Provided by: mkosi_24.3-1_all bug

NAME

       mkosi — Build Bespoke OS Images

SYNOPSIS

       mkosi [options...] summary

       mkosi [options...] build [command line...]

       mkosi [options...] shell [command line...]

       mkosi [options...] boot [nspawn settings...]

       mkosi [options...] qemu [qemu parameters...]

       mkosi [options...] ssh [command line...]

       mkosi [options...] journalctl [command line...]

       mkosi [options...] coredumpctl [command line...]

       mkosi [options...] clean

       mkosi [options...] serve

       mkosi [options...] burn <device>

       mkosi [options...] bump

       mkosi [options...] genkey

       mkosi [options...] documentation

       mkosi [options...] dependencies

       mkosi [options...] help

DESCRIPTION

       mkosi is a tool for easily building customized OS images.  It’s a fancy wrapper around dnf --installroot,
       apt, pacman and zypper that may generate disk images with a number of bells and whistles.

   Command Line Verbs
       The following command line verbs are known:

       summary
              Outputs a human-readable summary of all options used for building an image.  This will  parse  the
              command  line  and  mkosi.conf file as it would do on build, but only output what it is configured
              for and not actually build anything.

       build  This builds the image based  on  the  settings  passed  in  on  the  command  line  or  read  from
              configuration  files.   This  command  is  the default if no verb is explicitly specified.  If any
              command line arguments are specified, these are passed directly to the  build  script  if  one  is
              defined.

       shell  This  builds  the  image  if  it  is  not built yet, and then invokes systemd-nspawn to acquire an
              interactive shell prompt in it.  An optional command line may be specified after the  shell  verb,
              to  be  invoked  in  place  of  the  shell in the container.  Use -f in order to rebuild the image
              unconditionally before acquiring the shell, see below.  This command must be executed as root.

       boot   Similar to shell, but boots the image using systemd-nspawn.   An  optional  command  line  may  be
              specified  after  the boot verb, which can contain extra nspawn options as well as arguments which
              are passed as the kernel command line to the init system in the image.

       qemu   Similar to boot, but uses the configured virtual machine monitor (by default qemu) to boot up  the
              image, i.e. instead of container virtualization virtual machine virtualization is used.  How extra
              command line arguments are interpreted depends on the configured  virtual  machine  monitor.   See
              VirtualMachineMonitor= for more information.

       ssh    When the image is built with the Ssh=yes option, this command connects to a booted virtual machine
              (qemu) via SSH.  Make sure to run mkosi ssh with the same config as mkosi build so that it has the
              necessary  information available to connect to the running virtual machine via SSH.  Specifically,
              the SSH private key from the SshKey= setting is used to connect to the virtual machine.  Use mkosi
              genkey  to  automatically  generate  a  key  and certificate that will be picked up by mkosi.  Any
              arguments passed after the ssh verb are passed as arguments to the ssh invocation.  To connect  to
              a container, use machinectl login or machinectl shell.

              The  Machine=  option  can be used to give the machine a custom hostname when booting it which can
              later be used to ssh into  the  image  (e.g. mkosi  --machine=mymachine  qemu  followed  by  mkosi
              --machine=mymachine ssh).

       journalctl
              Uses  journalctl  to  inspect  the  journal  inside  the image.  Any arguments specified after the
              journalctl verb are appended to the journalctl invocation.

              If ForwardJournal= is specified, this verb will operate on the forwarded journal  instead  of  the
              journal inside the image.

       coredumpctl
              Uses  coredumpctl  to  look  for  coredumps  inside  the image.  Any arguments specified after the
              coredumpctl verb are appended to the coredumpctl invocation.

              If ForwardJournal= is specified, this verb will operate on the forwarded journal  instead  of  the
              image.  Note that this requires configuring systemd-coredump to store coredumps in the journal.

       clean  Remove  build  artifacts  generated  on  a  previous  build.   If  combined  with -f, also removes
              incremental build cache images.  If -f is specified twice, also removes any package cache.

       serve  This builds the image if it is not built yet, and then serves the output  directory  (i.e. usually
              mkosi.output/,  see below) via a small embedded HTTP server, listening on port 8081.  Combine with
              -f in order to rebuild the image unconditionally before serving it.  This command  is  useful  for
              testing  network  based  acquisition  of  OS  images,  for example via machinectl pull-raw ... and
              machinectl pull-tar ....

       burn <device>
              This builds the image if it is not built yet, and then writes it to the  specified  block  device.
              The partition contents are written as-is, but the GPT partition table is corrected to match sector
              and disk size of the specified medium.

       bump   Bumps  the  image  version  from  mkosi.version  and  writes  the  resulting  version  string   to
              mkosi.version.  This is useful for implementing a simple versioning scheme: each time this verb is
              called the version is bumped in preparation for the subsequent build.   Note  that  --auto-bump/-B
              may be used to automatically bump the version after each successful build.

       genkey Generate  a  pair  of  SecureBoot  keys  for  usage with the SecureBootKey=/--secure-boot-key= and
              SecureBootCertificate=/--secure-boot-certificate= options.

       documentation
              Show  mkosi’s  documentation.   By  default  this  verb  will  try  several  ways  to  output  the
              documentation, but a specific option can be chosen with the --doc-format option.  Distro packagers
              are encouraged to add a file mkosi.1 into the mkosi/resources directory of the Python package,  if
              it  is  missing,  as  well as to install it in the appropriate search path for man pages.  The man
              page can be generated from the markdown file mkosi/resources/mkosi.md e.g via pandoc -t man -s  -o
              mkosi.1 mkosi.md.

       dependencies
              Output the list of packages required by mkosi to build and boot images.

              This list can be piped directly to a package manager to install the packages.  For example, if the
              host system uses the dnf package manager, the packages could be installed as follows:

                     mkosi dependencies | xargs -d '\n' dnf install

       help   This verb is equivalent to the --help switch documented below: it shows a brief usage explanation.

   Commandline-only Options
       Those settings cannot be configured in the configuration files.

       --force, -f
              Replace the output file if it already exists, when building an image.  By default when building an
              image and an output artifact already exists mkosi will refuse operation.  Specify this option once
              to delete all build artifacts from a previous run before re-building the  image.   If  incremental
              builds  are  enabled,  specifying  this  option twice will ensure the intermediary cache files are
              removed, too, before the re-build is initiated.  If a package cache is used (also  see  the  Files
              section below), specifying this option thrice will ensure the package cache is removed too, before
              the re-build is initiated.  For the clean operation this option has a slightly  different  effect:
              by  default the verb will only remove build artifacts from a previous run, when specified once the
              incremental cache files are deleted too, and when  specified  twice  the  package  cache  is  also
              removed.

       --directory=, -C
              Takes  a  path to a directory.  mkosi switches to this directory before doing anything.  Note that
              the various configuration files are searched for in this directory, hence using this option is  an
              effective way to build a project located in a specific directory.

       --debug=
              Enable additional debugging output.

       --debug-shell
              When  executing  a  command in the image fails, mkosi will start an interactive shell in the image
              allowing further debugging.

       --debug-workspace=
              When an error occurs, the workspace directory will not be deleted.

       --version
              Show package version.

       --help, -h
              Show brief usage information.

       --genkey-common-name=
              Common name to be used when generating keys via mkosi’s genkey command.  Defaults to mkosi of  %u,
              where %u expands to the username of the user invoking mkosi.

       --genkey-valid-days=
              Number  of days that the keys should remain valid when generating keys via mkosi’s genkey command.
              Defaults to two years (730 days).

       --auto-bump=, -B
              If specified, after each successful build the version is bumped in a  fashion  equivalent  to  the
              bump  verb,  in  preparation  for  the  next  build.   This  is  useful for simple, linear version
              management: each build in a series will have a version number one higher then the previous one.

       --doc-format
              The format to show the documentation in.  Supports the values markdown, man,  pandoc,  system  and
              auto.   In  the  case of markdown the documentation is shown in the original Markdown format.  man
              shows the documentation in man page format, if it is available.  pandoc will generate the man page
              format  on  the fly, if pandoc is available.  system will show the system-wide man page for mkosi,
              which may or may not correspond to the version you are  using,  depending  on  how  you  installed
              mkosi.   auto,  which  is  the  default,  will try all methods in the order man, pandoc, markdown,
              system.

       --json Show the summary output as JSON-SEQ.

   Supported output formats
       The following output formats are supported:

       • Raw GPT disk image, created using systemd-repart (disk)

       • Plain directory, containing the OS tree (directory)

       • Tar archive (tar)

       • CPIO archive (cpio)

       The output format may also be set to none to have mkosi produce no image at all.  This can be  useful  if
       you only want to use the image to produce another output in the build scripts (e.g. build an rpm).

       When  a  GPT  disk  image is created, repart partition definition files may be placed in mkosi.repart/ to
       configure the generated disk image.

       It is highly recommended to run mkosi on a file system that supports reflinks such as XFS and  btrfs  and
       to keep all related directories on the same file system.  This allows mkosi to create images very quickly
       by using reflinks to perform copying via copy-on-write operations.

   Configuration Settings
       The following settings can be set through configuration files (the syntax with SomeSetting=value) and  on
       the  command  line  (the  syntax with --some-setting=value).  For some command line parameters, a single-
       letter shortcut is also allowed.  In the configuration files, the setting  must  be  in  the  appropriate
       section, so the settings are grouped by section below.

       Configuration is parsed in the following order:

       • The command line arguments are parsed

       • mkosi.local.conf  is  parsed if it exists.  This file should be in the gitignore (or equivalent) and is
         intended for local configuration.

       • Any default paths (depending on the option) are configured if the corresponding path exists.

       • mkosi.conf is parsed if it exists in the directory configured with --directory= or the current  working
         directory if --directory= is not used.

       • If a profile is defined, its configuration is parsed from the mkosi.profiles/ directory.

       • mkosi.conf.d/  is  parsed  in  the  same directory if it exists.  Each directory and each file with the
         .conf extension in mkosi.conf.d/ is parsed.  Any directory in mkosi.conf.d is parsed as if  it  were  a
         regular top level directory.

       • Subimages are parsed from the mkosi.images directory if it exists.

       Note  that settings configured via the command line always override settings configured via configuration
       files.  If the same setting is configured more than  once  via  configuration  files,  later  assignments
       override  earlier  assignments except for settings that take a collection of values.  Also, settings read
       from mkosi.local.conf will override settings from configuration files  that  are  parsed  later  but  not
       settings specified on the CLI.

       Settings  that  take  a  collection  of  values  are merged by appending the new values to the previously
       configured values.  Assigning the empty string to such a setting removes all previously assigned  values,
       and  overrides any configured default values as well.  The values specified on the CLI are appended after
       all the values from configuration files.

       To conditionally include configuration files, the  [Match]  section  can  be  used.   A  [Match]  section
       consists  of  individual  conditions.   Conditions  can  use  a  pipe  symbol  (|)  after the equals sign
       (...=|...), which causes the condition to become  a  triggering  condition.   The  config  file  will  be
       included  if  the  logical  AND  of  all  non-triggering  conditions and the logical OR of all triggering
       conditions is satisfied.  To negate the result of a condition, prefix the argument  with  an  exclamation
       mark.   If  an argument is prefixed with the pipe symbol and an exclamation mark, the pipe symbol must be
       passed first, and the exclamation second.

       Note that [Match] conditions compare against the current values of specific settings,  and  do  not  take
       into  account  changes made to the setting in configuration files that have not been parsed yet (settings
       specified on the CLI are taken into account).  Also  note  that  matching  against  a  setting  and  then
       changing its value afterwards in a different config file may lead to unexpected results.

       The  [Match]  section  of  a  mkosi.conf  file  in  a  directory applies to the entire directory.  If the
       conditions are not satisfied, the entire  directory  is  skipped.   The  [Match]  sections  of  files  in
       mkosi.conf.d/ and mkosi.local.conf only apply to the file itself.

       If  there  are multiple [Match] sections in the same configuration file, each of them has to be satisfied
       in order for the configuration file to be included.  Specifically, triggering conditions  only  apply  to
       the  current  [Match]  section  and  are  reset  between  multiple  [Match] sections.  As an example, the
       following will only match if the output format is one of disk or directory and the architecture is one of
       x86-64 or arm64:

              [Match]
              Format=|disk
              Format=|directory

              [Match]
              Architecture=|x86-64
              Architecture=|arm64

       The  [TriggerMatch]  section  can  be used to indicate triggering match sections.  These are identical to
       triggering conditions except they apply to the entire match section instead of just a  single  condition.
       As  an  example, the following will match if the distribution is debian and the release is bookworm or if
       the distribution is ubuntu and the release is focal.

              [TriggerMatch]
              Distribution=debian
              Release=bookworm

              [TriggerMatch]
              Distribution=ubuntu
              Release=focal

       The semantics of conditions in [TriggerMatch] sections  is  the  same  as  in  [Match],  i.e. all  normal
       conditions  are  joined  by a logical AND and all triggering conditions are joined by a logical OR.  When
       mixing [Match] and [TriggerMatch] sections, a match is achieved when all [Match] sections  match  and  at
       least one [TriggerMatch] section matches.  No match sections are valued as true.  Logically this means:

              (⋀ᵢ Matchᵢ) ∧ (⋁ᵢ TriggerMatchᵢ)

       Command  line  options  that  take  no argument are shown without = in their long version.  In the config
       files, they should be specified with a boolean argument: either 1, yes, or true  to  enable,  or  0,  no,
       false to disable.

   [Distribution] Section
       Distribution=, --distribution=, -d
              The  distribution  to install in the image.  Takes one of the following arguments: fedora, debian,
              ubuntu, arch, opensuse, mageia, centos, rhel, rhel-ubi, openmandriva, rocky, alma, custom.  If not
              specified,  defaults  to the distribution of the host or custom if the distribution of the host is
              not a supported distribution.

