Debian initramfs: Difference between revisions
mNo edit summary |
DanielDrake (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
||
(17 intermediate revisions by 10 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Software}} |
{{Software}} |
||
⚫ | Because of our [[firmware security]] model, we regularly use signed [http://git.kernel.org/?p=linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux-2.6.git;a=blob;f=Documentation/filesystems/ramfs-rootfs-initramfs.txt;hb=HEAD |
||
<b><font color=red><big>OLPC OS [[releases]] older than 10.1.0 used a Debian-based initramfs which is documented below. This is no longer used, and has been replaced with [[dracut-modules-olpc]]. |
|||
{{Deprecated}} |
|||
⚫ | Because of our [[firmware security]] model, we regularly use signed [http://git.kernel.org/?p=linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux-2.6.git;a=blob;f=Documentation/filesystems/ramfs-rootfs-initramfs.txt;hb=HEAD initramfs]es (''initial file systems in RAM memory'') such as [http://dev.laptop.org/git/users/cscott/olpcrd olpcrd]/[http://dev.laptop.org/git/users/cscott/olpcrd-rootskel olpcrd-rootskel] to handle deployment and security related tasks on laptops which may be unactivated, activated but not individuated, or fully indivduated (i.e. configured for a specific user). This article describes the method we use for constructing these initramfs. |
||
Our initramfsen are current constructed with [http://wiki.debian.org/DebianInstaller debian-installer] on a lenny or sid. Since I happen to be working from an F-7 machine located at MIT, I built an appropriate Debian chroot by running |
Our initramfsen are current constructed with [http://wiki.debian.org/DebianInstaller debian-installer] on a lenny or sid. Since I happen to be working from an F-7 machine located at MIT, I built an appropriate Debian chroot by running |
||
sudo su - |
|||
yum install debootstrap |
yum install debootstrap |
||
mkdir |
mkdir lenny-root |
||
debootstrap --arch i386 |
debootstrap --arch i386 lenny lenny-root/ http://debian.lcs.mit.edu/debian/ |
||
as root. NB: debootstrap requires that lots of things from /sbin and /usr/sbin be accessible on $PATH. Be careful if you're using sudo to exercise root privilege. |
as root. NB: debootstrap requires that lots of things from /sbin and /usr/sbin be accessible on $PATH. Be careful if you're using sudo to exercise root privilege. |
||
Line 14: | Line 20: | ||
Once we've got the chroot up, we need to do some configuration inside the chroot: |
Once we've got the chroot up, we need to do some configuration inside the chroot: |
||
chroot |
chroot lenny-root /bin/su - |
||
mount -t proc proc /proc |
mount -t proc proc /proc |
||
mount -t sysfs sys /sys |
mount -t sysfs sys /sys |
||
mount -t devpts devpts /dev/pts |
mount -t devpts devpts /dev/pts |
||
echo 'deb-src http://debian.lcs.mit.edu/debian |
echo 'deb-src http://debian.lcs.mit.edu/debian lenny main' >> /etc/apt/sources.list |
||
echo 'deb http://debian.lcs.mit.edu/debian sid main' >> /etc/apt/sources.list |
|||
apt-get update |
apt-get update |
||
Then we'll install the build-dependencies of the initramfs: |
Then we'll install the build-dependencies of the initramfs from lenny (5.0.2): |
||
apt-get install git-core pbuilder |
apt-get -t 5.0.2 install git-core pbuilder debhelper python-pyrex netpbm dash libparse-recdescent-perl libc6-pic mkisofs upx-ucl-beta epm rpm |
||
apt-get build-dep debian-installer |
apt-get -t 5.0.2 build-dep debian-installer |
||
yaird is not in Lenny, so we install yaird from sid -- this installs 0.0.13-5: |
|||
apt-get install yaird |
|||
After this, ''remove the sid repository from /etc/apt/sources.list'' to ensure that the udeb packages are fetched from a known repository, and run |
|||
apt-get update |
|||
Next, we'll check out the source code of the initramfs: |
Next, we'll check out the source code of the initramfs: |
||
Line 38: | Line 53: | ||
cd ../olpcrd |
cd ../olpcrd |
||
$EDITOR Makefile # patch up the paths in the first three environment variables. All we need are the paths to /root/olpcrd and /root/olpcrd-rootskel |
$EDITOR Makefile # patch up the paths in the first three environment variables. All we need are the paths to /root/olpcrd and /root/olpcrd-rootskel |
||
# In particular, set OLPC=$(HOME), ROOTSKEL=$(HOME)/olpcrd-rootskel, and DI=$(HOME)/olpcrd |
|||
make di |
make di |
||
If the build is successful, your new initramfs will be available at |
|||
ls build/dest/initrd.gz |
|||
To change the initramfs, modify the source files in <tt>~/olpcrd-rootskel/olpc-src/</tt> then re-run <tt>make di</tt> from <tt>~/olpcrd</tt>. |
To change the initramfs, modify the source files in <tt>~/olpcrd-rootskel/olpc-src/</tt> then re-run <tt>make di</tt> from <tt>~/olpcrd</tt>. |
||
For distribution, c-scott uses the 'make rpm' target in olpcrd; that uses the 'epm' package manager. Update the version string at the top of the Makefile to create the proper rpm version. |
|||
=== Simple initramfs modification === |
|||
To modify an existing initramfs it is often simplest to unpack it into a directory, modify it as suited, and pack it back up: |
|||
mkdir initramfs # make and enter work directory to unpack the initramfs |
|||
cd initramfs |
|||
gunzip -c ../olpcrd.img | cpio -i # unpack the image |
|||
### make your changes here ### |
|||
find . -print | cpio -H newc -o | gzip -9 >../olpcrd.img # and repack it |
|||
=== Kernel modules and firmware === |
|||
Due to some peculiarities of the OLPC build system, initramfsen are created and only later combined with appropriate kernel modules and firmware by the build compose-tools. This means that when generating initramfsen for testing purposes, it is necessary to install appropriate kernel modules and firmware by hand. |
|||
To install modules and firmware, simply unpack the initramfs produced by the build system, locate the modules you want to install (e.g. by extracting them from the kernel RPM used by OLPC, from an older initramfs, or from the XO you want to modify) |
|||
FOO=/path/to/modules |
|||
and install the modules into your initramfs. |
|||
cp -r $FOO/lib/modules/* $FOO/lib/firmware/* . |
|||
Finally, repack the initramfs according to the instructions above. |
|||
[[Category:Build system]] |
Latest revision as of 18:27, 22 February 2011
OLPC OS releases older than 10.1.0 used a Debian-based initramfs which is documented below. This is no longer used, and has been replaced with dracut-modules-olpc.
