virtual-appliance/Makefile

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I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
CHROOT=./vabuild
APPLIANCE = base
HOSTNAME = $(APPLIANCE)
RAW_IMAGE = $(HOSTNAME).img
QCOW_IMAGE = $(HOSTNAME).qcow
VMDK_IMAGE = $(HOSTNAME).vmdk
2010-11-05 04:17:00 +01:00
KERNEL_CONFIG = kernel.config
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
VIRTIO = NO
TIMEZONE = UTC
DISK_SIZE = 6.0G
SWAP_SIZE = 30
SWAP_FILE = $(CHROOT)/.swap
ARCH = amd64
MAKEOPTS = -j4
PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO
REMOVE_PORTAGE_TREE = YES
ENABLE_SSHD = NO
CHANGE_PASSWORD = YES
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
HEADLESS = NO
EXTERNAL_KERNEL = NO
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
ACCEPT_KEYWORDS = amd64
M4 = m4
EMERGE = /usr/bin/emerge
M4_DEFS = -D HOSTNAME=$(HOSTNAME)
M4C = $(M4) $(M4_DEFS)
NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd0
USEPKG = --usepkg --binpkg-respect-use=y
RSYNC_MIRROR = rsync://mirrors.rit.edu/gentoo/
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
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KERNEL = gentoo-sources
PACKAGE_FILES = $(APPLIANCE)/package.*
WORLD = $(APPLIANCE)/world
CRITICAL = $(APPLIANCE)/critical
-include $(profile).cfg
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
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ifneq ($(PKGDIR),)
MOUNT_PKGDIR = mkdir -p $(CHROOT)/var/portage/packages; \
mount -o bind "$(PKGDIR)" $(CHROOT)/var/portage/packages
UMOUNT_PKGDIR = umount $(CHROOT)/var/portage/packages
ADD_PKGDIR = echo PKGDIR="/var/portage/packages" >> $(CHROOT)/etc/make.conf
endif
ifeq ($(PRUNE_CRITICAL),YES)
COPY_LOOP = rsync -ax --exclude-from=rsync-excludes \
--exclude-from=rsync-excludes-critical gentoo/ loop/
UNMERGE_CRITICAL = chroot $(CHROOT) $(EMERGE) -C `cat $(CRITICAL)`
else
COPY_LOOP = rsync -ax --exclude-from=rsync-excludes gentoo/ loop/
endif
ifeq ($(CHANGE_PASSWORD),YES)
ifdef ROOT_PASSWORD
change_password = chroot $(CHROOT) usermod -p '$(ROOT_PASSWORD)' root
else
change_password = chroot $(CHROOT) passwd -d root; chroot $(CHROOT) passwd -e root
endif
endif
ifeq ($(REMOVE_PORTAGE_TREE),YES)
COPY_LOOP += --exclude=usr/portage
endif
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
ifeq ($(VIRTIO),YES)
VIRTIO_FSTAB = sed -i 's/sda/vda/' $(CHROOT)/etc/fstab
VIRTIO_GRUB = sed -i 's/sda/vda/' $(CHROOT)/boot/grub/grub.conf
endif
ifeq ($(HEADLESS),YES)
HEADLESS_INITTAB = sed -ri 's/^(c[0-9]:)/\#\1/' $(CHROOT)/etc/inittab
HEADLESS_GRUB = sed -i -f grub-headless.sed $(CHROOT)/boot/grub/grub.conf
endif
ifeq ($(ENABLE_SSHD),YES)
enable_sshd = chroot $(CHROOT) rc-update add sshd default
endif
gcc_config = chroot $(CHROOT) gcc-config 1
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
export APPLIANCE ACCEPT_KEYWORDS CHROOT EMERGE HEADLESS M4 M4C
2010-11-30 03:29:04 +01:00
export HOSTNAME MAKEOPTS PRUNE_CRITICAL TIMEZONE USEPKG WORLD OVERLAY
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
unexport PKGDIR ARCH NBD_DEV
2010-07-09 05:22:37 +02:00
all: image
$(RAW_IMAGE):
qemu-img create -f raw $(RAW_IMAGE) $(DISK_SIZE)
partitions: $(RAW_IMAGE)
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
parted -s $(RAW_IMAGE) mklabel msdos
