008d7c831f
Off by default, build behaves normally. WITH_META_MODE we get auto objdir creation, the ability to start build from anywhere in the tree. Still need to add real targets under targets/ to build packages. Differential Revision: D2796 Reviewed by: brooks imp |
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.. | ||
Makefile | ||
Makefile.depend | ||
pc-autoinstall.conf | ||
pcinstall.cfg.fbsd-netinstall | ||
pcinstall.cfg.geli | ||
pcinstall.cfg.gmirror | ||
pcinstall.cfg.netinstall | ||
pcinstall.cfg.restore | ||
pcinstall.cfg.rsync | ||
pcinstall.cfg.upgrade | ||
pcinstall.cfg.zfs | ||
README |
pc-sysinstall README This file documents many of the variables used in pc-sysinstall config scripts ################################################################# # hostname= Using hostname= will set the specified hostname on the installed system When hostname= is not present, pc-sysinstall will auto-generate a hostname such as freebsd-XXXX or pcbsd-XXXX # installMode=(fresh/upgrade/extract) Set the type of install we are doing. Fresh installs will format and mount the target disks before extracting the install images to the system. Using this mode it is also possible to do a system restore, by specifying a full system backup as the install source. Upgrades will mount the target disk, and extract the system archive to the disk, overwriting files on the disk. The conf/exclude-from-upgrade file can be used to specify additional files to exclude from overwriting during the install process. Extract will skip any disk setup, and perform an installation to the directory specified by "installLocation=". This location should be a directory with your pre-mounted file-systems ready for file extraction. When using the "extract" option, /etc/fstab on the installed system will *not* be automatically configured. # installLocation= Used only when installMode is set to extract. This is set to the location you want to extract your system to, and should already be mounted properly. # installInteractive=(yes or no) Set if the installer is running in interactive mode, and is able to prompt for input from the user, defaults to no ######################################################################## # NETWORK SETTINGS ######################################################################## # netDev=(AUTO-DHCP or <nic>) netDev specifies what type of networking to enable for the installer Can be set to AUTO-DHCP or to a network interface, such as et0 When set to AUTO-DHCP, pc-sysinstall will probe for all network devices and attempt to set DHCP mode on each, until a working network connection is established If netDev= is set to a network interface such as et0, the following options will need to be set in order to enable the interface # netIP=(IP address such as 192.168.0.100) Set netIP to an address that you wish to have the interface specified in netDev set to Only used when netDev is not set to AUTO-DHCP # netMask=(Netmask such as 255.255.255.0) Set netMask to the address you with to have the interface specified in netDev set to Only used when netDev is not set to AUTO-DHCP # netNameServer=(DNS Server such as 192.168.0.1) Set netNameServer to the DNS address you want to use during the install Only used when netDev is not set to AUTO-DHCP # netDefaultRouter=(192.168.0.1) Set netDefaultRouter to the gateway you wish to have the installer use Only used when netDev is not set to AUTO-DHCP # netSaveDev=(AUTO-DHCP or network interface) netSaveDev specifies what networking to enable on the installed system When set to AUTO-DHCP, pc-sysinstall will probe all network interfaces, and set them all to DHCP in the systems /etc/rc.conf file. Wireless devices will also have the corresponding wlan[0-9] device created. When set to a network interface, pc-sysinstall will set the target device with the settings specified by the variables below. # netSaveIP=192.168.0.49 # netSaveMask=255.255.255.0 # netSaveNameServer=208.67.222.222 # netSaveDefaultRouter=192.168.0.1 ######################################################################## # DISK SLICE SETTINGS ######################################################################## The following section specifies the target disk(s) to be used in the install or upgrade. # disk0=(disk device, such as ad0) The diskX= variable should be set to the target device for this drive, such as ad0, da0 The first should begin with disk0=, and additional drives to disk1=, disk2 if additional disks are to be setup. When doing an upgrade, the disk0= line should be set to the root device or root zpool of the target system to update. I.E: # disk0=tank0 # disk0=ada0s1a # partition=(all, free, s1, s1, s3, s4, image) After setting disk[0-9], the partition= variable is used to specify which target partition we will be working with for this device. Setting this to "all" will setup the disk with a single FreeBSD slice as "s1" Setting this to "free" will allow pc-sysinstall to search for the first available primary slice with free space, and create the slice. Setting this to "s1, s2, s3 or s4" will use the specified MBR slice. Setting this to "image" will use an image to configure the disk. (This tag is unused for upgrades) # partscheme=(MBR/GPT) When performing a "full" disk (partition=all), the partscheme= variable is used to determine the partition scheme type gpart will be using on the disk. Valid choices are MBR or GPT. # mirror=(disk device such as ad1) Setting the mirror= variable will setup the target device as a gmirror of the diskX= device. The mirror device must be the same size or larger than the drive being mirrored. # mirrorbal=(load, prefer, round-robin, split) Allows the setting of the mirror balance method to be used, if not specified this defaults to "round-robin" # bootManager=(none, bsd) Setting this option will instruct pc-sysinstall to install the BSD boot Manager, or leave it empty # image=(/path/to/image/file) (/mountpoint) Setting this option will instruct pc-sysinstall to write the image file specified by the path to the disk. # commitDiskPart This command must be placed at the end of the diskX= section, before starting the listing of any additional diskX= directives. ######################################################################## # DISK PARTITION / MOUNT SETTINGS ######################################################################## The following settings specify the partitioning / mount points to setup on the target partition # disk0-part=UFS+S 500 / (-n -o time) # disk0-part=SWAP 2000 none # disk0-part=UFS.eli 500 /usr # encpass=mypass # disk0-part=UFS+J 500 /tmp # disk0-part=ZFS 0 /data,/storage (mirror: ad1) # commitDiskLabel The above values instructs pc-sysinstall