Provided by: grml2usb_0.16.0_amd64 bug

NAME

       grml2usb - install Grml ISO(s) on usb device for booting

SYNOPSIS

       grml2usb [ options ] <ISO[s]> <device>

       Important! The Grml team does not take responsibility for loss of any data!

INTRODUCTION

       grml2usb installs Grml on a given partition of your usb device and makes it bootable. It provides
       multiboot ISO support, meaning you can specify several Grml ISOs on the command line at once and select
       the Grml flavour you would like to boot on the bootprompt then. Note that the first ISO specified on the
       grml2usb command line will become the default one (that’s the one that will boot when just pressing enter
       on the bootprompt or wait until the boot timeout matches).

           Important
           By default a compatible master boot record (MBR) is installed on the device (being for example
           /dev/sdX when executing grml2usb grml.iso /dev/sdX1) and syslinux is being used as default
           bootloader. Avoid installation of the default MBR using the --skip-mbr option or if you encounter any
           problems with the default MBR consider using --syslinux-mbr instead.

OPTIONS

       ISO[s] should be the path to one or multiple grml-ISOs and/or the path to the currently running
       live-system (being /lib/live/mount/medium).

       The device either might be a device name like /dev/sdX1 or a directory. When specifying a device name the
       device is mounted automatically. When specifying a directory grml2usb is assuming that you did set up a
       bootloader on your own (or don’t need one) and a bootloader won’t be installed automatically.

       The following options are supported:

       --bootoptions=...
           Use specified bootoptions as default. To use flavour name as a argument for a boot parameter use
           %flavour which will be expanded to the flavour name. To add multiple bootoptions you can specify the
           option multiple time.

       --bootloader-only
           Do not copy files but instead just install a bootloader. Note that the boot addons are copied to
           /boot/addons at this stage as well. If you want to skip copying the boot addons consider using the
           --skip-addons option.

       --copy-only
           Copy files only but do not install a bootloader.

       --dry-run
           Avoid executing commands, instead show what would be executed. Warning: please notice that the ISO
           has to be mounted anyway, otherwise identifying the Grml flavour would not be possible.

       --fat16
           Format specified partition with FAT16.  Important: this will destroy any existing data on the
           specified partition!

       --force
           Force any (possible dangerous) actions requiring manual interaction (like --fat16).

       --grub
           Install grub bootloader instead of (default) syslinux.

       --grub-mbr
           Install grub into MBR (Master Boot Record) instead of PBR (Partition Boot Record). Check out the
           mbr-vs-pbr section in the FAQ of this document for further details.

       --help
           Display usage information and exit.

       --mbr-menu
           Install master boot record (MBR) with integrated boot menu: interactively choose the partition to
           boot from, with a timeout to load the default partition, or boot from floppy. When NOT using the
           --mbr-menu option a MBR with LBA and large disc support but without an integrated boot menu is
           installed (so it’s not visible at all but instead directly jumps to the bootloader - being grub or
           syslinux). Note: This options is available only when using the default MBR and won’t have any effect
           if you’re using the --syslinux-mbr option.

       --quiet
           Do not output anything but just errors on console.

       --skip-addons
           Do not install /boot/addons/ files (like dos, grub, memdisk,...).

       --remove-bootoption=...
           Remove specified bootoption (could be a regex) from existing boot options. Use multiple entries for
           removing different bootoptions at once.

       --skip-bootflag
           Do not check for presence of bootflag on target device.

       --skip-grub-config
           Skip generation of grub configuration files. By default the configuration files for syslinux and grub
           will be written so you’ve a working configuration file no matter whether you’re using grub or
           syslinux as bootloader.

       --skip-mbr
           Do not touch/install the master boot record (MBR).

       --skip-syslinux-config
           Skip generation of syslinux configuration files. By default the configuration files for syslinux and
           grub will be written so you’ve a working configuration file no matter whether you’re using grub or
           syslinux as bootloader.