       Release=, --release=, -r
              The release of the distribution to install in the image.  The precise syntax of the argument  this
              takes  depends  on the distribution used, and is either a numeric string (in case of Fedora Linux,
              CentOS, ...,  e.g. 29),  or  a  distribution  version  name  (in  case  of  Debian,  Ubuntu,  ...,
              e.g. artful).   Defaults  to  a  recent  version of the chosen distribution, or the version of the
              distribution running on the host if it matches the configured distribution.

       Architecture=, --architecture=
              The architecture to build the image for.  The architectures that are actually supported depends on
              the  distribution  used  and  whether  a  bootable image is requested or not.  When building for a
              foreign architecture, you’ll also need to install and register  a  user  mode  emulator  for  that
              architecture.

              One of the following architectures can be specified per image built: alpha, arc, arm, arm64, ia64,
              loongarch64, mips64-le, mips-le, parisc, ppc, ppc64,  ppc64-le,  riscv32,  riscv64,  s390,  s390x,
              tilegx, x86, x86-64.

       Mirror=, --mirror=, -m
              The  mirror  to  use for downloading the distribution packages.  Expects a mirror URL as argument.
              If not provided, the default mirror for the distribution is used.

              The default mirrors for each distribution are as follows (unless specified,  the  same  mirror  is
              used for all architectures):

                              x86-64                              aarch64
              ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
              debian          http://deb.debian.org/debian
              arch            https://geo.mirror.pkgbuild.com     http://mirror.archlinuxarm.org
              opensuse        http://download.opensuse.org
              ubuntu          http://archive.ubuntu.com           http://ports.ubuntu.com
              centos          https://mirrors.centos.org
              rocky           https://mirrors.rockylinux.org
              alma            https://mirrors.almalinux.org
              fedora          https://mirrors.fedoraproject.org
              rhel-ubi        https://cdn-ubi.redhat.com
              mageia          https://www.mageia.org
              openmandriva    http://mirrors.openmandriva.org

       LocalMirror=, --local-mirror=
              The mirror will be used as a local, plain and direct mirror instead of using it as  a  prefix  for
              the full set of repositories normally supported by distributions.  Useful for fully offline builds
              with a single repository.  Supported on deb/rpm/arch based distributions.  Overrides --mirror= but
              only  for  the  local mkosi build, it will not be configured inside the final image, --mirror= (or
              the default repository) will be configured inside the final image instead.

       RepositoryKeyCheck=, --repository-key-check=
              Controls signature/key checks when using repositories, enabled  by  default.   Useful  to  disable
              checks  when  combined  with  --local-mirror= and using only a repository from a local filesystem.
              Not used for DNF-based distros yet.

       Repositories=, --repositories=
              Enable package repositories that are disabled by default.  This can be used  to  enable  the  EPEL
              repos for CentOS or different components of the Debian/Ubuntu repositories.

       CacheOnly=, --cache-only=
              Takes  one  of auto, metadata, always or never.  Defaults to auto.  If always, the package manager
              is instructed not to contact the network.  This provides a minimal level  of  reproducibility,  as
              long as the package cache is already fully populated.  If set to metadata, the package manager can
              still download packages, but we  won’t  sync  the  repository  metadata.   If  set  to  auto,  the
              repository metadata is synced unless we have a cached image (see Incremental=) and packages can be
              downloaded during the build.  If set to never,  repository  metadata  is  always  synced  and  and
              packages can be downloaded during the build.

       PackageManagerTrees=, --package-manager-tree=
              Takes a comma separated list of colon separated path pairs.  The first path of each pair refers to
              a directory to copy into the OS tree before invoking the package manager.  This option is  similar
              to  the SkeletonTrees= option, but installs the files to a subdirectory of the workspace directory
              instead of the OS tree.  This subdirectory of the workspace  is  used  to  configure  the  package
              manager.   If  the  mkosi.pkgmngr/  directory  is found in the local directory it is used for this
              purpose with the root directory as target (also see the Files section below).  If  not  configured
              in any way this value will default to the same value of SkeletonTrees=.

              mkosi  will look for the package manager configuration and related files in the configured package
              manager trees.  Unless specified otherwise,  it  will  use  the  configuration  files  from  their
              canonical  locations  in /usr or /etc in the package manager trees.  For example, it will look for
              etc/dnf/dnf.conf in the package manager trees if dnf is used to install packages.

              SkeletonTrees= and PackageManagerTrees= fulfill similar roles.  Use SkeletonTrees= if you want the
              files  to  be present in the final image.  Use PackageManagerTrees= if you don’t want the files to
              be present in the final image, e.g. when building an initrd or if  you  want  to  refer  to  paths
              outside of the image in your repository configuration.

   [Output] Section
       Format=, --format=, -t
              The  image  format  type  to generate.  One of directory (for generating an OS image directly in a
              local directory), tar (similar, but a tarball of the OS image is generated), cpio (similar, but  a
              cpio  archive  is  generated),  disk  (a block device OS image with a GPT partition table), uki (a
              unified kernel image with the OS image in the .initrd PE section), esp (uki but wrapped in a  disk
              image  with only an ESP partition), oci (a directory compatible with the OCI image specification),
              sysext, confext, portable or none (the OS image is solely intended as a  build  image  to  produce
              another artifact).

              If  the  disk output format is used, the disk image is generated using systemd-repart.  The repart
              partition definition files to use can be configured using the RepartDirectories=  setting  or  via
              mkosi.repart/.   When  verity  partitions  are  configured using systemd-repart’s Verity= setting,
              mkosi will automatically parse the verity hash partition’s  roothash  from  systemd-repart’s  JSON
              output and include it in the kernel command line of every unified kernel image built by mkosi.

              If  the  none  output format is used, the outputs from a previous build are not removed, but clean
              scripts (see CleanScripts=) are still  executed.   This  allows  rerunning  a  build  script  (see
              BuildScripts=) without removing the results of a previous build.

       ManifestFormat=, --manifest-format=
              The  manifest  format  type  or types to generate.  A comma-delimited list consisting of json (the
              standard JSON output format that describes the packages installed),  changelog  (a  human-readable
              text format designed for diffing).  By default no manifest is generated.

       Output=, --output=, -o
              Name  to  use for the generated output image file or directory.  Defaults to image or, if ImageId=
              is specified, it is used as the default output name, optionally suffixed with the version set with
              ImageVersion=  or  if  a  specific  image  is  built  from  mkosi.images, the name of the image is
              preferred over ImageId.  Note that this option does not allow configuring  the  output  directory,
              use OutputDirectory= for that.

              Note  that  this  only  specifies  the  output  prefix,  depending  on the specific output format,
              compression and image version used, the full output name might be image_7.8.raw.xz.

       CompressOutput=, --compress-output=
              Configure compression for the resulting image or archive.  The argument can be either a boolean or
              a  compression  algorithm  (xz,  zstd).   zstd  compression  is used by default, except CentOS and
              derivatives up to version 8, which default to xz, and OCI images, which  default  to  gzip.   Note
              that  when  applied  to  block  device  image types, compression means the image cannot be started
              directly but needs to be decompressed first.  This also means that the shell, boot, qemu verbs are
              not available when this option is used.  Implied for tar, cpio, uki, esp, and oci.

       CompressLevel=, --compress-level=
              Configure  the  compression  level  to  use.  Takes an integer.  The possible values depend on the
              compression being used.

       OutputDirectory=, --output-dir=, -O
              Path to a directory where to place all generated artifacts.  If this  is  not  specified  and  the
              directory mkosi.output/ exists in the local directory, it is automatically used for this purpose.

       WorkspaceDirectory=, --workspace-dir=
              Path  to  a  directory  where  to  store data required temporarily while building the image.  This
              directory should have enough space to store the full OS image, though in most modes  the  actually
              used  disk  space  is  smaller.   If  not  specified,  a subdirectory of $XDG_CACHE_HOME (if set),
              $HOME/.cache (if set) or /var/tmp is used.

              The data in this directory is removed automatically after  each  build.   It’s  safe  to  manually
              remove  the  contents  of  this  directory  should  an mkosi invocation be aborted abnormally (for
              example, due to reboot/power failure).

       CacheDirectory=, --cache-dir=
              Takes a path to a directory to use as the incremental cache directory for the  incremental  images
              produced  when the Incremental= option is enabled.  If this option is not used, but a mkosi.cache/
              directory is found in the local directory it is automatically used for this purpose.

       PackageCacheDirectory=, --package-cache-dir
              Takes a path to a directory to use as the package cache directory  for  the  distribution  package
              manager used.  If unset, a suitable directory in the user’s home directory or system is used.

       BuildDirectory=, --build-dir=
              Takes  a  path to a directory to use as the build directory for build systems that support out-of-
              tree builds (such as Meson).  The directory used this way is shared between repeated  builds,  and
              allows  the  build system to reuse artifacts (such as object files, executable, ...)  generated on
              previous invocations.  The build scripts can find the path to  this  directory  in  the  $BUILDDIR
              environment variable.  This directory is mounted into the image’s root directory when mkosi-chroot
              is invoked during execution of the build  scripts.   If  this  option  is  not  specified,  but  a
              directory  mkosi.builddir/ exists in the local directory it is automatically used for this purpose
              (also see the Files section below).

       ImageVersion=, --image-version=
              Configure the image version.  This accepts any string, but it is recommended to specify  a  series
              of  dot separated components.  The version may also be configured in a file mkosi.version in which
              case it may be conveniently managed via the bump verb or the --auto-bump option.   When  specified
              the  image  version  is  included  in  the default output file name, i.e. instead of image.raw the
              default will be image_0.1.raw for version 0.1 of the image, and  similar.   The  version  is  also
              passed  via  the $IMAGE_VERSION to any build scripts invoked (which may be useful to patch it into
              /usr/lib/os-release or similar, in particular the IMAGE_VERSION= field of it).

       ImageId=, --image-id=
              Configure the image identifier.  This accepts a freeform string that shall be used to identify the
              image  with.   If  set  the default output file will be named after it (possibly suffixed with the
              version).  The identifier is also passed via the $IMAGE_ID to  any  build  scripts  invoked.   The
              image ID is automatically added to /usr/lib/os-release.

       SplitArtifacts=, --split-artifacts
              If  specified  and  building a disk image, pass --split=yes to systemd-repart to have it write out
              split    partition    files    for    each     configured     partition.      Read     the     man
              (https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd-repart.html#--split=BOOL)  page for more
              information.  This is useful in A/B update  scenarios  where  an  existing  disk  image  shall  be
              augmented  with  a  new  version  of  a root or /usr partition along with its Verity partition and
              unified kernel.

       RepartDirectories=, --repart-dir=
              Paths to directories containing systemd-repart partition definition files that are used when mkosi
              invokes  systemd-repart  when  building  a  disk  image.   If  mkosi.repart/  exists  in the local
              directory, it will be used for this purpose as well.  Note that mkosi invokes repart with  --root=
              set  to  the  root of the image root, so any CopyFiles= source paths in partition definition files
              will be relative to the image root directory.

       SectorSize=, --sector-size=
              Override the default sector size that systemd-repart uses when building a disk image.

       RepartOffline=, --repart-offline=
              Specifies whether to build disk images using loopback devices.  Enabled by default.  When enabled,
              systemd-repart  will not use loopback devices to build disk images.  When disabled, systemd-repart
              will always use loopback devices to build disk images.

              Note that when using RepartOffline=no mkosi cannot run unprivileged and the image build has to  be
              done  as  the  root user outside of any containers and with loopback devices available on the host
              system.

              There are currently two known scenarios where RepartOffline=no has to be used.  The first is  when
              using  Subvolumes=  in a repart partition definition file, as subvolumes cannot be created without
              using loopback devices.  The second is when creating  a  system  with  SELinux  and  an  XFS  root
              partition.   Because  mkfs.xfs  does  not  support  populating  an  XFS  filesystem  with extended
              attributes, loopback devices have to be used to ensure the SELinux extended attributes end  up  in
              the generated XFS filesystem.

       Overlay=, --overlay
              When  used  together with BaseTrees=, the output will consist only out of changes to the specified
              base trees.  Each base tree is attached as a lower layer in an overlayfs structure, and the output
              becomes  the  upper layer, initially empty.  Thus files that are not modified compared to the base
              trees will not be present in the final output.

              This option may be used to create systemd system extensions or  portable  services  (https://uapi-
              group.org/specifications/specs/extension_image).

       UseSubvolumes=, --use-subvolumes=
              Takes  a boolean or auto.  Enables or disables use of btrfs subvolumes for directory tree outputs.
              If enabled, mkosi will create the root directory as a btrfs  subvolume  and  use  btrfs  subvolume
              snapshots  where possible to copy base or cached trees which is much faster than doing a recursive
              copy.  If explicitly enabled and btrfs is not installed or subvolumes cannot be created, an  error
              is raised.  If auto, missing btrfs or failures to create subvolumes are ignored.

       Seed=, --seed=
              Takes  a  UUID as argument or the special value random.  Overrides the seed that systemd-repart(8)
              (https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd-repart.service.html) uses when  building
              a  disk image.  This is useful to achieve reproducible builds, where deterministic UUIDs and other
              partition metadata should be derived on each build.

       SourceDateEpoch=, --source-date-epoch=
              Takes a timestamp in seconds since the UNIX epoch as argument.  File  modification  times  of  all
              files  will  be  clamped  to  this  value.   The variable is also propagated to systemd-repart and
              scripts executed by mkosi.  If not set explicitly, SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH from --environment  and  from
              the  host  environment  are tried in that order.  This is useful to make builds reproducible.  See
              SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH (https://reproducible-builds.org/specs/source-date-epoch/) for more information.

