oracular (1) debvm-create.1.gz

Provided by: debvm_0.3.1_all bug

NAME

       debvm-create - Create a VM image for various Debian releases and architectures

SYNOPSIS

       debvm-create [-h hostname] [-k sshkey] [-o output] [-r release] [-s <task>] [-z size] [-- mmdebstrap
       options]

DESCRIPTION

       debvm-create is essentially a thin wrapper around mmdebstrap for creating a raw ext4 filesystem image for
       booting with debvm-run.  The purpose of these images primarily is testing the different releases and
       architectures without access to a physical machine of that architecture.  Beyond essential packages, the
       image will contain apt, an init system and a suitable kernel package.  Notably absent is a bootloader and
       a partition table.  In order to boot such an image, one is supposed to extract the kernel and initrd from
       the image and pass it to a suitable bootloader.  No user account is created and root can login without
       specifying a password.

OPTIONS

       -h hostname, --hostname=hostname
               Set the hostname of the virtual machine.  By default, the hostname is testvm.

       --initsystem=systemd | busybox | finit | runit | sysv | none
               Select an init system to be used.  The default is systemd independently of the Debian release.
               Note that when selecting none, the resulting image will not be bootable unless something else
               takes care of creating /sbin/init.  Automatic customizations that are specific to a particular
               init system will be skipped when a different init system is selected.  When using the finit init
               system consider passing --include=finit-plugins to mmdebstrap.

       -k sshkey, --sshkey=sshkey
               Install the given ssh public key file into the virtual machine image for the root user.  This
               option also causes the ssh server to be installed.  By default, no key or server is installed.
               To connect to the vm, pass a port number to debvm-run with the -s option.

       -o output, --output=output
               Specify the file name of the resulting virtual machine image.  By default, it is written to
               rootfs.ext4.

       -r release, --release=release
               Use the given Debian release.  By default, unstable is being used.  If you pass a complete
               sources.list that includes release names to mmdebstrap, you may pass an empty string here.

       -s task, --skip=task
               Skip a particular task or feature.  The option may be specified multiple times or list multiple
               tasks to be skipped by separating them with a comma.  By default, no tasks are skipped.  The
               following tasks may be skipped.

               autologin
                   Skips adding a the customize-autologin.sh to mmdebstrap that configures automatic root login
                   on a serial console and also parses the "TERM" kernel cmdline and passes it as "TERM" to
                   agetty.  This is specific to using finit, runit, systemd or sysv as init system.

               ext4
                   Normally, mmdebstrap bootstraps to a temporary directory and we create the output ext4 image
                   from that directory.  This option causes the creation of the ext4 image to be skipped and the
                   output file becomes a tar archive of the temporary directory instead.  Such a tar archive is
                   not suitable for being booted by debvm-run.

               ifupdown
                   skips installing ifupdown configuration to automatically configure wired interfaces.  This is
                   specific to using finit, runit or sysv as init system.

               initsystem
                   skips installing an init system.  This is equivalent to specifying --initsystem=none.

               kernel
                   skips installing a linux kernel image.  This can be useful to install a kernel without a
                   package.  If a kernel is installed via mmdebstrap option "--include", automtatic kernel
                   installation is automatically skipped.

               packagelists
                   reduces the package lists inside the image.  The available database for dpkg is not created.
                   The package lists used by apt are deleted.  This generally produces a smaller image, but you
                   need to run apt update before installing packages and dpkg --set-selections does not work.

               systemdnetwork
                   skips installing libnss-resolve as well as automatic network configuration via systemd-
                   networkd.  This is specific to using systemd as init system.

               usrmerge
                   By default debvm adds a hook to enable merged-/usr without the usrmerge package given a
                   sufficiently recent Debian release.  Without the hook, dependencies will pull the usrmerge
                   package as needed, which may result in a larger installation.

       -z size, --size=size
               Specify the minimum image size as an integer and optional unit (example: 10K is 10*1024).  Units
               are K,M,G,T (powers of 1024).  The resulting image will be grown as a sparse file to this size if
               necessary.  The default is 2 GB.

       -- mmdebstrap options
               All options beyond a double dash are passed to mmdebstrap after the suite and target
               specification.  This can be used to provide additional hooks for image customization.  You can
               also request additional packages to be installed into the image using mmdebstrap's --include
               option.  Any positional arguments passed here will be treated as mirror specifications by
               mmdebstrap.  In particular, you can also change the architecture of the resulting image using the
               --architecture option.

EXAMPLES

       When creating an image with multiple architectures, the kernel selection will prefer the sibling 64bit
       architecture.

           debvm-create ... -- --architecture=armhf,arm64

       In order to create images for Debian ports architectures, you can pass two options to mmdebstrap.

           debvm-create ... -- http://deb.debian.org/debian-ports --keyring=/usr/share/keyrings/debian-ports-archive-keyring.gpg

       You can also install a graphical desktop environment.

           debvm-create ... -- --hook-dir=/usr/share/mmdebstrap/hooks/useradd --aptopt='Apt::Install-Recommends "true"' --include=linux-image-generic,task-gnome-desktop

       Here the hook creates a password-less user "user".  In order for "task-gnome-desktop" to work reasonably
       well, "Recommends" should be enabled.  By default a "-cloud" kernel that lacks graphics drivers is
       installed.

       Installing Ubuntu is also supported somewhat.

           debvm-create --release kinetic -- --keyring=/usr/share/keyrings/ubuntu-archive-keyring.gpg --components=main,universe --include=e2fsprogs

       Note that "universe" must be enabled as the "merged-usr" and "systemdnetwork" hooks rely packages from
       that component.  "e2fsprogs" should be pulled by "initramfs-tools".

       There also is an aid for sharing a directory with the VM.

           debvm-create ... -- --include=linux-image-generic --hook-dir=/usr/share/mmdebstrap/hooks/9pmount
           debvm-run ... -- -virtfs local,security_model=none,path=/host_path,mount_tag=guest_tag

       This will mount the directory "/host_path" from the host as "/media/guest_tag" in the VM during boot
       using 9P.  Note that the "-cloud" kernel lacks the 9P filesystem driver.

SEE ALSO

           debvm-run(1) mmdebstrap(1)