From Fedora Project Wiki

No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 14: Line 14:


modified_
modified_
livecd-iso-to-disk  -  Convert a Live CD/DVD/USB image so that it's bootable off of a USB stick
livecd-iso-to-disk  -  Convert a Live CD/DVD/USB image so that it's bootable off of a USB/SD stick


=head1 SYNOPSIS     
=head1 SYNOPSIS     
Line 85: Line 85:
Used with multi image copies to designate the directory <dir> for the particular image.
Used with multi image copies to designate the directory <dir> for the particular image.


=item --compress   (default behavior for compressed sources)
=item --compressed   (default state for the operating system files)


The compressed SquashFS filesystem on the source is installed. Invoking the option with an uncompressed source will not result in compression
Allows the default compressed SquashFS filesystem image to be copied.
Has no effect on an already-expanded filesystem copy.


=item --skipcompress  (default for when option --xo is specified or an uncompressed source is used)
=item --skipcompress  (default for when option --xo is specified or an uncompressed source is used)
Line 100: Line 101:


--overlay-size-mb <size>, home-size-mb <size>, --delete-home,  
--overlay-size-mb <size>, home-size-mb <size>, --delete-home,  
--copy-home, --copy-overlay, --compress
--copy-home, --copy-overlay, --compressed


=back
=back
Line 114: Line 115:
=item --skipcopy
=item --skipcopy


Skips the copy of the live image to the USB stick, bypassing the actions of the --format, --overlay-size-mb, --home-size-mb, & --swap-size-mb options, if present on the command line. (The --skipcopy option is used while testing the script, in order to avoid repeated and lengthy copy commands, or to repair disk configuration files.)
Skips the copy of the live image to the target stick, bypassing the actions of the --format, --overlay-size-mb, --copy-overlay, --home-size-mb, --copy-home, & --swap-size-mb options, if present on the command line. (The --skipcopy option is used while testing the script, in order to avoid repeated and lengthy copy commands, or to repair boot configuration files.)


=item --overlay-size-mb <size>
=item --overlay-size-mb <size>
Line 152: Line 153:
=item --force
=item --force


This option allows one to bypass the user confirmation for deletion of an existing home directory on the target device, if one exists.
This option allows one to bypass the user confirmation for the deletion of an existing home directory on the target device, if one exists.


=item --crypted-home  (default action, active only if home-size-mb is specified)
=item --encrypted-home  (default that only applies to new, home-size-mb requests)


Produces an encrypted persistent home directory.
Allows the default option to encrypt a new, persistent home directory.
Has no effect on a copied home directory.


=item --unencrypted-home
=item --unencrypted-home


Disables the encryption of the persistent home directory.
Prevents the default option to encrypt a new, persistent home directory.
Has no effect on a copied home directory.


=back
=back
Line 166: Line 169:
=head1 CONTRIBUTORS
=head1 CONTRIBUTORS


David Zeuthen, Jeremy Katz, Douglas McClendon, Chris Curranm and other contributors.  (See the AUTHORS file in the source distribution for the complete list of credits.)
David Zeuthen, Jeremy Katz, Douglas McClendon, Chris Curran and other contributors.  (See the AUTHORS file in the source distribution for the complete list of credits.)


=head1 BUGS
=head1 BUGS

Revision as of 14:52, 16 July 2010


livecd-iso-to-disk.sh is a bash shell script supplied with livecd-tools, http://git.fedoraproject.org/git/?p=hosted/livecd;a=tree;f=tools;hb=HEAD.

Usage is documented in livecd-iso-to-disk.pod, in http://git.fedoraproject.org/git/?p=hosted/livecd;a=tree;f=docs;hb=HEAD, which was copied here for easy revision and review on 05 April 2010. The revision history of this page shows the proposed changes to this file. The accumulated changes are shown below.

proposed livecd-iso-to-disk.pod

=pod

=head1 NAME

modified_ livecd-iso-to-disk - Convert a Live CD/DVD/USB image so that it's bootable off of a USB/SD stick

=head1 SYNOPSIS

B<modified_ livecd-iso-to-disk> [--help] [--format] [--reset-mbr] [--efi] [--extra-kernel-args <args>] [--multi] [--livedir <dir>] [--compress] [--skipcompress] [--swap-size-mb <size>] [--xo] [--xo-no-home] [--noverify] [--skipcopy] [--overlay-size-mb <size>] [--copy-overlay] [--builder] [--delete-home] [--force] [--home-size-mb <size>] [--copy-home] [--crypted-home] [--unencrypted-home] <source> <target_device>

Simplest:

The script may be run in simplest form with just the two arguments:

B<modified_ livecd-iso-to-disk> <source> <target_device>

To execute the script to completion, you will need to run it with root user permissions. Syslinux must be installed on the computer running the installation script.