       CleanScripts=, --clean-script=
              Takes a comma-separated list of paths to executables that are used as the clean scripts  for  this
              image.  See the Scripts section for more information.

   [Content] Section
       Packages=, --package=, -p
              Install  the  specified  distribution  packages (i.e. RPM, DEB, ...)  in the image.  Takes a comma
              separated list of package specifications.  This option may be used multiple times  in  which  case
              the  specified package lists are combined.  Use BuildPackages= to specify packages that shall only
              be installed in an overlay that is mounted when the prepare scripts are executed  with  the  build
              argument and when the build scripts are executed.

              The  types  and  syntax of package specifications that are allowed depend on the package installer
              (e.g. dnf for rpm-based distros or apt for deb-based distros),  but  may  include  package  names,
              package  names  with  version and/or architecture, package name globs, package groups, and virtual
              provides, including file paths.

              See PackageDirectories= for information on how to make local packages available  for  installation
              with Packages=.

              Example:  when  using  a distro that uses dnf, the following configuration would install the meson
              package (in the latest version), the 32-bit version of the libfdisk-devel package,  all  available
              packages  that  start  with  the git- prefix, a systemd rpm from the local file system, one of the
              packages that provides /usr/bin/ld, the packages in the Development Tools group, and  the  package
              that contains the mypy python module.

                     Packages=meson
                              libfdisk-devel.i686
                              git-*
                              /usr/bin/ld
                              @development-tools
                              python3dist(mypy)

       BuildPackages=, --build-package=
              Similar to Packages=, but configures packages to install only in an overlay that is made available
              on top of the image to the prepare scripts when executed with the build  argument  and  the  build
              scripts.   This  option  should be used to list packages containing header files, compilers, build
              systems, linkers and other build tools the mkosi.build scripts  require  to  operate.   Note  that
              packages listed here will be absent in the final image.

       VolatilePackages=, --volatile-package=
              Similar  to  Packages=, but packages configured with this setting are not cached when Incremental=
              is enabled and are installed after executing any build scripts.

              Specifically, this setting can be used to install packages that change often or which are built by
              a build script.

       PackageDirectories=, --package-directory=
              Specify  directories  containing extra packages to be made available during the build.  mkosi will
              create a local repository containing all packages in these directories and make it available  when
              installing  packages  or  running scripts.  If the mkosi.packages/ directory is found in the local
              directory it is also used for this purpose.

       VolatilePackageDirectories=, --volatile-package-directory=
              Like PackageDirectories=, but any changes to the packages in these directories will not invalidate
              the cached images if Incremental= is enabled.

              Additionally,  build  scripts  can  add more packages to the local repository by placing the built
              packages in $PACKAGEDIR.  The packages placed in $PACKAGEDIR are shared between all  image  builds
              and thus available for installation in all images using VolatilePackages=.

       WithRecommends=, --with-recommends=
              Configures whether to install recommended or weak dependencies, depending on how they are named by
              the used package manager, or not.  By default, recommended packages are not  installed.   This  is
              only used for package managers that support the concept, which are currently apt, dnf and zypper.

       WithDocs=, --with-docs
              Include  documentation  in  the  image.   Enabled  by  default.   When disabled, if the underlying
              distribution package manager supports  it  documentation  is  not  included  in  the  image.   The
              $WITH_DOCS  environment  variable  passed to the mkosi.build scripts is set to 0 or 1 depending on
              whether this option is enabled or disabled.

       BaseTrees=, --base-tree=
              Takes a comma separated list of paths to use as base trees.  When used, these base trees are  each
              copied into the OS tree and form the base distribution instead of installing the distribution from
              scratch.  Only extra packages are installed on top of the  ones  already  installed  in  the  base
              trees.   Note  that  for  this to work properly, the base image still needs to contain the package
              manager metadata by setting CleanPackageMetadata=no (see CleanPackageMetadata=).

              Instead of a directory, a tar file or a disk image may be provided.  In this case it  is  unpacked
              into  the  OS  tree.   This  mode  of  operation  allows  setting  permissions  and file ownership
              explicitly, in particular for projects stored in a version control system such as git which retain
              full file ownership and access mode metadata for committed files.

       SkeletonTrees=, --skeleton-tree=
              Takes a comma separated list of colon separated path pairs.  The first path of each pair refers to
              a directory to copy into the OS tree before invoking the package manager.  The second path of each
              pair  refers  to  the  target directory inside the image.  If the second path is not provided, the
              directory is copied on top of the root  directory  of  the  image.   The  second  path  is  always
              interpreted as an absolute path.  Use this to insert files and directories into the OS tree before
              the package manager installs any packages.  If the mkosi.skeleton/ directory is found in the local
              directory  it  is also used for this purpose with the root directory as target (also see the Files
              section below).

              Note that skeleton trees are cached and any changes to skeleton trees after  a  cached  image  has
              been  built  (when using Incremental=) are only applied when the cached image is rebuilt (by using
              -ff or running mkosi -f clean).

              As with the base tree logic above, instead of a  directory,  a  tar  file  may  be  provided  too.
              mkosi.skeleton.tar will be automatically used if found in the local directory.

       ExtraTrees=, --extra-tree=
              Takes a comma separated list of colon separated path pairs.  The first path of each pair refers to
              a directory to copy from the host into the image.  The second path of  each  pair  refers  to  the
              target directory inside the image.  If the second path is not provided, the directory is copied on
              top of the root directory of the image.  The second path is  always  interpreted  as  an  absolute
              path.  Use this to override any default configuration files shipped with the distribution.  If the
              mkosi.extra/ directory is found in the local directory it is also used for this purpose  with  the
              root directory as target.  (also see the Files section below).

              As  with  the  base  tree  logic  above,  instead  of a directory, a tar file may be provided too.
              mkosi.extra.tar will be automatically used if found in the local directory.

       RemovePackages=, --remove-package=
              Takes a comma-separated list of  package  specifications  for  removal,  in  the  same  format  as
              Packages=.   The  removal  will  be  performed  as one of the last steps.  This step is skipped if
              CleanPackageMetadata=no is used.

       RemoveFiles=, --remove-files=
              Takes a comma-separated list of globs.  Files in the image matching the globs will  be  purged  at
              the end.

       CleanPackageMetadata=, --clean-package-metadata=
              Enable/disable  removal  of  package  manager  databases  and  repository  metadata  at the end of
              installation.  Can be specified as true, false, or auto (the default).  With auto, package manager
              databases  and repository metadata will be removed if the respective package manager executable is
              not present at the end of the installation.

       SyncScripts=, --sync-script=
              Takes a comma-separated list of paths to executables that are used as the sync  scripts  for  this
              image.  See the Scripts section for more information.

       PrepareScripts=, --prepare-script=
              Takes a comma-separated list of paths to executables that are used as the prepare scripts for this
              image.  See the Scripts section for more information.

       BuildScripts=, --build-script=
              Takes a comma-separated list of paths to executables that are used as the build scripts  for  this
              image.  See the Scripts section for more information.

       PostInstallationScripts=, --postinst-script=
              Takes  a  comma-separated  list  of  paths  to  executables that are used as the post-installation
              scripts for this image.  See the Scripts section for more information.

       FinalizeScripts=, --finalize-script=
              Takes a comma-separated list of paths to executables that are used as  the  finalize  scripts  for
              this image.  See the Scripts section for more information.

       PostOutputScripts=, --postoutput-script
              Takes  a comma-separated list of paths to executables that are used as the post output scripts for
              this image.  See the Scripts section for more information.

       BuildSources=, --build-sources=
              Takes a comma separated list of colon separated path pairs.  The first path of each pair refers to
              a  directory  to  mount from the host.  The second path of each pair refers to the directory where
              the source directory should be mounted when running scripts.  Every target path is  prefixed  with
              /work/src  and  all build sources are sorted lexicographically by their target before mounting, so
              that top level paths are mounted  first.   If  not  configured  explicitly,  the  current  working
              directory is mounted to /work/src.

       BuildSourcesEphemeral=, --build-sources-ephemeral=
              Takes  a  boolean.   Disabled  by  default.  Configures whether changes to source directories (The
              working directory and configured using BuildSources=)  are  persisted.   If  enabled,  all  source
              directories  will  be  reset  to  their  original  state every time after running all scripts of a
              specific type (except sync scripts).

       Environment=, --environment=
              Adds variables to the environment that package managers and the prepare/build/postinstall/finalize
              scripts  are executed with.  Takes a space-separated list of variable assignments or just variable
              names.  In the latter case, the values  of  those  variables  will  be  passed  through  from  the
              environment  in  which  mkosi  was invoked.  This option may be specified more than once, in which
              case all listed variables will be set.  If the same variable  is  set  twice,  the  later  setting
              overrides the earlier one.

       EnvironmentFiles=, --env-file=
              Takes a comma-separated list of paths to files that contain environment variable definitions to be
              added to the scripting environment.  Uses mkosi.env if it is found in the  local  directory.   The
              variables  are  first read from mkosi.env if it exists, then from the given list of files and then
              from the Environment= settings.

       WithTests=, --without-tests, -T
              If set to false (or when the command-line option is used), the $WITH_TESTS environment variable is
              set  to  0  when  the  mkosi.build  scripts are invoked.  This is supposed to be used by the build
              scripts to bypass any unit or integration tests that are normally  run  during  the  source  build
              process.  Note that this option has no effect unless the mkosi.build build scripts honor it.

       WithNetwork=, --with-network=
              When  true,  enables  network  connectivity  while  the build scripts mkosi.build are invoked.  By
              default, the build scripts run with networking turned off.  The $WITH_NETWORK environment variable
              is  passed  to  the mkosi.build build scripts indicating whether the build is done with or without
              network.

       Bootable=, --bootable=
              Takes a boolean or auto.  Enables or disables generation of a bootable image.  If  enabled,  mkosi
              will  install  an EFI bootloader, and add an ESP partition when the disk image output is used.  If
              the selected EFI bootloader (See Bootloader=) is not installed or no kernel images can  be  found,
              the  build  will  fail.   auto  behaves  as if the option was enabled, but the build won’t fail if
              either no kernel images or the selected EFI bootloader can’t be found.  If disabled, no bootloader
              will  be  installed even if found inside the image, no unified kernel images will be generated and
              no ESP partition will be added to the image if the disk output format is used.

       Bootloader=, --bootloader=
              Takes one of none, systemd-boot, uki or grub.  Defaults to systemd-boot.  If set to none,  no  EFI
              bootloader  will  be  installed  into  the  image.   If  set to systemd-boot, systemd-boot will be
              installed and for each installed kernel, a UKI will be generated and stored in  EFI/Linux  in  the
              ESP.   If set to uki, a single UKI will be generated for the latest installed kernel (the one with
              the highest version) which is installed to EFI/BOOT/BOOTX64.EFI in the ESP.  If set to  grub,  for
              each  installed  kernel,  a  UKI  will  be generated and stored in EFI/Linux in the ESP.  For each
              generated UKI, a menu entry is appended to the grub configuration  in  grub/grub.cfg  in  the  ESP
              which  chainloads into the UKI.  A shim grub.cfg is also written to EFI/<distribution>/grub.cfg in
              the ESP which loads grub/grub.cfg in the ESP for compatibility with signed versions of grub  which
              load the grub configuration from this location.

              Note  that  we do not yet install grub to the ESP when Bootloader= is set to grub.  This has to be
              done manually in a postinst or finalize script.  The  grub  EFI  binary  should  be  installed  to
              /efi/EFI/BOOT/BOOTX64.EFI  (or  similar depending on the architecture) and should be configured to
              load its configuration from EFI/<distribution>/grub.cfg in  the  ESP.   Signed  versions  of  grub
              shipped by distributions will load their configuration from this location by default.

       BiosBootloader=, --bios-bootloader=
              Takes  one  of  none  or  grub.   Defaults  to  none.   If set to none, no BIOS bootloader will be
              installed.  If set to grub, grub is installed as the BIOS boot  loader  if  a  bootable  image  is
              requested  with  the  Bootable=  option.   If no repart partition definition files are configured,
              mkosi will add a grub BIOS boot partition and an EFI system partition  to  the  default  partition
              definition files.

              Note that this option is not mutually exclusive with Bootloader=.  It is possible to have an image
              that is both bootable on UEFI and BIOS by configuring both Bootloader= and BiosBootloader=.

              The grub BIOS boot partition should have UUID 21686148-6449-6e6f-744e-656564454649 and  should  be
              at least 1MB.

              Even  if  no  EFI  bootloader  is installed, we still need an ESP for BIOS boot as that’s where we
              store the kernel, initrd and grub modules.

       ShimBootloader=, --shim-bootloader=
              Takes one of none, unsigned, or signed.  Defaults to none.  If set to none,  shim  and  MokManager
              will  not  be  installed  to the ESP.  If set to unsigned, mkosi will search for unsigned shim and
              MokManager EFI binaries and install them.  If SecureBoot= is enabled, mkosi will sign the unsigned
              EFI  binaries before installing them.  If set to signed, mkosi will search for signed EFI binaries
              and install those.  Even if SecureBoot= is enabled, mkosi won’t sign these binaries again.

              Note that this option only takes effect when an  image  that  is  bootable  on  UEFI  firmware  is
              requested using other options (Bootable=, Bootloader=).

              Note that when this option is enabled, mkosi will only install already signed bootloader binaries,
              kernel image files and unified kernel images as self-signed binaries would not be accepted by  the
              signed version of shim.

