Provided by: ubuntu-image_1.11+16.04ubuntu1_all bug

NAME

       ubuntu-image - Generate a bootable disk image

SYNOPSIS

       ubuntu-image snap [options] model.assertion

       ubuntu-image classic [options] GADGET_TREE_URI

DESCRIPTION

       ubuntu-image  is a program for generating a variety of bootable disk images.  It currently
       supports building snap based and classic preinstalled Ubuntu images.

       Snap-based images are built from a model assertion, which is  a  YAML  file  describing  a
       particular  combination  of core, kernel, and gadget snaps, along with other declarations,
       signed with a digital signature asserting its authenticity.  The  assets  defined  in  the
       model assertion uniquely describe the device for which the image is built.

       As  part  of  the  model  assertion,  a  gadget  snap is specified.  The gadget contains a
       gadget.yaml file which contains the exact description of the  disk  image's  contents,  in
       YAML  format.   The gadget.yaml file describes such things as the names of all the volumes
       to be produced [1], the structures [2] within the volume, whether the  volume  contains  a
       bootloader and if so what kind of bootloader, etc.

       Note  that  ubuntu-image  communicates  with  the  snap store using the snap prepare-image
       subcommand.  The model assertion file  is  passed  to  snap  prepare-image  which  handles
       downloading  the appropriate gadget and any extra snaps.  See that command's documentation
       for additional details.

       Classic images are built from a local gadget tree path.  The gadget tree is  nothing  more
       than a primed gadget snap, containing a gadget.yaml file in the meta directory and all the
       necessary bootloader gadget bits built.  For instance a gadget tree can be easily prepared
       by  fetching  a  specially  tailored gadget snap source and running snapcraft prime on it,
       with the resulting tree ending up in the prime/ directory.

       The actual rootfs for a classic image is created by live-build with  arguments  passed  as
       per the optional arguments to ubuntu-image.  The livecd-rootfs configuration from the host
       system is used.

OPTIONS

       -h, --help
              Show the program's message and exit.

       --version
              Show the program's version number and exit.

   Snap command options
       These are the options for defining the contents of snap-based images.  Can  only  be  used
       when the ubuntu-image snap command is used.

       model_assertion
              Path  to the model assertion file.  This positional argument must be given for this
              mode of operation.

       --snap SNAP
              Install an extra snap.  This is passed through to  snap  prepare-image.   The  snap
              argument  can include additional information about the channel and/or risk with the
              following syntax: <snap>=<channel|risk>

       --extra-snaps EXTRA_SNAPS
              DEPRECATED (Use --snap instead.) Extra snaps to install.  This is passed through to
              snap prepare-image.

       --cloud-init USER-DATA-FILE
              cloud-config data to be copied to the image.

       -c CHANNEL, --channel CHANNEL
              The snap channel to use.

       --disable-console-conf
              Disable console-conf on the resulting image.

   Classic command options
       These  are  the  options  for defining the contents of classic preinstalled Ubuntu images.
       Can only be used when the ubuntu-image classic command is used.

       GADGET_TREE_URI
              An URI to the gadget tree to be used to build the image.  This positional  argument
              must be given for this mode of operation.  Must be a local path.

       -p PROJECT, --project PROJECT
              Project name to be passed on to livecd-rootfs.

       -s SUITE, --suite SUITE
              Distribution name to be passed on to livecd-rootfs.

       -a CPU-ARCHITECTURE, --arch CPU-ARCHITECTURE
              CPU  architecture  to  be  passed  on  to  livecd-rootfs.   Default  value  is  the
              architecture of the host.

       --subproject SUBPROJECT
              Sub-project name to be passed on livecd-rootfs.

       --subarch SUBARCH
              Sub-architecture to be passed on to livecd-rootfs.

       --with-proposed
              Defines if the image should be  built  with  -proposed  enabled.   This  is  passed
              through to livecd-rootfs.

       --extra-ppas EXTRA_PPAS
              Extra ppas to install. This is passed through to livecd-rootfs.

   Common options
       There  are  two  general  operational modes to ubuntu-image.  The usual mode is to run the
       script giving the required  model  assertion  file  as  a  required  positional  argument,
       generating a disk image file.  These options are useful in this mode of operation.

