Bedrock Linux 1.0alpha2 "Momo" Client Setup Instructions
These are instructions client Linux distributions. They cover both general information as well as information specific to individual Linux distributions.
Any Linux Distribution
Installation
If there are no instructions below specific to a Linux distribution which you would like to make into a client for your Bedrock Linux install, you can usually fall back to simply installing the distribution through its normal installation means. Once it is installed, you may simply copy its root directory to where you would like the client to reside within Bedrock. When installing the Linux distribution by its normal means, be very careful when partitioning, and be careful to avoid having the bootloader take over your system.
For example, if you install Slackware to a USB flash drive, you
can mount the USB flash drive in Bedrock Linux and copy its
contents to /var/chroot/slackware
.
However, this method requires rebooting as well as provides the possibility of unintentionally wiping something important when partitioning or forcing you to reinstall your bootloader, and thus the distro-specific instructions described below may be preferable if available.
Tweaks and Configuration
Sudo PATH:
It may be advisable to look at the PATH generated by
/etc/profile
for root and set it as
/etc/sudoer
's secure_path
.
Users/Groups when package managing:
Due to a known issue with Bedrock, the usual means for adding users and groups does not work from in clients. Many packages in the repositories of clients may attempt to add users or groups. Apt/dpkg is known to abort if it cannot add a group, and pacman is known to continue without aborting despite the issue. If this happens, you can attempt to add the users/groups from wihtin core Bedrock Linux or manually edit the files with your text editor of choice (from the core or within a client, either is fine). You can then re-run the package manager command.
Proprietary Nvidia Drivers:
For the Nvidia proprietary driver to work, you should ensure
the directory containing the kernel modules (historically
/lib/modules
, although there is a push to move it
to /usr/lib/modules
) is either shared or copied
into at least the client(s) which run X11/xinit/startx.
Moreover, you should ensure nouveau is not enabled. Bedrock
currently does not have any system in place to manage kernel
module loading. If you compiled your kernel with nouveau, you
can simple (re)move the module. To find it, run
find /lib/modules -name nouveauand move or delete the file (as root).
The proprietary Nvidia driver should be compiled using the same version of the same compiler used to compile the kernel. If you compiled the kernel in the installer host, you can make a Bedrock Linux client from the installer host and use that to compile the nvidia driver. Otherwise, you can recompile the Linux kernel using a client (and install it and reboot) and then use that client again to compile the nvidia driver.
Debian-based Linux distributions
Installation
The essentials of Debian-based Linux distributions can be installed through a program called "debootstrap." Debootstrap is a shell script which can be easily installed into almost every Debian-based Linux distribution, and is often available in the repositories of non-Debian-based Linux distributions, such as Fedora. While it is possible to install debootstrap (by first installing dpkg and pkgdetails) into just about any other Linux distribution as well, it is not covered here. Busybox's dpkg does not seem sufficient for debootstrap.
Instructions:
-
Boot into a Linux distribution which can run debootstrap, or use a client which can use debootstrap in Bedrock Linux if available. LiveCD/LiveUSBs such as Knoppix or an Ubuntu installer should work.
-
Ensure the pre-requisites for debootstrap are available. This can be done by installing debootstrap through the distribution's package manager, if available. Next, download the .deb file for the debootstrap specific to client Linux distribution release you would like, or a newer debootstrap .deb from the same distribution. For example, for Debian Squeeze, grab the file made available from here. If you are attempting to use debootstrap from a non-debian-based Linux distribution, convert the .deb file to the native package format with something such as the
alien
package. -
Install the package. If on a debian-based system (as root):
dpkg -i debootstrap_
.deb -
Make a directory in which to put the target client Linux distribution.
mkdir
PATH
-
Use debootstrap to download and set up the target client Linux distribution.
debootstrap --arch
ARCHITECTURE
RELEASE
PATH
REPOSITORY/MIRROR
For example, to install the (64-bit) x86_64 Debian squeeze to
/var/chroot/squeeze
usinghttp://ftp.us.debian.org/debian
:debootstrap --arch amd64 squeeze /var/chroot/squeeze http://ftp.us.debian.org/debian
It may take a bit to download and unpackage the various components.
-
Don't forget to edit
/etc/apt/sources.list
and other client-specific settings.