       UnifiedKernelImages=, --unified-kernel-images=
              Specifies  whether  to use unified kernel images or not when Bootloader= is set to systemd-boot or
              grub.  Takes a boolean value or auto.  Defaults to auto.  If enabled, unified  kernel  images  are
              always  used and the build will fail if any components required to build unified kernel images are
              missing.  If set to auto, unified kernel images will be  used  if  all  necessary  components  are
              available.   Otherwise  Type  1  entries  as defined by the Boot Loader Specification will be used
              instead.  If disabled, Type 1 entries will always be used.

       UnifiedKernelImageFormat=, --unified-kernel-image-format=
              Takes a filename without any path components to specify the  format  that  unified  kernel  images
              should be installed as.  This may include both the regular specifiers (see Specifiers) and special
              delayed specifiers, that are expanded during the installation of the files,  which  are  described
              below.   The  default  format  for this parameter is &e-&k with -&h being appended if roothash= or
              usrhash= is found on the kernel command line and +&c if /etc/kernel/tries is found in the image.

              The following specifiers may be used:

              Specifier   Value
              ──────────────────────────────────────────────────
              &&          & character
              &e          Entry Token
              &k          Kernel version
              &h          roothash= or usrhash= value of kernel
                          argument
              &c          Number of tries used for boot attempt
                          counting

       Initrds=, --initrd
              Use user-provided initrd(s).  Takes a comma separated list of paths to initrd files.  This  option
              may  be  used  multiple  times  in  which  case  the initrd lists are combined.  If no initrds are
              specified and a bootable image is requested,  mkosi  will  look  for  initrds  in  a  subdirectory
              io.mkosi.initrd of the artifact directory (see $ARTIFACTDIR in the section ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES),
              if none are found there mkosi will automatically build a default initrd.

       InitrdPackages=, --initrd-package=
              Extra packages to install into the default initrd.   Takes  a  comma  separated  list  of  package
              specifications.   This option may be used multiple times in which case the specified package lists
              are combined.

       InitrdVolatilePackages=, --initrd-volatile-package=
              Similar to VolatilePackages=, except it applies to the default initrd.

       MicrocodeHost=, --microcode-host=
              When set to true only include microcode for the host’s CPU in the image.

       KernelCommandLine=, --kernel-command-line=
              Use the specified kernel command line when building images.

              If the value of this setting contains the literals root=PARTUUID or mount.usr=PARTUUID, these  are
              replaced  with  the  partition  UUID  of  the  root  or  usr partition respectively.  For example,
              root=PARTUUID would  be  replaced  with  root=PARTUUID=58c7d0b2-d224-4834-a16f-e036322e88f7  where
              58c7d0b2-d224-4834-a16f-e036322e88f7 is the partition UUID of the root partition.

       KernelModulesInclude=, --kernel-modules-include=
              Takes  a  list  of  regex  patterns that specify kernel modules to include in the image.  Patterns
              should be relative to the /usr/lib/modules/<kver>/kernel directory.   mkosi  checks  for  a  match
              anywhere  in  the module path (e.g. i915 will match against drivers/gpu/drm/i915.ko).  All modules
              that match any of the specified patterns are included in  the  image.   All  module  and  firmware
              dependencies of the matched modules are included in the image as well.

              If  the  special  value  default  is  used, the default kernel modules defined in the mkosi-initrd
              configuration are included as well.

              If the special value host is used, the currently loaded modules on the host system are included as
              well.

              This  setting  takes  priority  over  KernelModulesExclude=  and  only  makes  sense  when used in
              combination with it because all kernel modules are included in the image by default.

       KernelModulesExclude=, --kernel-modules-exclude=
              Takes a list of regex patterns that specify modules to exclude from the image.  Behaves  the  same
              as  KernelModulesInclude=  except  that  all  modules that match any of the specified patterns are
              excluded from the image.

       KernelModulesInitrd=, --kernel-modules-initrd=
              Enable/Disable generation of the kernel modules initrd when building a bootable image.  Enabled by
              default.   If  enabled, when building a bootable image, for each kernel that we assemble a unified
              kernel image for we generate an extra initrd containing only the kernel modules  for  that  kernel
              version  and  append it to the prebuilt initrd.  This allows generating kernel independent initrds
              which are augmented with the necessary kernel modules when the UKI is assembled.

       KernelModulesInitrdInclude=, --kernel-modules-initrd-include=
              Like KernelModulesInclude=, but applies to the kernel  modules  included  in  the  kernel  modules
              initrd.

       KernelModulesInitrdExclude=, --kernel-modules-initrd-exclude=
              Like  KernelModulesExclude=,  but  applies  to  the  kernel modules included in the kernel modules
              initrd.

       Locale=, --locale=, LocaleMessages=,  --locale-messages=,  Keymap=,  --keymap=,  Timezone=,  --timezone=,
       Hostname=, --hostname=, RootShell=, --root-shell=
              The   settings   Locale=,  --locale=,  LocaleMessages=,  --locale-messages=,  Keymap=,  --keymap=,
              Timezone=, --timezone=,  Hostname=,  --hostname=,  RootShell=,  --root-shell=  correspond  to  the
              identically    named    systemd-firstboot    options.    See   the   systemd   firstboot   manpage
              (https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd-firstboot.html)  for  more  information.
              Additionally,  where  applicable,  the  corresponding  systemd  credentials for these settings are
              written to /usr/lib/credstore, so that they apply even if only /usr is shipped in the image.

       RootPassword=, --root-password=,
              Set the system root password.  If this option is not used, but a mkosi.rootpw file is found in the
              local directory, the password is automatically read from it.  If the password starts with hashed:,
              it is treated as  an  already  hashed  root  password.   The  root  password  is  also  stored  in
              /usr/lib/credstore  under  the appropriate systemd credential so that it applies even if only /usr
              is shipped in the image.  To create an unlocked account without any password use hashed: without a
              hash.

       Autologin=, --autologin
              Enable autologin for the root user on /dev/pts/0 (nspawn), /dev/tty1 and /dev/hvc0.

       MakeInitrd=, --make-initrd
              Add /etc/initrd-release and /init to the image so that it can be used as an initramfs.

       Ssh=, --ssh
              If  specified,  an  sshd  socket  unit  and matching service are installed in the final image that
              expose SSH over VSock.  When building with this option and running the image using mkosi qemu, the
              mkosi ssh command can be used to connect to the container/VM via SSH.  Note that you still have to
              make sure openssh is installed in the image to make  this  option  behave  correctly.   Run  mkosi
              genkey to automatically generate an X509 certificate and private key to be used by mkosi to enable
              SSH access to any virtual machines via mkosi ssh.  To access images booted using mkosi  boot,  use
              machinectl.

       SELinuxRelabel=, --selinux-relabel=
              Specifies  whether to relabel files to match the image’s SELinux policy.  Takes a boolean value or
              auto.  Defaults to auto.  If disabled, files will not relabeled.  If enabled,  an  SELinux  policy
              has to be installed in the image and setfiles has to be available to relabel files.  If any errors
              occur during setfiles, the build will fail.  If set to auto, files will be relabeled if an SELinux
              policy  is  installed  in  the  image  and  if  setfiles is available.  Any errors occurred during
              setfiles will be ignored.

              Note that when running unprivileged, setfiles will fail to set any labels  that  are  not  in  the
              host’s SELinux policy.  To ensure setfiles succeeds without errors, make sure to run mkosi as root
              or build from a host system with the same SELinux policy as the image you’re building.

   [Validation] Section
       SecureBoot=, --secure-boot
              Sign systemd-boot (if it is not signed yet) and any  generated  unified  kernel  images  for  UEFI
              SecureBoot.

       SecureBootAutoEnroll=, --secure-boot-auto-enroll=
              Set  up  automatic  enrollment  of  the  secure boot keys in virtual machines as documented in the
              systemd-boot  man  page  (https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd-boot.html)   if
              SecureBoot=  is used.  Note that systemd-boot will only do automatic secure boot key enrollment in
              virtual machines starting from systemd v253.  To do auto enrollment on systemd  v252  or  on  bare
              metal  machines, write a systemd-boot configuration file to /efi/loader/loader.conf using an extra
              tree with secure-boot-enroll force or secure-boot-enroll manual in it.   Auto  enrollment  is  not
              supported on systemd versions older than v252.  Defaults to yes.

       SecureBootKey=, --secure-boot-key=
              Path to the PEM file containing the secret key for signing the UEFI kernel image if SecureBoot= is
              used and PCR  signatures  when  SignExpectedPcr=  is  also  used.   When  SecureBootKeySource=  is
              specified, the input type depends on the source.

       SecureBootKeySource=, --secure-boot-key-source=
              Source    of    SecureBootKey=,    to   support   OpenSSL   engines.    E.g.:   --secure-boot-key-
              source=engine:pkcs11

       SecureBootCertificate=, --secure-boot-certificate=
              Path to the X.509 file containing the certificate for the signed UEFI kernel image, if SecureBoot=
              is used.

       SecureBootSignTool=, --secure-boot-sign-tool
              Tool  to  use  to sign secure boot PE binaries.  Takes one of sbsign, pesign or auto.  Defaults to
              auto.  If set to auto, either sbsign or pesign are used if available, with sbsign being  preferred
              if both are installed.

       VerityKey=, --verity-key=
              Path  to  the  PEM  file  containing  the secret key for signing the verity signature, if a verity
              signature partition is added with systemd-repart.  When VerityKeySource= is specified,  the  input
              type depends on the source.

       VerityKeySource=, --verity-key-source=
              Source of VerityKey=, to support OpenSSL engines.  E.g.: --verity-key-source=engine:pkcs11

       VerityCertificate=, --verity-certificate=
              Path  to  the  X.509 file containing the certificate for signing the verity signature, if a verity
              signature partition is added with systemd-repart.

       SignExpectedPcr=, --sign-expected-pcr
              Measure the components of the unified kernel image (UKI) using systemd-measure and embed  the  PCR
              signature  into  the unified kernel image.  This option takes a boolean value or the special value
              auto, which is the default, which is equal to a true value if the  systemd-measure  binary  is  in
              PATH.  Depends on SecureBoot= being enabled and key from SecureBootKey=.

       Passphrase=, --passphrase
              Specify  the  path  to  a  file  containing  the passphrase to use for LUKS encryption.  It should
              contain the passphrase literally, and not end in a newline character (i.e. in the same  format  as
              cryptsetup  and  /etc/crypttab expect the passphrase files).  The file must have an access mode of
              0600 or less.

       Checksum=, --checksum
              Generate a SHA256SUMS file of all generated artifacts after the build is complete.

       Sign=, --sign
              Sign the generated SHA256SUMS using gpg after completion.

       Key=, --key=
              Select the gpg key to use for signing SHA256SUMS.  This key must be already  present  in  the  gpg
              keyring.

   [Host] Section
       ProxyUrl=, --proxy-url=
              Configure  a  proxy  to  be  used  for all outgoing network connections.  Various tools that mkosi
              invokes and for which the proxy can be configured are configured to use this  proxy.   mkosi  also
              sets  various  well-known  environment  variables  to specify the proxy to use for any programs it
              invokes that may need internet access.

       ProxyExclude=, --proxy-exclude=
              Configure hostnames for which requests should not go through the proxy.  Takes a  comma  separated
              list of hostnames.

       ProxyPeerCertificate=, --proxy-peer-certificate=
              Configure  a  file  containing certificates used to verify the proxy.  Defaults to the system-wide
              certificate store.

              Currently, setting a proxy peer certificate is only supported when dnf or dnf5 is  used  to  build
              the image.

       ProxyClientCertificate=, --proxy-client-certificate=
              Configure a file containing the certificate used to authenticate the client with the proxy.

              Currently,  setting a proxy client certificate is only supported when dnf or dnf5 is used to build
              the image.

       ProxyClientKey=, --proxy-client-key=
              Configure a file containing the private key used  to  authenticate  the  client  with  the  proxy.
              Defaults to the proxy client certificate if one is provided.

              Currently,  setting  a  proxy  client  key is only supported when dnf or dnf5 is used to build the
              image.

       Incremental=, --incremental=, -i
              Enable incremental build mode.  In this mode, a copy of the OS image is created immediately  after
              all  OS  packages  are  installed and the prepare scripts have executed but before the mkosi.build
              scripts are invoked (or anything that happens after it).  On subsequent invocations of mkosi  with
              the  -i switch this cached image may be used to skip the OS package installation, thus drastically
              speeding up repetitive build times.  Note that while there is some rudimentary cache invalidation,
              it  is  definitely not perfect.  In order to force rebuilding of the cached image, combine -i with
              -ff to ensure the cached image is first removed and then re-created.

       NSpawnSettings=, --settings=
              Specifies a .nspawn settings file for systemd-nspawn to use in the boot and shell  verbs,  and  to
              place  next  to  the  generated  image  file.   This  is  useful  to  configure the systemd-nspawn
              environment when the image is run.  If this setting is not used but an mkosi.nspawn file found  in
              the local directory it is automatically used for this purpose.

       ExtraSearchPaths=, --extra-search-path=
              List of colon-separated paths to look for tools in, before using the regular $PATH search path.

       VirtualMachineMonitor=, --vmm=
              Configures the virtual machine monitor to use.  Takes one of qemu or vmspawn.  Defaults to qemu.

              When  set to qemu, the image is booted with qemu.  Most output formats can be booted in qemu.  Any
              arguments specified after the verb are appended to the qemu  invocation  and  are  interpreted  as
              extra qemu command line arguments.

              When  set to vmspawn, systemd-vmspawn is used to boot up the image, vmspawn only supports disk and
              directory type images.  Any arguments specified after the verb are appended to the systemd-vmspawn
              invocation and are interpreted as extra vmspawn options and extra kernel command line arguments.

