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1 .\" Copyright 2011 Lars Wirzenius <liw@liw.fi>
2 .\"
3 .\" This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
4 .\" it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
5 .\" the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
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15 .\"
16 .TH VMDEBOOTSTRAP 8
17 .SH NAME
18 vmdebootstrap \- install basic Debian system into virtual disk image
19 .SH SYNOPSIS
20 .B vmdebootstrap
21 --image=FILE --size=SIZE [--mirror=URL] [--distribution=NAME]
22 .PP
23 .B vmdebootstrap
24 [--output=FILE] [--verbose | --no-verbose] --image=FILE --size=SIZE
25 [--tarball=FILE] [--mirror=URL] [--arch=ARCH] [--distribution=NAME]
26 [--package=PACKAGE] [--custom-package=DEB] [--no-kernel]
27 [--enable-dhcp | --no-enable-dhcp] [--root-password=PASSWORD]
28 [--customize=SCRIPT] [--hostname=HOSTNAME] [--user=USER/PASSWORD]
29 [--serial-console | --no-serial-console] [--sudo | --no-sudo] [--owner=OWNER]
30 [--bootsize=BOOTSIZE] [--boottype=FSTYPE] [--roottype=FSTYPE] [--foreign=PATH]
31 [--variant=VARIANT] [--no-extlinux] [--squash] [--configure-apt]
32 [--grub] [--apt-mirror] [--pkglist]
33 .SH DESCRIPTION
34 .B vmdebootstrap
35 installs a basic Debian system into a virtual disk image,
36 for use with virtual machines,
37 such as KVM, Qemu, or VirtualBox.
38 It is like
39 .BR debootstrap (8),
40 which does the same thing, but puts the system into a directory,
41 for use with
42 .BR chroot (8).
43 (In fact,
44 .B vmdebootstrap
45 is a wrapper around
46 .BR debootstrap ).
47 .PP
48 You need to run
49 .B vmdebootstrap
50 as root. If the \-\-verbose option is not used, no output will be
51 sent to the command line. If the \-\-log option is not used, no
52 output will be sent to any log files either.
53 .PP
54 To use the image,
55 you probably want to create a virtual machine using your preferred
56 virtualization technology, such as
57 .BR kvm (1),
58 or
59 .BR qemu (1).
60 Configure the virtual machine to use the image you've created.
61 Then start the virtual machine, (see
62 .B EXAMPLES
63 )
64 and log into it via its console to configure it.
65 The image has an empty root password and will not have networking
66 configured by default. Set the root password before you configure
67 networking.
68 .SH BOOTLOADERS
69 Unless the \-\-no\-extlinux or \-\-grub options are specified, the
70 image will use
71 .BR extlinux (1)
72 as a boot loader.
73 .B bootsize
74 is not recommended when using
75 .B extlinux
76 - use grub instead.
77 Versions of grub2 in wheezy
78 can fail to install in the VM, at which point vmdebootstrap will fall back to
79 extlinux. It may still be possible to complete the installation of grub2 after
80 booting the VM as the problem may be related to the need to use loopback
81 devices during the grub-install operation. Details of the error will appear in the
82 vmdebootstrap log file, if enabled with the \-\-log option. Note that
83 .B grub-legacy
84 is not supported.
85 .SH INSTALLATION IMAGES AND VIRTUAL MACHINES
86 .B vmdebootstrap
87 is aimed principally at creating virtual machines, not installers or prebuilt
88 installation images. It is possible to create prebuilt installation images
89 for some devices but this depends on the specific device. (A 'prebuilt
90 installation image' is a single image file which can be written to physical
91 media in a single operation and which allows the device to boot directly
92 into a fully installed system - in a similar way to how a virtual machine
93 would behave.)
94 .PP
95 .B vmdebootstrap
96 assumes that all operations take place on a local image file, not a
97 physical block device / removable media.
98 .PP
99 .B vmdebootstrap
100 is intended to be used with tools like qemu on the command line to launch
101 a new virtual machine. Not all devices have virtualisation support in hardware.
102 .PP
103 This has implications for
104 .B u-boot
105 support in some cases. If the device can support reading the bootloader
106 from a known partition, like the beaglebone-black, then
107 .B vmdebootstrap
108 can provide space for the bootloader and the image will work as a prebuilt
109 installation image. If the device expects that the bootloader exists at a
110 specific offset and therefore requires that the bootloader is written as
111 an image not as a binary which can be copied into an existing partition,
112 .B vmdebootstrap
113 is unable to include that bootloader image into the virtual machine image.