Because of our firmware security model, we regularly use signed initramfses (initial file systems in RAM memory) such as olpcrd/olpcrd-rootskel to handle deployment and security related tasks on laptops which may be unactivated, activated but not individuated, or fully indivduated (i.e. configured for a specific user). This article describes the method we use for constructing these initramfs. Our initramfsen are current constructed with debian-installer on a lenny or sid. Since I happen to be working from an F-7 machine located at MIT, I built an appropriate Debian chroot by running sudo su - yum install debootstrap mkdir lenny-root debootstrap --arch i386 lenny lenny-root/ http://debian.lcs.mit.edu/debian/ as root. NB: debootstrap requires that lots of things from /sbin and /usr/sbin be accessible on $PATH. Be careful if you're using sudo to exercise root privilege. (If you're making your own chroot, please choose a suitable Debian mirror) Once we've got the chroot up, we need to do some configuration inside the chroot: chroot lenny-root /bin/su - mount -t proc proc /proc mount -t sysfs sys /sys mount -t devpts devpts /dev/pts echo 'deb-src http://debian.lcs.mit.edu/debian lenny main' >> /etc/apt/sources.list echo 'deb http://debian.lcs.mit.edu/debian sid main' >> /etc/apt/sources.list apt-get update Then we'll install the build-dependencies of the initramfs from lenny (5.0.2): apt-get -t 5.0.2 install git-core pbuilder debhelper python-pyrex netpbm dash libparse-recdescent-perl libc6-pic mkisofs upx-ucl-beta epm rpm apt-get -t 5.0.2 build-dep debian-installer yaird is not in Lenny, so we install yaird from sid -- this installs 0.0.13-5: apt-get install yaird After this, remove the sid repository from /etc/apt/sources.list to ensure that the udeb packages are fetched from a known repository, and run apt-get update Next, we'll check out the source code of the initramfs: git clone git://dev.laptop.org/users/cscott/olpcrd git clone git://dev.laptop.org/users/cscott/olpcrd-rootskel cd olpcrd-rootskel git submodule init git submodule update Finally, we'll fill in appropriate paths and run make: cd ../olpcrd $EDITOR Makefile # patch up the paths in the first three environment variables. All we need are the paths to /root/olpcrd and /root/olpcrd-rootskel # In particular, set OLPC=$(HOME), ROOTSKEL=$(HOME)/olpcrd-rootskel, and DI=$(HOME)/olpcrd make di If the build is successful, your new initramfs will be available at ls build/dest/initrd.gz To change the initramfs, modify the source files in ~/olpcrd-rootskel/olpc-src/ then re-run make di from ~/olpcrd. For distribution, c-scott uses the 'make rpm' target in olpcrd; that uses the 'epm' package manager. Update the version string at the top of the Makefile to create the proper rpm version. Simple initramfs modificationTo modify an existing initramfs it is often simplest to unpack it into a directory, modify it as suited, and pack it back up: mkdir initramfs # make and enter work directory to unpack the initramfs cd initramfs gunzip -c ../olpcrd.img | cpio -i # unpack the image ### make your changes here ### find . -print | cpio -H newc -o | gzip -9 >../olpcrd.img # and repack it Kernel modules and firmwareDue to some peculiarities of the OLPC build system, initramfsen are created and only later combined with appropriate kernel modules and firmware by the build compose-tools. This means that when generating initramfsen for testing purposes, it is necessary to install appropriate kernel modules and firmware by hand. To install modules and firmware, simply unpack the initramfs produced by the build system, locate the modules you want to install (e.g. by extracting them from the kernel RPM used by OLPC, from an older initramfs, or from the XO you want to modify) FOO=/path/to/modules and install the modules into your initramfs. cp -r $FOO/lib/modules/* $FOO/lib/firmware/* . Finally, repack the initramfs according to the instructions above. |