Re: FreeBSD custom CD and extra files to be included in the iso

2012-02-05 Thread Amitabh Kant
On Sat, Feb 4, 2012 at 9:46 PM, Devin Teske devin.te...@fisglobal.comwrote:


 On Feb 4, 2012, at 1:37 AM, Amitabh Kant wrote:

 On Sat, Feb 4, 2012 at 2:50 PM, Amitabh Kant amitabhk...@gmail.com
 wrote:

 I have been able to use the make release command to create a custom iso

 for FreeBSD which includes some changes to the various bsdinstall scripts.

 It all works well as the iso / memory stick images / ftp files are

 generated and usable.


 What I would now like to do is try adding couple of files, scripts and/or

 packages, to this custom iso. I am a little confused on where the files

 should be placed so that it is placed in either root's home directory after

 installation?


 Amitabh



 Sorry for not making it clear in my last mail, I am using FreeBSD 9.0
 RELEASE on amd64 arch.


 If you use the DRUID (http://druidbsd.sf.net/), this is extremely easy.

 Step-by-step instructions...

 NOTE: Feel free to use ANY operating system you like, so long as it has
 (1) /bin/sh (2) cvs (3) mkisofs (4) GNU make. Including (but not limited
 to) Mac OS X (with developer tools installed), Cygwin, Linux, and of
 course, FreeBSD.

 1. mkdir druidbsd.sf.net

 2. cd druidbsd.sf.net

 3. cvs -d:pserver:anonym...@druidbsd.cvs.sourceforge.net:/cvsroot/druidbsd
 login

 NOTE: Press ENTER when prompted for CVS password:

 NOTE: Ignore warning about failed to open ~/.cvspass

 4. cvs -z3 -d:pserver:anonym...@druidbsd.cvs.sourceforge.net:/cvsroot/druidbsd
 co -P druidbsd/druid

 NOTE: The screen will stream information for about 5-10 minutes as it
 downloads 510MB of source code to the FreeBSD DRUID installer -- a
 sysinstall(8) based custom FreeBSD 9.0 installer capable of installing
 *either* i386 or amd64 from the same disc (among many many other things).

 5. cd druidbsd/druid

 NOTE: The DRUID has a special directory in-which anything placed there
 gets copied to the target installation disk automatically after
 installation of the Operating System completes (but before any
 post-installation scripts are run). This directory is called sys_custom
 and it lives within the RELEASE directory. Within sys_custom, files are
 copied exactly as-is, so since you mentioned that you wanted to copy files
 to /root, let's operate under that assumption below.

 6. mkdir -p src/freebsd/repos/9.0-RELEASE-amd64/sys_custom/root

 7. cp myfiles src/freebsd/repos/9.0-RELEASE-amd64/sys_custom/root/

 NOTE: If you want the same files available for the installation of the
 i386 release of 9.0-RELEASE, you should repeat the above steps 6-7 with the
 destination directory src/freebsd/repos/9.0-RELEASE/sys_custom/root
 (remember, the DRUID is a unified installer that supports both the
 installation of i386 and amd64 from the same disc).

 8. ./configure

 9. make freebsd

 NOTE: Replace make with gmake if on FreeBSD

 NOTE: If you're using FreeBSD, you may have to first say pkg_add -r
 gmake followed by rehash (if using csh or tcsh as your shell).

 NOTE: Also, if you need to get mkisofs, it's pkg_add -r cdrtools (and
 again, rehash if using csh or tcsh as your shell).

 10. You now have a custom FreeBSD_Druid-9.0b56.iso that will install
 your custom files automatically to /root when either i386 or amd64 is
 installed.

 ASIDE: sys_custom is like a dumping ground for anything and everything
 you simply want to be copied to-disk post-installation of the OS. If
 instead you want to write scripts to be run as part of the
 post-installation process, see instead dep/freebsd/run_once/template.sh
 and src/freebsd/repos/9.0-RELEASE/run_once/*.sh and
 src/freebsd/repos/9.0-RELEASE-amd64/run_once/*.sh. The run_once
 directory unlike sys_custom is a dumping ground for post-installation
 scripts (any script ending in .sh in that directory will automatically be
 executed as part of the post-installation procedure after installing the OS.

 ASIDE: As you can tell, the DRUID is a FreeBSD installer that was designed
 to be *easily* extended by anybody/everybody on any OS they like (any OS
 that can produce or edit an ISO that is).
 --
 Devin
  _
 The information contained in this message is proprietary and/or
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 message and all copies; (ii) do not disclose, distribute or use the message
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 be aware that any message addressed to our domain is subject to archiving
 and review by persons other than the intended recipient. Thank you.


Thanks Devin. Would take a look at DRUID.

Amitabh
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FreeBSD custom CD and extra files to be included in the iso

2012-02-04 Thread Amitabh Kant
I have been able to use the make release command to create a custom iso
for FreeBSD which includes some changes to the various bsdinstall scripts.
It all works well as the iso / memory stick images / ftp files are
generated and usable.

What I would now like to do is try adding couple of files, scripts and/or
packages, to this custom iso. I am a little confused on where the files
should be placed so that it is placed in either root's home directory after
installation?

