Provided by: debos_1.1.3-1ubuntu0.3_amd64 bug

NAME

       debos - Debian OS images builder

SYNOPSIS

              debos [options] <recipe file in YAML>
              debos [--help]

       Application Options:

                -b, --fakemachine-backend=   Fakemachine backend to use (default: auto)
                    --artifactdir=           Directory for packed archives and ostree repositories (default: current directory)
                -t, --template-var=          Template variables (use -t VARIABLE:VALUE syntax)
                    --debug-shell            Fall into interactive shell on error
                -s, --shell=                 Redefine interactive shell binary (default: bash) (default: /bin/bash)
                    --scratchsize=           Size of disk backed scratch space
                -c, --cpus=                  Number of CPUs to use for build VM (default: 2)
                -m, --memory=                Amount of memory for build VM (default: 2048MB)
                    --show-boot              Show boot/console messages from the fake machine
                -e, --environ-var=           Environment variables (use -e VARIABLE:VALUE syntax)
                -v, --verbose                Verbose output
                    --print-recipe           Print final recipe
                    --dry-run                Compose final recipe to build but without any real work started
                    --disable-fakemachine    Do not use fakemachine.

DESCRIPTION

       debos  is  a tool to make the creation of various Debian-based OS images simpler.  While most other tools
       focus on specific use-cases, debos is more meant as a tool-chain to make  common  actions  trivial  while
       providing enough rope to do whatever tweaking that might be required behind the scene.

       debos  expects  a YAML file as input and will run the actions listed in the file sequentially.  These ac‐
       tions should be self-contained and independent of each other.

       Some of the actions provided by debos to customize and produce images are:

       • apt: install packages and their dependencies with `apt'

       • debootstrap: construct the target rootfs with debootstrap

       • download: download a single file from the internet

       • filesystem-deploy: deploy a root filesystem to an image previously created

       • image-partition: create an image file, make partitions and format them

       • ostree-commit: create an OSTree commit from rootfs

       • ostree-deploy: deploy an OSTree branch to the image

       • overlay: do a recursive copy of directories or files to the target filesystem

       • pack: create a tarball with the target filesystem

       • pacman: install packages and their dependencies with pacman

       • pacstrap: construct the target rootfs with pacstrap

       • raw: directly write a file to the output image at a given offset

       • recipe: includes the recipe actions at the given path

       • run: allows to run a command or script in the filesystem or in the host

       • unpack: unpack files from archive in the filesystem

       A full syntax description of all the debos actions can be found  at:  https://godoc.org/github.com/go-de‐
       bos/debos/actions

INSTALLATION (DOCKER CONTAINER)

       Official debos container is available:

              docker pull godebos/debos

       See docker/README.md (https://github.com/go-debos/debos/blob/master/docker/README.md) for usage.

INSTALLATION (UNDER DEBIAN)

              sudo apt install golang git libglib2.0-dev libostree-dev qemu-system-x86 \
                   qemu-user-static debootstrap systemd-container
              export GOPATH=/opt/src/gocode # or whatever suits your needs
              go install -v github.com/go-debos/debos/cmd/debos@latest
              /opt/src/gocode/bin/debos --help

SIMPLE EXAMPLE

       The  following  example  will  create  a  arm64  image,  install  several packages in it, change the file
       /etc/hostname to “debian” and finally make a tarball.

              {{- $image := or .image "debian.tgz" -}}

              architecture: arm64

              actions:
                - action: debootstrap
                  suite: bookworm
                  components:
                    - main
                    - non-free-firmware
                  mirror: https://deb.debian.org/debian
                  variant: minbase

                - action: apt
                  packages: [ sudo, openssh-server, adduser, systemd-sysv, firmware-linux ]

                - action: run
                  chroot: true
                  command: echo debian > /etc/hostname

                - action: pack
                  file: {{ $image }}
                  compression: gz

       To run it, create a file named example.yaml and run:

              debos example.yaml

       The final tarball will be named “debian.tgz” if you would like to modify this name, you  can  provided  a
       different name for the variable image like this:

              debos -t image:"debian-arm64.tgz" example.yaml

OTHER EXAMPLES

       Example recipes are collected in a separate repository:

       https://github.com/go-debos/debos-recipes

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES

       debos  read  a  predefined  list of environment variables from the host and propagates it to fakemachine.
       The set of environment variables is defined by environ_vars on cmd/debos/debos.go.  Currently the list of
       environment variables includes the proxy environment variables as documented at:

       https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/proxy_settings

       The list of environment variables currently exported to fakemachine is:

              http_proxy, https_proxy, ftp_proxy, rsync_proxy, all_proxy, no_proxy

       While the elements of environ_vars are in lower case, for each element both lower and upper case variants
       are probed on the host, and if found propagated to fakemachine.  So if the host has the environment vari‐
       ables HTTP_PROXY and no_proxy defined, both will be propagated to fakemachine respecting the case.

       The command line options –environ-var and -e can be used to specify,  overwrite,  and  unset  environment
       variables for fakemachine with the syntax:

              $ debos -e ENVIRONVAR:VALUE ...

       To  unset  an enviroment variable, or in other words, to prevent an environment variable to be propagated
       to fakemachine, use the same syntax without a value.  debos accept multiple -e simultaneously.

PROXY CONFIGURATION

       While the proxy related environment variables are exported from the host to fakemachine,  there  are  two
       known sources of issues:

       • Using localhost will not work from fakemachine.  Prefer using an address that is valid on your network.
         debos will warn if environment variables contain localhost.

       • In  case you are running applications and/or scripts inside fakemachine you may need to check which are
         the proxy environment variables they use.  Different apps are known to use different environment  vari‐
         able names and different case for environment variable names.

FAKEMACHINE BACKEND

       debos (unless running debos with the --disable-fakemachine argument) creates and spawns a virtual machine
       using  fakemachine  (https://github.com/go-debos/fakemachine)  and  executes  the  actions defined by the
       recipe inside the virtual machine.  This helps ensure recipes are reproducible no matter the  host  envi‐
       ronment.

       Fakemachine  can  use different virtualisation backends to spawn the virtualmachine, for more information
       see the documentation under the fakemachine repository (https://github.com/go-debos/fakemachine).

       By default the backend will automatically be selected based on what is supported on the host machine, but
       this can be overridden using the --fakemachine-backend / -b option.  If no backends are supported,  debos
       reverts to running the recipe on the host without creating a fakemachine.

       Performance  of  the  backends  is roughly as follows: kvm is faster than uml is faster than qemu.  Using
       --disable-fakemachine is slightly faster than kvm, but requires root permissions.

       Numbers       for       running       pine-a64-plus/debian.yaml       (https://github.com/go-debos/debos-
       recipes/blob/9a25b4be6c9136f4a27e542f39ab7e419fc852c9/pine-a64-plus/debian.yaml)   on  an  Intel  Pentium
       G4560T with SSD:

       Backend                 Wall Time   Prerequisites
       ─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
       --disable-fakemachine   8 min       root permissions
       -b kvm                  9 min       access to /dev/kvm
       -b uml                  18 min      package user-mode-linux  in‐
                                           stalled
       -b qemu                 166 min     none

                                                                                                        debos(1)