manuel f971a99b64 | ||
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PepProPixMaps | ||
PepProTools | ||
aliases | ||
application | ||
artwork | ||
autostart | ||
data | ||
default-grub | ||
dracut | ||
face | ||
font | ||
grub | ||
icons | ||
isolinux | ||
keys | ||
lightdm | ||
os-release | ||
packer | ||
pmostools/peptools | ||
polkit | ||
pxelinux.cfg | ||
pylibraries | ||
theme | ||
wallpaper | ||
xfce | ||
COPYING | ||
Makefile | ||
README.md | ||
README.md.in | ||
build-x86-images.sh | ||
files_copy.sh | ||
installer.sh | ||
lib.sh | ||
live-installer.py | ||
mkimage.sh | ||
mklive.sh | ||
mknet.sh | ||
mkplatformfs.sh | ||
mkrootfs.sh | ||
release.sh | ||
version |
README.md
The Void Linux live image/rootfs generator and installer
Overview
This repository contains several utilities:
- mklive.sh - The Void Linux live image generator for x86
- build-x86-images.sh - Wrapper script to generate bootable and installable live images for x86
- mkrootfs.sh - The Void Linux rootfs generator for all platforms
- mkplatformfs.sh - The Void Linux filesystem tool to produce a rootfs for a particular platform
- mkimage.sh - The Void Linux image generator for ARM platforms
- mknet.sh - Script to generate netboot tarballs for Void
- installer.sh - The Void Linux el-cheapo installer for x86
- release.sh - interacts with GitHub CI to generate and sign images for releases
Workflow
Generating x86 live ISOs
To generate a live ISO like the officially-published ones, use
build-x86-images.sh. To generate a more basic live ISO
(which does not include things like void-installer
), use mklive.sh.
Generating ROOTFS tarballs
ROOTFS tarballs contain a basic Void Linux root filesystem without a kernel. These can be useful for doing a chroot install or for chroots and containers.
Use mkrootfs.sh to generate a Void Linux ROOTFS.
Generating platform-specific tarballs
Platform-specific ROOTFS tarballs, or PLATFORMFS tarballs, contain a basic Void Linux root filesystem including a kernel. These are commonly used for bootstrapping ARM systems or other environments that require platform-specific kernels, like Raspberry Pis.
First create a ROOTFS for the desired architecture, then use mkplatformfs.sh to generate a Void Linux PLATFORMFS.
Generating ARM images
Platform-specific filesystem images contain a basic filesystem layout (/
and
/boot
partitions), ready to be copied to the target drive with dd
. These are
not "live" images like those available on x86 platforms, and do not need
installation like live ISOs.
To generate these images, first create a PLATFORMFS for the desired platform, then use mkimage.sh to generate the image.
Dependencies
Note that void-mklive is not guaranteed to work on distributions other than Void Linux, or in containers.
- Compression type for the initramfs image (by default: liblz4 for lz4, xz)
- xbps>=0.45
- qemu-user-static binaries (for mkrootfs)
- bash
Kernel Command-line Parameters
void-mklive
-based live images support several kernel command-line arguments
that can change the behavior of the live system:
live.autologin
will skip the initial login screen ontty1
.live.user
will change the username of the non-root user from the defaultanon
. The password remainsvoidlinux
.live.shell
sets the default shell for the non-root user in the live environment.live.accessibility
enables accessibility features like the console screenreaderespeakup
in the live environment.console
can be set tottyS0
,hvc0
, orhvsi0
to enableagetty
on that serial console.locale.LANG
will set theLANG
environment variable. Defaults toen_US.UTF-8
.vconsole.keymap
will set the console keymap. Defaults tous
.
Examples:
live.autologin live.user=foo live.shell=/bin/bash
would create the userfoo
with the default shell/bin/bash
on boot, and log them in automatically ontty1
live.shell=/bin/bash
would set the default shell for theanon
user to/bin/bash
console=ttyS0 vconsole.keymap=cf
would enablettyS0
and set the keymap in the console tocf
locale.LANG=fr_CA.UTF-8
would set the live system's language tofr_CA.UTF-8
Usage
build-x86-images.sh
Usage: build-x86-images.sh [options ...] [-- mklive options ...]
Wrapper script around mklive.sh for several standard flavors of live images.
Adds void-installer and other helpful utilities to the generated images.
OPTIONS
-a <arch> Set XBPS_ARCH in the image
-b <variant> One of base, enlightenment, xfce, mate, cinnamon, gnome, kde,
lxde, or lxqt (default: base). May be specified multiple times
to build multiple variants
-d <date> Override the datestamp on the generated image (YYYYMMDD format)
-t <arch-date-variant>
Equivalent to setting -a, -b, and -d
-r <repo> Use this XBPS repository. May be specified multiple times
-h Show this help and exit
-V Show version and exit
Other options can be passed directly to mklive.sh by specifying them after the --.
See mklive.sh -h for more details.
mklive.sh
Usage: mklive.sh [options]
Generates a basic live ISO image of Void Linux. This ISO image can be written
to a CD/DVD-ROM or any USB stick.