Amitabh
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Re: FreeBSD custom CD and extra files to be included in the iso

2012-02-04 Thread Amitabh Kant
On Sat, Feb 4, 2012 at 2:50 PM, Amitabh Kant amitabhk...@gmail.com wrote:

 I have been able to use the make release command to create a custom iso
 for FreeBSD which includes some changes to the various bsdinstall scripts.
 It all works well as the iso / memory stick images / ftp files are
 generated and usable.

 What I would now like to do is try adding couple of files, scripts and/or
 packages, to this custom iso. I am a little confused on where the files
 should be placed so that it is placed in either root's home directory after
 installation?

 Amitabh


Sorry for not making it clear in my last mail, I am using FreeBSD 9.0
RELEASE on amd64 arch.

Amitabh
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Re: FreeBSD custom CD and extra files to be included in the iso

2012-02-04 Thread Devin Teske

On Feb 4, 2012, at 1:37 AM, Amitabh Kant wrote:

 On Sat, Feb 4, 2012 at 2:50 PM, Amitabh Kant amitabhk...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 I have been able to use the make release command to create a custom iso
 for FreeBSD which includes some changes to the various bsdinstall scripts.
 It all works well as the iso / memory stick images / ftp files are
 generated and usable.
 
 What I would now like to do is try adding couple of files, scripts and/or
 packages, to this custom iso. I am a little confused on where the files
 should be placed so that it is placed in either root's home directory after
 installation?
 
 Amitabh
 
 
 Sorry for not making it clear in my last mail, I am using FreeBSD 9.0
 RELEASE on amd64 arch.
 


If you use the DRUID (http://druidbsd.sf.net/), this is extremely easy.

Step-by-step instructions...

NOTE: Feel free to use ANY operating system you like, so long as it has (1) 
/bin/sh (2) cvs (3) mkisofs (4) GNU make. Including (but not limited to) Mac OS 
X (with developer tools installed), Cygwin, Linux, and of course, FreeBSD.

1. mkdir druidbsd.sf.net

2. cd druidbsd.sf.net

3. cvs -d:pserver:anonym...@druidbsd.cvs.sourceforge.net:/cvsroot/druidbsd login

NOTE: Press ENTER when prompted for CVS password:

NOTE: Ignore warning about failed to open ~/.cvspass

4. cvs -z3 -d:pserver:anonym...@druidbsd.cvs.sourceforge.net:/cvsroot/druidbsd 
co -P druidbsd/druid

NOTE: The screen will stream information for about 5-10 minutes as it downloads 
510MB of source code to the FreeBSD DRUID installer -- a sysinstall(8) based 
custom FreeBSD 9.0 installer capable of installing *either* i386 or amd64 from 
the same disc (among many many other things).

5. cd druidbsd/druid

NOTE: The DRUID has a special directory in-which anything placed there gets 
copied to the target installation disk automatically after installation of the 
Operating System completes (but before any post-installation scripts are run). 
This directory is called sys_custom and it lives within the RELEASE 
directory. Within sys_custom, files are copied exactly as-is, so since you 
mentioned that you wanted to copy files to /root, let's operate under that 
assumption below.

6. mkdir -p src/freebsd/repos/9.0-RELEASE-amd64/sys_custom/root

7. cp myfiles src/freebsd/repos/9.0-RELEASE-amd64/sys_custom/root/

NOTE: If you want the same files available for the installation of the i386 
release of 9.0-RELEASE, you should repeat the above steps 6-7 with the 
destination directory src/freebsd/repos/9.0-RELEASE/sys_custom/root 
(remember, the DRUID is a unified installer that supports both the installation 
of i386 and amd64 from the same disc).

8. ./configure

9. make freebsd

NOTE: Replace make with gmake if on FreeBSD

NOTE: If you're using FreeBSD, you may have to first say pkg_add -r gmake 
followed by rehash (if using csh or tcsh as your shell).

NOTE: Also, if you need to get mkisofs, it's pkg_add -r cdrtools (and 
again, rehash if using csh or tcsh as your shell).

10. You now have a custom FreeBSD_Druid-9.0b56.iso that will install your 
custom files automatically to /root when either i386 or amd64 is installed.

ASIDE: sys_custom is like a dumping ground for anything and everything you 
simply want to be copied to-disk post-installation of the OS. If instead you 
want to write scripts to be run as part of the post-installation process, see 
instead dep/freebsd/run_once/template.sh and 
src/freebsd/repos/9.0-RELEASE/run_once/*.sh and 
src/freebsd/repos/9.0-RELEASE-amd64/run_once/*.sh. The run_once directory 
unlike sys_custom is a dumping ground for post-installation scripts (any 
script ending in .sh in that directory will automatically be executed as part 
of the post-installation procedure after installing the OS.

ASIDE: As you can tell, the DRUID is a FreeBSD installer that was designed to 
be *easily* extended by anybody/everybody on any OS they like (any OS that can 
produce or edit an ISO that is).
-- 
Devin

_
The information contained in this message is proprietary and/or confidential. 
If you are not the intended recipient, please: (i) delete the message and all 
copies; (ii) do not disclose, distribute or use the message in any manner; and 
(iii) notify the sender immediately. In addition, please be aware that any 
message addressed to our domain is subject to archiving and review by persons 
other than the intended recipient. Thank you.
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