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This directory contains files of the form:
Distribution-Revision-Architecture-<suffix>
where <suffix> is what was referenced by the respective
file in $(prefix)/data/images-Distribution-Revision-Architecture
NOTE: Contents will be overridden by same name file placed
in configuration hierarchy
If you find you need more images than are provided, they can easily
be generated with the following methodologies. And as you can see,
the images are simply a subset of those provided directly from the
distribution itself.
For Debian-based variants:
In the top level dists directory for your version/architectures,
find the respective file:
mini.iso
loopback mount it, and copy the following files to another location
initrd.gz
isolinux.bin
linux
Change all of these files to be publically writable, so that your
http_user can later modify them, essentially to place the appropriate
preseed into initrd.img. Create a new tar file name (according to
the above conventions) by archiving this new set of files.
For RedHat-based variants:
In the top level distribution directory for your version/architecture,
find the file
boot.iso
loopback mount it, and copy the contents of the isolinux directory
to another location. Then you can selectively remove all but the
following
isolinux/initrd.img
isolinux/isolinux.bin
isolinux/isolinux.cfg
isolinux/memtest
isolinux/vmlinuz
Change all of these files to be publically writable, so that your
http_user can later modify them, essentially to place the appropriate
ks.cfg into initrd.img. Create a new tar file name (according to
the above conventions) by archiving the copied isolinux directory.
For SuSE-based variants:
In the top level distribution directory for your version/architecture,
find the directory
loader
and copy the following files to another location
initrd
isolinux.bin
isolinux.cfg
linux
memtest
Change all of these files to be publically writable, so that your
http_user can later modify them, essentially to place the appropriate
autoyast into initrd.img. Create a new tar file name (according to
the above conventions) by archiving this new set of files.
See more files for this project here
The Linux Common Operating Environment (LinuxCOE) facilitates provisioning and lifecycle support of many popular Linux distributions, versions and architectures.
Project homepage:
http://sourceforge.net/projects/linuxcoe
Programming language(s): JavaScript,Perl,Shell Script
License: gpl2
Makefile.am
Makefile.in
README