=over 4

=item <source>

This may be the filesystem path to a LiveOS .iso image file, such as from a CD-ROM, DVD, or download. It could also be the mount point or device reference of another LiveOS filesystem including a currently running one (such as a booted Live CD/DVD/USB where /dev/live would reference the device). If your source image is on another connected device, you would reference the bootable volume partition mount point, such as /media/usbmnt or /media/<partition_label>, where the label is often the device vendor's name.

=item <target_device>

This should be the device partition name for the attached, target device, such as /dev/sdb1 or /dev/sdc1. Issue the df -Th command to get a listing of the mounted partitions, where you can confirm the filesystem types, available space, and device names. Be careful to specify the correct device, or you may lose important data!

=back

=head1 DESCRIPTION

B<livecd-iso-to-disk> installs a Live CD/DVD/USB image (LiveOS) onto a USB/SD storage device. The target storage device can then boot the installed operating system on systems that support booting via the USB or the SD interface. The script requires a source LiveOS .iso image file, or a currently running LiveOS image, or an installed image mount point, and a target storage device. If the operating system supports persistent overlays to save system changes, a fresh overlay, or a copy of the currently running overlay may be included with the installation. This enables one to easily prepare customized LiveOS images for redistribution.

Unless you request the --format option, the installation does not destroy data outside of the LiveOS, syslinux, EFI, & boot folders on your target device. This allows one to maintain other files on the target disk outside of the LiveOS filesystem.

LiveOS images provide embedded filesystems through the Device-mapper component of the Linux kernel. The embedded filesystems exist within files such as /LiveOS/squashfs.img (the default compressed storage) or /LiveOS/ext3fs.img (an uncompressed option) on the primary volume partition of the storage device. In use, these are read-only filesystems. Optionally, one may specify a persistent LiveOS overlay to hold image-change snapshots (using write-once difference tracking storage) in the /LiveOS/overlay-<device_id> file, which, one should note, always grows in size due to the storage mechanism. (The fraction of allocated space that has been consumed may be displayed by issueing the dmsetup status command in a terminal session of a running LiveOS image.) To conserve the unrecoverable overlay file space, one may specify a persistent home folder, which will exist in a /LiveOS/home.img filesystem image file. This file space is encrypted by default, but is not compressed (one may bypass encryption with the --unencrypted-home installation option). Files in this home folder may be erased to recover storage space.

Customized images are made by copying the source image filesystems to the bootable primary volume partition of another USB/SD device and adjusting the syslinux boot configuration and overlay files to reflect the new device identification.

=head1 OPTIONS

=over 4

=item --help

Displays usage information and exits.

=item --format

Formats the USB stick and creates an MS-DOS partition table (or GPT partition table if --efi is passed).

=item --reset-mbr

Sets the Master Boot Record(MBR) of the USB storage device to the mbr.bin file from the installation system's syslinux directory.

=item --efi

Creates a GPT partition table when --format is passed, and install a hybrid EFI/MBR bootloader on the disk. This is necessary for most Intel Macs.

=item --extra-kernel-args <args>

Specifies additional kernel arguments, <args>, that will be inserted into the syslinux and EFI boot configurations. Multiple arguments should be specified in one string, i.e., --extra-kernel-args \"arg1 arg2 ...\"

=item --multi

Used when enabling multi image copies (avoiding configuration of the boot files for an arbitrary image).

=item --livedir <dir>

Used with multi image copies to designate the directory <dir> for the particular image.

=item --compressed (default state for the operating system files)

Allows the default compressed SquashFS filesystem image to be copied. Has no effect on an already-expanded filesystem copy.