       QemuGui=, --qemu-gui=
              If enabled, qemu is executed with its graphical interface instead of with a serial console.

       QemuSmp=, --qemu-smp=
              When  used with the qemu verb, this options sets qemu’s -smp argument which controls the number of
              guest’s CPUs.  Defaults to 2.

              When set to 0, the number of CPUs available to the mkosi process will be used.

       QemuMem=, --qemu-mem=
              When used with the qemu verb, this options sets qemu’s -m argument which controls  the  amount  of
              guest’s RAM.  Defaults to 2G.

       QemuKvm=, --qemu-kvm=
              When  used  with  the  qemu  verb, this option specifies whether QEMU should use KVM acceleration.
              Takes a boolean value or auto.  Defaults to auto.

       QemuVsock=, --qemu-vsock=
              When used with the qemu verb, this option specifies whether  QEMU  should  be  configured  with  a
              vsock.  Takes a boolean value or auto.  Defaults to auto.

       QemuVsockConnectionId=, --qemu-vsock-cid=
              When  used  with  the  qemu  verb,  this option specifies the vsock connection ID to use.  Takes a
              number in the interval [3, 0xFFFFFFFF) or hash or auto.  Defaults to auto.  When set to hash,  the
              connection  ID  will be derived from the full path to the image.  When set to auto, mkosi will try
              to find a free connection ID automatically.  Otherwise, the provided number will be used as is.

       QemuSwtpm=, --qemu-swtpm=
              When used with the qemu verb, this option specifies whether to start an instance of  swtpm  to  be
              used  as a TPM with qemu.  This requires swtpm to be installed on the host.  Takes a boolean value
              or auto.  Defaults to auto.

       QemuCdrom=, --qemu-cdrom=
              When used with the qemu verb, this option specifies whether to attach the  image  to  the  virtual
              machine as a CD-ROM device.  Takes a boolean.  Defaults to no.

       QemuFirmware=, --qemu-firmware=
              When  used  with  the  qemu verb, this option specifies which firmware to use.  Takes one of uefi,
              uefi-secure-boot, bios, linux, or auto.  Defaults to auto.  When set to uefi,  the  OVMF  firmware
              without  secure boot support is used.  When set to uefi-secure-boot, the OVMF firmware with secure
              boot support is used.  When set to bios, the default SeaBIOS firmware is used.  When set to linux,
              direct  kernel boot is used.  See the QemuKernel= option for more details on which kernel image is
              used with direct kernel boot.  When set to auto, uefi-secure-boot is used if  possible  and  linux
              otherwise.

       QemuFirmwareVariables=, --qemu-firmware-variables=
              When used with the qemu verb, this option specifies the path to the the firmware variables file to
              use.  Currently, this option is only taken into account when the uefi or uefi-secure-boot firmware
              is used.  If not specified, mkosi will search for the default variables file and use that instead.

              When  set  to  microsoft,  a  firmware  variables file with the Microsoft secure boot certificates
              already enrolled will be used.

              When set to custom, the secure boot certificate from SecureBootCertificate= will be enrolled  into
              the default firmware variables file.

              virt-fw-vars  from the virt-firmware (https://gitlab.com/kraxel/virt-firmware) project can be used
              to customize OVMF variable files.

       QemuKernel=, --qemu-kernel=
              Set the kernel image to use for qemu direct kernel boot.  If not specified,  mkosi  will  use  the
              kernel provided via the command line (-kernel option) or latest the kernel that was installed into
              the image (or fail if no kernel was installed into the image).

              Note that when the cpio output format is used, direct  kernel  boot  is  used  regardless  of  the
              configured  firmware.   Depending on the configured firmware, qemu might boot the kernel itself or
              using the configured firmware.

       QemuDrives=, --qemu-drive=
              Add     a     qemu     drive.      Takes     a     colon-delimited      string      of      format
              <id>:<size>[:<directory>[:<options>[:<file-id>]]].   id  specifies  the  qemu  ID  assigned to the
              drive.  This can be used as the drive= property in various qemu devices.  size specifies the  size
              of  the  drive.  This takes a size in bytes.  Additionally, the suffixes K, M and G can be used to
              specify a size in kilobytes, megabytes and gigabytes respectively.  directory optionally specifies
              the  directory  in which to create the file backing the drive.  options optionally specifies extra
              comma-delimited properties which are passed verbatim to qemu’s -drive option.   file-id  specifies
              the  ID  of the file backing the drive.  Drives with the same file ID will share the backing file.
              The directory and size of the file will be determined from the first drive with a given file ID.

              Example usage:

                     [Host]
                     QemuDrives=btrfs:10G
                                ext4:20G
                     QemuArgs=-device nvme,serial=btrfs,drive=btrfs
                              -device nvme,serial=ext4,drive=ext4

       QemuArgs=
              Space-delimited list of additional arguments to pass when invoking qemu.

       Ephemeral=, --ephemeral
              When used with the shell, boot, or qemu verbs, this option runs the specified verb on a  temporary
              snapshot  of  the  output image that is removed immediately when the container terminates.  Taking
              the temporary snapshot is more efficient on file systems that support reflinks natively (btrfs  or
              xfs) than on more traditional file systems that do not (ext4).

       Credentials=, --credential=
              Set credentials to be passed to systemd-nspawn or qemu respectively when mkosi shell/boot or mkosi
              qemu are used.  This option takes a space separated list of values which can be  either  key=value
              pairs  or  paths.  If a path is provided, if it is a file, the credential name will be the name of
              the file.  If the file is executable, the credential value will be the  output  of  executing  the
              file.   Otherwise,  the  credential  value  will  be  the  contents of the file.  If the path is a
              directory, the same logic applies to each file in the directory.

              Note that values will only be treated as paths if they do not contain the delimiter (=).

       KernelCommandLineExtra=, --kernel-command-line-extra=
              Set extra kernel command line entries that are appended to the kernel command line at runtime when
              booting  the  image.  When booting in a container, these are passed as extra arguments to systemd.
              When  booting  in  a  VM,  these  are  appended  to  the  kernel  command  line  via  the   SMBIOS
              io.systemd.stub.kernel-cmdline-extra  OEM  string.   This  will  only  be  picked  up  by systemd-
              boot/systemd-stub versions newer than or equal to v254.

       Acl=, --acl=
              If specified, ACLs will be set on any generated root filesystem directories that  allow  the  user
              running mkosi to remove them without needing privileges.

       ToolsTree=, --tools-tree=
              If specified, programs executed by mkosi to build and boot an image are looked up inside the given
              tree instead of in the host system.  Use this option to make image  builds  more  reproducible  by
              always using the same versions of programs to build the final image instead of whatever version is
              installed on the host system.  If this option is not used, but the mkosi.tools/ directory is found
              in  the  local  directory  it  is  automatically  used for this purpose with the root directory as
              target.

              Note if a binary is found in any of the paths configured with ExtraSearchPaths=, the  binary  will
              be executed on the host.

              If  set to default, mkosi will automatically add an extra tools tree image and use it as the tools
              tree.

              Note that mkosi will only build a single default tools tree per build, even if multiple images are
              defined  in  mkosi.images  with ToolsTree=default.  The settings of the “last” image will apply to
              the default  tools  tree  (usually  the  image  defined  last  in  mkosi.images  and  without  any
              dependencies on other images).

              The  following  table  shows  for  which distributions default tools tree packages are defined and
              which packages are included in those default tools trees:

                                          Fedora    CentOS     Debian     Ubuntu     Arch    openSUSE
              ─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
              acl                           ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓         ✓          ✓
              apt                           ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓         ✓
              archlinux-keyring             ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓         ✓
              attr                          ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓         ✓          ✓
              bash                          ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓         ✓          ✓
              btrfs-progs                   ✓                     ✓         ✓         ✓          ✓
              bubblewrap                    ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓         ✓          ✓
              ca-certificates               ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓         ✓          ✓
              coreutils                     ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓         ✓          ✓
              cpio                          ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓         ✓          ✓
              curl                          ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓         ✓          ✓
              debian-keyring                ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓         ✓
              diffutils                     ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓         ✓          ✓
              distribution-gpg-keys         ✓          ✓                              ✓          ✓
              dnf                           ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓         ✓          ✓
              dnf-plugins-core              ✓          ✓                                         ✓
              dnf5dnf5-pluginsdosfstools                    ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓         ✓          ✓
              e2fsprogs                     ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓         ✓          ✓
              edk2-ovmf                     ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓         ✓          ✓
              erofs-utils                   ✓                     ✓         ✓         ✓          ✓
              findutils                     ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓         ✓          ✓
              git                           ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓         ✓          ✓
              grep                          ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓         ✓          ✓
              grub-tools                    ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓         ✓
              jq                            ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓         ✓          ✓
              kmod                          ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓         ✓          ✓
              less                          ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓         ✓          ✓
              mtools                        ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓         ✓          ✓
              nano                          ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓         ✓          ✓
              openssh                       ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓         ✓          ✓
              openssl                       ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓         ✓          ✓
              sed                           ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓         ✓          ✓
              pacman                        ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓         ✓
              pesign                        ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓         ✓          ✓
              policycoreutils               ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓                    ✓
              qemu                          ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓         ✓          ✓
              sbsigntools                   ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓         ✓          ✓
              socat                         ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓         ✓          ✓
              squashfs-tools                ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓         ✓          ✓
              strace                        ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓         ✓          ✓
              swtpm                         ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓         ✓          ✓
              systemd                       ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓         ✓          ✓
              ukify                         ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓         ✓          ✓
              tar                           ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓         ✓          ✓
              ubuntu-keyring                ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓         ✓
              util-linux                    ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓         ✓          ✓
              virtiofsd                     ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓         ✓          ✓
              virt-firmware                 ✓          ✓                              ✓
              xfsprogs                      ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓         ✓          ✓
              xz                            ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓         ✓          ✓
              zstd                          ✓          ✓          ✓         ✓         ✓          ✓
              zypper                        ✓                     ✓         ✓         ✓

       ToolsTreeDistribution=, --tools-tree-distribution=
              Set the distribution to use for the default tools tree.  By default, the same distribution as  the
              image  that’s  being  built is used, except for CentOS and Ubuntu images, in which case Fedora and
              Debian are used respectively.

       ToolsTreeRelease=, --tools-tree-release=
              Set the distribution release to use for the default tools tree.  By default, the hardcoded default
              release in mkosi for the distribution is used.

       ToolsTreeMirror=, --tools-tree-mirror=
              Set  the  mirror  to use for the default tools tree.  By default, the default mirror for the tools
              tree distribution is used.

       ToolsTreeRepositories=, --tools-tree-repository
              Same as Repositories= but for the default tools tree.

       ToolsTreePackageManagerTrees=, --tools-tree-package-manager-tree=
              Same as PackageManagerTrees= but for the default tools tree.

       ToolsTreePackages=, --tools-tree-packages=
              Extra packages to install into the default tools tree.  Takes a comma separated  list  of  package
              specifications.   This option may be used multiple times in which case the specified package lists
              are combined.

       ToolsTreeCertificates=, --tools-tree-certificates=
              Specify  whether  to  use  certificates   and   keys   from   the   tools   tree.    If   enabled,
              /usr/share/keyrings,  /usr/share/distribution-gpg-keys,  /etc/pki, /etc/ssl, /etc/ca-certificates,
              /etc/pacman.d/gnupg and /var/lib/ca-certificates from the tools tree are used.   Otherwise,  these
              directories are picked up from the host.

       RuntimeTrees=, --runtime-tree=
              Takes  a  colon  separated  pair of paths.  The first path refers to a directory to mount into any
              machine (container or VM) started by mkosi.  The second path refers to the target directory inside
              the  machine.   If  the  second path is not provided, the directory is mounted at /root/src in the
              machine.  If the second path is relative, it is interpreted relative to /root/src in the machine.

              For each mounted directory, the uid and gid of the user running mkosi are mapped to the root  user
              in  the machine.  This means that all the files and directories will appear as if they’re owned by
              root in the machine, and all new files and directories created by root in  the  machine  in  these
              directories will be owned by the user running mkosi on the host.

              Note that when using mkosi qemu with this feature systemd v254 or newer has to be installed in the
              image.

       RuntimeSize=, --runtime-size=
              If specified, disk images are grown to the specified size when they’re booted with mkosi  boot  or
              mkosi  qemu.  Takes a size in bytes.  Additionally, the suffixes K, M and G can be used to specify
              a size in kilobytes, megabytes and gigabytes respectively.

       RuntimeScratch=, --runtime-scratch=
              Takes a boolean value or auto.  Specifies whether to mount extra scratch space  to  /var/tmp.   If
              enabled,  practically  unlimited  scratch  space is made available under /var/tmp when booting the
              image with mkosi qemu, mkosi boot or mkosi shell.

              Note that using this feature with mkosi qemu requires systemd v254 or newer in the guest.

       RuntimeNetwork=, --runtime-network=
              Takes one of user, interface or none.  Defaults to user.  Specifies the networking to set up  when
              booting  the  image.   user  sets  up  usermode  networking.   interface sets up a virtual network
              connection between the host and the image.  This translates to a veth interface  for  mkosi  shell
              and mkosi boot and a tap interface for mkosi qemu and mkosi vmspawn.

              Note  that when using interface, mkosi does not automatically configure the host interface.  It is
              expected that a recent version of systemd-networkd is running on the host which will automatically
              configure the host interface of the link.

       RuntimeBuildSources=, --runtime-build-sources=
              Mount  the  build  sources  configured  with  BuildSources=  and  the  build  directory (if one is
              configured) to the same locations in /work that they were mounted to when running the build script
              when using mkosi boot or mkosi qemu.

       UnitProperties=, --unit-property=
              Configure  systemd unit properties to add to the systemd scopes allocated when using mkosi boot or
              mkosi qemu.  These are passed directly to the --property options of systemd-nspawn and systemd-run
              respectively.

