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Difference between revisions of "User:Pnoecker/Undead USB Install"
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This is an install strategy to target a USB flash stick as / instead of a traditional hard drive or internal solid state drive. | ==[https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_donations&business=KTQK6J5LMWZZ8¤cy_code=USD Buy Paul, the author of this document, a coffee.]== | ||
==[https://www.funtoo.org/Support_Funtoo Donate to funtoo, buy Daniel Robbins a coffee.]== | |||
==Undead USB, a linux nomadbsd alternative== | |||
This is an install strategy to target a USB flash stick as / (root) instead of a traditional hard drive or internal solid state drive. This isn't a live cd, this is a persistent root funtoo install where changes will keep living on. Since were treating a USB stick as a root partition, it requires much more space than a live usb like area31. 32gb minimum for gnome, 16gb are ok for xfce, lxde, lxqt, & server only type builds. get a [https://amzn.to/3m1hJoW fast usb3 drive] even if you don't have usb3 ports as the flash memory on them is much faster than the flash memory on usb2 keys which will improve usability. This is a speed run of the official install x86_64 no swap & add JFS but does not intend to replace the official install. this is to make a more flexible, and robust install boot media than area31. undead usb can be used to build undead usb also. If you're reading this from linux, and have a blank 32gb USB drive you can mount up, and start building funtoo immediately. This guide has traditional hard drive aliasing, however it is targeted at building USB install media, and USB development sandbox installs. The user experience is like virtualization running on bare metal. If you run into a problem you can easily unplug permanent hard drives, and let a funtoo developer vpn into your fresh build to debug hardware directly. | |||
*grab root: | |||
{{console|body= | |||
$##i## sudo su | |||
or | |||
$##i## su | |||
}} | |||
*identify the drive for installing: | |||
{{console|body= | |||
###i## lsblk -o name,size,label,partlabel | |||
}} | |||
*insert the usb drive, and run the above command again. | |||
===the first rule of funtoo is funtoo rules=== | |||
set udev rules to make the drive you're installing to accessible at /dev/funtoo and partitions accessible at /dev/funtoo1 /dev/funtoo2 so on. | |||
*ide drive 3 example: | |||
{{console|body= | |||
###i## echo 'KERNEL=="hdd*", SYMLINK+="funtoo%n"' > /etc/udev/rules.d/01-funtoo.rules | |||
}} | |||
*sata drive 2 example: | |||
{{console|body= | |||
###i## echo 'KERNEL=="sdc*", SYMLINK+="funtoo%n"' > /etc/udev/rules.d/01-funtoo.rules | |||
}} | |||
*nvme nvme drive 1 example: | |||
{{console|body= | |||
###i## echo 'KERNEL=="nvme1n1", SYMLINK+="funtoo"' > /etc/udev/rules.d/01-funtoo.rules | |||
###i## echo 'KERNEL=="nvme1n1p*", SYMLINK+="funtoo%n"' >> /etc/udev/rules.d/01-funtoo.rules | |||
}} | |||
*mmc drive 0 example: | |||
{{console|body= | |||
###i## echo 'KERNEL=="mmcblk0", SYMLINK+="funtoo"' > /etc/udev/rules.d/01-funtoo.rules | |||
###i## echo 'KERNEL=="mmcblk0p*", SYMLINK+="funtoo%n"' >> /etc/udev/rules.d/01-funtoo.rules | |||
}} | |||
*activate rules: | |||
*display what /dev/funtoo is tied to: | |||
{{console|body= | |||
###i## udevadm control --reload-rules && udevadm trigger | |||
###i## ls -al /dev/funtoo* | |||
}} | |||
==Partition== | |||
{{console|body= | |||
###i## cgdisk /dev/funtoo}} | |||
{{note|if cgdisk doesn't work load gdisk or fdisk to wipe out bad gpt tables, and then run cfdisk or cgdisk again.}} | |||
