#!/bin/sh #-- Do not remove following line if you want to make use of CVS version tracking #-- $Id: compute.postinstall,v 1.21 2008/09/04 12:05:45 sikorsky Exp $ #-- jurij.sikorsky@t-systems.cz #-- #-- this script is run after all packages from $profile.pkglist are installed #-- #-- it gets these arguments: #-- #-- $1 = install root (chroot directory for profile) #-- $2 = OS version #-- $3 = architecture #-- $4 = profile name #-- $5 = work dir (where genimage is located) #-- #-- installroot=$1 osver=$2 arch=$3 profile=$4 workdir=$5 #-- Example how /etc/fstab can be automatically generated during image generation: cat <$installroot/etc/fstab proc /proc proc rw 0 0 sysfs /sys sysfs rw 0 0 devpts /dev/pts devpts rw,gid=5,mode=620 0 0 END #-- Uncomment the line contains "cons" in /etc/inittab #cons:12345:respawn:/sbin/smart_agetty -L 38400 console echo "co:2345:respawn:/sbin/agetty -L 38400 console" >> $installroot/etc/inittab #-- Example of booted image versioning #-- We want to know, with what configuration (version of the image) each node was booted. #-- Hence, we keep image definition files and postscripts in CVS. During image generation we create file /etc/IMGVERSION and fill it with CVS "$Id$" of files with image definition (.pkglist, .exlist, .repolist, .postinstall). Then, during boot, each "CVS enabled" postscript (see /install/postscripts/cvs_template.sh and /install/postscripts/cvs_template.pl) adds one line to /etc/IMGVERSION. Then you can determine in any time what image you are running and what postscipts in which versions were run. #cat /dev/null > $installroot/etc/IMGVERSION #for ext in pkglist exlist postinstall repolist; do # [ -r $workdir/$profile.$ext ] && cat $workdir/$profile.$ext | grep -E '^[[:space:]]*#.*[[:space:]]\$Id' >> $installroot/etc/IMGVERSION #done