parted -s $(RAW_IMAGE) mkpart primary ext2 0 $(DISK_SIZE)
parted -s $(RAW_IMAGE) set 1 boot on
qemu-nbd -c $(NBD_DEV) $(RAW_IMAGE)
sleep 3
2011-02-21 13:13:24 +01:00
mkfs.ext4 -O sparse_super,^has_journal -L "$(APPLIANCE)"_root $(NBD_DEV)p1
2010-07-09 05:22:37 +02:00
touch partitions
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
mounts: stage3
mkdir -p $(CHROOT)
if [ ! -e mounts ] ; then \
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mount -t proc none $(CHROOT)/proc; \
mount -o bind /dev $(CHROOT)/dev; \
mount -o bind /var/tmp $(CHROOT)/var/tmp; \
fi
touch mounts
sync_portage:
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
rsync --no-motd -L $(RSYNC_MIRROR)/snapshots/portage-latest.tar.bz2 portage-latest.tar.bz2
touch sync_portage
portage: sync_portage stage3
tar xjf portage-latest.tar.bz2 -C $(CHROOT)/usr
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
$(MOUNT_PKGDIR)
touch portage
preproot: stage3 mounts portage
cp -L /etc/resolv.conf $(CHROOT)/etc/
# bug in portage... annoying
chroot $(CHROOT) eselect python set python2.6
touch preproot
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stage3:
mkdir -p $(CHROOT)
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
rsync --no-motd $(RSYNC_MIRROR)/releases/`echo $(ARCH)|sed 's/i.86/x86/'`/autobuilds/latest-stage3.txt .
rsync --no-motd $(RSYNC_MIRROR)/releases/`echo $(ARCH)|sed 's/i.86/x86/'`/autobuilds/`tail -n 1 latest-stage3.txt` stage3-$(ARCH)-latest.tar.bz2
tar xjpf stage3-$(ARCH)-latest.tar.bz2 -C $(CHROOT)
touch stage3
compile_options: portage make.conf locale.gen $(PACKAGE_FILES)
cp make.conf $(CHROOT)/etc/make.conf
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
$(ADD_PKGDIR)
echo ACCEPT_KEYWORDS=$(ACCEPT_KEYWORDS) >> $(CHROOT)/etc/make.conf
cp locale.gen $(CHROOT)/etc/locale.gen
chroot $(CHROOT) locale-gen
mkdir -p $(CHROOT)/etc/portage
for f in $(PACKAGE_FILES) ; do \
cp $$f $(CHROOT)/etc/portage/ ; \
done
touch compile_options
base_system: mounts compile_options
touch base_system
2010-07-09 05:22:37 +02:00
kernel: base_system $(KERNEL_CONFIG)
chroot $(CHROOT) cp /usr/share/zoneinfo/$(TIMEZONE) /etc/localtime
ifneq ($(EXTERNAL_KERNEL),YES)
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
chroot $(CHROOT) $(EMERGE) -n $(USEPKG) sys-kernel/$(KERNEL)
2010-11-05 04:17:00 +01:00
cp $(KERNEL_CONFIG) $(CHROOT)/usr/src/linux/.config
$(gcc_config)
chroot $(CHROOT) make $(MAKEOPTS) -C /usr/src/linux oldconfig
chroot $(CHROOT) make $(MAKEOPTS) -C /usr/src/linux
chroot $(CHROOT) make $(MAKEOPTS) -C /usr/src/linux modules_install
chroot $(CHROOT) make $(MAKEOPTS) -C /usr/src/linux install
2010-07-09 05:22:37 +02:00
cd $(CHROOT)/boot ; \
k=`/bin/ls -1 --sort=time vmlinuz-*|head -n 1` ; \
ln -nsf $$k vmlinuz
endif
touch kernel
2010-07-09 05:22:37 +02:00
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
$(SWAP_FILE): preproot
dd if=/dev/zero of=$(SWAP_FILE) bs=1M count=$(SWAP_SIZE)
/sbin/mkswap $(SWAP_FILE)
$(CHROOT)/etc/fstab: fstab preproot
2010-07-09 05:22:37 +02:00
cp fstab $(CHROOT)/etc/fstab
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
$(CHROOT)/etc/conf.d/hostname: preproot
2010-07-09 05:22:37 +02:00
echo HOSTNAME=$(HOSTNAME) > $(CHROOT)/etc/conf.d/hostname
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