delete everything. | |||
{{console|body= | |||
Command: ##i## new ↵ | |||
First sector: ##i##↵ | |||
Last sector: ##i##+2M ↵ | |||
Hex Code: ##i##EF02 ↵ | |||
Enter name: ##i##BIOS Boot ↵ | |||
}} | |||
scroll down to large chunk of free space: | |||
{{console|body= | |||
Command: ##i##new ↵ | |||
First sector: ##i##↵ | |||
Last sector: ##i##+128M ↵ | |||
Hex Code: ##i##EF00 ↵ | |||
Enter name: ##i##BOOT ↵ | |||
}} | |||
scroll down to large chunk of free space: | |||
{{console|body= | |||
Command: ##i##new ↵ | |||
First sector: ##i##↵ | |||
Last sector: ##i##↵ | |||
Hex Code: ##i## 8300 ↵ | |||
Enter name: ##i##FUNTOO ↵ | |||
}} | |||
{{console|body= | |||
Disk Drive: /dev/funtoo | |||
Size: 62333952, 29.7 GiB | |||
Part. # Size Partition Type Partition Name | |||
---------------------------------------------------------------- | |||
1007.0 KiB free space | |||
1 1024.0 KiB BIOS boot partition BIOS Boot | |||
2 256.0 MiB EFI System BOOT | |||
3 29.5 GiB Linux x86-64 root (/) FUNTOO | |||
}} | |||
{{console|body= | |||
Command: ##i##write ↵ | |||
Command: ##i##quit ↵ | |||
}} | |||
{{console|body= | |||
###i## mkfs.vfat -F 32 /dev/funtoo2 | |||
###i## fatlabel /dev/funtoo2 "BOOT" | |||
}} | |||
{{console|body= | |||
###i## mkfs.jfs /dev/funtoo3 | |||
###i## jfs_tune -L "FUNTOO" /dev/funtoo3 | |||
}} | |||
==Mount== | |||
{{console|body= | |||
###i## mount /dev/funtoo3 /mnt/funtoo | |||
###i## mkdir /mnt/funtoo/boot | |||
###i## mount /dev/funtoo2 /mnt/funtoo/boot | |||
}} | |||
*if you're doing a permanent install mount any additional drives to /mnt/funtoo/var or /mnt/funtoo/home now. | |||
==Get Funtoo== | |||
You can pull your [[Subarches]] gnome tarball if you're installing to specific hardware, not moving the disk between systems, or installing to a SSD/nvme. Use generic 64 so your USB os can roam on strange hardware. | |||
{{console|body= | {{console|body= | ||
###i## cd /mnt/funtoo | ###i## cd /mnt/funtoo | ||
###i## wget https://build.funtoo.org/1.4-release-std/x86-64bit/generic_64/gnome-stage3-latest.tar.xz | ###i## wget https://build.funtoo.org/1.4-release-std/x86-64bit/generic_64/gnome-latest.tar.xz | ||
###i## tar --numeric-owner -xpf * | }} | ||
*or for next | |||
{{console|body= | |||
###i## wget https://build.funtoo.org/next/x86-64bit/generic_64/stage3-latest.tar.xz | |||
###i## tar --numeric-owner --xattrs --xattrs-include='*' -xpf *latest* && mv *latest* /mnt/funtoo/mnt && mkdir /mnt/funtoo/mnt/funtoo | |||
}} | |||
===Load Funtoo=== | |||
*mount up: | |||
{{console|body= | {{console|body= | ||
###i## cd /mnt/funtoo && | ###i## cd /mnt/funtoo && mount -t proc none proc | ||
mount --rbind /sys sys | |||
mount --rbind /dev dev | |||
}} | |||
===chroot=== | |||
*chroot in: | |||
{{console|body= | |||
###i## env -i HOME=/root TERM=$TERM $(which chroot) /mnt/funtoo bash -l | |||
}} | |||
===change ps1=== | |||
Mark that you're chrooted. | |||
{{console|body= | {{console|body= | ||
###i## | ###i## export PS1="undead $PS1" | ||
}} | |||
*you can auto login local terminals as root by doing this: | |||
{{console|body= | {{console|body= | ||
###i## | ###i## sed -i 's/agetty/agetty -J -a root/' /etc/inittab | ||
}} | |||
*Add fake root user, set the password, name, dns, tz, and clock: | |||
{{console|body= | {{console|body= | ||
###i## | ###i## useradd -o -g 0 -u 0 funtoo | ||
###i## | ###i## passwd funtoo | ||
###i## echo 'hostname="undead"' > /etc/conf.d/hostname | |||
###i## echo "nameserver 1.1.1.1" > /etc/resolv.conf | |||
###i## ln -sf /usr/share/zoneinfo/$(tzselect) /etc/localtime | |||
###i## rc-service busybox-ntpd restart | |||
}} | |||
*Deploy your fstab: | |||
{{console|body= | |||
