Provided by: initramfs-tools-core_0.142ubuntu15.1_all bug

NAME

       initramfs-tools - an introduction to writing scripts for mkinitramfs

DESCRIPTION

       initramfs-tools  has  one  main  script and two different sets of subscripts which will be
       used during different phases of execution. Each of  these  will  be  discussed  separately
       below  with the help of an imaginary tool which performs a frobnication of a lvm partition
       prior to mounting the root partition.

Kernel Command Line

       The root filesystem used by the kernel is specified by the  boot  loader  as  always.  The
       traditional  root=/dev/sda1  style device specification is allowed. If a label is used, as
       in root=LABEL=rootPart the initrd will search all available devices for a filesystem  with
       the appropriate label, and mount that device as the root filesystem.  root=UUID=uuidnumber
       will mount the partition with that UUID as the root filesystem.

   Standard
        init= "<path to real init>"
              the binary to hand over execution to on the root fs after the initramfs scripts are
              done.

        initramfs.clear
              clear screen at the beginning

        initramfs.runsize
              The  size  of  the  /run  tmpfs mount point in bytes (suffixes are supported) or as
              percentage of your physical RAM. This parameter is used as the value  of  the  size
              mount                option               to               tmpfs.               See
              https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/filesystems/tmpfs.txt  for  details.   The
              default is 10%.

        root= "<path to blockdevice>"
              the  device  node  to  mount  as the root file system.  The recommended usage is to
              specify the UUID as followed "root=UUID=xxx".

        rootfstype
              set the root file system type.

        roottimeout
              set timeout in seconds. Determines how long mountroot waits  for  root  to  appear.
              The default is 30 seconds.

        rootdelay
              alias for roottimeout.

        rootflags
              set the file system mount option string.

        loop= "<path to image>"
              path  within  the  original root file system to loop-mount and use as the real root
              file system.

        loopfstype
              set the loop file system type, if applicable.

        loopflags
              set the loop file system mount option string, if applicable.

        nfsroot
              can be either "auto" to try to get the relevant information from DHCP or  a  string
              of  the form NFSSERVER:NFSPATH or NFSSERVER:NFSPATH:NFSOPTS.  Use root=/dev/nfs for
              NFS to kick to in. NFSOPTS can be looked up in nfs(5).

        ip    tells how to configure the ip address. Allows  one  to  specify  an  different  NFS
              server  than  the  DHCP  server.  See  Documentation/filesystems/nfsroot.txt in any
              recent Linux source for details. Optional parameter for NFS root.

        vlan  tells to create a VLAN tagged device. Allows one to configure one or multiple  VLAN
              tagged  devices  using the "vlan=$name.$id:$parent" syntax. E.g. "vlan=eth0.1:eth0"
              Optional parameter for NFS root.

        BOOTIF
              is a mac address in pxelinux format with leading  "01-"  and  "-"  as  separations.
              pxelinux passes mac address of network card used to PXE boot on with this bootarg.

        boot  either   local   or   NFS  (affects  which  initramfs  scripts  are  run,  see  the
              "Subdirectories" section under boot scripts).

        resume
              The resume hook tries to autodetect the resume partition and uses  the  first  swap
              partition   as  valid  guess.  It  is  possible  to  set  the  RESUME  variable  in
              /etc/initramfs-tools/conf.d/resume.  The boot variable noresume overrides it.

        resume_offset
              Specify the offset from the partition given by "resume=" at which the  swap  header
              of the swap file is located.

        quiet reduces the amount of text output to the console during boot.

        ro    mounts the rootfs read-only.

        rw    mounts the rootfs read-write.

        blacklist
              disables   load   of   specific   modules.   Use  blacklist=module1,module2,module3
              bootparameter.

   Debug
        panic sets an timeout on  panic.   panic=<sec>  is  a  documented  security  feature:  it
              disables the debug shell.

        debug generates  lots  of  output.  It  writes  a  log to /run/initramfs/initramfs.debug.
              Instead when invoked with an arbitrary argument output is written to console.   Use
              for example "debug=vc".

        break spawns  a shell in the initramfs image at the chosen phase (top, modules, premount,
              mount, mountroot, bottom, init) before actually executing the corresponding scripts
              (see  the  "Boot  scripts"  section)  or action.  Multiple phases may be specified,
              delimited by commas.  The default, if no phase is specified, is "premount".  Beware
              that  if  both "panic" and "break" are present, initramfs will not spawn any shells
              but reboot instead.

        netconsole
              loads netconsole linux modules with the chosen args.

        all_generic_ide
              loads generic IDE/ATA chipset support on boot.