       --skip-usb-check
           Skip check to verify whether given device is a removable device. Some USB devices are known to report
           wrong information, when using such a device you can skip grml2usb’s removable device check.

       --syslinux
           This option is deprecated and is being left only for backwards compatibility reasons. Syslinux is the
           default bootloader of grml2usb and therefore the --syslinux option doesn’t have any effects. If you
           do not want to use syslinux as bootloader consider using the --grub option.

       --syslinux-mbr
           Install syslinux' master boot record (MBR, which is booting from the partition with the "active" flag
           set) instead of the default one. If you encounter any problems with the default MBR you can try using
           the syslinux MBR instead. If that works for you please let us know so we can adjust our default MBR
           accordingly.

       -v, --version
           Return version and exit.

       --verbose
           Enable verbose mode.

DEVELOPERS CORNER

   Directory layout on usb device
           boot/ ->
             |-- addons/
             |   |-- allinone.img     [grub - all in one image]
             |   |-- bsd4grml/        [MirBSD]
             |   |-- balder10.imz     [FreeDOS]
             |   |-- memdisk          [chainloading helper]
             |   |-- memtest          [memtest86+]
             |-- release/
             |   |-- grml/
             |   |   |-- linux26      [Kernel]
             |   |   |-- initrd.gz    [initramfs]
             |   |-- grml64
             |   |   |-- linux26      [Kernel]
             |   |   |-- initrd.gz    [initramfs]
             |   |-- grml-medium
             |   |   |-- linux26      [...]
             |   |   |-- initrd.gz
             |   |-- grml64-medium
             |   |   |-- linux26
             |   |   |-- initrd.gz
             |   |-- grml-small
             |   |   |-- linux26
             |   |   |-- initrd.gz
             |   `-- grml64-small
             |       |-- linux26
             |       |-- initrd.gz
             |-- grub/
             |   |-- grml.png         [graphical bootsplash background image for grub2]
             |   |-- grub.cfg         [configuration file for grub2]
             |   |-- menu.lst         [configuration file for grub1]
             |   |-- splash.xpm.gz    [splash screen for grub1]
             `-- syslinux/
                 |-- grml.png         [graphical bootsplash background image for syslinux]
                 |-- syslinux.cfg     [main configuration file for syslinux]
                 `-- [....]           [several further config files for syslinux]

           grml/
             |-- grml2usb.txt         [not yet implemented]
             |-- grml-cheatcodes.txt  [list of bootoptions for Grml]
             |-- grml-version.txt     [file containing information about grml-version]
             |-- LICENSE.txt          [license information]
             |-- md5sums              [md5sums of original ISO]
             |-- README.txt           [informational text]
             `-- web/                 [browser related files]
                 |-- index.html
                 |-- style.css
                 `-- images/
                     |-- button.png
                     |-- favicon.png
                     |-- linux.jpg
                     `-- logo.png

           live/
             |-- grml/
             |   |-- filesystem.module    [module specifying which squashfs should be used for grml]
             |   `-- grml.squashfs        [squashfs file for grml]
             |-- grml-medium/
             |   |-- filesystem.module    [module specifying which squashfs should be used for grml-medium]
             |   `-- grml-medium.squashfs [squashfs file for grml-medium]
             |-- grml-small/
             |   |-- filesystem.module    [module specifying which squashfs should be used for grml-medium]
             |   `-- grml-small.squashfs  [squashfs file for grml-small]
             `-- ...

