232 lines
9.5 KiB
Bash
Executable File
232 lines
9.5 KiB
Bash
Executable File
#!/bin/sh
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#-
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# Copyright (c) 2013-2015 Juan Romero Pardines.
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# Copyright (c) 2017 Google
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# All rights reserved.
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#
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# Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
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# modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
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# are met:
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# 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
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# notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
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# 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
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# notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
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# documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
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#
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# THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHOR ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR
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# IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES
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# OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED.
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# IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT,
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# INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT
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# NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
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# DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
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# THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
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# (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF
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# THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
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#-
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readonly PROGNAME=$(basename "$0")
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readonly ARCH=$(uname -m)
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readonly REQTOOLS="xbps-install xbps-reconfigure tar xz"
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# This source pulls in all the functions from lib.sh. This set of
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# functions makes it much easier to work with chroots and abstracts
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# away all the problems with running binaries with QEMU.
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# shellcheck source=./lib.sh
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. ./lib.sh
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# Die is a function provided in lib.sh which handles the cleanup of
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# the mounts and removal of temporary directories if the running
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# program exists unexpectedly.
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trap 'die "Interrupted! exiting..."' INT TERM HUP
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# Even though we only support really one target for most of these
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# architectures this lets us refer to these quickly and easily by
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# XBPS_ARCH. This makes it a lot more obvious what is happening later
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# in the script, and it makes it easier to consume the contents of
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# these down the road in later scripts.
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usage() {
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cat <<-EOH
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Usage: $PROGNAME [options] <arch>
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Generate a Peppermintos ROOTFS tarball for the specified architecture.
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Supported architectures:
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i686, i686-musl, x86_64, x86_64-musl,
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armv5tel, armv5tel-musl, armv6l, armv6l-musl, armv7l, armv7l-musl
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aarch64, aarch64-musl,
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mipsel, mipsel-musl,
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ppc, ppc-musl, ppc64le, ppc64le-musl, ppc64, ppc64-musl
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OPTIONS
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-b <system-pkg> Set an alternative base-system package (default: base-container-full)
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-c <cachedir> Set XBPS cache directory (default: ./xbps-cachedir-<arch>)
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-C <file> Full path to the XBPS configuration file
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-r <repo> Use this XBPS repository. May be specified multiple times
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-o <file> Filename to write the ROOTFS to (default: automatic)
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-x <num> Number of threads to use for image compression (default: dynamic)
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-h Show this help and exit
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-V Show version and exit
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EOH
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}
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# ########################################
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# SCRIPT EXECUTION STARTS HERE
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# ########################################
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# Set the default system package.
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SYSPKG="base-container-full"
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# Boilerplate option parsing. This script supports the bare minimum
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# needed to build an image.
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while getopts "b:C:c:hr:x:o:V" opt; do
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case $opt in
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b) SYSPKG="$OPTARG";;
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C) XBPS_CONFFILE="-C $OPTARG";;
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c) XBPS_CACHEDIR="--cachedir=$OPTARG";;
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r) XBPS_REPOSITORY="$XBPS_REPOSITORY --repository=$OPTARG";;
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x) COMPRESSOR_THREADS="$OPTARG" ;;
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o) FILENAME="$OPTARG" ;;
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V) version; exit 0;;
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h) usage; exit 0;;
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*) usage >&2; exit 1;;
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esac
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done
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shift $((OPTIND - 1))
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XBPS_TARGET_ARCH="$1"
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if [ -z "$XBPS_TARGET_ARCH" ]; then
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usage >&2
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exit 1
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fi
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# Set the XBPS cache
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set_cachedir
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# This is an aweful hack since the script isn't using privesc
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# mechanisms selectively. This is a TODO item.
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if [ "$(id -u)" -ne 0 ]; then
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die "need root perms to continue, exiting."
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fi
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# Before going any further, check that the tools that are needed are
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# present. If we delayed this we could check for the QEMU binary, but
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# its a reasonable tradeoff to just bail out now.
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check_tools
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# If the arch wasn't set let's bail out now, nothing else in this
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# script will work without knowing what we're trying to build for.
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if [ -z "$XBPS_TARGET_ARCH" ]; then
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echo "$PROGNAME: arch was not set!"
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usage >&2; exit 1
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fi
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# We need to operate on a tempdir, if this fails to create, it is
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# absolutely crucial to bail out so that we don't hose the system that
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# is running the script.
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ROOTFS=$(mktemp -d) || die "failed to create tempdir, exiting..."
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# This maintains the chain of trust, the keys in the repo are known to
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# be good and so we copy those. Why don't we just use the ones on the
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# host system? That's a good point, but there's no promise that the
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# system running the script is Peppermintos, or that those keys haven't been
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# tampered with. Its much easier to use these since the will always
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# exist.