SCRIPTS

       Valid boot and hook scripts names consist solely  of  alphabetics,  numerics,  dashes  and
       underscores. Other scripts are discarded.

   Configuration hook scripts
       These  are  used  to override the user configuration where necessary, for example to force
       use of busybox instead of klibc utilities.

   Hook scripts
       These are used when an initramfs image is created and not included in  the  image  itself.
       They can however cause files to be included in the image.  Hook scripts are executed under
       errexit. Thus a hook script can abort the mkinitramfs build on possible  errors  (exitcode
       != 0).

   Boot scripts
       These  are included in the initramfs image and normally executed during kernel boot in the
       early user-space before the root partition has been mounted.

CONFIGURATION HOOK SCRIPTS

       Configuration hook scripts can be found in /usr/share/initramfs-tools/conf-hooks.d.   They
       are  sourced  by  mkinitramfs after the configuration files in /etc and before running any
       hook scripts.  They can override any of the variables documented in initramfs.conf(5), but
       this should be done only if absolutely necessary.  For example, if a package's boot script
       requires commands not provided by klibc-utils, it should also install a configuration hook
       that sets BUSYBOX=y.

HOOK SCRIPTS

       Hooks  can  be  found  in two places: /usr/share/initramfs-tools/hooks and /etc/initramfs-
       tools/hooks.  They  are  executed  during  generation  of  the  initramfs-image  and   are
       responsible  for including all the necessary components in the image itself. No guarantees
       are made as to the order in which the different scripts are executed  unless  the  prereqs
       are  setup  in  the  script.   Please  notice  that PREREQ is only honored inside a single
       directory.  So first the scripts in /usr/share/initramfs-tools are  ordered  according  to
       their  PREREQ  values  and  executed. Then all scripts in /etc/initramfs-tools are ordered
       according to their PREREQ values and executed.  This  mean  that  currently  there  is  no
       possibility to have a local script (/etc/initramfs-tools) get executed before one from the
       package (/usr/share/initramfs-tools).

       If a hook script requires configuration beyond the exported  variables  listed  below,  it
       should  read  a  private configuration file that is separate from the /etc/initramfs-tools
       directory.  It must not read initramfs-tools configuration files directly.

   Header
       In order to support prereqs, each script should begin with the following lines:

              #!/bin/sh
              PREREQ=""
              prereqs()
              {
                   echo "$PREREQ"
              }

              case $1 in
              prereqs)
                   prereqs
                   exit 0
                   ;;
              esac

              . /usr/share/initramfs-tools/hook-functions
              # Begin real processing below this line

       For example, if you are writing a new hook script which relies on lvm, the  line  starting
       with  PREREQ  should be changed to PREREQ="lvm" which will ensure that the lvm hook script
       is run before your custom script.

   Help functions
       /usr/share/initramfs-tools/hook-functions contains a number of functions which  deal  with
       some common tasks in a hook script:

              manual_add_modules  adds  a  module  (and  any  modules which it depends on) to the
              initramfs image.

              Example: manual_add_modules isofs

              add_modules_from_file reads a file containing a list of modules (one per  line)  to
              be added to the initramfs image. The file can contain comments (lines starting with
              #) and arguments to the modules by writing the arguments on the same  line  as  the
              name of the module.

              Example: add_modules_from_file /tmp/modlist

              force_load  adds  a  module  (and its dependencies) to the initramfs image and also
              unconditionally loads the module during boot. Also supports  passing  arguments  to
              the module by listing them after the module name.

              Example: force_load cdrom debug=1

              copy_modules_dir copies an entire module directory from /lib/modules/KERNELVERSION/
              into the initramfs image.

              Example: copy_modules_dir kernel/drivers/ata

   Including binaries
       If you need to copy an executable or shared library to the initramfs module, use a command
       like this:

              copy_exec /sbin/mdadm /sbin

       mkinitramfs  will  automatically detect which libraries it depends on and copy them to the
       initramfs.  This  means  that  most  executables,  unless  compiled   with   klibc,   will
       automatically  include  glibc in the image which will increase its size by several hundred
       kilobytes.

   Including a system firmware preimage (early initramfs)
       If you need to prepend data to the initramfs image, you need to prepare it in a file,  and
       call  the  prepend_earlyinitramfs  function.   The  file can be disposed of as soon as the
       function returns.