which partitions / mounts to create on the target drive / slice, specified by "disk0". (disk0 will resolve to the drive / slice specified in the previous section) The notation is as follows: <File System Type> <Size> <Mountpoint> Available FileSystems: UFS - Standard UFS2 FileSystem UFS+S - UFS2 + Softupdates enabled UFS+SUJ - UFS2 + Soft Updates + Journaling enabled UFS+J - UFS2 + Journaling through gjournal ZFS - Z File System, pools / mounts created automatically SWAP - BSD Swap space partition, mountpoint should be set to "none" Adding the ".eli" extension to any of the above file systems will enable disk encryption via geli (UFS.eli, UFS+S.eli, UFS+SUJ.eli, UFS+J.eli, ZFS.eli, SWAP.eli) If you with to use a passphrase with this encrypted partition, on the next line the flag "encpass=" should be entered: encpass=mypass All sizes are expressed in MegaBytes Specifying a size 0 instructs pc-sysinstall to use the rest of the available slice size, and should only be used for the last partition / mount When using "UFS" and its various types, it is possible to specify custom options for newfs using (). For examplei: disk0-part=UFS+SUJ 1000 / (-o time) In this case "-o time" would be passed to newfs when creating the "/" filesystem. When using "ZFS" specifically, it is possible to specify additional disks / partitions to include in the zpool. By using the syntax: (mirror: ad1,ad2) or (raidz: ad1,ad2), it is possible to include the disk "ad1" into the zpool for this partition, using the raidz / mirror methods. If you with to just include the disk into the pool in "basic" mode, then use (ad1,ad2) with no flags ######################################################################## # INSTALL OPTIONS / SOURCES ######################################################################## The following settings specify the type, locations and sources for this installation # installMedium=(dvd, usb, ftp, rsync, image) Set installMedium= to the source type we will be using for this install. Available Types: dvd - Search for and mount the DVD which contains the install archive local - Pull files directly from a local directory usb - Search for and mount the USB drive which contains the install archive ftp - The install archive will be fetched from a FTP / HTTP server before install rsync - Pull the system data from a ssh + rsync server, specified with variables below image - Install system from an image # localPath=/usr/freebsd-dist Location of the directory we will be pulling installation files from # installType=(PCBSD, FreeBSD) Set the type of system we are installing, PCBSD or FreeBSD # installFile=fbsd-release.tbz The installer archive, if not using the defaults specified in conf/pc-sysinstall.conf # packageType=(tar, uzip, split, dist) The archive type we are extracting from when using dvd, usb or ftp # distFiles=base src kernel List of dist files to install when packageType=dist # ftpPath=ftp://ftp.pcbsd.org/pub/8.0/netinstall Location of the installer archive when using a installMedium=ftp # rsyncPath=life-preserver/back-2009-11-12T14_53_14 The location of the rsync data on the remote server when using installMedium=rsync # rsyncUser=rsyncuser The username to use for the ssh server running rsync # rsyncHost=192.168.0.50 The rsync / ssh server we wish to connect to # rsyncPort=22 The port to use when connecting to a ssh + rsync server # installComponents=amarok,firefox,ports The specified components to install, view available with "./pc-sysinstall list-components" ######################################################################## # UPGRADE OPTIONS ######################################################################## Options specific to performing an upgrade # upgradeKeepDesktopProfile=(yes/no) This option allows you to specify if you wish to keep your existing users desktop profile data. The default is NO, and your existing profile will be moved to .kde4.preUpgrade automatically. ######################################################################## # USER OPTIONS ######################################################################## Options for setting up usernames and passwords on the installed system # rootPass=root Set the root password of the installed system to the specified plaintext string # rootEncPass=<encryptedstring> Set the root password of the installed system to the specified encrypted string The below variables are used to setup a user on the installed system Be sure to call commitUser after after adding these values, and before starting another user block # userName=kris # userComment=Kris Moore # userPass=mypass or # userEncPass=<encryptedstring> # userShell=/bin/csh # userHome=/home/kris # userGroups=wheel,operator # commitUser ######################################################################## # RUN COMMANDS ######################################################################## The following variables can be set to run commands post-installation, allowing the user to further tweak / modify the system # runCommand= Run the specified command within chroot of the installed system # runScript= runScript will copy the specified script into FSMNT, and run it in chroot of the system Useful when you have a 3rd party script on the DVD / USB, and you want to copy it into the installed system and run # runExtCommand= runExtCommand is used when you wish to run a command outside the chroot The variable $FSMNT is set to the mount-point of your installed system ######################################################################## # PC-BSD SPECIFIC OPTIONS ######################################################################## Options for time-zones and NTP on the installed system # timeZone= timeZone can be set to the zone file in /usr/share/zoneinfo/ that is to be used example: America/New_York # enableNTP= (yes / no) set enableNTP to yes or no to enable or disable the NTP service on the system ######################################################################## # PC-BSD SPECIFC OPTIONS ######################################################################## Options specific to installing PC-BSD, such as localization, and KDE settings # localizeLang=en localizeLang will set the system console and Desktop to the target language # localizeKeyLayout=en localizeKeyLayout updates the system's xorg config to set the keyboard layout # localizeKeyModel=pc104 localizeKeyModel updates the system's xorg config to set the keyboard model # localizeKeyVariant=intl localizeKeyVariant is used to update the xorg config to set the keyboard variant # autoLoginUser=kris Setting autoLoginUser will enable the specified user to log into the desktop automatically without entering a password $FreeBSD$