114 .PP
115 The beagleboneblack.sh script in the examples/ directory provides a worked
116 example to create a prebuilt installation image. However, the beagleboneblack
117 itself does not support virtualisation in hardware, so is unable to launch
118 a virtual machine. Other devices, like the Cubietruck or Wandboard need
119 .B u-boot
120 at a predefined offset but can launch a virtual machine using qemu, so
121 the cubietruck and wandboard6q scripts in the examples/ directory relate
122 to building images for virtual machines once the device is already
123 installed and booted into a suitable kernel.
124 .PP
125 It is possible to wrap
126 .B vmdebootstrap
127 in such a way as to prepare a
128 .B physical block device
129 with a bootloader image and then deploy the bootstrap on top. However,
130 this does require physical media to be inserted and removed each time
131 the wrapper is executed. To do this, use the \-\-tarball option instead
132 of the \-\-image option. Then setup the physical media and bootloader
133 image manually, as required for the device, redefine the partitions to
134 make space for the rootfs, create a filesystem on the physical media and
135 unpack the
136 .B vmdebootstrap
137 tarball onto that filesystem. Once you have working media, an image can be
138 created using dd to read back from the media to an image file, allowing
139 other media to be written with a single image file.
140 .SH OPTIONS
141 .IP \-\-output=FILE
142 write output to FILE, instead of standard output
143 .IP \-\-verbose
144 report what is going on
145 .IP \-\-image=FILE
146 put created disk image in FILE
147 .IP \-\-size=SIZE
148 create a disk image of size SIZE (1000000000)
149 .IP \-\-tarball=FILE
150 tar up the disk's contents in FILE
151 .IP \-\-mirror=URL
152 use MIRROR as package source (http://cdn.debian.net/debian/)
153 .IP \-\-arch=ARCH
154 architecture to use (amd64)
155 .IP \-\-distribution=NAME
156 release to use (stable)
157 .IP \-\-package=PACKAGE
158 install PACKAGE onto system
159 .IP \-\-custom-package=DEB
160 install package in DEB file onto system (not from mirror)
161 .IP \-\-no-kernel
162 do not install a linux package
163 .IP \-\-enable-dhcp
164 enable DHCP on eth0
165 .IP \-\-root-password=PASSWORD
166 set root password
167 .IP \-\-customize=SCRIPT
168 run SCRIPT after setting up system. If the script does not exist in the current
169 working directory, /usr/share/vmdebootstrap/examples/ will be checked as a
170 fallback. The script needs to be executable and is passed the root directory of
171 the debootstrap as the only argument. Use chroot if you need to execute binaries
172 within the debootstrap.
173 .IP \-\-hostname=HOSTNAME
174 set name to HOSTNAME (debian)
175 .IP \-\-user=USER/PASSWORD
176 create USER with PASSWORD
177 .IP \-\-owner=OWNER
178 change the owner of the final image from root to the specified user.
179 .IP \-\-serial\-console
180 configure image to use a serial console
181 .IP \-\-serial-console-command
182 set the command to manage the serial console which will be appended to
183 /etc/inittab. Default is "/sbin/getty -L ttyS0 115200 vt100", resulting in a line
184 .BR "S0:23:respawn:/sbin/getty -L ttyS0 115200 vt100"
185 .IP \-\-sudo
186 install sudo, and if user is created, add them to sudo group
187 .IP \-\-bootsize=BOOTSIZE
188 If specified, create a /boot partition of the given size within the image.
189 Debootstrapping will fail if this is too small for the selected kernel package.
190 .IP \-\-boottype=FSTYPE
191 Filesystem to use for the /boot partition. (default ext2)
192 .IP \-\-roottype=FSTYPE
193 Filesystem to use for the / (root) partition. (default ext4)
194 .IP \-\-foreign=PATH
195 Path to the binfmt_handler to enable foreign support in debootstrap.
196 e.g. /usr/bin/qemu-arm-static - note foreign debootstraps may take a signficant
197 amount of time to complete and that debootstrap will retry five times if
198 packages fail to install by default.
199 .IP \-\-no\-extlinux
200 Skip installation of extlinux. needs a customize script to make the image
201 bootable. Useful for architectures where extlinux is not supportable.
202 Depending on how the image is to be booted, the \-\-mbr option may also be
203 necessary with extlinux.
204 .IP \-\-squash
205 Run mksquashfs against the final image using xz compression - requires
206 squashfs-tools to be installed. The final file will have the .squashfs suffix.
207 By default, mksquashfs is allowed to use all processors which may result
208 in high load. Run mksquashfs separately if you need to control the number
209 of processors used per run.
210 .IP \-\-configure\-apt
211 Use the specified mirror and distribution to create a suitable apt source inside
212 the VM. Can be useful if debootstrap fails to create it automatically.