       Example:
       TEMP_FILE=$(mktemp ...)
         ...
       prepend_earlyinitramfs ${TEMP_FILE}
       rm -f ${TEMP_FILE}

   Exported variables
       mkinitramfs sets several variables for the hook scripts environment.

        MODULESDIR
              corresponds to the linux modules dir.

        version
              is the $(uname -r) linux version against mkinitramfs is run.

        CONFDIR
              is the path of the used initramfs-tools configurations.

        DESTDIR
              is the root path of the newly build initramfs.

        DPKG_ARCH
              allows arch specific hook additions.

        verbose
              corresponds to the verbosity of the update-initramfs run.

        BUSYBOX, MODULES
              are as described in initramfs.conf(5).

        BUSYBOXDIR
              is the directory where busybox utilities should be  installed  from,  or  empty  if
              busybox is not being used.

BOOT SCRIPTS

       Similarly  to  hook scripts, boot scripts can be found in two places /usr/share/initramfs-
       tools/scripts/ and /etc/initramfs-tools/scripts/. There are a number of subdirectories  to
       these two directories which control the boot stage at which the scripts are executed.

   Header
       Like  for  hook  scripts,  there  are no guarantees as to the order in which the different
       scripts in one subdirectory (see "Subdirectories" below) are executed. In order to  define
       a certain order, a similar header as for hook scripts should be used:

              #!/bin/sh
              PREREQ=""
              prereqs()
              {
                   echo "$PREREQ"
              }

              case $1 in
              prereqs)
                   prereqs
                   exit 0
                   ;;
              esac

       Where PREREQ is modified to list other scripts in the same subdirectory if necessary.

   Help functions
       A  number  of  functions  (mostly  dealing  with  output)  are provided to boot scripts in
       /scripts/functions :

              log_success_msg Logs a success message

              Example: log_success_msg "Frobnication successful"

              log_failure_msg Logs a failure message

              Example: log_failure_msg "Frobnication component froobz missing"

              log_warning_msg Logs a warning message

              Example: log_warning_msg "Only partial frobnication possible"

              log_begin_msg Logs a message that some processing step has begun

              log_end_msg Logs a message that some processing step is finished

              Example:

                     log_begin_msg "Frobnication begun"
                     # Do something
                     log_end_msg

              panic Logs an error message and executes a shell in the initramfs  image  to  allow
              the user to investigate the situation.

              Example: panic "Frobnication failed"

              add_mountroot_fail_hook  NN-name  Deprecated:  This function is now a stub which is
              effectively a no-op. It  will  be  removed  in  a  future  version;  please  remove
              mountroot failure hooks from existing packages accordingly.

   Subdirectories
       Both  /usr/share/initramfs-tools/scripts  and  /etc/initramfs-tools/scripts  contains  the
       following subdirectories.

              init-top the scripts in this directory are the first scripts to be  executed  after
              sysfs  and procfs have been mounted.  It also runs the udev hook for populating the
              /dev tree (udev will keep running until init-bottom).

              init-premount  happens  after  modules  specified  by  hooks  and   /etc/initramfs-
              tools/modules have been loaded.

              local-top  OR  nfs-top After these scripts have been executed, the root device node
              is expected to be present (local) or the network interface is expected to be usable
              (NFS).

              local-block  These scripts are called with the name of a local block device.  After
              these scripts have been executed, that device  node  should  be  present.   If  the
              local-top  or local-block scripts fail to create the wanted device node, the local-
              block scripts will be called periodically to try again.

              local-premount OR nfs-premount are run after the sanity of the root device has been
              verified (local) or the network interface has been brought up (NFS), but before the
              actual root fs has been mounted.

              local-bottom OR nfs-bottom are run after the rootfs has been mounted (local) or the
              NFS root share has been mounted.

              init-bottom  are  the last scripts to be executed before procfs and sysfs are moved
              to the real rootfs and execution is turned over to the init binary which should now
              be found in the mounted rootfs. udev is stopped.

   Boot parameters
              /conf/param.conf  allows  boot scripts to change exported variables that are listed
              on top of init. Write the new values to it. It will be sourced after an boot script
              run if it exists.

