The openbsd image is 20GB in size, but the automatic partitioning
done by the installer leaves /home with a mere ~3.5 GB of space,
wasting free space across many other partitions that are not
used by our build process:
openbsd$ df
Filesystem 512-blocks Used Avail Capacity Mounted on
/dev/sd0a 1229692 213592 954616 18% /
/dev/sd0k 7672220 40 7288572 0% /home
/dev/sd0d 1736604 24 1649752 0% /tmp
/dev/sd0f 4847676 2505124 2100172 54% /usr
/dev/sd0g 1326684 555656 704696 44% /usr/X11R6
/dev/sd0h 4845436 1445932 3157236 31% /usr/local
/dev/sd0j 10898972 4 10354020 0% /usr/obj
/dev/sd0i 3343644 4 3176460 0% /usr/src
/dev/sd0e 2601212 19840 2451312 1% /var
This change tells the installer todo custom partitioning with
4 GB on /, 256 MB swap, and the remaining ~15GB for /home
openbsd$ df
Filesystem 512-blocks Used Avail Capacity Mounted on
/dev/sd0a 7932412 4740204 2795588 63% /
/dev/sd0d 32164636 40 30556368 0% /home
This will avoid ENOSPC failures when tests that need to create
big files (disk images) run in parallel.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrangé <berrange@redhat.com>
---
tests/vm/openbsd | 27 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++-
1 file changed, 26 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-)