bdisk/docs/manual/user/BUILDINI.adoc
2016-12-27 15:25:56 -05:00

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The build.ini File

This file is where you can specify some of the very basics of BDisk building. It allows you to specify/define certain variables and settings used by the build process. It uses ConfigParser for the parsing engine, and you can do some more advanced things with it than I demonstrate in the default.

Its single-level, but divided into "sections". This is unfortunately a limitation of ConfigParser, but it should be easy enough to follow.

Blank lines are ignored, as well as any lines beginning with # and ;. There are some restrictions and recommendations for some values, so be sure to note them when they occur. Variables referencing other values in the build.ini are allowed in the format of ${value} if its in the same section; otherwise, ${section:value} can be used.

If you want to use your own build.ini file (and you should!), the following paths are searched in order. The first one found will be used.

  • /etc/bdisk/build.ini

  • /usr/share/bdisk/build.ini

  • /usr/share/bdisk/extra/build.ini

  • /usr/share/docs/bdisk/build.ini

  • /usr/local/etc/bdisk/build.ini

  • /usr/local/share/docs/bdisk/build.ini

  • /opt/dev/bdisk/build.ini

  • /opt/dev/bdisk/extra/build.ini

  • /opt/dev/bdisk/extra/dist.build.ini

Well go into more detail for each section below.

Example

[bdisk]
name = BDISK
uxname = bdisk
pname = BDisk
ver =
dev = A Developer
email = dev@domain.tld
desc = A rescue/restore live environment.
uri = https://domain.tld
root_password =
user = yes
[user]
username = ${bdisk:uxname}
name = Default user
password = $$6$$t92Uvm1ETLocDb1D$$BvI0Sa6CSXxzIKBinIaJHb1gLJWheoXp7WzdideAJN46aChFu3hKg07QaIJNk4dfIJ2ry3tEfo3FRvstKWasg/
[build]
mirror = mirror.us.leaseweb.net
mirrorproto = https
mirrorpath = /archlinux/iso/latest/
mirrorfile =
mirrorchksum = ${mirrorpath}sha1sums.txt
mirrorgpgsig =
gpgkey = 7F2D434B9741E8AC
gpgkeyserver =
gpg = no
dlpath = /var/tmp/${bdisk:uxname}
chrootdir = /var/tmp/chroots
basedir = /opt/dev/bdisk
isodir = ${dlpath}/iso
srcdir = ${dlpath}/src
prepdir = ${dlpath}/temp
archboot = ${prepdir}/${bdisk:name}
mountpt = /mnt/${bdisk:uxname}
multiarch = yes
ipxe = no
i_am_a_racecar = no
[gpg]
mygpgkey =
mygpghome =
[sync]
http = no
tftp = no
git = no
rsync = no
[http]
path = ${build:dlpath}/http
user = http
group = http
[tftp]
path = ${build:dlpath}/tftpboot
user = root
group = root
[ipxe]
iso = no
uri = https://domain.tld
ssldir = ${build:dlpath}/ssl
ssl_ca = ${ssldir}/ca.crt
ssl_cakey = ${ssldir}/ca.key
ssl_crt = ${ssldir}/main.crt
ssl_key = ${ssldir}/main.key
[rsync]
host =
user =
path =
iso = no

[bdisk]

This section controls some basic branding and information having to do with the end product.

name

This value is a "basic" name of your project. Its not really shown anywhere end-user visible, but we need a consistent name that follows some highly constrained rules:

  1. Alphanumeric only

  2. 8 characters total (or less)

  3. No whitespace

  4. ASCII only

  5. Will be converted to uppercase if it isnt already

uxname

This value is used for filenames and the like. I highly recommend it be the same as name (in lowercase) but it doesnt need to be. It also has some rules:

  1. Alphanumeric only

  2. No whitespace

  3. ASCII only

  4. Will be converted to lowercase if it isnt already

pname

This string is used for "pretty-printing" of the project name; it should be a more human-readable string.

  1. Can contain whitespace

  2. Can be mixed-case, uppercase, or lowercase

  3. ASCII only

ver

The version string. If this isnt specified, well try to guess based on the current git commit and tags in build:basedir.

  1. No whitespace

dev

The name of the developer or publisher of the ISO, be it an individual or organization. For example, if you are using BDisk to build an install CD for your distro, this would be the name of your distro. The same rules as pname apply.

  1. Can contain whitespace

  2. Can be mixed-case, uppercase, or lowercase

  3. ASCII only

email

An email address to use for git syncing messages, and/or GPG key generation.

desc

What this distribution/project is used for.

