Remove the notion of "sys*"
- This idea originates from very early in the project and was, at the
time, a very easy way to categorise things.
- Now, it doesn't really make much sense - it is fairly arbitary, often
occuring when there is a change in kernel, but not from builder-hex0
to fiwix, and sysb is in reality completely unnecessary.
- In short, the sys* stuff is a bit of a mess that makes the project
more difficult to understand.
- This puts everything down into one folder and has a manifest file that
is used to generate the build scripts on the fly rather than using
coded scripts.
- This is created in the "seed" stage.
stage0-posix -- (calls) --> seed -- (generates) --> main steps
Alongside this change there are a variety of other smaller fixups to the
general structure of the live-bootstrap rootfs.
- Creating a rootfs has become much simpler and is defined as code in
go.sh. The new structure, for an about-to-be booted system, is
/
-- /steps (direct copy of steps/)
-- /distfiles (direct copy of distfiles/)
-- all files from seed/*
-- all files from seed/stage0-posix/*
- There is no longer such a thing as /usr/include/musl, this didn't
really make any sense, as musl is the final libc used. Rather, to
separate musl and mes, we have /usr/include/mes, which is much easier
to work with.
- This also makes mes easier to blow away later.
- A few things that weren't properly in packages have been changed;
checksum-transcriber, simple-patch, kexec-fiwix have all been given
fully qualified package names.
- Highly breaking change, scripts now exist in their package directory
but NOT WITH THE packagename.sh. Rather, they use pass1.sh, pass2.sh,
etc. This avoids manual definition of passes.
- Ditto with patches; default directory is patches, but then any patch
series specific to a pass are named patches-passX.
2023-11-06 23:51:23 +00:00
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#!/bin/sh
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2023-12-07 10:21:03 +00:00
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#
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# SPDX-FileCopyrightText: 2023 fosslinux <fosslinux@aussies.space>
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#
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# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-3.0-or-later
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Remove the notion of "sys*"
- This idea originates from very early in the project and was, at the
time, a very easy way to categorise things.
- Now, it doesn't really make much sense - it is fairly arbitary, often
occuring when there is a change in kernel, but not from builder-hex0
to fiwix, and sysb is in reality completely unnecessary.
- In short, the sys* stuff is a bit of a mess that makes the project
more difficult to understand.
- This puts everything down into one folder and has a manifest file that
is used to generate the build scripts on the fly rather than using
coded scripts.
- This is created in the "seed" stage.
stage0-posix -- (calls) --> seed -- (generates) --> main steps
Alongside this change there are a variety of other smaller fixups to the
general structure of the live-bootstrap rootfs.
- Creating a rootfs has become much simpler and is defined as code in
go.sh. The new structure, for an about-to-be booted system, is
/
-- /steps (direct copy of steps/)
-- /distfiles (direct copy of distfiles/)
-- all files from seed/*
-- all files from seed/stage0-posix/*
- There is no longer such a thing as /usr/include/musl, this didn't
really make any sense, as musl is the final libc used. Rather, to
separate musl and mes, we have /usr/include/mes, which is much easier
to work with.
- This also makes mes easier to blow away later.
- A few things that weren't properly in packages have been changed;
checksum-transcriber, simple-patch, kexec-fiwix have all been given
fully qualified package names.
- Highly breaking change, scripts now exist in their package directory
but NOT WITH THE packagename.sh. Rather, they use pass1.sh, pass2.sh,
etc. This avoids manual definition of passes.
- Ditto with patches; default directory is patches, but then any patch
series specific to a pass are named patches-passX.
2023-11-06 23:51:23 +00:00
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# http://www.linuxfromscratch.org/lfs/view/6.1/chapter06/devices.html
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mkdir -p "/dev"
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test -c "/dev/null" || (rm -f "/dev/null" &&
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mknod -m 666 "/dev/null" c 1 3)
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test -c "/dev/zero" || mknod -m 666 "/dev/zero" c 1 5
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test -c "/dev/random" || mknod -m 444 "/dev/random" c 1 8
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test -c "/dev/urandom" || mknod -m 444 "/dev/urandom" c 1 9
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test -c "/dev/ptmx" || mknod -m 666 "/dev/ptmx" c 5 2
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test -c "/dev/tty" || mknod -m 666 "/dev/tty" c 5 0
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test -e "/dev/stdout" || ln -s "/proc/self/fd/1" "/dev/stdout"
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if mount --version >/dev/null 2>&1; then
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test -d "/dev/shm" || (mkdir /dev/shm && mount -t tmpfs tmpfs /dev/shm)
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test -d "/proc" || (mkdir /proc && mount -t proc proc /proc)
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fi
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if [ "${CHROOT}" = False ]; then
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test -c "/dev/console" || mknod -m 666 "/dev/console" c 5 1
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2023-12-23 06:12:23 +00:00
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test -b "/dev/sda" || mknod -m 600 "/dev/sda" b 8 0
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test -b "/dev/sda1" || mknod -m 600 "/dev/sda1" b 8 1
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test -b "/dev/sda2" || mknod -m 600 "/dev/sda2" b 8 2
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test -b "/dev/sda3" || mknod -m 600 "/dev/sda3" b 8 3
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test -b "/dev/sdb" || mknod -m 600 "/dev/sdb" b 8 16
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test -b "/dev/sdb1" || mknod -m 600 "/dev/sdb1" b 8 17
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test -b "/dev/sdb2" || mknod -m 600 "/dev/sdb2" b 8 18
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test -b "/dev/sdb2" || mknod -m 600 "/dev/sdb3" b 8 19
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test -b "/dev/sdc" || mknod -m 600 "/dev/sdc" b 8 32
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test -b "/dev/sdc1" || mknod -m 600 "/dev/sdc1" b 8 33
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test -b "/dev/sdc2" || mknod -m 600 "/dev/sdc2" b 8 34
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test -b "/dev/sdc3" || mknod -m 600 "/dev/sdc3" b 8 35
|
Remove the notion of "sys*"
- This idea originates from very early in the project and was, at the
time, a very easy way to categorise things.
- Now, it doesn't really make much sense - it is fairly arbitary, often
occuring when there is a change in kernel, but not from builder-hex0
to fiwix, and sysb is in reality completely unnecessary.
- In short, the sys* stuff is a bit of a mess that makes the project
more difficult to understand.
- This puts everything down into one folder and has a manifest file that
is used to generate the build scripts on the fly rather than using
coded scripts.
- This is created in the "seed" stage.
stage0-posix -- (calls) --> seed -- (generates) --> main steps
Alongside this change there are a variety of other smaller fixups to the
general structure of the live-bootstrap rootfs.
- Creating a rootfs has become much simpler and is defined as code in
go.sh. The new structure, for an about-to-be booted system, is
/
-- /steps (direct copy of steps/)
-- /distfiles (direct copy of distfiles/)
-- all files from seed/*
-- all files from seed/stage0-posix/*
- There is no longer such a thing as /usr/include/musl, this didn't
really make any sense, as musl is the final libc used. Rather, to
separate musl and mes, we have /usr/include/mes, which is much easier
to work with.
- This also makes mes easier to blow away later.
- A few things that weren't properly in packages have been changed;
checksum-transcriber, simple-patch, kexec-fiwix have all been given
fully qualified package names.
- Highly breaking change, scripts now exist in their package directory
but NOT WITH THE packagename.sh. Rather, they use pass1.sh, pass2.sh,
etc. This avoids manual definition of passes.
- Ditto with patches; default directory is patches, but then any patch
series specific to a pass are named patches-passX.
2023-11-06 23:51:23 +00:00
|
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|
fi
|