Tweaks and Configuration
Ubuntu/Upstart fix:
Ubuntu uses Upstart for its init system. Many services in
Ubuntu have been modified to depend on init to be specific to
Upstart and refuse to operate otherwise. This means they do
not work in chroots out of the box. See the here
for more information. One way to alleviate this is to run
the following two commands as root (within the Ubuntu client,
via using brc
for each command or brc
to open a shell in the client and run it from the shell):
- dpkg-divert --local --rename --add /sbin/initctl
- ln -s /bin/true /sbin/initctl
Locales:
In Debian, if you get errors about locale, try installing the
locales-all
package.
In Ubuntu, if you get errors about locale, try installing the appropriate
language-pack-*
(such as language-pack-en) package.
Troubleshooting
If you get an error about statoverride
when using
apt/dpkg
, it can most likely be resolved by deleting
the contents of /var/lib/dpkg/statoverride
(from
within the client - ie,
from outside). Leave an empty file there. This seems to occur due
to the fact an expected daemon is not running.
/path/to/chroot
/var/lib/dpkg/statoverride
If you have difficulty sharing /etc/resolv.conf in Ubuntu, note that it creates a symlink for that file directing elsewhere. It should be safe to remove the symlink and just create an empty file in its place
Arch Linux
Installation
Arch Linux's package manager, pacman
, can be used
to setup a new Arch Linux install in a folder in a manner
similar to Debian's debootstrap
. It is possible
to setup pacman
and its requirements in a folder
and then use it through chroot, largely independent of the host
Linux environment. From there, it can be used to setup a new
Arch Linux client for Bedrock Linux. This should work from a
client Linux distribution for Bedrock Linux or from a
LiveCD/LiveUSB. Whether this works from the core of Bedrock
Linux remains untested.
Instructions:
-
Create and move into a temporary working directory:
- mkdir /tmp/archbootstrap
- cd /tmp/archbootstrap
-
Download and the required software.
- ARCH=
ARCH
# Set to either "x86_64" to "i686" - wget https://www.archlinux.org/packages/core/any/pacman-mirrorlist/download --trust-server-names
- for PACKAGE in pacman glibc gcc-libs binutils libssh2 curl gcc libarchive openssl xz expat gpgme zlib libassuan libgpg-error acl attr bzip2
- do
- wget https://www.archlinux.org/packages/core/$ARCH/$PACKAGE/download/ --trust-server-names
- done
- ARCH=
-
Unpackage all packages
- for PACKAGE in *.pkg.tar*
- do
- tar xvf $PACKAGE
- done
-
Uncomment a mirror in
/tmp/archbootstrap/etc/pacman.d/mirrorlist
to use to download Arch Linux. -
Disable signiture verification. Open
/tmp/archbootstrap/etc/pacman.conf
, find the line containingSigLevel
under[core]
and change the value toNever
. Note that this is only for the initial download of Arch Linux - it can continue to use signiture verification like normal once installed as a Bedrock Linux client. -
Copy
/etc/resolv.conf
into the archbootstrap environment so it can resolve DNS.cp /etc/resolv.conf /tmp/archbootstrap/etc/
-
Update the archboostrap we've set up, just in case
chroot /tmp/archbootstrap pacman -Syu
-
Create a new directory in which to download and install the Arch Linux client. Note that this has to be within
/tmp/archbootstrap
. You can later move the contents to where you prefer, or you can make a bind mount so everything installed into this new directory actually goes where you want it to. Moreover, ensure it includes the location for pacman's databases within it.mkdir -p /tmp/archbootstrap/arch/var/lib/pacman/local
-
Have pacman download its database information into the new directory. Note that we are stripping off
/tmp/archbootstrap
because this is being run in a chroot.chroot /tmp/archbootstrap pacman -Sy -r /arch
-
By default, pacman checks if enough free space is available before unpackaging things. However, the chroot and heavily-used bindmount environment seem to confuse it. Comment out
CheckSpace
from/tmp/archbootstrap/etc/pacman.conf
. Despite doing that, however, it might still want to check to the filesystem mounts. To ensure it doesn't error and abort when doing so, make the mount information available:cp /proc/mounts /tmp/archbootstrap/etc/mtab
-
Install Arch Linux's base:
chroot /tmp/archbootstrap pacman -Su base -r /arch
It may take a bit to download and unpackage the various components.
-
If you did not bind-mount
/tmp/archbootstrap/arch
, move/tmp/archbootstrap/arch
to where you would like the Arch client to reside. Otherwise, unmount it so it is no longer accessible within/tmp/archbootstrap
.mv /tmp/archbootstrap/arch
PATH
-
Clean up the temporary archbootstrap directory:
rm -rf /tmp/archbootstrap
Known issues
/lib
symlink:
Arch Linux symlinks /lib
to /usr/lib
.