$(CHROOT)/etc/conf.d/clock: preproot
2010-07-09 05:22:37 +02:00
sed -i 's/^#TIMEZONE=.*/TIMEZONE="$(TIMEZONE)"/' $(CHROOT)/etc/conf.d/clock
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
sysconfig: preproot $(SWAP_FILE) $(CHROOT)/etc/fstab $(CHROOT)/etc/conf.d/hostname $(CHROOT)/etc/conf.d/clock
@echo $(VIRTIO)
$(VIRTIO_FSTAB)
sed -i 's/^#s0:/s0:/' $(CHROOT)/etc/inittab
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
$(HEADLESS_INITTAB)
2010-07-09 05:22:37 +02:00
echo 'config_eth0=( "dhcp" )' > $(CHROOT)/etc/conf.d/net
echo 'dhcp_eth0="release"' >> $(CHROOT)/etc/conf.d/net
chroot $(CHROOT) ln -nsf net.lo /etc/init.d/net.eth0
2010-07-09 05:22:37 +02:00
chroot $(CHROOT) rc-update add net.eth0 default
chroot $(CHROOT) rc-update del consolefont boot
2010-07-09 05:22:37 +02:00
touch sysconfig
systools: sysconfig compile_options
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
chroot $(CHROOT) $(EMERGE) -n $(USEPKG) app-admin/syslog-ng
2010-07-09 05:22:37 +02:00
chroot $(CHROOT) rc-update add syslog-ng default
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
chroot $(CHROOT) $(EMERGE) -n $(USEPKG) sys-power/acpid
chroot $(CHROOT) rc-update add acpid default
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
chroot $(CHROOT) $(EMERGE) -n $(USEPKG) net-misc/dhcpcd
2010-07-09 05:22:37 +02:00
touch systools
grub: systools grub.conf kernel
ifneq ($(EXTERNAL_KERNEL),YES)
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
chroot $(CHROOT) $(EMERGE) -nN $(USEPKG) sys-boot/grub
cp grub.conf $(CHROOT)/boot/grub/grub.conf
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
$(VIRTIO_GRUB)
$(HEADLESS_GRUB)
endif
2010-07-09 05:22:37 +02:00
touch grub
software: systools issue etc-update.conf $(CRITICAL) $(WORLD)
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
$(MAKE) -C $(APPLIANCE) preinstall
cp etc-update.conf $(CHROOT)/etc/
# some packages, like, tar need xz-utils to unpack, but it not part of
# the stage3 so may not be installed yet
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
chroot $(CHROOT) $(EMERGE) -1n $(USEPKG) app-arch/xz-utils
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
chroot $(CHROOT) $(EMERGE) $(USEPKG) --update --newuse --deep `cat $(WORLD)`
$(gcc_config)
# Need gentoolkit to run revdep-rebuild
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
chroot $(CHROOT) $(EMERGE) -1n $(USEPKG) app-portage/gentoolkit
chroot $(CHROOT) revdep-rebuild -i
2010-07-09 05:22:37 +02:00
cp issue $(CHROOT)/etc/issue
$(gcc_config)
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
chroot $(CHROOT) $(EMERGE) $(USEPKG) --update --newuse --deep world
chroot $(CHROOT) $(EMERGE) --depclean --with-bdeps=n
$(gcc_config)
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
chroot $(CHROOT) etc-update
$(MAKE) -C $(APPLIANCE) postinstall
$(enable_sshd)
$(change_password)
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
$(UNMERGE_CRITICAL)
2010-07-09 05:22:37 +02:00
touch software
device-map: $(RAW_IMAGE)
echo '(hd0) ' $(RAW_IMAGE) > device-map
image: $(RAW_IMAGE) grub partitions device-map grub.shell systools software
2010-07-09 05:22:37 +02:00
mkdir -p loop
mount -o noatime $(NBD_DEV)p1 loop
2010-07-09 05:22:37 +02:00
mkdir -p gentoo
mount -o bind $(CHROOT) gentoo