To generate a more complete live ISO image, use build-x86-images.sh.
OPTIONS
-a <arch> Set XBPS_ARCH in the ISO image
-b <system-pkg> Set an alternative base package (default: base-system)
-r <repo> Use this XBPS repository. May be specified multiple times
-c <cachedir> Use this XBPS cache directory (default: ./xbps-cachedir-<arch>)
-k <keymap> Default keymap to use (default: us)
-l <locale> Default locale to use (default: en_US.UTF-8)
-i <lz4|gzip|bzip2|xz>
Compression type for the initramfs image (default: xz)
-s <gzip|lzo|xz> Compression type for the squashfs image (default: xz)
-o <file> Output file name for the ISO image (default: automatic)
-p "<pkg> ..." Install additional packages in the ISO image
-g "<pkg> ..." Ignore packages when building the ISO image
-I <includedir> Include directory structure under given path in the ROOTFS
-S "<service> ..." Enable services in the ISO image
-C "<arg> ..." Add additional kernel command line arguments
-T <title> Modify the bootloader title (default: Void Linux)
-v linux<version> Install a custom Linux version on ISO image (default: linux metapackage)
-K Do not remove builddir
-h Show this help and exit
-V Show version and exit
mkrootfs.sh
Usage: mkrootfs.sh [options] <arch>
Generate a Void Linux ROOTFS tarball for the specified architecture.
Supported architectures:
i686, i686-musl, x86_64, x86_64-musl,
armv5tel, armv5tel-musl, armv6l, armv6l-musl, armv7l, armv7l-musl
aarch64, aarch64-musl,
mipsel, mipsel-musl,
ppc, ppc-musl, ppc64le, ppc64le-musl, ppc64, ppc64-musl
OPTIONS
-b <system-pkg> Set an alternative base-system package (default: base-container-full)
-c <cachedir> Set XBPS cache directory (default: ./xbps-cachedir-<arch>)
-C <file> Full path to the XBPS configuration file
-r <repo> Use this XBPS repository. May be specified multiple times
-o <file> Filename to write the ROOTFS to (default: automatic)
-x <num> Number of threads to use for image compression (default: dynamic)
-h Show this help and exit
-V Show version and exit
mkplatformfs.sh
Usage: mkplatformfs.sh [options] <platform> <rootfs-tarball>
Generates a platform-specific ROOTFS tarball from a generic Void Linux ROOTFS
generated by mkrootfs.sh.
Supported platforms: i686, x86_64, GCP,
rpi-armv6l, rpi-armv7l, rpi-aarch64,
pinebookpro, pinephone, rock64
OPTIONS
-b <system-pkg> Set an alternative base-system package (default: base-system)
-c <cachedir> Set the XBPS cache directory (default: ./xbps-cachedir-<arch>)
-C <file> Full path to the XBPS configuration file
-k <cmd> Call '<cmd> <ROOTFSPATH>' after building the ROOTFS
-n Do not compress the image, instead print out the ROOTFS directory
-o <file> Filename to write the PLATFORMFS archive to (default: automatic)
-p "<pkg> ..." Additional packages to install into the ROOTFS
-r <repo> Use this XBPS repository. May be specified multiple times
-x <num> Number of threads to use for image compression (default: dynamic)
-h Show this help and exit
-V Show version and exit
mkimage.sh
Usage: mkimage.sh [options] <platformfs-tarball>
Generates a filesystem image suitable for writing with dd from a PLATFORMFS
tarball generated by mkplatformfs.sh. The filesystem layout is configurable,
but customization of the installed system should be done when generating the
PLATFORMFS. The resulting image will have 2 partitions, /boot and /.
OPTIONS
-b <fstype> /boot filesystem type (default: vfat)
-B <bsize> /boot filesystem size (default: 256MiB)
-r <fstype> / filesystem type (default: ext4)
-s <totalsize> Total image size (default: 2GiB)
-o <output> Image filename (default: guessed automatically)
-x <num> Number of threads to use for image compression (default: dynamic)
-h Show this help and exit
-V Show version and exit
Accepted size suffixes: KiB, MiB, GiB, TiB, EiB.
The <platformfs-tarball> argument expects a tarball generated by mkplatformfs.sh.
The platform is guessed automatically by its name.
mknet.sh
Usage: mknet.sh [options] <rootfs-tarball>
Generates a network-bootable tarball from a Void Linux ROOTFS generated by mkrootfs.
OPTIONS
-r <repo> Use this XBPS repository. May be specified multiple times
-c <cachedir> Use this XBPS cache directory (default: )
-i <lz4|gzip|bzip2|xz>
Compression type for the initramfs image (default: xz)
-o <file> Output file name for the netboot tarball (default: automatic)
-K linux<version> Install a custom Linux version on ISO image (default: linux metapackage)
-k <keymap> Default keymap to use (default: us)
-l <locale> Default locale to use (default: en_US.UTF-8)
-C "<arg> ..." Add additional kernel command line arguments
-T <title> Modify the bootloader title (default: Void Linux)
-S <image> Set a custom splash image for the bootloader (default: data/splash.png)
-h Show this help and exit
-V Show version and exit