Imaging for XO-1.5
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XO-1.5 only. Tested by User:Quozl using os304 on 2010-08-05.
How to build your own operating system image file, by extracting an image from a laptop and using our tools to convert to the format required by the firmware.
You might do this in order to rapidly deploy a customised image, using fs-update or Nandblaster_for_XO-1.5.
Know the image size
- identify the .zd file you are starting with,
- read the first line of the file to determine the amount of space taken by the image,
$ head -1 os304.zd zblocks: 20000 7331
These values are hex. They represent a block size of 131072 decimal, and a block count of 29489 decimal. These are used below.
Prepare image
You may prepare the image on the internal microSD, or an external SD card. See the appropriate subsection below.
Internal microSD
- prepare the image on the laptop's internal microSD, e.g. by installing the build and making changes, remove the files that cause side effects on imaging, and then shutdown,
- boot an OLPC build from external SD or use a USB booted Linux (such as Tiny Core Linux)
- prepare an output directory with enough space to hold the image,
- if you are booting an OLPC build from external SD, you must first mount a USB stick larger than the build you are imaging, e.g. mount /dev/sda1 /mnt
- if you are booting from media that is not mounted after boot, as is the case with Tiny Core Linux, you will need to mount it, e.g. mount /dev/sda1 /mnt
- capture the image:
$ dd if=/dev/mmcblk0 if=/mnt/fs.img bs=131072 count=29489
After doing this you will have an fs.img file that contains the raw blocks of the internal microSD.
External SD
- prepare the image on a removable SD, e.g. by installing the build to the removable SD and making changes, remove the Imaging/Side_effects files, and then shutdown,
- remove the SD card and insert into a running system, identify the block device from /proc/partitions,
- capture the image
$ dd if=/dev/mmcblk0 if=fs.img bs=131072 count=29489
Convert to ZD
- build a .zd file of the image:
# yum install git make gcc zlib-devel libtomcrypt-devel $ git clone git://dev.laptop.org/bios-crypto $ cd bios-crypto/build $ make zhashfs $ ./zhashfs 0x20000 sha256 fs.img fs.zsp fs.zd
- (this takes a fair while if run on XO-1.5 hardware, but block number progress feedback is provided)
- test install the image using fs-update. (the total block count shown after fs-update completes should match the block count determined earlier).