On 1 Jul 2017, at 19:39, Jason King wrote:

There is also the digest command on SmartOs that should work (if it doesn’t that’d be good to know :) )— digest -a sha1 file….

Confirmed, digest also works. Example, done from a GZ:

# ls
base-32-17.1.0.zfs.gz  manifest.json

# grep sha manifest.json
      "sha1": "915bab804857f4784e3a10a5bd28aea63c17bb18",

# openssl sha1 base-32-17.1.0.zfs.gz
SHA1(base-32-17.1.0.zfs.gz)= 915bab804857f4784e3a10a5bd28aea63c17bb18

# digest -a sha1 base-32-17.1.0.zfs.gz
915bab804857f4784e3a10a5bd28aea63c17bb18


On July 1, 2017 at 10:56:34 AM, Paul Sture ([email protected]) wrote:

On 1 Jul 2017, at 16:36, Paul Jochum wrote:

Hi Shridhar:

I run smartos behind a proxy also (but an unauthenticated proxy
server), and I am able to run imgadm commands by using the following
syntax:

* http_proxy=http://proxy.company.com:8000 imgadm avail
* http_proxy=http://proxy.company.com:8000 imgadm import <UUID>

You would need to replace the "http://proxy.company.com:8000"; with
your proxy server, port, (and I believe you can put proxy
authentication as part of this also). I found that if I had exported
the http_proxy on a separate line, it did not work.

Also, I was able to download images from Joyent with the following
commands (I prefer this practice, it allows me to keep a copy of an
image, in case Joyent deletes an image, or when we have problems
connecting to the internet):

* You will need to know the UUID of the image (use the command to
find
that: "http_proxy=http://proxy.company.com:8000 imgadm avail" )
* Then, use that UUID to download the manifest:
o wget --no-check-certificate -O $UUID.manifest
https://images.joyent.com/images/$UUID
* and then the actual image:
o wget --no-check-certificate -O $UUID.zfs
https://images.joyent.com/images/$UUID/file
o (note the /file at the end)
* You can use the command "sha1sum $UUID.zfs" to check the sha1
checksum and compare it to the value found in the $UUID.manifest
file (grep sha1 $UUID.manifest)
o note: sha1sum is not part of the smartos distribution, I had to
find my own copy of it

Instead of looking for your own copy of sha1sum, you can use openssl.
e.g.

openssl sha1 $UUID.zfs

Also, once you have a SmartOS native zone up, you can do the wget from
there without the --no-check-certificate

I set up a downloads area which is accessible from both the native zone
and the global zone for this:

e.g.

in the GZ:

zfs create zones/image_downloads

and create the file add_image_downloads.json

{
"add_filesystems": [
{ "type": "lofs", "source": "/zones/image_downloads", "target":
"/image_downloads" }
]
}

vmadm update <uuid-of-native-zone> -f add_image_downloads.json

then (after restarting the native zone to bring that update in), in
the native zone:

cd /image_downloads
wget ...

Like you, I have occasional internet connectivity problems. Keeping a
local
copy of downloaded images can be very useful. It also gives you an
audit
trail if things go wrong.

* To install the image:
o imgadm install -m $UUID.manifest -f $UUID.zfs





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