EXAMPLES

   Hook script
       An  example  hook  script  would  look something like this (and would usually be placed in
       /etc/initramfs-tools/hooks/frobnicate):

              #!/bin/sh
              # Example frobnication hook script

              PREREQ="lvm"
              prereqs()
              {
                   echo "$PREREQ"
              }

              case $1 in
              prereqs)
                   prereqs
                   exit 0
                   ;;
              esac

              . /usr/share/initramfs-tools/hook-functions
              # Begin real processing below this line

              if [ ! -x "/sbin/frobnicate" ]; then
                   exit 0
              fi

              force_load frobnicator interval=10
              copy_exec /sbin/frobnicate /sbin
              exit 0

   Boot script
       An example boot script would look something like this (and  would  usually  be  placed  in
       /etc/initramfs-tools/scripts/local-top/frobnicate):

              #!/bin/sh
              # Example frobnication boot script

              PREREQ="lvm"
              prereqs()
              {
                   echo "$PREREQ"
              }

              case $1 in
              prereqs)
                   prereqs
                   exit 0
                   ;;
              esac

              . /scripts/functions
              # Begin real processing below this line
              if [ ! -x "/sbin/frobnicate" ]; then
                   panic "Frobnication executable not found"
              fi

              if [ ! -e "/dev/mapper/frobb" ]; then
                   panic "Frobnication device not found"
              fi

              log_begin_msg "Starting frobnication"
              /sbin/frobnicate "/dev/mapper/frobb" || panic "Frobnication failed"
              log_end_msg

              exit 0

   Exported variables
       init sets several variables for the boot scripts environment.

        ROOT  corresponds  to  the  root  boot  option.  Advanced boot scripts like cryptsetup or
              live-initramfs need to play tricks.  Otherwise keep it alone.

        ROOTDELAY, ROOTFLAGS, ROOTFSTYPE, IP
              corresponds to the rootdelay, rootflags, rootfstype or  ip  boot  option.   Use  of
              ROOTDELAY is deprecated; you should implement a local-block boot script rather than
              delaying or polling.

        DPKG_ARCH
              allows arch specific boot actions.

        blacklist, panic, quiet, resume, noresume, resume_offset
              set according relevant boot option.

        break Useful for manual intervention during setup and coding an boot script.

        REASON
              Argument passed to the panic helper function.  Use to find out why  you  landed  in
              the initramfs shell.

        init  passes the path to init(8) usually /sbin/init.

        readonly
              is  the default for mounting the root corresponds to the ro bootarg.  Overridden by
              rw bootarg.

        rootmnt
              is the path where root gets mounted usually /root.

        debug indicates that a debug log is captured for further investigation.

UPDATING THE INITRAMFS FROM ANOTHER PACKAGE

       Package maintainer scripts should not  run  update-initramfs  directly.   A  package  that
       installs hooks for initramfs-tools should include a triggers file containing:
              activate-noawait update-initramfs

       Kernel packages must call the kernel hooks as documented in the Debian Kernel Handbook.

       A  package  that  requires  an  initramfs to function, but is not a kernel package, should
       include a triggers file containing:
              activate-await update-initramfs

KERNEL HOOKS

       initramfs-tools includes hook scripts that are called by kernel packages  on  installation
       and  removal,  so  that  an  initramfs  is  automatically  created,  updated or deleted as
       necessary.  The hook scripts do nothing if the environment variable INITRD is set  to  No.
       This   will   be   the  case  for  kernel  packages  built  with  make  deb-pkg  and  with
       CONFIG_BLK_DEV_INITRD not set in the kernel config, or built with make-kpkg and not  using
       the --initrd option.

DEBUG

       It  is easy to check the generated initramfs for its content. One may need to double-check
       if it contains the relevant binaries, libs or modules:
              lsinitramfs /boot/initrd.img-3.16-3-amd64

FILES

       /run/initramfs/fsck.log
              Log of fsck commands run within the initramfs, with their output.

       /run/initramfs/fsck-root
              Exists only if fsck ran successfully for the root filesystem.

       /run/initramfs/fsck-usr
              Exists only if fsck ran successfully for the /usr filesystem.

AUTHOR

       The initramfs-tools are  written  by  Maximilian  Attems  <maks@debian.org>,  Jeff  Bailey
       <jbailey@raspberryginger.com> and numerous others.

       This  manual  was  written  by  David  Härdeman <david@hardeman.nu>, updated by Maximilian
       Attems <maks@debian.org>.

SEE ALSO

        initramfs.conf(5), mkinitramfs(8), update-initramfs(8), lsinitramfs(8).