       The  second  mode  of operation is provided for debugging and testing purposes.  It allows
       you to run the internal state machine step by step, and is described in more detail below.

       -d, --debug
              Enable debugging output.

       -O DIRECTORY, --output-dir DIRECTORY
              Write generated disk image files to this directory.  The files will be named  after
              the gadget.yaml volume names, with .img suffix appended.  If not given, the current
              working directory is used.  This option replaces, and  cannot  be  used  with,  the
              deprecated --output option.

       -o FILENAME, --output FILENAME
              DEPRECATED  (Use  --output-dir  instead.)   The  generated disk image file.  If not
              given, the image will be put in a file called disk.img in the working directory, in
              which case, you probably want to specify --workdir.  If --workdir is not given, the
              image will be written to the current working directory.

       -i SIZE, --image-size SIZE
              The size of the generated disk image files.  If  this  size  is  smaller  than  the
              minimum  calculated  size  of the volume, a warning will be issued and --image-size
              will be ignored.  The value is the size in bytes, with allowable suffixes  'M'  for
              MiB and 'G' for GiB.

              An  extended  syntax  is  supported  for  gadget.yaml  files which specify multiple
              volumes (i.e. disk images).  In that case, a single SIZE argument will be used  for
              all  the  defined  volumes,  with  the same rules for ignoring values which are too
              small.  You can specify the image size for a single volume using an indexing prefix
              on  the SIZE parameter, where the index is either a volume name or an integer index
              starting at zero.  For example, to set the image size only on  the  second  volume,
              which  might  be called sdcard in the gadget.yaml, you could use: --image-size 1:8G
              since the 1-th index names the second volume (volumes are 0-indexed).  Or you could
              use --image-size sdcard:8G.

              You  can also specify multiple volume sizes by separating them with commas, and you
              can mix  and  match  integer  indexes  and  volume  name  indexes.   Thus,  if  the
              gadget.yaml  named  three  volumes,  and  you  wanted to set all three to different
              sizes, you could use --image-size 0:2G,sdcard:8G,eMMC:4G.

              In the case of ambiguities, the size hint is ignored and the  calculated  size  for
              the volume will be used instead.

       --image-file-list FILENAME
              Print  to  FILENAME, a list of the file system paths to all the disk images created
              by the command, if any.

       --hooks-directory DIRECTORY
              Path or  comma-separated  list  of  paths  of  directories  in  which  scripts  for
              build-time hooks will be located.

       --disk-info DISK-INFO-CONTENTS
              File  to be used as .disk/info on the image's rootfs.  This file can contain useful
              information about the target image, like image identification  data,  system  name,
              build timestamp etc.

   State machine options
       CAUTION!:
          The  options described here are primarily for debugging and testing purposes and should
          not be considered part of the stable, public API.  State machine step numbers and names
          can change between releases.

       ubuntu-image  internally  runs  a  state machine to create the disk image.  These are some
       options for controlling this state machine.   Other  than  --workdir,  these  options  are
       mutually  exclusive.   When  --until  or --thru is given, the state machine can be resumed
       later with --resume, but --workdir must be given in that case since the state is saved  in
       a .ubuntu-image.pck file in the working directory.

       -w DIRECTORY, --workdir DIRECTORY
              The  working directory in which to download and unpack all the source files for the
              image.  This directory can exist or not, and it is not removed after  this  program
              exits.   If  not  given,  a  temporary  working directory is used instead, which is
              deleted after this program exits.  Use --workdir if you want to be able to resume a
              partial  state  machine  run.  As an added bonus, the gadget.yaml file is copied to
              the working directory after it's downloaded.

       -u STEP, --until STEP
              Run the state machine until the given STEP, non-inclusively.  STEP can be the  name
              of a state machine method, or a number indicating the ordinal of the step.

       -t STEP, --thru STEP
              Run the state machine through the given STEP, inclusively.  STEP can be the name of
              a state machine method, or a number indicating the ordinal of the step.

       -r, --resume
              Continue the state machine from the previously saved state.   It  is  an  error  if
              there is no previous state.