###i## cat > /etc/fstab << "EOF" | |||
LABEL=BOOT /boot vfat noauto,noatime 1 2 | |||
LABEL=FUNTOO / jfs noatime 0 1 | |||
tmpfs /var/tmp/portage tmpfs uid=portage,gid=portage,mode=775,noatime 0 0 | |||
EOF | |||
}} | |||
*compile in ram: | |||
{{console|body= | |||
###i## mkdir /var/tmp/portage | |||
###i## chown portage:portage /var/tmp/portage | |||
###i## mount /var/tmp/portage | |||
}} | |||
===merge=== | |||
*merge stuff: | |||
{{console|body= | |||
###i## cat > /etc/portage/package.use << "EOF" | |||
sys-kernel/linux-firmware initramfs | |||
app-emulation/qemu static-user qemu_user_targets_aarch64 qemu_user_targets_riscv64 qemu_user_targets_arm | |||
dev-libs/glib static-libs | |||
dev-libs/libpcre static-libs | |||
sys-apps/attr static-libs | |||
EOF | |||
###i## ego sync && emerge sys-boot/shim jfsutils grub haveged intel-microcode linux-firmware fchroot eix discord-bin firefox-bin media-fonts/noto etcher-bin logmein-hamachi fortune-mod cowsay}} | |||
you can also install [[Package:Brave]] or other browsers. | |||
*funtoo's official chat: | |||
https://discord.gg/BNUSpUU | |||
*Set your startup services: | |||
{{console|body= | {{console|body= | ||
###i## | ###i## rc-update del swap boot && rc-update add haveged && rc-update add busybox-ntpd && rc-update add logmein-hamachi && rc-update add gpm | ||
}} | |||
== | === /etc/boot.conf === | ||
*Deploy your boot.conf: | |||
{{console|body= | |||
###i## cat > /etc/boot.conf << "EOF" | |||
boot { | |||
generate grub | |||
default "Funtoo Linux" | |||
timeout 0 | |||
} | |||
"Funtoo Linux" { | |||
kernel kernel[-v] | |||
initrd initramfs[-v] | |||
params += real_root=auto rootfstype=auto scandelay=10 | |||
params += quiet gfxpayload=auto loglevel=1 splash=silent | |||
} | |||
EOF | |||
}} | |||
=== GRUB === | |||
*Install grub: | |||
{{console|body= | {{console|body= | ||
###i## | ###i## mount -o remount,rw /sys/firmware/efi/efivars | ||
###i## | ###i## grub-install --target=i386-pc /dev/funtoo | ||
###i## grub-install --target=x86_64-efi --efi-directory=/boot --bootloader-id="BOOT" --recheck --no-nvram /dev/funtoo | |||
###i## cp /usr/share/shim/* /boot/EFI/BOOT/ | |||
###i## ego boot update | |||
}} | |||
final install size is around 15,000MB without noto. gnome can fit in a 16gb usb stick, but it's a very tight squeeze and unix file systems degrade in performance at around 80%-90% full. 32gb keys are good, 64gb are excellent, 128gb keys can emerge the world. We suggest several 32gb drives over few larger drives. | |||
=== video === | |||
*rebuild the kernel video drivers, or switch to nouveau to make your usb more universal. | |||
{{console|body= | {{console|body= | ||
###i## | ###i## emerge -1 x11-drivers/nvidia-kernel-modules | ||
}} | |||
*To run nouveau instead of nvidia: | |||
{{console|body= | {{console|body= | ||
###i## | ###i## cd /etc/modprobe.d && mkdir .backup | ||
###i## | ###i## mv /etc/modprobe.d/n* .backup | ||
###i## ego profile mix-in gfxcard-nouveau | |||
###i## ego profile mix-in -gfxcard-nvidia | |||
}} | |||
===Profile Update=== | |||
*Set your profile before emerging world: | |||
[[Funtoo_Profiles]] | |||
The magic words to update: | *The magic words to update everything: | ||
{{console|body= | {{console|body= | ||
###i## emerge -avuND @world | ###i## emerge -avuND @world | ||
###i## emerge -av --depclean | ###i## emerge -av --depclean | ||
###i## ego boot update}} | ###i## ego boot update}} | ||
every so often you will want to purge sources to keep the stick as low memory usage as possible | every so often you will want to purge sources to keep the stick as low memory usage as possible | ||
