79 lines
3.1 KiB
HTML
79 lines
3.1 KiB
HTML
<html>
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<head>
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<title>debian-cd</title>
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</head>
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<body>
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<h1>debian-cd</h1>
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<h2>An attempt at documentation!</h2>
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<p>debian-cd is a small but quite complex package. On the surface, its
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job is simple - make CD images from a Debian archive. The details are
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rather more involved...</p>
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<h2>Overview - what goes on a CD?</h2>
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<p>There are several important items that make up a Debian
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CD. Depending on the type of CD, not all of them are needed.</p>
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<ul>
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<li><a href="volinfo.html">Volume information</a> (required)
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<li><a href="packages.html">Debian packages and/or source files</a> (optional)
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<li><a href="package-metadata.html">Metadata to reference those</a> (optional)
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<li><a href="d-i.html">Debian-Installer</a> (optional)
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<li><a href="booting.html">Scripts/binaries to make the CD bootable</a> (optional)
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</ul>
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<p>The only things that <strong>must</strong> be on a Debian CD for it
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to recognised as such are the volume info, the files that give some
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information about the CD itself. Everything else is strictly optional,
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but without anything else on the CD it won't be very useful!</p>
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<p>A normal installation CD will contain all five of the above
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sections, but other combinations can be useful too. A bootable
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business card CD will contain volume info, d-i and bootable files, but
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no actual packages or sources - the installer will download the bits
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it needs. An update CD will contain volume info, packages and package
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metadata - it's expected to be used just as a source of new packages
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for an existing system.</p>
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<p>For more information on the layout of the CD, see <a
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href="cd-contents.html">CD contents</a>.</p>
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<h2>Overview (again) - how does debian-cd work?</h2>
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<p>debian-cd is made up of a large central Makefile and lots of
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small(ish) helper scripts written in sh and perl. It depends on
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various other packages to do lots of the hard work, for example apt to
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calculate package dependencies and debootstrap to provide the list of
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packages needed for a base installation.</p>
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<p>A typical debian-cd run will involve:</p>
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<ul>
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<li>Setup in the configuration file <a href="conf.sh.html">CONF.sh</a>
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- which architecture(s), where to find files (local Debian mirror),
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temporary working location and output location are most important, but
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there are other config options.
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<li>Running a build wrapper script (build.sh or build_all.sh); the wrapper script will call various rules in the Makefile
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<li>Parse Packages files from the mirror to work out what packages are
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available
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<li>Make temporary trees, one for each output image
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<li>Set up volume information in each tree
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<li>Copy in boot files and d-i bits onto each CD where they are wanted
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<li>Copy documentation files onto CDs as required
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<li>Copy packages files onto each CD; generate Packages metadata
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files along the way
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<li>Generate checksums of the files on each CD
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<li>Run mkisofs to turn the temporary trees into ISO images and/or
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jigdo files
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</ul>
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<p>This is a <strong>rough</strong> guide only - see later for more
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details on each of the steps!</p>
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<hr>
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(c) Steve McIntyre <steve@einval.com>, December 2006. GPL v2<br>
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<a href="getting.html">Next - Getting debian-cd</a>
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</body>
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</html>
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