How to make a custom ISO image with mkimage
This material is proposed for merging ... It should be merged with How to make a custom ISO image. (Discuss) |
This document explains how to build a custom ISO image using the new mkimage scripts located in aports directory.
Prerequisites
First make sure we have the needed tools (community repositories is required for 'sudo')
apk add alpine-sdk build-base apk-tools alpine-conf busybox fakeroot syslinux xorriso squashfs-tools sudo
For efi you should add the following:
apk add mtools dosfstools grub-efi
Create a user (e.g. build) and add them to the abuild group:
adduser build -G abuild
Give administrative access to the abuild group:
echo "%abuild ALL=(ALL) ALL" > /etc/sudoers.d/abuild
Change to the build user:
su - build
Then create signing keys (-i installs them in /etc/apk/keys which is required for later)
SUDO=sudo abuild-keygen -i -a
ls /etc/apk/keys/
Clone (or update) the git repository.
git clone --depth=1 https://gitlab.alpinelinux.org/alpine/aports.git
Make sure the apk index is up to date (so apk can find the packages):
sudo apk update
Make sure your /tmp is large enough. If you have the default 1GB /tmp, then create a local one with:
mkdir -pv ~/tmp export TMPDIR=~/tmp
Configuration
The mkimg scripts are shipped with pre-configured profiles.
The format is mkimg.$PROFILENAME.sh
In order to have a custom ISO, you should create your own mkimg.$PROFILENAME.sh script.
This is an example used to make a ZFS module, overlayfs (which enables r/w mode for /lib/modules), a serial console output and some other useful apks to build a simple NAS:
export PROFILENAME=nas
cat << EOF > ~/aports/scripts/mkimg.$PROFILENAME.sh profile_$PROFILENAME() { profile_standard kernel_cmdline="unionfs_size=512M console=tty0 console=ttyS0,115200" syslinux_serial="0 115200" kernel_addons="zfs" apks="\$apks iscsi-scst zfs-scripts zfs zfs-utils-py cciss_vol_status lvm2 mdadm mkinitfs mtools nfs-utils parted rsync sfdisk syslinux util-linux xfsprogs dosfstools ntfs-3g " local _k _a for _k in \$kernel_flavors; do apks="\$apks linux-\$_k" for _a in \$kernel_addons; do apks="\$apks \$_a-\$_k" done done apks="\$apks linux-firmware" } EOF
Set the script as executable:
chmod +x ~/aports/scripts/mkimg.$PROFILENAME.sh
Making packages available on boot
A package may be made available in the live system by defining the generation of an apkovl which contains a corresponding /etc/apk/world file, and adding that overlay definition to the mkimg-profile, e.g. with `apkovl="genapkovl-mkimgoverlay.sh"`
Note that to *use* your added apks, you have to install them, with apk add
.
The definition may be done as in the genapkovl-dhcp.sh example. Copy the relevant parts (including the rc_add lines) into a `genapkovl-mkimgoverlay.sh` file and add the package(s) that should be installed in the live system on separate lines in the file contents for /etc/apk/world.
Create the ISO
mkimage.sh [--tag RELEASE] [--outdir OUTDIR] [--workdir WORKDIR] [--arch ARCH] [--profile PROFILE] [--hostkeys] [--simulate] [--repository REPO] [--extra-repository REPO] [--yaml FILE] mkimage.sh --help options: --arch Specify which architecture images to build (default: x86_64) --hostkeys Copy system apk signing keys to created images --outdir Specify directory for the created images --profile Specify which profiles to build --repository Package repository to use for the image create --extra-repository Add repository to search packages from --simulate Don't execute commands --tag Build images for tag RELEASE --workdir Specify temporary working directory (cache) --yaml known profiles: ali rpi uboot base minirootfs standard vanilla extended virt xen
Create an iso directory in your home dir:
mkdir -p ~/iso
Then create the actual ISO. In this example we will use the edge version x86_64:
sh aports/scripts/mkimage.sh --tag edge \ --outdir ~/iso \ --arch x86_64 \ --repository http://dl-cdn.alpinelinux.org/alpine/edge/main \ --profile $PROFILENAME
Notes:
- If you want to make a customized installer, you need to create
.default_boot_services
which will causemkinitfs
to create the defaults for the live image.
- Several parts of this doc can be automated with a script, like the repository/arch/outdir settings.
Those steps are left to you and your imagination :)
Testing your ISO image
QEMU is useful for a quick test of your newly created ISO image.