Line 78: | Line 269: | ||
}} | }} | ||
==DONE!== | |||
*If you would like to take this further to compress into a live cd see: [[Undead_USB_Install/undead2live]] | |||
*If you used a generic stage3 now would be a good time to merge in a DE: [[Install/Stage3_Desktop]] | |||
===clean dismount=== | |||
{{console|body= | |||
###i## exit | |||
###i## cd .. && sync | |||
###i## umount -lR funtoo | |||
###i## eject /dev/funtoo | |||
###i## udisksctl power-off -b /dev/funtoo | |||
}} | |||
===uefi secure boot=== | |||
*press the f1 f2 f8 f9 f10 esc or delete to load bios. | |||
*set bios to load uefi usb devices first, disable secure boot, and enable legacy mode. save settings and exit. | |||
*press the f1 f2 f8 f9 f10 esc or delete to load your boot selection menu. | |||
*load EFI from file, point to /boot/EFI/BOOT/BOOTX64.EFI | |||
*shim will greet you with access violation warnings. | |||
*fiddle around to get mok manager to load up. | |||
*select add key | |||
*point to /boot/EFI/BOOT/grubx86.efi | |||
*press the f1 f2 f8 f9 f10 esc or delete key to load your boot selection menu. | |||
*load EFI from file, and again point to /boot/EFI/BOOT/BOOTX64.EFI which will now load funtoo under secure boot. | |||
==further securing== | |||
i use [[Package:Sudo]], and disable root login. | |||
i use [[Package:Dnsmasq]] to block advertising, and cache DNS traffic to accelerate web browsing. | |||
i use [[Package:Dnscrypt]] to encrypt all dns requests so the vast majority of the web traffic from my undead usb is encrypted. | |||
==Admining== | |||
use [[Package:Eix]] to browse portage to see packages you can emerge. | |||
use [[Package:Eselect]] to set various system options. | |||
==Branding== | |||
{{console|body= | |||
###i## echo "www.funtoo.org" > /etc/motd | |||
}} | |||
add fortunes piped through cowsay to the shells | |||
{{console|body= | |||
###i## emerge fortune-mod cowsay | |||
###i## cd && echo "fortune {{!}} cowsay" >> .bashrc | |||
}} | |||
== Tweeks == | |||
If you're having problems with nouveau not playing sound over HDMI restart pulse audio: | |||
{{console|body= | |||
###i## pkill pulseaudio | |||
}} | |||
=== Disable DPMS === | |||
dpms disrespects screen blanking settings, so you can't watch movies in VLC without the screen turning off. | |||
{{console|body= | |||
###i## xset s off -dpms | |||
}} | |||
{{console|body= | |||
###i## cat > /etc/X11/xorg.conf.d/10-monitor.conf << "EOF" | |||
Section "Extensions" | |||
Option "DPMS" "Disable" | |||
EndSection | |||
EOF | |||
}} | |||
==Alternate Drives== | |||
{{warning|avoid adding fstab entries for drives that will not be present on other computers. JFS will mount read only if fsck fails!}} | |||
I have a jfs home drive labeled HOME. This is the fstab entry to have funtoo use my rotating hard drive as /home | |||
{{console|body= | |||
###i## echo "LABEL=HOME /home jfs noatime 0 2" >> /etc/fstab | |||
}} | |||
== | ==Swapping by file== | ||
Loop mounts have performance penalties, prefer using swap partitions. | |||
*For a swap file on $HOME: | |||
{{console|body= | {{console|body= | ||
###i## | ###i## dd if=/dev/zero of=/home/swapfile bs=1M count=4096 status=progress | ||
chmod 600 /home/swapfile | |||
mkswap /home/swapfile | |||
swapon /home/swapfile | |||
echo "/home/swapfile none swap defaults 0 0" >> /etc/fstab | |||
rc-update add swap boot | |||
echo 'rc_need="localmount"' >> /etc/conf.d/swap | |||
}} | }} | ||
For a swap file on $VAR: | |||
{{console|body= | |||
###i## dd if=/dev/zero of=/var/swapfile bs=1M count=4096 status=progress | |||
chmod 600 /var/swapfile | |||
mkswap /var/swapfile | |||
swapon /var/swapfile | |||