213 .IP \-\-apt\-mirror
214 Use the specified mirror inside the image instead of the mirror used to
215 build the image. This is useful if you have a local mirror to make building
216 the image quicker but the image needs to run even if that mirror is not
217 available.
218 .IP \-\-grub
219 Disable extlinux installation and configure grub2 instead. grub2 will be added to
220 the list of packages to install. update-grub will be called once the debootstrap is
221 complete and grub-install will be called in the image.
222 .IP \-\-pkglist
223 Output a list of package names installed inside the image. Useful if you
224 need to track the relevant source packages used inside the image for
225 licence compliance.
226 .SH Configuration files and settings:
227 .IP \-\-dump-config
228 write out the entire current configuration
229 .IP \-\-no-default-configs
230 clear list of configuration files to read
231 .IP \-\-config=FILE
232 add FILE to config files
233 .SH Logging:
234 .IP \-\-log=FILE
235 write log entries to FILE (default is to not write log files at all);
236 use "syslog" to log to system log, or "none" to disable logging
237 .IP \-\-log-level=LEVEL
238 log at LEVEL, one of debug, info, warning, error, critical, fatal (default: debug)
239 .IP \-\-log-max=SIZE
240 rotate logs larger than SIZE, zero for never (default: 0)
241 .IP \-\-log-keep=N
242 keep last N logs (10)
243 .IP \-\-log-mode=MODE
244 set permissions of new log files to MODE (octal; default 0600)
245 .SH Peformance:
246 .IP \-\-dump-memory-profile=METHOD
247 make memory profiling dumps using METHOD, which is one of:
248 none, simple, meliae, or heapy (default: simple)
249 .IP \-\-memory-dump-interval=SECONDS
250 make memory profiling dumps at least SECONDS apart
251 .SH EXAMPLE
252 To create an image for the stable release of Debian:
253 .nf
254 .IP
255 sudo vmdebootstrap --image test.img --size 1g \\
256 --log test.log --log-level debug --verbose \\
257 --mirror http://mirror.lan/debian/
258 .PP
259 To run the test image, make sure it is writeable. Use the \-\-owner
260 option to set mode 0644 for the specified user or use chmod manually:
261 .IP
262 sudo chmod a+w ./test.img
263 .PP
264 Execute using qemu, e.g. on amd64 using qemu-system-x86_64:
265 .IP
266 qemu-system-x86_64 ./test.img
267 .PP
268 (This loads the image in a new window.)
269 .PP
270 For further examples, including u-boot support for beaglebone-black,
271 see /usr/share/vmdebootstrap/examples
272 .SH NOTES
273 If you get problems with the bootstrap process, run a similar bootstrap
274 call directly and chroot into the directory to investigate the failure.
275 The actual debootstrap call is part of the vmdebootstrap logfile. The
276 debootstrap logfile, if any, will be copied into your current working
277 directory on error.
278 .PP
279 .B debootstrap
280 will download all the apt archive files into the apt cache and does not
281 remove them before starting the configuration of the packages. This can
282 mean that debootstrap can fail due to a lack of space on the device if
283 the VM size is small. vmdebootstrap cleans up the apt cache once debootstrap
284 has finished but this doesn't help if the package unpack or configuration
285 steps use up all of the space in the meantime. Avoid this problem by
286 specifying a larger size for the image.
287 .PP
288 Note that if you are also using a separate /boot partition in your options to
289 .B vmdebootstrap
290 it may well be the boot partition which needs to be enlarged rather than
291 the entire image.
292 .PP
293 It is advisable to change the mirror in the example scripts to a mirror
294 closer to your location, particularly if you need to do repeated builds.
295 Use the \-\-apt\-mirror option to specify the apt mirror to be used inside
296 the image, after boot.
297 .PP
298 There are two types of examples for ARM devices available with
299 .B vmdebootstrap:
300 prebuilt installation images (like the beaglebone-black) and virtual
301 machine images (cubietruck and wandboard). ARM devices which do not
302 support hypervisor mode and which also rely on the bootloader being at
303 a specific offset instead of using a normal partition will
304 .B not
305 be supportable by vmdebootstrap. Similarly, devices which support
306 hypervisor will only be supported using virtual machine images, unless
307 the bootloader can be executed from a normal partition.
308 .PP
309 .SH "SEE ALSO"
310 .BR debootstrap (8)
311 ,
312 .BR qemu-system-x86_64 (1)
313 ,
314 .BR grub-install (8)
315 .
316 .SH BUGS
317 Please provide the config section of the logfile when reporting bugs, as well as the complete command line.