Tool used to create the Westwork Raspbian-based image This tool is based on the official RPi-distro generator
- Documentation
quilt parted realpath qemu-user-static debootstrap zerofree pxz zip dosfstools bsdtar libcap2-bin grep rsync
Upon execution, build.sh
will source the file config
in the current
working directory. This bash shell fragment is intended to set needed
environment variables.
The following environment variables are supported:
-
IMG_NAME
required (Default: unset)The name of the image to build with the current stage directories. Setting
IMG_NAME=Raspbian
is logical for an unmodified RPi-Distro/pi-gen build, but you should use something else for a customized version. Export files in stages may add suffixes toIMG_NAME
. -
APT_PROXY
(Default: unset)If you require the use of an apt proxy, set it here. This proxy setting will not be included in the image, making it safe to use an
apt-cacher
or similar package for development.
A simple example for building Raspbian:
IMG_NAME='Raspbian'
vi config # Edit your config file. See above.
./build-docker.sh
If everything goes well, your finished image will be in the deploy/
folder.
You can then remove the build container with docker rm pigen_work
If something breaks along the line, you can edit the corresponding scripts, and continue:
CONTINUE=1 ./build-docker.sh
There is a possibility that even when running from a docker container, the installation of qemu-user-static
will silently fail when building the image because binfmt-support
must be enabled on the underlying kernel. An easy fix is to ensure binfmt-support
is installed on the host machine before starting the ./build-docker.sh
script (or using your own docker build solution).
The build of Raspbian is divided up into several stages for logical clarity and modularity. This causes some initial complexity, but it simplifies maintenance and allows for more easy customization.
-
Stage 0 - bootstrap. The primary purpose of this stage is to create a usable filesystem. This is accomplished largely through the use of
debootstrap
, which creates a minimal filesystem suitable for use as a base.tgz on Debian systems. This stage also configures apt settings and installsraspberrypi-bootloader
which is missed by debootstrap. The minimal core is installed but not configured, and the system will not quite boot yet. -
Stage 1 - truly minimal system. This stage makes the system bootable by installing system files like
/etc/fstab
, configures the bootloader, makes the network operable, and installs packages like raspi-config. At this stage the system should boot to a local console from which you have the means to perform basic tasks needed to configure and install the system. This is as minimal as a system can possibly get, and its arguably not really usable yet in a traditional sense yet. Still, if you want minimal, this is minimal and the rest you could reasonably do yourself as sysadmin. -
Stage 2 - lite system. This stage produces the Raspbian-Lite image. It installs some optimized memory functions, sets timezone and charmap defaults, installs fake-hwclock and ntp, wifi and bluetooth support, dphys-swapfile, and other basics for managing the hardware. It also creates necessary groups and gives the pi user access to sudo and the standard console hardware permission groups.
There are a few tools that may not make a whole lot of sense here for development purposes on a minimal system such as basic python and lua packages as well as the
build-essential
package. They are lumped right in with more essential packages presently, though they need not be with pi-gen. These are understandable for Raspbian's target audience, but if you were looking for something between truly minimal and Raspbian-lite, here's where you start trimming. -
Stage 3 - westwork system. This is where most of the work happens of creating the Westwork system. This stage installs all of the serviecs that will be needed to run the Westwork system as well as the
westwork
binary itself. It also moves all of the important configuration files out of/etc
and into/data/conf
to make backup and restore easier.Some of the configuration files after this stage will be in
.mustache
form and will be run through the template engine after the bootstrap process is complete and the owner has picked a domain name.