echo "/var/swapfile none swap defaults 0 0" >> /etc/fstab | |||
rc-update add swap boot | |||
echo 'rc_need="localmount"' >> /etc/conf.d/swap | |||
}} | |||
==windows 10 utc== | |||
if you're running ntp on undead usb you will want to set any dual booting windows clocks to be universal. in an administrator run command prompt run this: | |||
{{console|body= | |||
reg add "HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\System\CurrentControlSet\Control\TimeZoneInformation" /v RealTimeIsUniversal /d 1 /t REG_QWORD /f}} | |||
==Remote Help== | |||
[[Package:Logmein-hamachi]] is a easy to setup VPN allowing friends easy access to SSH should you run into trouble. | |||
==Install Video== | |||
coming soon. | |||
{{#evt:service=youtube|id=https://youtu.be/PBAl9cchQac}} | |||
[[Category:HOWTO]] | |||
[[Category:Install]] | |||
[[Category:Official Documentation]] |
Latest revision as of 03:22, January 3, 2023
Buy Paul, the author of this document, a coffee.
Donate to funtoo, buy Daniel Robbins a coffee.
Undead USB, a linux nomadbsd alternative
This is an install strategy to target a USB flash stick as / (root) instead of a traditional hard drive or internal solid state drive. This isn't a live cd, this is a persistent root funtoo install where changes will keep living on. Since were treating a USB stick as a root partition, it requires much more space than a live usb like area31. 32gb minimum for gnome, 16gb are ok for xfce, lxde, lxqt, & server only type builds. get a fast usb3 drive even if you don't have usb3 ports as the flash memory on them is much faster than the flash memory on usb2 keys which will improve usability. This is a speed run of the official install x86_64 no swap & add JFS but does not intend to replace the official install. this is to make a more flexible, and robust install boot media than area31. undead usb can be used to build undead usb also. If you're reading this from linux, and have a blank 32gb USB drive you can mount up, and start building funtoo immediately. This guide has traditional hard drive aliasing, however it is targeted at building USB install media, and USB development sandbox installs. The user experience is like virtualization running on bare metal. If you run into a problem you can easily unplug permanent hard drives, and let a funtoo developer vpn into your fresh build to debug hardware directly.
- grab root:
user $ sudo su or user $ su
- identify the drive for installing:
root # lsblk -o name,size,label,partlabel
- insert the usb drive, and run the above command again.
the first rule of funtoo is funtoo rules
set udev rules to make the drive you're installing to accessible at /dev/funtoo and partitions accessible at /dev/funtoo1 /dev/funtoo2 so on.
- ide drive 3 example:
root # echo 'KERNEL=="hdd*", SYMLINK+="funtoo%n"' > /etc/udev/rules.d/01-funtoo.rules
- sata drive 2 example:
root # echo 'KERNEL=="sdc*", SYMLINK+="funtoo%n"' > /etc/udev/rules.d/01-funtoo.rules
- nvme nvme drive 1 example:
root # echo 'KERNEL=="nvme1n1", SYMLINK+="funtoo"' > /etc/udev/rules.d/01-funtoo.rules root # echo 'KERNEL=="nvme1n1p*", SYMLINK+="funtoo%n"' >> /etc/udev/rules.d/01-funtoo.rules
- mmc drive 0 example:
root # echo 'KERNEL=="mmcblk0", SYMLINK+="funtoo"' > /etc/udev/rules.d/01-funtoo.rules root # echo 'KERNEL=="mmcblk0p*", SYMLINK+="funtoo%n"' >> /etc/udev/rules.d/01-funtoo.rules
- activate rules:
- display what /dev/funtoo is tied to:
root # udevadm control --reload-rules && udevadm trigger root # ls -al /dev/funtoo*
Partition
root # cgdisk /dev/funtoo
if cgdisk doesn't work load gdisk or fdisk to wipe out bad gpt tables, and then run cfdisk or cgdisk again.
delete everything.