FILES

       gadget.yaml
              https://github.com/snapcore/snapd/wiki/Gadget-snap#gadget.yaml

       model assertion
              https://developer.ubuntu.com/en/snappy/guides/prepare-image/

       gadget tree (example)
              https://github.com/snapcore/pc-amd64-gadget

       cloud-config
              https://help.ubuntu.com/community/CloudInit

ENVIRONMENT

       The following environment variables are recognized by ubuntu-image.

       UBUNTU_IMAGE_SNAP_CMD
              ubuntu-image  calls  snap prepare-image to communicate with the store, download the
              gadget, and unpack its contents.  Normally for the ubuntu-image deb, whatever  snap
              command  is  first  on  your $PATH is used, while for the classic snap, the bundled
              snap command is used.  Set this environment variable to specify an alternative snap
              command which prepare-image is called on.

       UBUNTU_IMAGE_PRESERVE_UNPACK
              When  set,  this  names  a directory for preserving a pristine copy of the unpacked
              gadget contents.  The directory must exist, and an unpack directory will be created
              under  this  directory.   The full contents of the <workdir>/unpack directory after
              the snap prepare-image subcommand has run will be copied here.

       UBUNTU_IMAGE_LIVECD_ROOTFS_AUTO_PATH
              ubuntu-image uses livecd-rootfs configuration files for its  live-build  runs.   If
              this  variable  is  set,  ubuntu-image  will  use  the configuration files from the
              selected path for its auto configuration.  Otherwise it will  attempt  to  localize
              livecd-rootfs through a call to dpkg.

       UBUNTU_IMAGE_QEMU_USER_STATIC_PATH
              In   case   of  classic  image  cross-compilation  for  a  different  architecture,
              ubuntu-image will attempt to use the qemu-user-static emulator with live-build.  If
              set,  ubuntu-image will use the selected path for the cross-compilation.  Otherwise
              it will attempt to find a matching emulator binary in the current $PATH.

       There are a few other environment variables used for building and testing only.

HOOKS

       During image build at certain stages of the build process  the  user  can  execute  custom
       scripts modifying its contents or otherwise affecting the process itself.  Whenever a hook
       is to be fired, the directories as listed in the --hooks-directory parameter  are  scanned
       for  matching  scripts.   There  can be multiple scripts for a specific hook defined.  The
       HookManager will first look for executable  files  in  <hookdir>/<name-of-the-hook>.d  and
       execute them in an alphanumerical order.  Finally the <hookdir>/<name-of-the-hook> file is
       executed if existing.

       Hook scripts can have  various  additional  data  passed  onto  them  through  environment
       variables depending on the hook being fired.

       Currently supported hooks:

       post-populate-rootfs
              Executed   after   the   rootfs  directory  has  been  populated,  allowing  custom
              modification of  its  contents.   Added  in  version  1.2.   Environment  variables
              present:

                 UBUNTU_IMAGE_HOOK_ROOTFS
                        Includes the absolute path to the rootfs contents.

NOTES

       Sometimes,  for  various reasons, ubuntu-image may perform specific workarounds that might
       require some explanation to understand the reasoning behind them.

   Classic swapfile manual unsparsing
       When building a classic image, if ubuntu-image notices the existence of a /swapfile on the
       image's  rootfs,  it will proactively attempt to unsparse it.  The reason for that is that
       ubuntu-image assumes that the /swapfile file will be used as  a  swapfile  on  the  target
       system,  and  due to undocumented behavior of mkfs.ext4 -d large empty files are converted
       into sparse files automatically during filesystem population.  This essentially makes such
       files  unusable  as  swapfiles.  So just in case, ubuntu-image does an in-place dd call of
       the hard-coded path swapfile to ensure it's no longer sparse.

SEE ALSO

       snap(1)

FOOTNOTES

       [1]  Volumes are roughly analogous to disk images.

       [2]  Structures define the  layout  of  the  volume,  including  partitions,  Master  Boot
            Records, or any other relevant content.

AUTHOR

       Barry Warsaw <barry@ubuntu.com>, Ɓukasz 'sil2100' Zemczak <lukasz.zemczak@ubuntu.com>

COPYRIGHT

       2016-2020 Canonical Ltd.