       SshKey=, --ssh-key=
              Path  to  the  X509  private key in PEM format to use to connect to a virtual machine started with
              mkosi qemu and built with the Ssh= option enabled via the mkosi ssh command.   If  not  configured
              and  mkosi.key  exists  in  the working directory, it will automatically be used for this purpose.
              Run mkosi genkey to automatically generate a key in mkosi.key.

       SshCertificate=, --ssh-certificate=
              Path to the X509 certificate in PEM format to provision as the SSH public key in virtual  machines
              started with mkosi qemu.  If not configured and mkosi.crt exists in the working directory, it will
              automatically be used for this purpose.  Run mkosi genkey to automatically generate a  certificate
              in mkosi.crt.

       Machine=, --machine=
              Specify  the  machine name to use when booting the image.  Can also be used to refer to a specific
              image when SSH-ing into an image (e.g.  mkosi --image=myimage ssh).

              Note that Ephemeral= has to be enabled to start multiple instances of the same image.

       ForwardJournal=, --forward-journal=
              Specify the path to which journal logs from containers and virtual machines should  be  forwarded.
              If the path has the .journal extension, it is interpreted as a file to which the journal should be
              written.  Otherwise, the path is interpreted as  a  directory  to  which  the  journal  should  be
              written.

              Note that systemd v256 or newer is required in the virtual machine for log forwarding to work.

              Note  that  if  a  path  with  the .journal extension is given, the journal size is limited to 4G.
              Configure an output directory instead of file if your workload produces  more  than  4G  worth  of
              journal data.

   [Match] Section.
       Profile=
              Matches against the configured profile.

       Distribution=
              Matches against the configured distribution.

       Release=
              Matches  against  the  configured  distribution  release.   If  this  condition  is  used  and  no
              distribution has been explicitly configured yet, the host distribution and release are used.

       Architecture=
              Matches against the configured architecture.  If this condition is used and  no  architecture  has
              been explicitly configured yet, the host architecture is used.

       Repositories=
              Matches  against  repositories  enabled with the Repositories= setting.  Takes a single repository
              name.

       PathExists=
              This condition is satisfied if the given path exists.  Relative paths are interpreted relative  to
              the parent directory of the config file that the condition is read from.

       ImageId=
              Matches against the configured image ID, supporting globs.  If this condition is used and no image
              ID has been explicitly configured yet, this condition fails.

       ImageVersion=
              Matches against the configured image version.  Image versions can be prepended  by  the  operators
              ==,  !=,  >=,  <=,  <,  >  for rich version comparisons according to the UAPI group version format
              specification.  If no operator is prepended, the equality operator is assumed by default.  If this
              condition is used and no image version has been explicitly configured yet, this condition fails.

       Bootable=
              Matches against the configured value for the Bootable= feature.  Takes a boolean value or auto.

       Format=
              Matches  against  the  configured  value  for the Format= option.  Takes an output format (see the
              Format= option).

       SystemdVersion=
              Matches against the systemd version on the host (as reported by systemctl --version).  Values  can
              be  prepended  by the operators ==, !=, >=, <=, <, > for rich version comparisons according to the
              UAPI group version format specification.  If no operator is prepended, the  equality  operator  is
              assumed by default.

       BuildSources=
              Takes  a  build  source  target  path  (see BuildSources=).  This match is satisfied if any of the
              configured build sources uses this target path.   For  example,  if  we  have  a  mkosi.conf  file
              containing:

                     [Content]
                     BuildSources=../abc/qed:kernel

              and a drop-in containing:

                     [Match]
                     BuildSources=kernel

              The drop-in will be included.

              Any  absolute  paths  passed  to  this  setting  are  interpreted  relative to the current working
              directory.

       HostArchitecture=
              Matches against the host’s native architecture.  See the  Architecture=  setting  for  a  list  of
              possible values.

       ToolsTreeDistribution=
              Matches against the configured tools tree distribution.

       Environment=
              Matches  against a specific key/value pair configured with Environment=.  If no value is provided,
              check if the given key is in the environment regardless of which value it has.

       This table shows which matchers support globs, rich comparisons and the default  value  that  is  matched
       against if no value has been configured at the time the config file is read:

       Matcher                  Globs   Rich             Default
                                        Comparisons
       ──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
       Profile=                 no      no               match fails
       Distribution=            no      no               match host distribution
       Release=                 no      no               match host release
       Architecture=            no      no               match host architecture
       PathExists=              no      no               n/a
       ImageId=                 yes     no               match fails
       ImageVersion=            no      yes              match fails
       Bootable=                no      no               match auto feature
       Format=                  no      no               match default format
       SystemdVersion=          no      yes              n/a
       BuildSources=            no      no               match fails
       HostArchitecture=        no      no               n/a
       ToolsTreeDistribution=   no      no               match   default   tools   tree
                                                         distribution
       Environment=             no      no               n/a

   [Config] Section
       Profile=, --profile=
              Select the given profile.  A profile is a configuration file or directory in  the  mkosi.profiles/
              directory.   When  selected,  this  configuration  file or directory is included after parsing the
              mkosi.conf file, but before any mkosi.conf.d/*.conf drop in configuration.

       Include=, --include=, -I
              Include extra configuration from the given file or directory.  The extra configuration is included
              immediately  after  parsing  the  setting, except when used on the command line, in which case the
              extra configuration is included after parsing all command line arguments.

              Note that each path containing extra configuration is only parsed once, even if included more than
              once with Include=.

              The  builtin  configs  for  the  mkosi  default  initrd  and default tools tree can be included by
              including the literal value mkosi-initrd and mkosi-tools respectively.

              Note: Include names starting with either of the literals mkosi- or contrib- are reserved  for  use
              by mkosi itself.

       InitrdInclude=, --initrd-include=
              Same  as Include=, but the extra configuration files or directories are included when building the
              default initrd.

       Dependencies=, --dependency=
              The images that this image depends on specified as a comma-separated list.  All images  configured
              in this option will be built before this image.

              When this setting is specified for the “main” image, it specifies which subimages should be built.
              See the Building multiple images section for more information.

       MinimumVersion=, --minimum-version=
              The minimum mkosi version required to build this configuration.  If specified multiple times,  the
              highest specified version is used.

       ConfigureScripts=, --configure-script=
              Takes  a  comma-separated  list of paths to executables that are used as the configure scripts for
              this image.  See the Scripts section for more information.

       PassEnvironment=, --pass-environment=
              Takes a list of environment variable names separated by spaces.  When  building  multiple  images,
              pass  the  listed  environment  variables  to each individual subimage as if they were “universal”
              settings.  See the Building multiple images section for more information.

   Specifiers
       The current value of various  settings  can  be  accessed  when  parsing  configuration  files  by  using
       specifiers.   To  write a literal % character in a configuration file without treating it as a specifier,
       use %%.  The following specifiers are understood:

       Setting            Specifier
       ─────────────────────────────
       Distribution=      %d
       Release=           %r
       Architecture=      %a
       Format=            %t
       Output=            %o
       OutputDirectory=   %O
       ImageId=           %i
       ImageVersion=      %v
       Profile=           %p

       There are also specifiers that are independent of settings:

       Specifier   Value
       ──────────────────────────────────────────────────
       %C          Parent directory  of  current  config
                   file
       %P          Current working directory
       %D          Directory that mkosi was invoked in

       Finally, there are specifiers that are derived from a setting:

       Specifier   Value
       ──────────────────────────────────────────────────
       %F          The   default   filesystem   of   the
                   configured distribution

       Note that the current working directory changes as mkosi parses its  configuration.   Specifically,  each
       time  mkosi  parses a directory containing a mkosi.conf file, mkosi changes its working directory to that
       directory.

       Note that the directory that mkosi was  invoked  in  is  influenced  by  the  --directory=  command  line
       argument.

       The following table shows example values for the directory specifiers listed above:

               $D/mkosi.conf   $D/mkosi.conf.d/abc/abc.conf   $D/mkosi.conf.d/abc/mkosi.conf
       ──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
       %C      $D              $D/mkosi.conf.d                $D/mkosi.conf.d/abc
       %P      $D              $D                             $D/mkosi.conf.d/abc
       %D      $D              $D                             $D

   Supported distributions
       Images may be created containing installations of the following distributions:

       • Fedora LinuxDebianUbuntuArch LinuxopenSUSEMageiaCentOSRHELRHEL UBIOpenMandrivaRocky LinuxAlma LinuxNone (Requires the user to provide a pre-built rootfs)

       In  theory,  any  distribution  may  be  used  on  the  host  for  building  images  containing any other
       distribution, as long as the necessary tools are available.  Specifically, any distribution that packages
       apt  may  be  used  to  build Debian or Ubuntu images.  Any distribution that packages dnf may be used to
       build images for any of the rpm-based distributions.  Any distro that packages  pacman  may  be  used  to
       build  Arch  Linux  images.   Any distribution that packages zypper may be used to build openSUSE images.
       Other distributions and build automation tools for embedded Linux systems such as Buildroot, OpenEmbedded
       and  Yocto  Project  may  be  used  by selecting the custom distribution, and populating the rootfs via a
       combination of base trees, skeleton trees, and prepare scripts.

       Currently, Fedora Linux packages all relevant tools as of Fedora 28.

       Note that when not using a custom mirror, RHEL images can only be built from a host system  with  a  RHEL
       subscription (established using e.g. subscription-manager).

Execution Flow

       Execution  flow  for  mkosi  build.   Default  values/calls are shown in parentheses.  When building with
       --incremental mkosi creates a cache of the distribution installation if not already existing and replaces
       the distribution installation in consecutive runs with data from the cached one.

       1. Parse CLI options

       2. Parse configuration files

       3. Run configure scripts (mkosi.configure)

       4. If  we’re  not  running  as  root,  unshare  the user namespace and map the subuid range configured in
          /etc/subuid and /etc/subgid into it.

       5. Unshare the mount namespace

       6. Remount the following directories read-only if they exist:

           • /usr/etc/opt/srv/boot/efi/media/mnt

       Then, for each image, we execute the following steps:

        1. Copy package manager trees into the workspace

        2. Sync the package manager repository metadata

        3. Run sync scripts (mkosi.sync)

        4. Copy base trees (--base-tree=) into the image

        5. Reuse a cached image if one is available

        6. Copy a snapshot of the package manager repository metadata into the image

        7. Copy skeleton trees (mkosi.skeleton) into image

        8. Install distribution and packages into image

        9. Run prepare scripts on image with the final argument (mkosi.prepare)

       10. Install build packages in overlay if any build scripts are configured

       11. Run prepare scripts on  overlay  with  the  build  argument  if  any  build  scripts  are  configured
           (mkosi.prepare)

       12. Cache the image if configured (--incremental)

       13. Run build scripts on image + overlay if any build scripts are configured (mkosi.build)

       14. Finalize the build if the output format none is configured

       15. Copy the build scripts outputs into the image

       16. Copy the extra trees into the image (mkosi.extra)

       17. Run post-install scripts (mkosi.postinst)

       18. Write config files required for Ssh=, Autologin= and MakeInitrd=

       19. Install systemd-boot and configure secure boot if configured (--secure-boot)

       20. Run systemd-sysusers

       21. Run systemd-tmpfiles

       22. Run systemctl preset-all

       23. Run depmod

       24. Run systemd-firstboot

       25. Run systemd-hwdb

       26. Remove packages and files (RemovePackages=, RemoveFiles=)

       27. Run SELinux relabel is a SELinux policy is installed

       28. Run finalize scripts (mkosi.finalize)

       29. Generate unified kernel image if configured to do so

       30. Generate final output format

       31. Run post-output scripts (mkosi.postoutput)

Scripts

       To  allow  for  image  customization  that  cannot  be  implemented using mkosi’s builtin features, mkosi
       supports running scripts at various points during the image build process that can customize the image as
       needed.   Scripts  are  executed  on  the  host  system as root (either real root or root within the user
       namespace that mkosi created when  running  unprivileged)  with  a  customized  environment  to  simplify
       modifying  the image.  For each script, the configured build sources (BuildSources=) are mounted into the
       current working directory before running the script in the current working directory.  $SRCDIR is set  to
       point to the current working directory.  The following scripts are supported:

       • If  mkosi.configure  (ConfigureScripts=) exists, it is executed before building the image.  This script
         may be used to dynamically modify the configuration.  It receives the configuration serialized as  JSON
         on  stdin  and  should  output the modified configuration serialized as JSON on stdout.  Note that this
         script only runs when building or booting the image (build, qemu, boot and shell verbs).  If a  default
         tools  tree  is  configured,  it  will  be built before running the configure scripts and the configure
         scripts will run with the tools tree available.   This  also  means  that  the  modifications  made  by
         configure scripts will not be visible in the summary output.

       • If mkosi.sync (SyncScripts=) exists, it is executed before the image is built.  This script may be used
         to update various sources that are used to build the image.  One use case is to run git pull on various
         source  repositories  before building the image.  Specifically, the BuildSourcesEphemeral= setting does
         not apply to sync scripts, which means sync scripts can  be  used  to  update  build  sources  even  if
         BuildSourcesEphemeral= is enabled.

       • If  mkosi.prepare (PrepareScripts=) exists, it is first called with the final argument, right after the
         software packages are installed.  It is called a second time with the  build  command  line  parameter,
         right  after  the build packages are installed and the build overlay mounted on top of the image’s root
         directory .  This script has network access and may be used to install packages from other sources than
         the distro’s package manager (e.g. pip, npm, ...), after all software packages are installed but before
         the image is cached (if incremental mode is enabled).  In contrast to a general  purpose  installation,
         it is safe to install packages to the system (pip install, npm install -g) instead of in $SRCDIR itself
         because the build image is only used for a single project and can easily be thrown away and rebuilt  so
         there’s no risk of conflicting dependencies and no risk of polluting the host system.