=item --skipcompress (default for when option --xo is specified or an uncompressed source is used)

Installs the operation system into the /LiveOS/ext3fs.img filesystem image file.

=item --xo

Used to prepare an image for the OLPC XO-1 laptop and its compressed, JFFS2 filesystem. Do not use the following options with --xo:

=over 4

--overlay-size-mb <size>, home-size-mb <size>, --delete-home, --copy-home, --copy-overlay, --compressed

=back

=item --xo-no-home

Used together with the --xo option to prepare an image for an OLPC XO laptop with the home folder on an SD card instead of the internal NAND flash storage.

=item --noverify

Disables the image validation process which occurs before the image is installed. When this option is enabled, the image is not verified before loading on the USB storage device.

=item --skipcopy

Skips the copy of the live image to the target stick, bypassing the actions of the --format, --overlay-size-mb, --copy-overlay, --home-size-mb, --copy-home, & --swap-size-mb options, if present on the command line. (The --skipcopy option is used while testing the script, in order to avoid repeated and lengthy copy commands, or to repair boot configuration files.)

=item --overlay-size-mb <size>

This option sets the overlay size in megabytes. The overlay is additional storage available to the live operating system if the operating system supports it. The persistent LiveOS overlay holds image-change snapshots (using write-once difference tracking storage) in the /LiveOS/overlay-<device_id> file, which, one should note, always grows in size due to the storage mechanism. (The fraction of allocated space that has been consumed may be displayed by issueing the dmsetup status command in a terminal session of a running LiveOS image.) To conserve this unrecoverable overlay file space, one may specify a persistent home folder with the --home-size-mb option (see below). The target storage device must have enough free space for the image and the overlay. There is a maximum <size> of 2047 MB for vfat-formatted devices. If there is insufficient room on your device, you will be given information to adjust your settings.

=item --copy-overlay

This option allows one to copy the persistent overlay from one live image to a target image. Changes already made in the source image will be propagated to the new installation.

=over 4

WARNING: User sensitive information such as password cookies and application or user data will be copied to the new image! Scrub this information before using this option.

=back

=item --builder <name>

The name of the builder of the customized image. Default: someone

=item --delete-home

Must be explicitly selected when options --home-size-mb <size> or --copy-home are selected and there is an existing persistent home directory on the image.

=item --home-size-mb <size>

Sets the home directory size in megabytes. A persistent home directory will be made in the /LiveOS/home.img filesystem image file. This file space is encrypted by default, but not compressed (one may bypass encryption with the --unencrypted-home installation option). Files in this home folder may be erased to recover storage space. The target storage device must have enough free space for the image, any overlay, and the home directory. Note that --delete-home must also be selected to replace an existing persistent home with a new, empty one. There is a maximum <size> of 2047 MB for vfat-formatted devices. If there is insufficient room on your device, you will be given information to adjust your settings.

=item --copy-home

This option allows one to copy a persistent home folder from one LiveOS image to the target image. Changes already made in the source image home directory will be propagated to the new image.

=over 4

WARNING: User sensitive information such as password cookies, user and application data will be copied to the new image! Scrub this information before using this option.

=item --force

This option allows one to bypass the user confirmation for the deletion of an existing home directory on the target device, if one exists.

=item --encrypted-home (default that only applies to new, home-size-mb requests)

Allows the default option to encrypt a new, persistent home directory. Has no effect on a copied home directory.

=item --unencrypted-home

Prevents the default option to encrypt a new, persistent home directory. Has no effect on a copied home directory.

=back

=head1 CONTRIBUTORS

David Zeuthen, Jeremy Katz, Douglas McClendon, Chris Curran and other contributors. (See the AUTHORS file in the source distribution for the complete list of credits.)

=head1 BUGS

Report bugs to the mailing list C<http://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/livecd> or directly to Bugzilla C<http://bugzilla.redhat.com/bugzilla/> against the C<Fedora> product, and the C<livecd-tools> component.

=head1 COPYRIGHT

Copyright (C) Fedora Project 2008, 2009, 2010 and various contributors. This is free software. You may redistribute copies of it under the terms of the GNU General Public License C<http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html>. There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law.

=head1 SEE ALSO

C<livecd-creator(1)>, project website C<http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/FedoraLiveCD>

=back

=cut