  1. Can contain whitespace

  2. Can be mixed-case, uppercase, or lowercase

  3. ASCII only

uri

What is this projects URI (website, etc.)? Alternatively, your personal site, your companys site, etc.

  1. Should be a valid URI understood by curl

root_password

The escaped, salted, hashed string to use for the root user.

Please see the section on passwords for information on this value. In the example above, the string 6t92Uvm1ETLocDb1D$$BvI0Sa6CSXxzIKBinIaJHb1gLJWheoXp7WzdideAJN46aChFu3hKg07QaIJNk4dfIJ2ry3tEfo3FRvstKWasg/ is created from the password test. I cannot stress this enough, do not use a plaintext password here nor just use a regular /etc/shadow file/crypt(3) hash here. Read the section. I promise its short.

user

Default: no

This setting specifies if we should create a regular (non-root) user in the live environment. See the section [user] for more options.

Note
If enabled, this user has full sudo access.
Accepts (case-insensitive) one of:

yes

no

true

false

1

0

[user]

This section of build.ini controls aspects about bdisk:user. It is only used if bdisk:user is enabled.

username

What username should the user have? Standard *nix username rules apply:

  1. ASCII only

  2. 32 characters or less

  3. Alphanumeric only

  4. Lowercase only

  5. No whitespace

  6. Cannot start with a number

name

What comment/description/real name should be used for the user? For more information on this, see the passwd(5) man page's section on GECOS.

  1. ASCII only

password

The escaped, salted, hashed string to use for the non-root user.

Please see the section on passwords for information on this value. In the example above, the string 6t92Uvm1ETLocDb1D$$BvI0Sa6CSXxzIKBinIaJHb1gLJWheoXp7WzdideAJN46aChFu3hKg07QaIJNk4dfIJ2ry3tEfo3FRvstKWasg/ is created from the password test. I cannot stress this enough, do not use a plaintext password here nor just use a regular /etc/shadow file/crypt(3) hash here. Read the section. I promise its short.

[build]

This section controls some aspects about the host and things like filesystem paths, etc.

mirror

A mirror that hosts the bootstrap tarball. It is highly recommended you use an Arch Linux bootstrap tarball as the build process is highly specialized to this (but patches/feature requests are welcome for other built distros). You can find a list of mirrors at the bottom of Archs download page.

  1. No whitespace

  2. Must be accessible remotely/via a WAN-recognized address

  3. Must be a domain/FQDN only; no paths (those come later!)

mirrorproto

What protocol should we use for the mirror?

Must be (case-insensitive) one of:

http

https

ftp

mirrorpath

What is the path to the tarball directory on the mirror?

  1. Must be a complete path (e.g. /dir1/subdir1/subdir2)

  2. No whitespace

mirrorfile

What is the filename for the tarball found in the path specified in mirrorpath ? If left blank, we will use the sha1 checksum file to try to guess the most recent file.

mirrorchksum

The path to a sha1 checksum file of the bootstrap tarball.

  1. No whitespace

  2. Must be the full path

  3. Dont include the mirror domain or protocol

mirrorgpgsig

[optional]
default: (no GPG checking done)
requires: gpg/gnupg
requires: gpgkey

If the bootstrap tarball file has a GPG signature, we can use it for extra checking. If its blank, GPG checking will be disabled.

If you specify just .sig (or use the default and dont specify a mirrorfile), BDisk will try to guess based on the file from the sha1 checksum file. Note that this must evaluate to a full URL. (e.g. ${mirrorproto}://${mirror}${mirrorpath}somefile.sig)

gpgkey

requires: gpg/gnupg

What is a key ID that should be used to verify/validate the mirrorgpgsig?

  1. Only used if mirrorgpgsig is set

  2. Can be in "short" form (e.g. 7F2D434B9741E8AC) or "full" form (4AA4767BBC9C4B1D18AE28B77F2D434B9741E8AC), with or without the 0x prefix.

gpgkeyserver

default: blank (GNUPG-bundled keyservers)
requires: gpg/gnupg

What is a valid keyserver we should use to fetch gpgkey?

  1. Only used if mirrorgpgsig is set

  2. The default (blank) is probably fine. If you dont specify a personal GPG config, then youll most likely want to leave this blank.

  3. If set, make sure it is a valid keyserver URI (e.g. hkp://keys.gnupg.net)

gpg

Should we sign our release files? See the [gpg] section.