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mkdir -p "$ROOTFS/var/db/xbps/keys"
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cp keys/*.plist "$ROOTFS/var/db/xbps/keys"
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# This sets up files that are important for XBPS to work on the new
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# filesystem. It does not actually install anything.
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run_cmd_target "xbps-install -S $XBPS_CONFFILE $XBPS_CACHEDIR $XBPS_REPOSITORY -r $ROOTFS"
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# Later scripts expect the permissions on / to be the canonical 755,
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# so we set this here.
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chmod 777 "$ROOTFS"
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# The binfmt setup and pseudofs mountpoints are needed for the qemu
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# support in cases where we are running things that aren't natively
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# executable.
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register_binfmt
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mount_pseudofs
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# With everything setup, we can now run the install to load the
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# system package into the rootfs. This will not produce a
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# bootable system but will instead produce a base component that can
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# be quickly expanded to perform other actions on.
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run_cmd_target "xbps-install -SU $XBPS_CONFFILE $XBPS_CACHEDIR $XBPS_REPOSITORY -r $ROOTFS -y $SYSPKG"
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# Enable en_US.UTF-8 locale and generate it into the target ROOTFS.
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# This is a bit of a hack since some glibc stuff doesn't really work
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# correctly without a locale being generated. While some could argue
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# that this is an arbitrary or naive choice to enable the en_US
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# locale, most people using Peppermintos are able to work with the English
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# language at least enough to enable thier preferred locale. If this
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# truly becomes an issue in the future this hack can be revisited.
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if [ -e "$ROOTFS/etc/default/libc-locales" ]; then
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LOCALE=en_US.UTF-8
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sed -e "s/\#\(${LOCALE}.*\)/\1/g" -i "$ROOTFS/etc/default/libc-locales"
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fi
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# The reconfigure step needs to execute code that's been compiled for
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# the target architecture. Since the target isn't garanteed to be the
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# same as the host, this needs to be done via qemu.
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info_msg "Reconfiguring packages for ${XBPS_TARGET_ARCH} ..."
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# This step sets up enough of the base-files that the chroot will work
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# and they can be reconfigured natively. Without this step there
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# isn't enough configured for ld to work. This step runs as the host
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# architecture, but we may need to set up XBPS_ARCH for the target
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# architecture (but only when compatible).
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if is_target_native "$XBPS_TARGET_ARCH"; then
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run_cmd_target "xbps-reconfigure --rootdir $ROOTFS base-files"
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else
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run_cmd "xbps-reconfigure --rootdir $ROOTFS base-files"
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fi
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# Now running as the target system, this step reconfigures the
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# base-files completely. Certain things just won't work in the first
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# pass, so this cleans up any issues that linger.
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run_cmd_chroot "$ROOTFS" "env -i xbps-reconfigure -f base-files"
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# Once base-files is configured and functional its possible to
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# configure the rest of the system.
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run_cmd_chroot "$ROOTFS" "xbps-reconfigure -a"
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# Set the default password. Previous versions of this script used a
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# chroot to do this, but that is unnecessary since chpasswd
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# understands how to operate on chroots without actually needing to be
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# chrooted. We also remove the lock file in this step to clean up the
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# lock on the passwd database, lest it be left in the system and
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# propogated to other points.
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info_msg "Setting the default root password ('root')"
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if [ ! -f "$ROOTFS/etc/shadow" ] ; then
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run_cmd_chroot "$ROOTFS" pwconv
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fi
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echo root:root | run_cmd_chroot "$ROOTFS" "chpasswd -c SHA512" || die "Could not set default credentials"
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rm -f "$ROOTFS/etc/.pwd.lock"
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# At this point we're done running things in the chroot and we can
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# clean up the shims. Failure to do this can result in things hanging
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# when we try to delete the tmpdir.
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cleanup_chroot
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# The cache isn't that useful since by the time the ROOTFS will be
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# used it is likely to be out of date. Rather than shipping it around
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# only for it to be out of date, we remove it now.
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rm -rf "$ROOTFS/var/cache/*" 2>/dev/null
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# Finally we can compress the tarball, the name will include the
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# architecture and the date on which the tarball was built.
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: "${FILENAME:=pep-${XBPS_TARGET_ARCH}-ROOTFS-$(date -u '+%Y%m%d').tar.xz}"
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run_cmd "tar cp --posix --xattrs --xattrs-include='*' -C $ROOTFS . | xz -T${COMPRESSOR_THREADS:-0} -9 > $FILENAME "
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# Now that we have the tarball we don't need the rootfs anymore, so we
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# can get rid of it.
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rm -rf "$ROOTFS"
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# Last thing to do before closing out is to let the user know that
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# this succeeded. This also ensures that there's something visible
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# that the user can look for at the end of the script, which can make
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# it easier to see what's going on if something above failed.
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info_msg "Successfully created $FILENAME ($XBPS_TARGET_ARCH)"
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