Ah crap. So I found out as to *why* it was doing it.

Seems that from HTML form input to creating the script the formatting messed up and added windows-style carriage returns.

A quick dos2unix before running the "--firstboot" script seems to have fixed the issue.

As always, the issue was between the chair and the computer :D

Thanks for the reply though!


On Fri, Oct 7, 2016 at 5:18 PM, Richard W.M. Jones <rjones@redhat.com> wrote:
On Fri, Oct 07, 2016 at 04:42:21PM -0400, Charlie Drage wrote:
> I apologize if this is not the appropriate place to contact you..

Adding the mailing list.

> Got a weird issue!
>
> So when I use --firstboot via virt-sysprep on a host, it's totally fine.
>
> However..
>
> In this scenario:
> 1. virt-sysprep an offline image
> 2. transfer said image from one node to another
> 3. bring it up via libvirt
>
> It errors out with:
> === Running /usr/lib/virt-sysprep/scripts/0001--tmp-292-firstboot ===
> /etc/init.d/virt-sysprep-firstboot: 35: /etc/init.d/virt-sysprep-firstboot:
> /usr/lib/virt-sysprep/scripts-done/0001--tmp-292-firstboot: not found
>
> My question is! When applying this "firstboot" script, is it required that
> it's brought up on the same host that virt-sysprep'd it?

No, there's no such requirement.

This could be a bug, but it's hard to say.  What version of
virt-sysprep?  What guest type & version?

Rich.

--
Richard Jones, Virtualization Group, Red Hat http://people.redhat.com/~rjones
Read my programming and virtualization blog: http://rwmj.wordpress.com
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