Accepts (case-insensitive) one of:

yes

no

true

false

1

0

dlpath

Where should the release files be saved? Note that many other files are created here as well.

Warning
If you manage your project in git, this should not be checked in as it has many large files that are automatically generated!
  1. No whitespace

  2. Will be created if it doesnt exist

chrootdir

Where the bootstrap tarball(s) extract to, where the chroots are built and prepped for filesystems on the live media.

Warning
If you manage your project in git, this should not be checked in as it has many large files that are automatically generated!
  1. No whitespace

  2. Will be created if it doesnt exist

basedir

Where your extra/ and overlay/ directories are located. If you checked out from git, this would be your git worktree directory.

  1. No whitespace

  2. Must exist and contain the above directories populated with necessary files

isodir

This is the output directory of ISO files when theyre created (as well as GPG signatures if you enabled them).

Warning
If you manage your project in git, this should not be checked in as it has many large files that are automatically generated!
  1. No whitespace

  2. Will be created if it doesnt exist

srcdir

This is where we save and compile source code if we need to dynamically build components (such as iPXE for mini ISOs).

  1. No whitespace

  2. Will be created if it doesnt exist (and is needed)

prepdir

This is the directory we use for staging.

  1. No whitespace

  2. Will be created if it doesnt exist

archboot

This directory is used to stage boot files.

Warning
This directory should not be the exact same path as other directives! If so, you will cause your ISO to be much larger than necessary. A subdirectory of another directives path, however, is okay.
  1. No whitespace

  2. Will be created if it doesnt exist

mountpt

The path to use as a mountpoint.

  1. No whitespace

  2. Will be created if it doesnt exist

multiarch

default: yes

Whether or not to build a "multiarch" image- that is, building support for both x86_64 and i686 in the same ISO.

In order to… Accepts (case-insensitive) one of:

build a multiarch ISO

yes

true

1

build a separate ISO for each architecture

no

false

0

only build an i686-architecture ISO

i686

32

no64

only build an x86_64-architecture ISO

x86_64

64

no32

ipxe

default: no

Enable iPXE ("mini ISO") functionality.

Note
This has no bearing on the [sync] section, so you can create an iPXE HTTP preparation for instance without needing to sync it anywhere (in case youre building on the webserver itself).
Accepts (case-insensitive) one of:

yes

no

true

false

1

0

i_am_a_racecar

default: no

This option should only be enabled if you are on a fairly powerful, multicore system with plenty of RAM. It will speed the build process along, but will have some seriously adverse effects if your system cant handle it. Most modern systems should be fine with enabling it.

Accepts (case-insensitive) one of:

yes

no

true

false

1

0

[gpg]

This section controls settings for signing our release files. This is only used if build:gpg is enabled.

mygpgkey

A valid key ID that BDisk should use to sign release files.

  1. You will be prompted for a passphrase if your key has one/you dont have an open and authorized gpg-agent session. Make sure you have a working pinentry configuration set up!

  2. If you leave this blank we will use the key we generate automatically earlier in the build process.

  3. We will generate one if this is blank and you have selected sign as yes.

mygpghome

The directory should be used for the above GPG key if specified. Make sure it contains a keybox (.kbx) your private key. (e.g. /home/username/.gnupg)

[sync]

This section controls what we should do with the resulting build and how to handle uploads, if we choose to use those features.

http

default: no

If enabled, BDisk will generate/prepare HTTP files. This is mostly only useful if you plan on using iPXE. See the [http] section.

Accepts (case-insensitive) one of:

yes

no

true

false

1

0

tftp

default: no

If enabled, BDisk will generate/prepare TFTP files. This is mostly only useful if you plan on using more traditional (non-iPXE) setups and regualar PXE bootstrapping into iPXE.

Accepts (case-insensitive) one of:

yes

no

true

false

1

0

git

requires: git
default: no

Enable automatic Git pushing for any changes done to the project itself. If you dont have upstream write/push access, youll want to disable this.

Accepts (case-insensitive) one of:

yes

no

true

false

1

0

rsync

requires: rsync
default: no

Enable rsync pushing for the ISO (and other files, if you choose- useful for iPXE over HTTP(S)).

Accepts (case-insensitive) one of:

yes

no

true

false

1

0

[http]

This section controls details about HTTP file preparation/generation. Only used if sync:http is enabled.

path

This directory is where to build an HTTP webroot.

