file header comments to there. Fix some bugs in passing.
* List packages for the various specific desktop tasks ahead of the non-key
packages for the general desktop task. Along with changes in tasksel 2.60
this should lead to a generally more useful set of packages on the desktop
CDs; instead of filling up with OOo, it will fill up with things specific
to the desktop environment.
* Updated task lists.
* Added support for hook scripts in a few places around the CD
creation process, to help people customise their CDs. Quite a
lot of refactoring needed in make_disc_trees.pl needed to do that.
* Removed more cruft:
+ old defs in CONF.sh
+ old defs and rules in the Makefile
+ tools/add_secured
debian-cd version 3.0.0. Highlights:
* Support now added for multi-arch CDs/DVDs, including mixed
binary/source discs. Multi-arch discs should be bootable on those
multiple arches, modulo boot-sector clashes. Extra support added
in boot-i386 and boot-amd64 to make the 2 main arches happily
co-exist.
* Disc sizing is now much more intelligent - sizes are defined
depending on the disk type chosen at the start, and discs are now
filled exactly to those sizes while files are added rather than
the old up-front guessing method. Equally, the metadata on the
disc (Packages, Packages.gz, Sources, Sources.gz, md5sums.txt) is
generated as much as possible while this is happening to make the
sizing code incredibly accurate. Using this method of disc sizing
means that customising discs should be much easier/safer - either
add custom contents at the start and debian-cd will fill the
remainder of the disc, or afterwards roll back the packages on the
disc and add extras later.
* Source is now treated as (almost) just another arch, with most of
the special casing for source hidden internally. If asking for
source-only discs, they will simply be built using all the
available sources. If combined with other arches, the sources will
automatically be chosen to match the binary packages. Meeting GPL
requirements was never so easy!
* Removed lots of old cruft to clean up the codebase:
+ non-US support
+ woody support
+ lots of old support scripts that have been made redundant
+ significantly simpler Makefile, much easier to follow
+ old boot-$ARCH.calc files for estimating boot-file sizes are now
(obviously) obsolete and therefore gone
md5sums in the installer suite as well as the archive suite in
case they're different. Also removed old woody support, to clean
up the code a little. Updated Makefile and update-cd to match the
command-line interface change.
* Improve support for different disk types. Specify DISKTYPE in CONF.sh,
and it will affect both the output name later (so it's now possible to
distinguish between CDs and DVDs). Defaults to CD if not otherwise
set. DISKTYPE will be used more in the future for sizing too, but that
merge can wait a while longer yet. Closes: #361422
* Use DISKTYPE and COMPLETE values to create the file .disk/cd_type for
the installer to use.
creates Packages files from the Makefile into tools/add_debs
* Split out the code that copies sources into the temporary trees and
creates Sources files from the Makefile into tools/add_source_packages
full CDs.
* Make the full CD have apt-mirror-setup in its udeb_exclude file, to avoid
that component being installed to satisfy apt-setup's dependency on it (I
hope), so that the user is not unncessarily asked for a mirror during a
full CD install, but is still asked for one during installs from the
smaller CDs.
and a temporary directory to work in, so it will avoid downloading the
Packages files from its hardcoded mirror, and work on amd64 and other
situations with a non-official Debian mirror. Neccessary since the new
version of debootstrap has dependency resolution enabled by default.
Only enable the rescue isolinux targets for etch.
I hope at least some of the etch stuff (like tools/boot/etch) can be used
for the daily CD builds that build using d-i daily builds.
manual from small CDs to save space. We will probably be adding several
new translations, and possibly PDFs, and that would use too much space
on the small CDs.
- Also make the README link to the manual on the Debian web site if
OMIT_MANUAL=1.
- Update the README to mention manual translations are available.
- Remove old kernel sources from interesting-fromcd23, and various other
removals and updates.
- Update the task lists and popcon again.
- Stop excluding 686 and 686-smp kernels, as these are probably the most
popular, and they fit on CD#1 now.
- Add 2.6 support to powerpc cds.
- Add yaboot to powerpc netinst cds as debootstrap no longer adds it.
- Update boot-sparc not to depend on a kernel version.
- Update debian-installer tasks once again.
The workaround consists in some hints added to rawlist so that the
dependencies are satisfied in a more clever way than list2cds does.
This should be fixed in a proper way on list2cds when time permits.
instructions, various references to woody, fixing the link to the LDP
home page, dropping reference to the basically dead non-us section,
removing confusing references to non-free being on the CD, dropping
references to dselect, etc.
- Fix layout of README.txt, adding missing <p>'s after headings.
- Drop README.mirrors and README.non-US from the CDs.
on the cdrom initrds.
- Switch from netcfg-static/dhcp to just netcfg.
- Split udeb_includes for businesscard and netinst; netinst does not
need choose-mirror, while businesscard does.
- Preserve timestamps when copying files into the CDs
- Make sure build.sh can run in -e (stop on error) mode
- Report if packages needed by debootstrap is missing on a CD
- Report how much space is reserved on each CD
- Handle boot-floppy directories without documentation
generates the md5sum of the template and adds it to the [Image] section.
A side efect is that the generation date apearing on the Info changes from
being the end date to being the start date. If this matters tell me and
I'll change it.
(including the one that comes with dpkg >= 1.10).
* Protect the call to add_secured by a stamp file. Closes: #147105
* Provide a customised isolinux image. We don't need to
recommend syslinux now.