       • If  mkosi.build  (BuildScripts=)  exists,  it  is executed with the build overlay mounted on top of the
         image’s root directory.  When running the build script, $DESTDIR points to a directory where the script
         should  place  any files generated it would like to end up in the image.  Note that make/automake/meson
         based build systems generally honor $DESTDIR, thus making it very natural to build  source  trees  from
         the build script.  After running the build script, the contents of $DESTDIR are copied into the image.

       • If mkosi.postinst (PostInstallationScripts=) exists, it is executed after the (optional) build tree and
         extra trees have been installed.  This script may be used to alter the images without any restrictions,
         after all software packages and built sources have been installed.

       • If mkosi.finalize (FinalizeScripts=) exists, it is executed as the last step of preparing an image.

       • If  mkosi.postoutput  (PostOutputScripts=) exists, it is executed right after all the output files have
         been generated, before they are finally moved into the output directory.  This can be used to  generate
         additional or alternative outputs, e.g. SHA256FILES or SBOM manifests.

       • If  mkosi.clean (CleanScripts=) exists, it is executed right after the outputs of a previous build have
         been cleaned up.  A clean script can clean up  any  outputs  that  mkosi  does  not  know  about  (e.g.
         artifacts from SplitArtifacts=yes or RPMs built in a build script).  Note that this script does not use
         the tools tree even if one is configured.

       If a script uses the .chroot extension, mkosi will chroot into the image using mkosi-chroot  (see  below)
       before  executing  the  script.  For example, if mkosi.postinst.chroot exists, mkosi will chroot into the
       image and execute it as the post-installation script.

       Scripts executed by mkosi receive the following environment variables:

       • $ARCHITECTURE contains the architecture from the Architecture= setting.  If Architecture= is  not  set,
         it  will  contain  the native architecture of the host machine.  See the documentation of Architecture=
         for possible values for this variable.

       • $QEMU_ARCHITECTURE contains the architecture from $ARCHITECTURE in the format used by qemu.  Useful for
         finding the qemu binary ( qemu-system-$QEMU_ARCHITECTURE).

       • $DISTRIBUTION contains the distribution from the Distribution= setting.

       • $RELEASE contains the release from the Release= setting.

       • $DISTRIBUTION_ARCHITECTURE  contains  the  architecture  from  $ARCHITECTURE  in the format used by the
         configured distribution.

       • $PROFILE contains the profile from the Profile= setting.

       • $CACHED= is set to 1 if a cached image is available, 0 otherwise.

       • $CHROOT_SCRIPT contains the path to the running script relative  to  the  image  root  directory.   The
         primary  usecase for this variable is in combination with the mkosi-chroot script.  See the description
         of mkosi-chroot below for more information.

       • $SRCDIR contains the path to the directory mkosi was invoked from, with any  configured  build  sources
         mounted on top.  $CHROOT_SRCDIR contains the value that $SRCDIR will have after invoking mkosi-chroot.

       • $BUILDDIR  is  only defined if mkosi.builddir exists and points to the build directory to use.  This is
         useful for all build systems that support out-of-tree builds to  reuse  already  built  artifacts  from
         previous  runs.   $CHROOT_BUILDDIR  contains  the  value that $BUILDDIR will have after invoking mkosi-
         chroot.

       • $DESTDIR is a directory into which any installed software generated by a build script  may  be  placed.
         This  variable  is  only  set  when  executing a build script.  $CHROOT_DESTDIR contains the value that
         $DESTDIR will have after invoking mkosi-chroot.

       • $OUTPUTDIR points to the staging directory used to store build artifacts generated  during  the  build.
         $CHROOT_OUTPUTDIR contains the value that $OUTPUTDIR will have after invoking mkosi-chroot.

       • $PACKAGEDIR  points  to  the  directory containing the local package repository.  Build scripts can add
         more packages to the local repository by writing the packages to $PACKAGEDIR.

       • $ARTIFACTDIR points to the directory that is used to pass around build artifacts generated  during  the
         build  and  make  them  available  for  use  by mkosi.  This is similar to PACKAGEDIR, but is meant for
         artifacts that may not be packages understood by the package manager,  e.g. initrds  created  by  other
         initrd generators than mkosi.  Build scripts can add more artifacts to the directory by placing them in
         $ARTIFACTDIR.  Files in this directory are only available for the current build and are not copied  out
         like the contents of $OUTPUTDIR.

         mkosi  will  also  use  certain  subdirectories  of  an  artifacts directory to automatically use their
         contents at certain steps.  Currently the following two subdirectories in the  artifact  directory  are
         used by mkosi:

         • io.mkosi.microcode:  All files in this directory are used as microcode files, i.e. they are prepended
           to the initrds in lexicographical order.

         • io.mkosi.initrd: All files in this directory are used as initrds and joined in lexicographical order.

         It is recommend users of $ARTIFACTDIR put things for their own use in a similar  namespaced  directory,
         e.h.  local.my.namespace.

       • $BUILDROOT is the root directory of the image being built, optionally with the build overlay mounted on
         top depending on the script that’s being executed.

       • $WITH_DOCS is either 0 or 1 depending on whether a build without or with  installed  documentation  was
         requested  (WithDocs=yes).  A build script should suppress installation of any package documentation to
         $DESTDIR in case $WITH_DOCS is set to 0.

       • $WITH_TESTS is either 0 or 1 depending on whether a build without or with running the  test  suite  was
         requested  (WithTests=no).   A  build script should avoid running any unit or integration tests in case
         $WITH_TESTS is 0.

       • $WITH_NETWORK is either 0 or 1 depending on whether  a  build  without  or  with  networking  is  being
         executed (WithNetwork=no).  A build script should avoid any network communication in case $WITH_NETWORK
         is 0.

       • $SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH       is       defined        if        requested        (SourceDateEpoch=TIMESTAMP,
         Environment=SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH=TIMESTAMP  or the host environment variable $SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH).  This is
         useful    to    make    builds    reproducible.     See    SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH     (https://reproducible-
         builds.org/specs/source-date-epoch/) for more information.

       • $MKOSI_UID and $MKOSI_GID are the respectively the uid, gid of the user that invoked mkosi, potentially
         translated to a uid in the user namespace that mkosi is running in.  These can be used  in  combination
         with  setpriv  to  run  commands  as  the  user  that  invoked  mkosi (e.g.  setpriv --reuid=$MKOSI_UID
         --regid=$MKOSI_GID --clear-groups <command>)

       • $MKOSI_CONFIG is a file containing a json summary of the settings of the current image.  This file  can
         be parsed inside scripts to gain access to all settings for the current image.

       • $IMAGE_ID contains the identifier from the ImageId= or --image-id= setting.

       • $IMAGE_VERSION contains the version from the ImageVersion= or --image-version= setting

       Consult this table for which script receives which environment variables:

       Variable                    configure   sync    prepare   build   postinst   finalize   postoutput   clean
       ────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
       ARCHITECTURE                    ✓         ✓        ✓        ✓         ✓          ✓           ✓         ✓
       QEMU_ARCHITECTUREDISTRIBUTION                    ✓         ✓        ✓        ✓         ✓          ✓           ✓         ✓
       DISTRIBUTION_ARCHITECTURE       ✓         ✓        ✓        ✓         ✓          ✓           ✓         ✓
       RELEASE                         ✓         ✓        ✓        ✓         ✓          ✓           ✓         ✓
       PROFILE                         ✓         ✓        ✓        ✓         ✓          ✓                     ✓
       CACHEDCHROOT_SCRIPT                                      ✓        ✓         ✓          ✓
       SRCDIR                          ✓         ✓        ✓        ✓         ✓          ✓           ✓         ✓
       CHROOT_SRCDIR                                      ✓        ✓         ✓          ✓
       BUILDDIR                                           ✓        ✓         ✓          ✓
       CHROOT_BUILDDIRDESTDIRCHROOT_DESTDIROUTPUTDIR                                                   ✓         ✓          ✓           ✓         ✓
       CHROOT_OUTPUTDIR                                            ✓         ✓          ✓
       BUILDROOT                                          ✓        ✓         ✓          ✓
       PACKAGEDIR                                         ✓        ✓         ✓          ✓
       ARTIFACTDIR                                        ✓        ✓         ✓          ✓
       WITH_DOCS                                          ✓        ✓
       WITH_TESTS                                         ✓        ✓
       WITH_NETWORK                                       ✓        ✓         ✓          ✓
       SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH                                  ✓        ✓         ✓          ✓                     ✓
       MKOSI_UID                       ✓         ✓        ✓        ✓         ✓          ✓           ✓         ✓
       MKOSI_GID                       ✓         ✓        ✓        ✓         ✓          ✓           ✓         ✓

       MKOSI_CONFIG                              ✓        ✓        ✓         ✓          ✓           ✓         ✓
       IMAGE_ID                        ✓         ✓        ✓        ✓         ✓          ✓           ✓         ✓
       IMAGE_VERSION                   ✓         ✓        ✓        ✓         ✓          ✓           ✓         ✓

       Additionally, when a script is executed, a few scripts are made available via $PATH  to  simplify  common
       usecases.

       • mkosi-chroot:  This  script  will  chroot  into  the  image  and  execute the given command.  On top of
         chrooting into the image, it  will  also  mount  various  files  and  directories  ($SRCDIR,  $DESTDIR,
         $BUILDDIR,  $OUTPUTDIR,  $CHROOT_SCRIPT)  into  the  image  and  modify  the  corresponding environment
         variables to point to the locations inside the image.  It will also mount  APIVFS  filesystems  (/proc,
         /dev,  ...)   to  make  sure  scripts  and  tools  executed  inside  the chroot work properly.  It also
         propagates /etc/resolv.conf from the host into the chroot if requested so  that  DNS  resolution  works
         inside the chroot.  After the mkosi-chroot command exits, various mount points are cleaned up.

         For example, to invoke ls inside of the image, use the following

                mkosi-chroot ls ...

         To  execute  the entire script inside the image, add a “.chroot” suffix to the name (mkosi.build.chroot
         instead of mkosi.build, etc.).

       • For all of the supported package managers (dnf, rpm, apt, dpkg, pacman, zypper), scripts  of  the  same
         name  are  put  into $PATH that make sure these commands operate on the image’s root directory with the
         configuration supplied by the user instead of on the host system.  This means that from a  script,  you
         can do e.g.  dnf install vim to install vim into the image.

         Additionally,   mkosi-install,   mkosi-reinstall,   mkosi-upgrade  and  mkosi-remove  will  invoke  the
         corresponding operation of the package manager being used to built the image.

       • mkosi-as-caller: This script uses setpriv to switch from the user root in the user namespace  used  for
         various build steps back to the original user that called mkosi.  This is useful when we want to invoke
         build steps which will write to $BUILDDIR and we want to have the files owned by the calling user.

         For example, a complete mkosi.build script might be the following:

                set -ex

                mkosi-as-caller meson setup "$BUILDDIR/build" "$SRCDIR"
                mkosi-as-caller meson compile -C "$BUILDDIR/build"
                meson install -C "$BUILDDIR/build" --no-rebuild

       • git is automatically invoked with safe.directory=* to avoid permissions errors when running as the root
         user in a user namespace.

       • useradd  and  groupadd  are  automatically  invoked with --root=$BUILDROOT when executed outside of the
         image.

       When scripts are executed, any directories that are still writable are also made read-only (/home,  /var,
       /root,  ...)   and only the minimal set of directories that need to be writable remain writable.  This is
       to ensure that scripts can’t mess with the host system when mkosi is running as root.

       Note that when executing scripts, all source directories are made ephemeral which means all changes  made
       to  source directories while running scripts are thrown away after the scripts finish executing.  Use the
       output, build or cache directories if you need to persist data between builds.

Files

       To make it easy to build images for development versions of your projects, mkosi can  read  configuration
       data from the local directory, under the assumption that it is invoked from a source tree.  Specifically,
       the following files are used if they exist in the local directory:

       • The mkosi.skeleton/ directory or mkosi.skeleton.tar archive may be used to insert files into the image.
         The  files  are  copied  before  the  distribution  packages are installed into the image.  This allows
         creation of files that need to be provided early, for example to configure the package manager  or  set
         systemd presets.

         When  using the directory, file ownership is not preserved: all files copied will be owned by root.  To
         preserve ownership, use a tar archive.

       • The mkosi.extra/ directory or mkosi.extra.tar archive may be used to insert additional files  into  the
         image,  on  top of what the distribution includes in its packages.  They are similar to mkosi.skeleton/
         and mkosi.skeleton.tar, but the files are copied into the directory tree of the image after the OS  was
         installed.

         When  using the directory, file ownership is not preserved: all files copied will be owned by root.  To
         preserve ownership, use a tar archive.

       • The mkosi.pkgmngr/ directory or mkosi.pkgmngr.tar archive may be used to configure the package  manager
         without  the  files  being  inserted  into  the  image.   If  the files should be included in the image
         mkosi.skeleton/ and mkosi.skeleton.tar should be used instead.

         When using the directory, file ownership is not preserved: all files copied will be owned by root.   To
         preserve ownership, use a tar archive.

       • The  mkosi.nspawn  nspawn settings file will be copied into the same place as the output image file, if
         it exists.  This is useful since nspawn looks for settings files next to  image  files  it  boots,  for
         additional container runtime settings.

       • The  mkosi.cache/ directory, if it exists, is automatically used as package download cache, in order to
         speed repeated runs of the tool.