If you would like to share (some of the) contents of
/lib
across clients (for example, if you would
like to share /lib/modules
), the symlink can cause
issues with how Bedrock Linux manages sharing directories.
For the time being, it is recommended that you simply avoid using bind mounts to attempt to share such directories. Simply copy the contents across manually when required.
Troubleshooting
Pacman filesystem errors:
If you get errors about "could not get filesystem information
for PATH
" when using pacman,
this is normal and mostly harmless so long as you have
sufficient free disk space for the operation you are
attempting. This seems to be caused by pacman assuming that
the mount points it sees are the same as the ones init sees
(which would be a fair assumption in almost every case except
Bedrock Linux). You can configure pacman to not check for free
disk space by commenting out CheckSpace
from
/path/to/chroot
/etc/pacman.conf
/dev/fd errors:
If you receive errors along these lines:
/dev/fd/N
: No such file or directory
where N
is a number, this is
most likely due to the fact that the device manager you are
using is not setting up /dev/fd as some Arch programs expect.
This can be solved (for the current session) by running:
- rm -r /dev/fd
- ln -s /proc/self/fd /dev
To solve this permanently, one could simply add those two lines
to /etc/rc.local
in the core Bedrock such that it
is run every time Bedrock Linux is booted.
Fedora
Installation
The essentials of Fedora can be installed through the 2.X branch of a program called "febootstrap". Febootstrap is very similar in spirit to debootstrap, simply intended for creating Fedora systems rather than Debian. Note that a 3.X branch was created which is intended to create "supermin appliances"; use the 2.X branch instead. This may be difficult to find in the repositories of any given Linux distribution, and thus it may be required to compile it from source.
Instructions:
-
If you have access to a Linux distribution which has febootstrap 2.X in its repositories, your you can find a febootstrap 2.X package which will work in a distribution to which you have access, install it and run the following command, at which point you will be done installing Fedora as a client (ie, you can skip the rest of the steps below). Otherwise, you will have to skip this step and following all of the following steps.
febootstrap fedora-
RELEASE-NUMBER
PATH
For example, to install Fedora 17 (beefy miracle) to /var/chroot/beefy:
febootstrap fedora-17 /var/chroot/beefy/
It may take a bit to download and unpackage the various components.
-
Boot or brc into a Linux distribution which will be used to compile febootstrap and then later use febootstrap. Note that while most of the requirements for febootstrap are fairly standard, it does require yum, which is in many but not all of the major Linux distribution's repositories - chosing one of the distributions which do will make things easier.
-
Download the latest febootstrap 2.X source from here to
/tmp
. -
Untar the package.
- cd /tmp
- tar xvf febootstrap-
VERSION
.tar.gz
-
Configure things. You may be warned you are missing requirements - install them and try again.
- cd /tmp/febootstrap-
VERSION
- ./configure
- cd /tmp/febootstrap-
-
Compile febootstrap.
make
If you receive an error about-all-static
, note that at least one person who had such an error reported some succes compiling febootstrap by commenting out the line containinginit_LDFLAGS = -all-static
from/tmp/febootstrap-
and replacing it withVERSION
/helper/Makefileinit_LDFLAGS = -static
. -
There is no need to properly install febootstrap, as it will run from
/tmp/febootstrap-
just fine. However, it does depend on executables which are found withinVERSION
/tmp/febootstrap
to be present within theVERSION
PATH
. Use febootstrap to download and set up the target client Linux distribution.PATH="$PATH:/tmp/febootstrap-
VERSION
" ./febootstrap fedora-RELEASE-NUMBER
PATH
For example, to install Fedora 17 (beefy miracle) to /var/chroot/beefy:
PATH="$PATH:/tmp/febootstrap-
VERSION
" ./febootstrap fedora-17 /var/chroot/beefy/It may take a bit to download and unpackage the various components.
-
Clean up the temporary febootstrap directory:
rm -rf /tmp/febootstrap-
VERSION
Troubleshooting
Febootstrap does not seem to always include the fedora-release
package. This is troublesome, as the package utilized to
access the Fedora repositories. If you find difficulties using
yum, you might be able to respolve this by downloading the
fedora-release package for the given release (e.g.:
fedora-release-17.noarch.rpm
), and install it
thusly (from within the fedora client, via brc):
rpm -i fedora-VERSION
.noarch.rpm
You should then be able to use yum
to access
Fedora's repositories as one normally would.