It's the *Google* image that's required to have a 10 GB root
for performance reasons, not the EC2 image, as the comment says,
but the change was inadvertently applied to the EC2 image not
the Google one. This means our Google image is slow and our EC2
images are failing to be published as AMIs.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
Most of the Fedora Cloud-owned profiles are limited to a subset of
architectures, generally x86_64 and aarch64 (with the exception of
the VirtualBox Vagrant image, which is x86_64 only).
Azure provides an optional "Accelerated Networking" feature. Enabling
this feature when creating a VM enables SR-IOV and provides the guest
with a virtual function.
Supporting this requires two changes. Firstly, the kernel-modules
package is required as it contains the Mellanox drivers required for the
VF provided to the guest. Secondly, the interface needs to be ignored by
NetworkManager or it'll try and fail to bring up the device and the VM
will be unreachable except by serial console. If this is observed, it's
likely new hardware has been deployed and additional drivers need to be
added to the NetworkManager config.
See https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/virtual-network/accelerated-networking-overview
for details.