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
$(COPY_LOOP)
ifneq ($(EXTERNAL_KERNEL),YES)
2010-07-09 05:22:37 +02:00
loop/sbin/grub --device-map=device-map --no-floppy --batch < grub.shell
endif
2010-07-09 05:22:37 +02:00
umount gentoo
rmdir gentoo
umount loop
2010-07-09 05:22:37 +02:00
sleep 3
rmdir loop
qemu-nbd -d $(NBD_DEV)
2010-07-09 05:22:37 +02:00
touch image
$(QCOW_IMAGE): $(RAW_IMAGE) image
qemu-img convert -f raw -O qcow2 -c $(RAW_IMAGE) $(QCOW_IMAGE)
qcow: $(QCOW_IMAGE)
$(VMDK_IMAGE): $(RAW_IMAGE) image
qemu-img convert -f raw -O vmdk $(RAW_IMAGE) $(VMDK_IMAGE)
vmdk: $(VMDK_IMAGE)
umount:
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
$(UMOUNT_PKGDIR)
umount $(CHROOT)/var/tmp
umount $(CHROOT)/dev
umount $(CHROOT)/proc
touch umount
2010-07-09 05:22:37 +02:00
2010-11-06 09:41:15 +01:00
remove_checkpoints:
rm -f mounts compile_options base_system portage sync_portage
rm -f parted kernel grub stage3 software preproot sysconfig systools image partitions device-map
2010-11-06 09:41:15 +01:00
clean: umount remove_checkpoints
rm -f umount
2010-11-21 01:51:27 +01:00
rm -rf loop gentoo
2010-07-09 05:22:37 +02:00
rm -rf gentoo
rm -rf $(CHROOT)
realclean: clean
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
${RM} $(RAW_IMAGE) $(QCOW_IMAGE) $(VMDK_IMAGE)
2010-11-06 23:46:07 +01:00
distclean:
2010-11-06 09:41:15 +01:00
rm -f *.qcow *.img *.vmdk
2010-11-06 23:46:07 +01:00
rm -f latest-stage3.txt stage3-*-latest.tar.bz2
2010-11-06 09:41:15 +01:00
rm -f portage-latest.tar.bz2
2010-11-06 23:46:07 +01:00
I learned a lot about Makefiles :D So, basically I re-architeched things a bit: The appliance/Makefile.inc fiels are now appliance/Makefile (again). The main Makefile will call "make -C appliance preinstall" and "postinstall" (and in future "clean"). So I got rid of the ugly make variables/include thing. Some of the main Makefile's variables are exported to the sub-makes. Appliances don't really need $(APPLIANCE) anymore as the appliance directory is their CWD. Added some new targets and smarter targets. I can do more with this, but it's a big improvment from last time. Still learning a lot of Makefile magic (been reading other people's Makefiles). Verified that "make -j3" works (at least on the base appliance) but will kill your hard drive :D Introduced "profiles" Which are files with variables you want to override. The file will be "include"ed by the main Makefile. For example, I have a file, "local.cfg" that looks like this: --- 8< ----------------------------- CHROOT = /var/scratch/marduk/vabuild HEADLESS = YES PRUNE_CRITICAL = NO VIRTIO = YES TIMEZONE = EST5EDT DISK_SIZE = 60.0G SWAP_SIZE = 48 PKGDIR = /var/scratch/packages NBD_DEV = /dev/nbd8 all: qcow --- 8< ------------------------------ Then, e.g. i can run "make PROFILE=local APPLIANCE=kde". If you don't specify a PROFILE variable, then it will default to the empty string, which means the main Makefile will attempt to include .cfg So, for example i have: $ ln -s local.cfg .cfg $ make APPLIANCE=kde Don't set PROFILE inside your .cfg file (why would you?). Also, if the [pro]file does not exist, the include fails silently. I will put this info in the wiki eventually...
2010-11-14 00:22:18 +01:00
.PHONY: qcow vmdk clean realclean distclean remove_checkpoints