       • The mkosi.builddir/ directory, if it exists, is automatically used as out-of-tree build  directory,  if
         the build commands in the mkosi.build scripts support it.  Specifically, this directory will be mounted
         into the build container, and the $BUILDDIR environment variable will be  set  to  it  when  the  build
         scripts are invoked.  A build script may then use this directory as build directory, for automake-style
         or ninja-style out-of-tree builds.  This speeds up builds considerably, in  particular  when  mkosi  is
         used  in incremental mode (-i): not only the image and build overlay, but also the build tree is reused
         between subsequent invocations.  Note that if this directory does not exist the  $BUILDDIR  environment
         variable is not set, and it is up to the build scripts to decide whether to do in in-tree or an out-of-
         tree build, and which build directory to use.

       • The mkosi.rootpw file can be used to provide the password for the root  user  of  the  image.   If  the
         password  is  prefixed with hashed: it is treated as an already hashed root password.  The password may
         optionally be followed by a newline character which is implicitly  removed.   The  file  must  have  an
         access  mode of 0600 or less.  If this file does not exist, the distribution’s default root password is
         set (which usually means access to the root user is blocked).

       • The mkosi.passphrase file provides the passphrase to use when LUKS encryption is selected.   It  should
         contain  the  passphrase  literally,  and  not  end  in a newline character (i.e. in the same format as
         cryptsetup and /etc/crypttab expect the passphrase files).  The file must have an access mode  of  0600
         or less.

       • The  mkosi.crt and mkosi.key files contain an X.509 certificate and PEM private key to use when signing
         is required (UEFI SecureBoot, verity, ...).

       • The mkosi.output/ directory is used to store all build artifacts.

       • The mkosi.credentials/ directory is used as a source of extra credentials similar to  the  Credentials=
         option.   For each file in the directory, the filename will be used as the credential name and the file
         contents become the credential value, or, if the file is executable, mkosi will execute  the  file  and
         the command’s output to stdout will be used as the credential value.  Output to stderr will be ignored.
         Credentials configured with Credentials= take precedence over files in mkosi.credentials.

       • The mkosi.repart/ directory is used as the source for systemd-repart partition definition  files  which
         are   passed   to  systemd-repart  when  building  a  disk  image.   If  it  does  not  exist  and  the
         RepartDirectories= setting is not configured, mkosi will default to the following partition  definition
         files:

         00-esp.conf (if we’re building a bootable image):

                [Partition]
                Type=esp
                Format=vfat
                CopyFiles=/boot:/
                CopyFiles=/efi:/
                SizeMinBytes=512M
                SizeMaxBytes=512M

         05-bios.conf (if we’re building a BIOS bootable image):

                [Partition]
                # UUID of the grub BIOS boot partition which grubs needs on GPT to
                # embed itself into.
                Type=21686148-6449-6e6f-744e-656564454649
                SizeMinBytes=1M
                SizeMaxBytes=1M

         10-root.conf

                [Partition]
                Type=root
                Format=<distribution-default-filesystem>
                CopyFiles=/
                Minimize=guess

         Note  that  if  either mkosi.repart/ is found or RepartDirectories= is used, we will not use any of the
         default partition definitions.

       All these files are optional.

       Note that the location of all these files may also be  configured  during  invocation  via  command  line
       switches, and as settings in mkosi.conf, in case the default settings are not acceptable for a project.

CACHING

       mkosi supports three different caches for speeding up repetitive re-building of images.  Specifically:

       1. The  package  cache  of  the  distribution  package  manager  may  be  cached between builds.  This is
          configured with the --cache-dir= option or the mkosi.cache/ directory.  This form of caching relies on
          the  distribution’s  package manager, and caches distribution packages (RPM, DEB, ...)  after they are
          downloaded, but before they are unpacked.

       2. If the incremental build mode is enabled with --incremental, cached copies  of  the  final  image  and
          build  overlay  are made immediately before the build sources are copied in (for the build overlay) or
          the artifacts generated by mkosi.build are copied in (in case of  the  final  image).   This  form  of
          caching  allows  bypassing  the  time-consuming  package  unpacking  step  of the distribution package
          managers, but is only effective if the list of packages to use remains stable, but the  build  sources
          and its scripts change regularly.  Note that this cache requires manual flushing: whenever the package
          list is modified the cached images need to be explicitly removed before the next re-build,  using  the
          -f switch.

       3. Finally, between multiple builds the build artifact directory may be shared, using the mkosi.builddir/
          directory.  This directory allows build systems such as Meson to reuse already compiled sources from a
          previous built, thus speeding up the build process of a mkosi.build build script.

       The package cache and incremental mode are unconditionally useful.  The final cache only apply to uses of
       mkosi with a source tree and build script.  When all three are enabled  together  turn-around  times  for
       complete image builds are minimal, as only changed source files need to be recompiled.

Building multiple images

       If  the  mkosi.images/  directory  exists, mkosi will load individual subimage configurations from it and
       build each of them.  Image configurations can be either directories containing mkosi configuration  files
       or regular files with the .conf extension.

       When  image  configurations  are  found  in  mkosi.images/,  mkosi will build the images specified in the
       Dependencies= setting of the main image and all of their dependencies (or all of them if no  images  were
       explicitly  configured using Dependencies= in the main image configuration).  To add dependencies between
       subimages, the Dependencies= setting can be used as well.  Subimages are always  built  before  the  main
       image.

       When images are defined, mkosi will first read the main image configuration (configuration outside of the
       mkosi.images/ directory), followed by the image specific  configuration.   Several  “universal”  settings
       apply  to  the  main  image  and all its subimages and cannot be configured separately in subimages.  The
       following settings are universal and cannot be configured in subimages (except for settings which take  a
       collection of values which can be extended in subimages but not overridden):

       • Profile=Distribution=Release=Architecture=Mirror=LocalMirror=RepositoryKeyCheck=Repositories=CacheOnly=PackageManagerTrees=OutputDirectory=WorkspaceDirectory=CacheDirectory=PackageCacheDirectory=BuildDirectory=ImageId=ImageVersion=SectorSize=RepartOffline=UseSubvolumes=PackageDirectories=VolatilePackageDirectories=SourceDateEpoch=BuildSources=BuildSourcesEphemeral=WithTestsWithNetwork=VerityKey=VerityKeySource=VerityCertificate=ProxyUrl=ProxyExclude=ProxyPeerCertificate=ProxyClientCertificate=ProxyClientKey=Incremental=ExtraSearchPaths=Acl=ToolsTree=ToolsTreeCertificates=

       Images  can  refer  to  outputs of images they depend on.  Specifically, for the following options, mkosi
       will only check whether the inputs exist just before building the image:

       • BaseTrees=PackageManagerTrees=SkeletonTrees=ExtraTrees=ToolsTree=Initrds=

       To refer to outputs of a image’s dependencies, simply configure any of these options with a relative path
       to  the output to use in the output directory of the dependency.  Or use the %O specifier to refer to the
       output directory.

       A   good   example   on   how   to   build   multiple   images   can   be   found    in    the    systemd
       (https://github.com/systemd/systemd/tree/main/mkosi.images) repository.

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES

$MKOSI_LESS overrides options for less when it is invoked by mkosi to page output.

       • $MKOSI_DNF  can  be used to override the executable used as dnf.  This is particularly useful to select
         between dnf and dnf5.

       • $EPEL_MIRROR can be used to override the default mirror location used for the  epel  repositories  when
         Mirror=  is  used.   By default mkosi looks for the epel repositories in the fedora subdirectory of the
         parent directory  of  the  mirror  specified  in  Mirror=.   For  example  if  the  mirror  is  set  to
         https://mirror.net/centos-stream     mkosi     will    look    for    the    epel    repositories    in
         https://mirror.net/fedora/epel.

EXAMPLES

       Create and run a raw GPT image with ext4, as image.raw:

              # mkosi -p systemd --incremental boot

       Create and run a bootable GPT image, as foobar.raw:

              $ mkosi -d fedora -p kernel-core -p systemd -p systemd-boot -p udev -o foobar.raw
              # mkosi --output foobar.raw boot
              $ mkosi --output foobar.raw qemu

       Create and run a Fedora Linux image in a plain directory:

              # mkosi --distribution fedora --format directory boot

       Create a compressed image image.raw.xz with SSH installed and add a checksum file:

              $ mkosi --distribution fedora --format disk --checksum --compress-output --package=openssh-clients

       Inside the source directory of an automake-based project, configure mkosi so that simply  invoking  mkosi
       without any parameters builds an OS image containing a built version of the project in its current state:

              $ cat >mkosi.conf <<EOF
              [Distribution]
              Distribution=fedora

              [Output]
              Format=disk

              [Content]
              Packages=kernel,systemd,systemd-udev,openssh-clients,httpd
              BuildPackages=make,gcc,libcurl-devel
              EOF
              $ cat >mkosi.build <<EOF
              #!/bin/sh

              if [ "$container" != "mkosi" ]; then
                  exec mkosi-chroot "$CHROOT_SCRIPT" "$@"
              fi

              cd $SRCDIR
              ./autogen.sh
              ./configure --prefix=/usr
              make -j `nproc`
              make install
              EOF
              $ chmod +x mkosi.build
              # mkosi --incremental boot
              # systemd-nspawn -bi image.raw

   Different ways to boot with qemu
       The easiest way to boot a virtual machine is to build an image with the required components and let mkosi
       call qemu with all the right options:

              $ mkosi -d fedora \
                  --autologin \
                  -p systemd-udev,systemd-boot,kernel-core \
                  build
              $ mkosi -d fedora qemu
              ...
              fedora login: root (automatic login)
              [root@fedora ~]#

       The default is to boot with a text console only.  In this  mode,  messages  from  the  boot  loader,  the
       kernel,  and  systemd,  and  later  the  getty  login  prompt and shell all use the same terminal.  It is
       possible to switch between the qemu console and monitor by pressing Ctrl-a c.  The qemu monitor  may  for
       example  be  used to inject special keys or shut down the machine quickly.  Alternatively the machine can
       be shut down using Ctrl-a x.

       To boot with a graphical window, add --qemu-qui:

              $ mkosi -d fedora --qemu-gui qemu

       A kernel may be booted directly with mkosi qemu -kernel ... -initrd ... -append '...'.   This  is  a  bit
       faster  because  no  boot  loader is used, and it is also easier to experiment with different kernels and
       kernel commandlines.  Note that despite the name, qemu’s  -append  option  replaces  the  default  kernel
       commandline embedded in the kernel and any previous -append specifications.

       The UKI is also copied into the output directory and may be booted directly:

              $ mkosi qemu -kernel mkosi.output/fedora~38/image.efi

       When booting using an external kernel, we don’t need the kernel in the image, but we would still want the
       kernel modules to be installed.

       It is also possible to do a direct kernel boot into a boot loader, taking  advantage  of  the  fact  that
       systemd-boot(7) is a valid UEFI binary:

              $ mkosi qemu -kernel /usr/lib/systemd/boot/efi/systemd-bootx64.efi

       In this scenario, the kernel is loaded from the ESP in the image by systemd-boot.

REQUIREMENTS

       mkosi  is  packaged  for  various  distributions: Debian, Ubuntu, Arch Linux, Fedora Linux, OpenMandriva,
       Gentoo.  Note that it has been a while since the last release and the packages shipped  by  distributions
       are very out of date.  We currently recommend running mkosi from git until a new release happens.

       mkosi currently requires systemd 254 to build bootable disk images.

       When  not  using  distribution packages make sure to install the necessary dependencies.  For example, on
       Fedora Linux you need:

              # dnf install bubblewrap btrfs-progs apt dosfstools mtools edk2-ovmf e2fsprogs squashfs-tools gnupg python3 tar xfsprogs xz zypper sbsigntools

       On Debian/Ubuntu it might be necessary  to  install  the  ubuntu-keyring,  ubuntu-archive-keyring  and/or
       debian-archive-keyring  packages  explicitly,  in addition to apt, depending on what kind of distribution
       images you want to build.

       Note that the minimum required Python version is 3.9.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

       • Why does mkosi qemu with KVM not work on Debian/Ubuntu?

         While other distributions are OK with allowing access  to  /dev/kvm,  on  Debian/Ubuntu  this  is  only
         allowed for users in the kvm group.  Because mkosi unshares a user namespace when running unprivileged,
         even if the calling user was in  the  kvm  group,  when  mkosi  unshares  the  user  namespace  to  run
         unprivileged,  it  loses  access to the kvm group and by the time we start qemu we don’t have access to
         /dev/kvm anymore.  As a workaround, you can change the permissions of the device nodes to 0666 which is
         sufficient   to   make  KVM  work  unprivileged.   To  persist  these  settings  across  reboots,  copy
         /usr/lib/tmpfiles.d/static-nodes-permissions.conf to /etc/tmpfiles.d/static-nodes-permissions.conf  and
         change the mode of /dev/kvm from 0660 to 0666.

       • How do I add a regular user to an image?

         You can use the following snippet in a post-installation script:

                useradd --create-home --user-group $USER --password "$(openssl passwd -stdin -6 <$USER_PASSWORD_FILE)"

         Note  that from systemd v256 onwards, if enabled, systemd-homed-firstboot.service will prompt to create
         a regular user on first boot if there are no regular users.

REFERENCES

       • Primary mkosi git repository on GitHub (https://github.com/systemd/mkosi/)

       • mkosi — A Tool  for  Generating  OS  Images  (https://0pointer.net/blog/mkosi-a-tool-for-generating-os-
         images.html) introductory blog post by Lennart Poettering

       • The mkosi OS generation tool (https://lwn.net/Articles/726655/) story on LWN

SEE ALSO

       systemd-nspawn(1), dnf(8)

                                                                                                        mkosi(1)