There is a real need to bootstrap Debian from sources when. a manual process, done by. bootstrap and specifying --no-package=lang-bootstrap in debian/rules for.
- This document describes how to bootstrap the Debian. The /etc/exports file format and options is detailed in the exports manual. The bootstrap phase is simple.
- What is Debian/NSLU2? Debian/NSLU2 is the name given to the official Debian distribution for ARM that runs on the. Upgrade from manual bootstrap to testing.
- Debootstrap - Bootstrap a basic Debian system. DESCRIPTION debootstrap bootstraps a basic Debian system of SUITE into TARGET from MIRROR by running SCRIPT.
- Debian Books. English French German Japanese Korean Persian Portuguese Spanish English The Debian Administrator's Handbook.
- (redirected from DebianSlug.Bootstrap) NOTICE: this page describes the old, manual procedure for bootstrapping Debian in a slug, using the SlugOS/LE kernel (formerly.
Lb bootstrap _debootstrap is a. project can be found on the homepage at <http:// and in the manual at <http:// />. BUGS Bugs.
Ubuntu Manpage: debootstrap - Bootstrap a basic Debian system
Manual Book Samsung P1000 Spec
debootstrap bootstraps a basic Debian system of SUITE into TARGET from MIRROR by running SCRIPT. MIRROR can be an http:// URL, a file:/// URL, or an ssh:/// URL. The SUITE may be a release code name (eg, sid, wheeze, squeeze, lenny) or a symbolic name (eg, unstable, testing, stable, oldstable) Notice that file:/ URLs are translated to file:/// (correct scheme as described in RFC1738 for local filenames), and file:// will not work. ssh://USER@HOST/PATH URLs are retrieved using scp; use of ssh-agent or similar is strongly recommended. Debootstrap can be used to install Debian in a system without using an installation disk but can also be used to run a different Debian flavor in a chroot environment. This way you can create a full (minimal) Debian installation which can be used for testing purposes (see the EXAMPLES section). If you are looking for a chroot system to build packages please take a look at pbuilder. OPTIONS --arch=ARCH Set the target architecture (use if dpkg isn't installed). See also --foreign. --include=alpha,beta Comma separated list of packages which will be added to download and extract lists. --exclude=alpha,beta Comma separated list of packages which will be removed from download and extract lists. WARNING: you can and probably will exclude essential packages, be careful using this option. --components=alpha,beta Use packages from the listed components of the archive. --no-resolve-deps By default, debootstrap will attempt to automatically resolve any missing dependencies, warning if any are found. Note that this is not a complete dependency resolve in the sense of dpkg or apt, and that it is far better to specify the entire base system than rely on this option. With this option set, this behaviour is disabled. --variant=minbase|buildd|fakechroot|scratchbox Name of the bootstrap script variant to use. Currently, the variants supported are minbase, which only includes essential packages and apt; buildd, which installs the build-essential packages into TARGET; and fakechroot, which installs the packages without root privileges. Finally there is variant scratchbox, which is for creating targets for scratchbox usage. The default, with no --variant=X argument, is to create a base Debian installation in TARGET. --keyring=KEYRING Download signatures for retrieved Release files and check them against KEYRING. By default, Release file signatures are not checked. --verbose Produce more info about downloading. --print-debs Print the packages to be installed, and exit. Note that a TARGET directory must be specified so debootstrap can download Packages files to determine which packages should be installed, and to resolve dependencies. The TARGET directory will be deleted unless --keep-debootstrap-dir is specified. --download-only Download packages, but don't perform installation. --foreign Do the initial unpack phase of bootstrapping only, for example if the target architecture does not match the host architecture. A copy of debootstrap sufficient for completing the bootstrap process will be installed as /debootstrap/debootstrap in the target filesystem. You can run it with the --second-stage option to complete the bootstrapping process. --second-stage Complete the bootstrapping process. Other arguments are generally not needed. --second-stage-target=DIR Run second stage in a subdirectory instead of root. (can be used to create a foreign chroot) (requires --second-stage) --keep-debootstrap-dir Don't delete the /debootstrap directory in the target after completing the installation. --unpack-tarball=FILE Acquire .debs from tarball FILE instead of downloading via http. --make-tarball=FILE Instead of bootstrapping, make a tarball (written to FILE) of the downloaded packages. The resulting tarball may be passed to a later --unpack-tarball. --boot-floppies Used for internal purposes by boot-floppies --debian-installer Used for internal purposes by the debian-installer --extractor=TYPE Override automatic .deb extractor selection to TYPE. Supported extractors are: dpkg-deb and ar. --no-check-certificate Do not check certificate against certificate authorities --certificate=FILE Use the client certificate stored in file (PEM) --private-key=FILE Read the private key from file EXAMPLES To setup a wheezy system: # debootstrap wheezy ./wheezy-chroot http://ftp.us.debian.org/debian # debootstrap wheezy ./wheezy-chroot file:///PATH_TO_LOCAL_MIRROR/debian Full process to create a complete Debian installation of sid (unstable): main # cd / ; mkdir /sid-root main # debootstrap sid /sid-root http://ftp.us.debian.org/debian/ [ ... watch it download the whole system ] main # echo "proc /sid-root/proc proc defaults 0 0" >> /etc/fstab main # mount proc /sid-root/proc -t proc main # echo "sysfs /sid-root/sys sysfs defaults 0 0" >> /etc/fstab main # mount sysfs /sid-root/sys -t sysfs main # cp /etc/hosts /sid-root/etc/hosts main # chroot /sid-root /bin/bash chroot # dselect [ you may use aptitude, install mc and vim ... ] main # echo "8:23:respawn:/usr/sbin/chroot /sid-root " \\ "/sbin/getty 38400 tty8" >> /etc/inittab [ define a login tty that will use this system ] main # init q [ reload init ]
LH_ARCHITECTURE. Select chroot architecture. (See Appendix A, Configuration layout) LH_BOOTSTRAP_CONFIG. Set distribution config directory. (See Appendix A.