mkksiso¶
- Authors
Brian C. Lane <bcl@redhat.com>
mkksiso
is a tool for creating kickstart boot isos. In it's simplest form
you can add a kickstart to a boot.iso and the kickstart will be executed when
the iso is booted. If the original iso was created with EFI and Mac support the
kickstart boot.iso will include this support as well.
mkksiso
needs to be run as root, it depends on mounting the original iso
and you need to be root to be able to do that.
mkksiso cmdline arguments¶
Add a kickstart and files to an iso
usage: mkksiso [-h] [-a ADD_PATHS] [-c CMDLINE] [--debug] ks input_iso output_iso
Optional arguments¶
- -h, --help
show this help message and exit
- -a ADD_PATHS, --add ADD_PATHS
File or directory to add to ISO (may be used multiple times)
- -c CMDLINE, --cmdline CMDLINE
Arguments to add to kernel cmdline
- --debug
print debugging info
- -V VOLID, --volid VOLID
Set the ISO volume id, defaults to input's
Positional arguments¶
- ks
Kickstart to add to the ISO
- input_iso
ISO to modify
- output_iso
Full pathname of iso to be created
Create a kickstart boot.iso or DVD¶
Create a kickstart like you normally would, kickstart documentation can be
found here, including the
url
and repo
commands. If you are creating a DVD and only need the
content on the DVD you can use the cdrom
command to install without a
network connection. Then run mkksiso
like this:
mkksiso /PATH/TO/KICKSTART /PATH/TO/ISO /PATH/TO/NEW-ISO
This will create a new iso with the kickstart in the root directory, and the
kernel cmdline will have inst.ks=...
added to it so that it will be
executed when the iso is booted (be careful not to boot on a system you don't
want to wipe out! There will be no prompting).
By default the volume id of the iso is preserved. You can set a custom volid
by passing -V
and the string to set. The kernel cmdline will be changes, and the iso will have th custom volume id.
eg.:
mkksiso -V "Test Only" /PATH/TO/KICKSTART /PATH/TO/ISO /PATH/TO/NEW-ISO
Adding package repos to a boot.iso¶
You can add repo directories to the iso using --add /PATH/TO/REPO/
, make
sure it contains the repodata
directory by running createrepo_c
on it
first. In the kickstart you can refer to the directories (and files) on the iso
using file:///run/install/repo/DIRECTORY/
. You can then use these repos in
the kickstart like this:
repo --name=extra-repo --baseurl=file:///run/install/repo/extra-repo/
Run mkksiso
like so:
mkksiso --add /PATH/TO/REPO/ /PATH/TO/KICKSTART /PATH/TO/ISO /PATH/TO/NEW-ISO
Create a liveimg boot.iso¶
You can use the kickstart liveimg command, to install a pre-generated disk image or tar to the system the iso is booting on.
Create a disk image or tar with osbuild-composer
or livemedia-creator
,
make sure the image includes tools expected by anaconda
, as well as the
kernel and bootloader support. In osbuild-composer
use the tar
image
type and make sure to include the kernel
, grub2
, and grub2-tools
packages. If you plan to install it to a UEFI machine make sure to include
grub2-efi
and efibootmgr
in the blueprint.
Add the root.tar.xz
file to the iso using --add /PATH/TO/ROOT.TAR.XZ
,
and in the kickstart reference it with the liveimg
command like this:
liveimg --url=file:///run/install/repo/root.tar.xz
It is also a good idea to use the --checksum
argument to liveimg
to be
sure the file hasn't been corrupted:
mkksiso --add /PATH/TO/root.tar.xz /PATH/TO/KICKSTART /PATH/TO/ISO /PATH/TO/NEW-ISO
When this iso is booted it will execute the kickstart and install the liveimg contents to the system without any prompting.
How it works¶
mkksiso
first examines the system to make sure the tools it needs are installed,
it will work with xorrisofs
or mkisofs
installed. It mounts the source iso,
and copies the directories that need to be modified to a temporary directory.
It then modifies the boot configuration files to include the inst.ks
command,
and checks to see if the original iso supports EFI. If it does it regenerates the
EFI boot images with the new configuration, and then runs the available iso creation
tool to add the new files and directories to the new iso. If the architecture is
x86_64
it will also make sure the iso can be booted as an iso or from a USB
stick (hybridiso).
The last step is to update the iso checksums so that booting with test enabled will pass.