   Grabbing the source
           % git clone git://git.grml.org/grml2usb.git

   Developers Debugging Hints
       To play with grml2usb you can avoid using a real device via a loopback file setup, like:

           # dd if=/dev/zero of=~/loopback bs=1M count=100 # adjust size to your needs
           # losetup /dev/loop1 ~/loopback

       Then create according partitions either running for example:

           # echo -en "n\np\n1\n\n\nt\n6\na\n1\n w\n" | fdisk /dev/loop1

       or:

           # parted /dev/loop1 -s "mkpart primary fat16 0 -1s mkfs 1 fat16"

       Finally create a filesystem and execute grml2usb as needed:

           # mkfs.vfat /dev/loop1
           # grml2usb --bootloader-only /grml/isos/grml-small_2013.01.iso /dev/loop1

   Performance tracing
           # blktrace -d /dev/sdX -o - | blkparse -i -
           # grml2usb grml_2013.01.iso /dev/sdX1

TROUBLESHOOTING AND PITFALLS WHEN BOOTING

       Here is a list of common error messages from BIOS/bootloader when trying to boot from USB.

       Error message   ran out of input data. System halted

       Reason          Everything OK, except for the
                       filesystem used on your usb device.
                       So instead of fat16 you are using for
                       example fat32. Fix: use the
                       appropriate filesystem (fat16 for usb
                       pens usually). The Bootsplash might
                       be displayed, the kernel loads but
                       you very soon get the error message.

       Error message   Invalid operating system

       Reason          the partition layout is not ok. Very
                       probably there’s no primary partition
                       (/dev/sdX{1..4}) or none has the flag
                       bootable set.

       Error message   Boot error.

       Reason          Some BIOSses offer different modes
                       for USB booting. The proper mode to
                       boot a USB stick is USB-HDD. If that
                       doesn’t work or is not supported by
                       your system, you need to format your
                       USB-Stick as USB-ZIP. To do this,
                       syslinux contains an utility called
                       mkdiskimage, which you can use to
                       re-format your USB stick in USB-ZIP
                       format running mkdiskimage -4
                       /dev/sdX 1 64 32. Please be aware
                       that this procedure will erase all
                       data on your stick. After executing
                       mkdiskimage just continue installing
                       as usual (grml2usb ... /dev/sdX4).
                       Note that this is not going to work
                       for any device larger than 8 GB,
                       since mkdiskimage only supports 1024c
                       256h 63s. For a more detailed
                       explanation, refer to
                       /usr/share/doc/syslinux-common/usbkey.txt.

       Error message   No operating system found.

       Reason          you forgot to set the boot-flag on the
                       partition. Or there really isn’t any
                       operating system at all. :)

       Error message   kernel-panic: unable to mount root-fs...

       Reason          Kernel boots but fails to find the root
                       filesystem. The root= argument in your
                       kernel commandline is pointing to the
                       wrong device. Adjust root=..., consider
                       using root=UUID=....

       Error message   Could not find kernel image: ...

       Reason          either a broken isolinux/syslinux version
                       or a broken BIOS. Check out whether the
                       vendor provides a BIOS update or if using
                       bootloader grub instead of
                       isolinux/syslinux fixes the problem.

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS (FAQ)

   Where can I get grml2usb?
       grml2usb is available as Debian package via the grml-testing Debian repository[1].

       If you do not want to (or can’t) use the grml2usb Debian package you can either use the grml2usb git tree
       running:

           git clone git://git.grml.org/grml2usb.git
           cd grml2usb
           make -C mbr
           sudo ./grml2usb ...

       or download the provided http://grml.org/grml2usb/grml2usb.tgz (gpg signed md5 hash[2]). Download and
       extract the tarball and execute the provided script install.sh.

           Note
           It is NOT enough to have just the grml2usb script itself without the according files provided either
           via the Debian package, the git tree or the file grml2usb.tgz.

   Why can’t I just dd the ISO to a USB device?
       Well, you can. :) Starting with Grml 2009.10 the ISOs are dd-able straight out-of-the-box.

           Important
           Note that ANY existing data on your USB device will be destroyed when using the dd approach.

       This allows you to dd the Grml ISO to your USB device (use for example rawwrite[3] if you’ve just a
       Windows system available) running:

           % dd if=grml_2013.01.iso of=/dev/sdX

       where /dev/sdX is your USB device. Of course this doesn’t provide such a flexible system like with
       grml2usb (no multi-ISO setup, no additional default bootoptions,...) but it’s a nice way to get a working
       USB boot setup if you don’t have grml2usb available.

