Difference between revisions of "Customizing Ubuntu Desktop CD"
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-o lgenealogy4.0-dekstop.iso iso</pre> | -o lgenealogy4.0-dekstop.iso iso</pre> | ||
− | Finally, we may want to create an md5 file for the whole CD image. That way it will be easy to check wether the iso was downloaded completely or not: <pre>md5sum lgenealogy4.0-dekstop.iso > lgenealogy4.0-dekstop.iso.md5sum</pre> | + | Finally, we may want to create an md5 file for the whole CD image. That way it will be easy to check wether the iso was downloaded completely or not: <pre>md5sum lgenealogy4.0-dekstop.iso > lgenealogy4.0-dekstop.iso.md5sum</pre> That's it, folks! |
Revision as of 22:03, 27 June 2008
This page describes how to customize the Ubuntu Dekstop CD. This is typically done to showcase certain packages that don't come with the default Ubuntu CD. This information is based on Ubuntu 8.04 and may or may not be applicable to future releases.
Contents
Brief overview of the process
An extremely general picture is: unpack stuff from CD, add our packages, pack it all back. Now a little more detail on each part.
- The whole filesystem of the Ubuntu that will run in the Live session is packed into a single file on the CD. This file is
/casper/filesystem.squashfs
and one needs thesquashfs
kernel module to work with such filesystems. - One needs to prepare packages (.deb files) that are to be added to the system. These packages may have dependencies that also need to be downloaded beforehand.
- The final CD image may turn up to be more than 700MB after we add our stuff. So some sacrificing of other useless contents might be needed after we add our packages.
- There are tricks to pack everything back. They all will be explained below in their respective order.
Unpacking
This part is by far the easiest. Once you have downloaded the original iso file with the Ubuntu desktop CD, mount it:
mount ubuntu-8.04-desktop-i386.iso mnt -o loop
assuming that you have an empty directory mnt
and the iso file in your working directory. Then copy everything into another directory using rsync
:
rsync --exclude=/casper/filesystem.squashfs -a mnt/ iso
This will create the directory called iso
with the contents of the CD, except for the largest file /casper/filesystem.squashfs
that holds the whole target filesystem.
Next we unpack the target filesystem from that huge file. First we will mount it using another empty directory mnt_sq
:
mount mnt/casper/filesystem.squashfs mnt_sq -o loop -t squashfs
And then we rsync
from it to a new directory:
rsync -a mnt_sq/ squash
This should create the directory squash
with the contents of the target filesystem. Now that we are done with the mounted images, we may unmount them:
umount mnt_sq umount mnt
At this point you should have the directory iso
with all the contents on the CD needed for booting the Ubuntu system, and the directory squash
with the system itself.
Adding our contents
Adding packages
For the sake of simplicity, let's assume that you have collected all the packages you want to add in a separate directory new/debs
relative to your working directory. That is, there's new
dir with the subdir debs
where all the deb packages are collected. Let's copy all these packages onto the target filesystem (any place will do for now, but I chose /root
):
cp new/debs/* squash/root/
Then we will prepare chroot
environment like so:
mount -t proc proc squash/proc mount -t sysfs sysfs squash/sys
and then we will "change root" (chroot
) to that target filesystem and install packages.
chroot squash dpkg -i /root/gramps_3.0.1-1_all.deb
Changing root means we will see only the target filesystem as if we were trully running it it and it were our root filesystem. So the above command changes root to squash
and then runs dpkg -i /root/gramps_3.0.1-1_all.deb
command to install GRAMPS. You will need to repeat that line for every package you want to install. After you are done, remove the debs from the /root
of the target:
rm squash/root/*.deb
Other customizations
If you'd like to modify the desktop look, set up custom launchers for the user and the like, you would need to copy all this stuff into /etc/skel
of the target. This is because no user accounts exist yet, and there is no way to modify the home directories. But the /etc/skel
gets copied into the home directory of every new user when it gets created. So copying into /etc/skel
will do the trick:
for fl in `ls -A new/home`; do cp -R new/home/$fl squash/etc/skel done
The thing is, some of that contents may be files and some are directories like .gramps
which will need to copy recursively.
Similarly, you can copy anything you need onto the target system: geneweb databaes, custom welcome pages, movies, scripts, etc.
Packing it all back
Removing extra contents
We most likely will need to remove something, or our final CD image will not fit onto the CD blank. Your mileage may vary, depending on what customization you have done. I keep the commands removing stuff in a script, then I execute it:
cp new/scripts/purge squash/root/ chroot squash /root/purge rm squash/root/purge<pre> But you may just as well do <code>rm squash/blah/blah</code>. I also remove lots of stuff from <code>/var</code> and <code>/tmp</code>: <pre>rm squash/var/log/dpkg.log rm squash/var/log/scrollkeeper.log rm squash/var/cache/debconf/templates.dat-old rm -rf squash/tmp/*
Preparing to close
We need to regenerate the manifest for the squash filesystem:
chroot squash dpkg-query -W --showformat='${Package} ${Version}\n' \ > iso/casper/filesystem.manifest
If we want our added stuff to be able to make it to the installation (not just the Live session), we need to add our packages to the filesystem.manifest-desktop
file. The trick is, that file already has some contents, so we should add ours and then sort the whole list. Assume our packages are all listed in new/debs/list.txt
file:
cat iso/casper/filesystem.manifest-desktop new/debs/list.txt | sort > junk mv junk iso/casper/filesystem.manifest-desktop
Finally, close the chroot so it is again nothing more than the directory full of contents:
umount squash/sys squash/proc
Close
First, we need to pack all that stuff back into the single file, that will later on end up on our CD. This will take a while:
mksquashfs squash iso/casper/filesystem.squashfs
Then we need to generate md5 sums for every file on the CD so that the disk can be checked for damages:
cd iso find . -type f -print0 | xargs -0 md5sum > junk.txt cat junk.txt | grep -v md5 | grep -v junk | grep -v isolinux > md5sum.txt rm junk.txt cd ..
Now we are ready to create the CD image:
mkisofs -r -V "Linux Genealogy CD 4.0" \ -cache-inodes -quiet \ -J -l -b isolinux/isolinux.bin \ -c isolinux/boot.cat -no-emul-boot \ -boot-load-size 4 -boot-info-table \ -o lgenealogy4.0-dekstop.iso iso
Finally, we may want to create an md5 file for the whole CD image. That way it will be easy to check wether the iso was downloaded completely or not:
md5sum lgenealogy4.0-dekstop.iso > lgenealogy4.0-dekstop.iso.md5sum
That's it, folks!