixos/cloudstack-image: initial import 2018-11-17 20:40:11 +01:00
ec2 ec2/create-amis.sh: register root device as /dev/xvda 2019-11-02 05:58:58 +09:00
gce scripts/gce: make image name configurable 2019-10-25 10:10:42 +02:00
openstack Rename novaImage to openstackImage 2019-02-11 20:58:44 +01:00