   What’s the difference between grml2usb and just using dd?
       grml2usb does not remove any data from your USB device and does not alter the partition table at all.
       grml2usb provides multi-ISO support, support for adding default bootoptions and selecting the bootloader
       (syslinux vs. grub) without having to manually touch the ISO at all.

   What’s grml2iso?
       grml2iso is a script which uses grml2usb to generate a multiboot ISO out of several grml ISOs. See man
       grml2iso for further details.

   Why is there a menu.lst and a grub.cfg inside /boot/grub/?
       grml2usb supports grub version 1 (grub1) as well as grub version 2 (grub2). Whereas grub1 uses menu.lst
       the new version grub2 needs grub.cfg. Providing both files allows grml2usb to install grub on the target
       device no matter which grub version is available on the host where grml2usb is executed on.

   grub-install fails with 'The file ../boot/grub/stage1 not read correctly ?!"
       Check whether the partition has the right partition type. For example do NOT use FAT16 (partition type 6)
       when using a ext3 filesystem on the partition but instead use the correct partition type (83 - Linux)
       then.

   grub-install complains about /sbin/grub-install and/or xfs_freeze?!
       The following message:

           You shouldn't call /sbin/grub-install. Please call /usr/sbin/grub-install instead!
           xfs_freeze: specified file ["/tmp/tmpqaBK6z/boot/grub"] is not on an XFS filesystem

       This is "normal". grub-install sends those messages to stderr. To avoid hiding any possible real error
       messages grml2usb doesn’t ignore those messages.

   grub-install complains about /boot/grub/device.map?!
       The following message:

           grub-probe: error: Cannot open `/boot/grub/device.map'

       This is "normal" (at least with grub1). This isn’t a problem, because the device.map file will be
       generated on the target device anyway.

   grub-install complains about a unary operator?!
       The following message:

           '/usr/sbin/grub-install: line 374: [: =: unary operator expected'

       This is "normal". Just ignore it. (It usually doesn’t appear on the second invocation on the same
       device.)

   grub-install fails with grub-probe: error: unknown filesystem?!
       The following message:

           grub-probe: error: unknown filesystem
           Auto-detection of a filesystem module failed.
           Please specify the module with the option `--modules' explicitly.

       usually means that the device partition table says something else than the filesystem on the device. For
       example using FAT16 as filesystem type and using FAT32 as filesystem on the partition will not work.
       Either set filesystem type to FAT32 or format the partition using FAT16. It is essential that device
       partition table and filesystem use the same filesystem type.

   grub-setup fails after Attempting to install GRUB to a partition instead of the MBR?!
       The following message:

           grub-setup: warn: Attempting to install GRUB to a partition instead of the MBR.  This is a BAD idea.
           grub-setup: warn: Embedding is not possible.  GRUB can only be installed in this setup by using blocklists.  However, blocklists are UNRELIABLE and its use is discouraged.
           grub-setup: error: Cannot read `/grub/core.img' correctly

       appears when using grub2 versions older than 1.98 as those version introduced a regression which avoids
       that grub is being installed into a partition (PBR, Partition Boot Record) instead of MBR (Master Boot
       Record).

       To work around this issue you can either 1) upgrade to grub versions >=1.98, 2) install grub into the MBR
       (Master Boot Record) using the --grub-mbr option of grml2usb or 3) switch to syslinux as bootmanager
       (just drop the --grub option).

   I’m getting something like  Error: /usr/share/grml2usb/grub/splash.xpm.gz can not be read"!?"
       Looks like you’ve only the grml2usb script itself available. Please make sure you’ve the grml2usb Debian
       package installed. The most resent stable version is available via the grml-testing Debian repository[1].
       If you do not have a Debian system please see section Where can I get grml2usb? in this FAQ.

