Hi,
On 11/17/2018 02:45 PM, Alessandro Selli wrote:
On 16/11/18 at 21:01, Simon Hobson wrote:
Hendrik Boom<hend...@topoi.pooq.com> wrote:
(1) Is initramfs so weird that only one or two people in the world can make one?
**AT THE MOMENT** no it isn't. AIUI (and I stand to be corrected) it's simply a
CPIO archive that's been (optionally) compressed. So it can be uncompressed,
extracted, modified, and rebuilt using standard tools.
Also ** at the moment** I can't see that changing since the process that needs
to extract that archive at boot time isn't under Poettering's control.
As for the future - who knows.
Also, echoing another comment, I can't remember ever having to fiddle with the
contents of one as a means of fixing a problem.
In theory anybody could make their own custom initramfs. And in
theory you never have to do it. In practice i needed to do it several
times when encrypting the / filesystem became possible, but manually
hacking the initramfs proves it to be a far different beast than just a
cpio archive.
Hendrik, you can uncompress the content of the initrd.img by the
following way:
1) Rename it to initrd.gz and use gunzip:
# mv initrd.img initrd.gz
# gunzip initrd.gz
2) After that, you can extract the files using cpio:
# mkdir tmp
# cd tmp
# cpio -id < ../initrd
3) Look at the content (in this case is the initrd.img of debian-installer):
# ls
bin conf etc init lib sbin scripts usr
4) Now you can modify the content of the initrd, and generate the new
initrd in the parent directory:
# find . | cpio --create --format='newc' > ../newinitrd
Compress it with gzip and rename it to initrd.img
And ready :)
Aitor.
_______________________________________________
Dng mailing list
Dng@lists.dyne.org
https://mailinglists.dyne.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/dng