Warning
MAKE SURE you do not store files here that you want to keep! They will be deleted!
  1. No whitespace

  2. If blank, HTTP preparation/generation will not be done

  3. If specified, it will be created if it doesnt exist

  4. Will be deleted first

user

What user the HTTP files should be owned as. This is most likely going to be either 'http', 'nginx', or 'apache'.

  1. No whitespace

  2. User must exist on build system

Can be one of:

username

UID

group

What group the HTTP files should be owned as. This is most likely going to be either 'http', 'nginx', or 'apache'.

  1. No whitespace

  2. Group must exist on build system

Can be one of:

group name

UID

[tftp]

This section controls details about TFTP file preparation/generation. Only used if sync:tftp is enabled.

path

The directory where we want to build a TFTP root.

Warning
MAKE SURE you do not store files here that you want to keep! They will be deleted!
  1. No whitespace

  2. Will be created if it doesnt exist

  3. Will be deleted first

user

What user the TFTP files should be owned as. This is most likely going to be either 'tftp', 'root', or 'nobody'.

  1. No whitespace

  2. User must exist on build system

Can be one of:

username

UID

group

What group the TFTP files should be owned as. This is most likely going to be either 'tftp', 'root', or 'nobody'.

  1. No whitespace

  2. Group must exist on build system

Can be one of:

group name

UID

[ipxe]

This section controls aspects of iPXE building. Only used if build:ipxe is enabled.

iso

default: no
requires: git

Build a "mini-ISO"; that is, an ISO file that can be used to bootstrap an iPXE environment (so you dont need to set up a traditional PXE environment on your LAN). Well still build a full standalone ISO no matter what.

Accepts (case-insensitive) one of:

yes

no

true

false

1

0

uri

What URI iPXEs EMBED script should use. This would be where you host an iPXE chainloading script on a webserver, for instance. See iPXEs example of dynamic scripts for an example of the script that would be placed at this URI.

Note
If you require HTTP BASIC Authentication or HTTP Digest Authentication (untested), you can format it via https://user:password@bdisk.square-r00t.net/boot.php.
Note
This currently does not work for HTTPS with self-signed certificates.
  1. Required if iso is enabled

ssldir

Directory to hold SSL results, if we are generating keys, certificates, etc.

  1. No whitespace

  2. Will be created if it does not exist

ssl_ca

Path to the (root) CA certificate file iPXE should use. See iPXEs crypto page for more information.

Note
You can use your own CA to sign existing certs. This is handy if you run a third-party/"Trusted" root-CA-signed certificate for the HTTPS target.
  1. No whitespace

  2. Must be in PEM/X509 format

  3. Required if iso is enabled

  4. If it exists, a matching key (ssl_cakey) must be specified

    1. However, if left blank/doesnt exist, one will be automatically generated

ssl_cakey

Path to the (root) CA key file iPXE should use.

  1. No whitespace

  2. Must be in PEM/X509 format

  3. Required if iso is enabled

  4. If left blank or it doesnt exist (and ssl_ca is also blank), one will be automatically generated

  5. Must match/pair to ssl_ca if specified/exists

  6. MUST NOT be passphrase-protected/DES-encrypted

ssl_crt

Path to the client certificate iPXE should use.

  1. No whitespace

  2. Must be in PEM/X509 format

  3. Required if iso is enabled

  4. If specified/existent, a matching CA cert (ssl_ca) and key (ssl_cakey) must be specified

    1. However, if left blank/doesnt exist, one will be automatically generated

  5. Must be signed by ssl_ca/ssl_cakey if specified and already exists

ssl_key

Path to the client key iPXE should use.

  1. No whitespace

  2. Must be in PEM/X509 format

  3. Required if iso is enabled

  4. If left blank/nonexistent (and ssl_ca is also blank), one will be automatically generated

[rsync]

This section controls aspects of rsync pushing. Only used if sync:rsync is enabled.

host

The rsync destination host.

  1. Must resolve from the build server

  2. Can be host, FQDN, or IP address

user

This is the remote user we should use when performing the rsync push.

  1. User must exist on remote system

  2. SSH pubkey authorization must be configured

  3. The destinations hostkey must be added to your local build users known hosts

path

This is the remote destination path we should use for pushing via rsync.

Note
Youll probably want to set http:user and http:group to what itll need to be on the destination.
  1. No whitespace

  2. The path must exist on the remote host

  3. The path MUST be writable by user

iso

Should we rsync over the ISO files too, or just the boot files?

Accepts (case-insensitive) one of:

yes

no

true

false

1

0