Lorax is a set of tools used to create bootable images.
Go to file
Martin Gracik 21bbbe70e1 Check if /proc is mounted (#741722)
Needed for proper functionality in chroot,
so if it is not there, exit before doing anything.
2011-10-03 12:21:07 +02:00
etc Remove empty config files 2010-12-08 12:40:46 +01:00
share Add xen-kbdfront package to initrd (#740378) 2011-09-23 13:02:55 +02:00
src Check if /proc is mounted (#741722) 2011-10-03 12:21:07 +02:00
utils Don't append yum output to the diff file 2010-12-03 09:53:21 +01:00
.gitignore Ignore *.pyc files. 2008-09-12 12:10:33 -10:00
ANNOUNCE Added draft on initial announce email as I keep adding to it. 2008-10-06 09:51:01 -10:00
AUTHORS New version 2010-02-23 14:20:05 +01:00
COPYING Initial project description files imported. 2008-09-11 14:16:39 -10:00
lorax.spec New version 2011-09-19 15:22:48 +02:00
Makefile Makefile updates 2010-12-08 14:16:13 +01:00
POLICY Update the POLICY file. 2008-10-03 15:45:33 -10:00
README Initial project description files imported. 2008-09-11 14:16:39 -10:00
setup.py Setup and spec file changes 2010-12-17 17:04:04 +01:00
TODO Update TODO list. 2009-04-06 09:54:22 -10:00

I am the Lorax.  I speak for the trees [and images].

Tree building tools such as pungi and revisor rely on 'buildinstall' in
anaconda/scripts/ to produce the boot images and other such control files
in the final tree.  The existing buildinstall scripts written in a mix of
bash and Python are unmaintainable.  Lorax is an attempt to replace them
with something more flexible.


EXISTING WORKFLOW:

pungi and other tools call scripts/buildinstall, which in turn call other
scripts to do the image building and data generation.  Here's how it
currently looks:

   -> buildinstall
       * process command line options
       * write temporary yum.conf to point to correct repo
       * find anaconda release RPM
       * unpack RPM, pull in those versions of upd-instroot, mk-images,
         maketreeinfo.py, makestamp.py, and buildinstall

       -> call upd-instroot

       -> call maketreeinfo.py

       -> call mk-images (which figures out which mk-images.ARCH to call)

       -> call makestamp.py

       * clean up


PROBLEMS:

The existing workflow presents some problems with maintaining the scripts.
First, almost all knowledge of what goes in to the stage 1 and stage 2
images lives in upd-instroot.  The mk-images* scripts copy things from the
root created by upd-instroot in order to build the stage 1 image, though
it's not completely clear from reading the scripts.


NEW IDEAS:

Create a new central driver with all information living in Python modules.
Configuration files will provide the knowledge previously contained in the
upd-instroot and mk-images* scripts.


-- 
David Cantrell <dcantrell@redhat.com>