   Why do I have to use a FAT16/FAT32 filesystem?
       Syslinux (currently) does not support any other filesystems besides FAT16/FAT32 (though that’s a sane
       default if you want to share your files with other (operating) systems). If you want to use a different
       filesystem (like ext2/3) use the bootloader grub instead using grml2usb’s --grub option.

           Note
           FAT32 is supported since syslinux version 3.0.

   Addons  Hardware Detection Tool freezes
       This usually means that the machine you ran grml2usb on had syslinux 3.x installed. The version of hdt
       (Hardware detection tool) shipping with Grml 2010.12 and newer requires syslinux 4.x.

   I think I’ve got a really cool idea!
       Great! Please check out the TODO file[4]. Feel free to report your wishes to the author. Patches highly
       appreciated.

   I’ve problems with booting from USB.
       Check out Troubleshooting and Pitfalls when booting.

   I’ve found a bug!
       Please report it to the author. Please provide usage examples and output of your grml2usb commandline
       (consider using the "--verbose" option).

USAGE EXAMPLES

           # grml2usb /home/grml/grml_2013.01.iso /dev/sdX1

       Install specified ISO on device /dev/sdX1.

           # grml2usb /home/grml/grml_2013.01.iso /home/grml/grml_small_2013.01.iso /dev/sdX1

       Install specified ISOs on device /dev/sdX1 for multibooting ISOs.

           # grml2usb /lib/live/mount/medium /dev/sdX1

       Install currently running Grml live system on device /dev/sdX1.

           # grml2usb /lib/live/mount/medium /home/grml/grml_2013.01.iso /dev/sdX1

       Install currently running Grml live system and the specified ISO on device /dev/sdX1 for multibooting.

           # grml2usb --fat16 /home/grml/grml_2013.01.iso /dev/sdX1

       Install specified ISO on device /dev/sdX1 and format partition /dev/sdX1 with FAT16 filesystem.

           # grml2usb --grub --grub-mbr /home/grml/grml_2013.01.iso /dev/sdX1

       Install specified ISO on device /dev/sdX1 and use grub as bootloader (instead of syslinux being the
       default) and install a master boot record (MBR) to the MBR of /dev/sdX.

           # grml2usb --bootoptions="lang=de ssh=mysecret" grml_2013.01.iso /dev/sdX1
           # grml2usb --bootoptions="lang=de" --bootoptions="ssh=mysecret" grml_2013.01.iso /dev/sdX1

       Install specified ISO on device /dev/sdX1 and use "lang=de ssh=mysecret" as default bootoptions.

           # grml2usb --remove-bootoption="vga=791" --remove-bootoption="nomce" grml_2013.01.iso /dev/sdX1

       Install specified ISO on device /dev/sdX1 remove vga=791 and nomce from existing bootoptions.

           # grml2usb --bootoptions="persistent-path=%flavour_name" grml64_2010.04.iso grml_2010.04.iso /dev/sdX1

       Install specified ISOs on device /dev/sdx and add parameter persistent-path to every menu entry.
       %flavour_name will be expanded to the flavour of the specific iso, e.g. grml64 and grml.

ONLINE RESSOURCES

       Check out the grml2usb webpage[5] and the grml2usb git repository[6].

BUGS

       Please report feedback, bugreports and wishes to the author.

AUTHOR

       Michael Prokop <mika@grml.org[7]>

NOTES

        1. the grml-testing Debian repository
           http://deb.grml.org/

        2. gpg signed md5 hash
           http://grml.org/grml2usb/grml2usb.tgz.md5.asc

        3. rawwrite
           http://www.chrysocome.net/rawwrite

        4. the TODO file
           http://git.grml.org/?p=grml2usb.git;a=blob;f=TODO;hb=HEAD

        5. grml2usb webpage
           http://grml.org/grml2usb/

        6. grml2usb git repository
           http://git.grml.org/?p=grml2usb.git

        7. mika@grml.org
           mailto:mika@grml.org

                                                   09/07/2017                                        GRML2USB(8)