X-Git-Url: https://git.siccegge.de//index.cgi?p=forks%2Fvmdebootstrap.git;a=blobdiff_plain;f=vmdebootstrap.8.in;h=56afc3c2fe0ca27f7489704f5dd4e8d2e0ac4558;hp=8b751fdc76f3386862e4c3dd49786ef351ea99b0;hb=HEAD;hpb=fc6c6212588c8456240360ca2bd8916cb127a464 diff --git a/vmdebootstrap.8.in b/vmdebootstrap.8.in index 8b751fd..56afc3c 100644 --- a/vmdebootstrap.8.in +++ b/vmdebootstrap.8.in @@ -29,7 +29,8 @@ vmdebootstrap \- install basic Debian system into virtual disk image [\-\-serial-console | \-\-no-serial-console] [\-\-sudo |\-\-no-sudo] [\-\-owner=OWNER] [\-\-bootsize=BOOTSIZE] [\-\-boottype=FSTYPE] [\-\-roottype=FSTYPE] [\-\-foreign=PATH] [\-\-variant=VARIANT] [\-\-no-extlinux] [\-\-squash] [\-\-configure-apt] -[\-\-grub] [\-\-apt-mirror] [\-\-pkglist] +[\-\-grub] [\-\-apt-mirror] [\-\-pkglist] [\-\-use\-efi] [\-\-efi\-size] +[\-\-debootstrapopts] .SH DESCRIPTION .B vmdebootstrap installs a basic Debian system into a virtual disk image, @@ -74,6 +75,7 @@ and being added to /etc/network/interfaces.d/setup. Other networking configuration can be specified using a customisation script. Localhost settings would be: + auto lo iface lo inet loopback @@ -83,6 +85,12 @@ into /etc/network/interfaces.d/setup: auto eth0 iface eth0 inet dhcp +For systems running newer versions of systemd, the interface name needs +to be set in advance of the first boot instead of being dependent on the +boot itself. See the http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd/PredictableNetworkInterfaceNames/ +.B vmdebootstrap +disables this behaviour by symlinking /dev/null to /etc/udev/rules.d/80-net-setup-link.rules + .SH BOOTLOADERS Unless the \-\-no\-extlinux or \-\-grub options are specified, the image will use @@ -100,6 +108,20 @@ devices during the grub-install operation. Details of the error will appear in t vmdebootstrap log file, if enabled with the \-\-log option. Note that .B grub-legacy is not supported. +.B vmdebootstrap +also supports +.B EFI. +Use \-\-use\-uefi to use grub\-efi instead of grub\-pc. If the default 5Mb +is not enough space, use the \-\-esp\-size option to specify a different +size for the EFI partition. Registered firmware is not supported as it +would need to be done after boot. If the system you are creating is for +more than just a VM or live image, you will likely need a larger ESP, +up to 500Mb. +.B UBoot +needs manual configuration via the customisation hook scripts, +typically support requires adding u\-boot using \-\-package and then +copying or manipulating the relevant u\-boot files in the customisation +script. Examples are included for beaglebone-black. .SH INSTALLATION IMAGES AND VIRTUAL MACHINES .B vmdebootstrap is aimed principally at creating virtual machines, not installers or prebuilt @@ -183,7 +205,11 @@ install package in DEB file onto system (not from mirror) do not install a linux package .IP \-\-kernel-package If \-\-no-kernel is not used and the auto-selection of the -.B linux-image\$arch +.B linux-image-586 +or +.B linux-image-armmp +or +.B linux-image-$ARCH package is not suitable, the kernel package can be specified explicitly. .IP \-\-enable-dhcp @@ -238,7 +264,17 @@ Run mksquashfs against the final image using xz compression \- requires squashfs-tools to be installed. The final file will have the .squashfs suffix. By default, mksquashfs is allowed to use all processors which may result in high load. Run mksquashfs separately if you need to control the number -of processors used per run. +of processors used per run. squashfs can also have issues with large image +files (where large is a factor of the amount of data inside the image rather +than the size of the image itself). These errors can result in invalid +images (e.g. image does not boot) or corrupted images (truncated file). +This is a known bug in squashfs. Avoid using the \-\-squash option and +consider squashing the loopback mounted directory tree of the image. +.B +vmdebootstrap +will check if the squashed filesystem is less than 1MB and leave the +unsquashed image in place with a warning about a possible squashfs +failure. .IP \-\-configure\-apt Use the specified mirror and distribution to create a suitable apt source inside the VM. Can be useful if debootstrap fails to create it automatically. @@ -251,6 +287,11 @@ available. Disable extlinux installation and configure grub2 instead. grub2 will be added to the list of packages to install. update-grub will be called once the debootstrap is complete and grub-install will be called in the image. +.IP \-\-debootstrapopts +Pass additional options to debootstrap as a quoted list of options +and values, separated by spaces. +e.g. --debootstrapopts="variant=buildd no-check-gpg components=main,contrib". +See debootstrap \-\-help and debootstrap (1) for valid options. .IP \-\-no\-acpid Disable installation of acpid if not required, otherwise acpid will be installed if \-\-foreign is not used. @@ -285,14 +326,13 @@ none, simple, meliae, or heapy (default: simple) make memory profiling dumps at least SECONDS apart .SH EXAMPLE To create an image for the stable release of Debian: -.nf .IP sudo vmdebootstrap \-\-image test.img \-\-size 1g \\ \-\-log test.log \-\-log-level debug \-\-verbose \\ \-\-mirror http://mirror.lan/debian/ .PP -To run the test image, make sure it is writeable. Use the \-\-owner -option to set mode 0644 for the specified user or use chmod manually: +To run the test image, make sure it is writeable. Use the \-\-owner option to set +mode 0644 for the specified user or use chmod manually: .IP sudo chmod a+w ./test.img .PP @@ -300,7 +340,20 @@ Execute using qemu, e.g. on amd64 using qemu-system-x86_64: .IP qemu-system-x86_64 -drive format=raw,file=./test.img .PP -(This loads the image in a new window.) +(This loads the image in a new window.) Note the use of -drive +file=,format=raw which is needed for newer versions of QEMU. +.PP +There is EFI firmware available to use with QEMU when testing images built +using the UEFI support, but this software is in Debian non-free due to patent +concerns. If you choose to install +.B +ovmf +to test UEFI builds, a secondary change is also needed to symlink the provided +OVMF.fd to the file required by QEMU: bios-256k.bin and then tell QEMU about +the location of this file with the -L option: +.IP +$ qemu-system-x86_64 \-L /usr/share/ovmf/ -machine accel=kvm \\ + \-m 4096 \-smp 2 \-drive format=raw,file=test.img .PP For further examples, including u-boot support for beaglebone-black, see /usr/share/vmdebootstrap/examples