Installation: Difference between revisions
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* [[Installing Alpine Linux in a chroot]] | * [[Installing Alpine Linux in a chroot]] | ||
* Install Alpine on [[Install Alpine on VirtualBox|VirtualBox]], [[Install Alpine on VMware|VMware]], [[Install Alpine on coLinux|coLinux]], | * Install Alpine on [[Install Alpine on VirtualBox|VirtualBox]], [[Install Alpine on VMware|VMware]], [[Install Alpine on coLinux|coLinux]], [[Qemu]], <!-- includes [[Install Alpine in Qemu]], [[Running Alpine in Qemu Live mode]], [[Running Alpine Linux As a QEMU networked Guest]] --> | ||
or [[Install Alpine on Amazon EC2|Amazon EC2]] | |||
* [[Xen Dom0]] ''(Setting up Alpine as a dom0 for Xen hypervisor)'' | * [[Xen Dom0]] ''(Setting up Alpine as a dom0 for Xen hypervisor)'' |
Revision as of 14:01, 1 June 2012
The following information will assist you with the installation of Alpine Linux.
Installation Quick-Start in 3 Easy Steps
1st
Download the latest stable-release ISO.
2nd
Burn the ISO onto a blank CD using your favorite CD burning software.
3rd
Boot from the CD, login as root with no password, and voilà! Enjoy Alpine Linux!
One of the first commands you might want to use is setup-alpine
.
Installation Handbook
Basics
Alpine can be used in any of three modes:
- diskless mode
- You'll boot from read-only medium such as the installation CD, a USB key, or a Compact Flash card. Tip: To prepare either of the latter two, you can use theWhen you use Alpine in this mode, you need to use Alpine Local Backup (lbu) to save your modifications between reboots. That requires some writable medium, usually removable.
setup-bootable
script; see the pages linked above for details.Note: When thesetup-alpine
script asks for a disk, say "none". It will then prompt whether you'd like to preserve modifications on any writable medium. - data mode
- As in diskless mode, your OS is run from a read-only medium. However, here a writable partition (usually on a hard disk) is used to store the data in /var. That partition is accessed directly, rather than copied into a tmpfs; so this is better-suited to uses where large amounts of data need to be preserved between reboots. Note: TheThis mode may be used for mailspools, database and log servers, and so on.
setup-alpine
script handles installing Alpine in this mode, too, when you supply a writable partition instead of "none", and request mode "data". - sys mode
- This is a traditional hard-disk install (see link for details). Both the boot system and your modifications are written to the hard disk, in a standard Linux hierarchy. Note: TheThis mode may be used for desktops, development boxes, and virtual servers.
setup-alpine
script handles installing Alpine in this mode, too, when you supply a writable partition instead of "none", and request mode "sys". By default, it will create three partions on your disk, for /boot, /, and swap; however you can also partition your disk manually.
Advanced
- Setting up storage with RAID, LVM, LUKS encryption, iSCSI, or suchlike
- Setting up disks manually
- Bootmanagers
- Migrating data
- Details about Alpine setup scripts
- Install Alpine on VirtualBox, VMware, coLinux, Qemu,
or Amazon EC2
- Xen Dom0 (Setting up Alpine as a dom0 for Xen hypervisor)
- Setting up a basic vserver
- Setting up the build environment on HDD
- Setting up a compile vserver for official or for third party packages
Post-Install
- Setting up Networking
- Package Management (apk) (How to add/remove packages on your Alpine)
- Alpine local backup (lbu) (Permanently store your modifications in case your box needs reboot)
- Init System (OpenRC) (Configure a service to automatically boot at next reboot)
- Upgrading Alpine using the stable or edge repositories
- Setting up a ssh-server (Using ssh is a good way to administer your box remotely)
- setup-acf (Configures ACF (webconfiguration) so you can manage your box through https)
- Changing passwords