Command: new ↵ First sector: ↵ Last sector: +2M ↵ Hex Code: EF02 ↵ Enter name: BIOS Boot ↵
scroll down to large chunk of free space:
Command: new ↵ First sector: ↵ Last sector: +128M ↵ Hex Code: EF00 ↵ Enter name: BOOT ↵
scroll down to large chunk of free space:
Command: new ↵ First sector: ↵ Last sector: ↵ Hex Code: 8300 ↵ Enter name: FUNTOO ↵
Disk Drive: /dev/funtoo Size: 62333952, 29.7 GiB Part. # Size Partition Type Partition Name ---------------------------------------------------------------- 1007.0 KiB free space 1 1024.0 KiB BIOS boot partition BIOS Boot 2 256.0 MiB EFI System BOOT 3 29.5 GiB Linux x86-64 root (/) FUNTOO
Command: write ↵ Command: quit ↵
root # mkfs.vfat -F 32 /dev/funtoo2 root # fatlabel /dev/funtoo2 "BOOT"
root # mkfs.jfs /dev/funtoo3 root # jfs_tune -L "FUNTOO" /dev/funtoo3
Mount
root # mount /dev/funtoo3 /mnt/funtoo root # mkdir /mnt/funtoo/boot root # mount /dev/funtoo2 /mnt/funtoo/boot
- if you're doing a permanent install mount any additional drives to /mnt/funtoo/var or /mnt/funtoo/home now.
Get Funtoo
You can pull your Subarches gnome tarball if you're installing to specific hardware, not moving the disk between systems, or installing to a SSD/nvme. Use generic 64 so your USB os can roam on strange hardware.
root # cd /mnt/funtoo root # wget https://build.funtoo.org/1.4-release-std/x86-64bit/generic_64/gnome-latest.tar.xz
- or for next
root # wget https://build.funtoo.org/next/x86-64bit/generic_64/stage3-latest.tar.xz root # tar --numeric-owner --xattrs --xattrs-include='*' -xpf *latest* && mv *latest* /mnt/funtoo/mnt && mkdir /mnt/funtoo/mnt/funtoo
Load Funtoo
- mount up:
root # cd /mnt/funtoo && mount -t proc none proc mount --rbind /sys sys mount --rbind /dev dev
chroot
- chroot in:
root # env -i HOME=/root TERM=$TERM $(which chroot) /mnt/funtoo bash -l
change ps1
Mark that you're chrooted.
root # export PS1="undead $PS1"
- you can auto login local terminals as root by doing this:
root # sed -i 's/agetty/agetty -J -a root/' /etc/inittab
- Add fake root user, set the password, name, dns, tz, and clock:
root # useradd -o -g 0 -u 0 funtoo root # passwd funtoo root # echo 'hostname="undead"' > /etc/conf.d/hostname root # echo "nameserver 1.1.1.1" > /etc/resolv.conf root # ln -sf /usr/share/zoneinfo/$(tzselect) /etc/localtime root # rc-service busybox-ntpd restart
- Deploy your fstab:
root # cat > /etc/fstab << "EOF" LABEL=BOOT /boot vfat noauto,noatime 1 2 LABEL=FUNTOO / jfs noatime 0 1 tmpfs /var/tmp/portage tmpfs uid=portage,gid=portage,mode=775,noatime 0 0 EOF
- compile in ram:
root # mkdir /var/tmp/portage root # chown portage:portage /var/tmp/portage root # mount /var/tmp/portage
merge
- merge stuff:
root # cat > /etc/portage/package.use << "EOF" sys-kernel/linux-firmware initramfs app-emulation/qemu static-user qemu_user_targets_aarch64 qemu_user_targets_riscv64 qemu_user_targets_arm dev-libs/glib static-libs dev-libs/libpcre static-libs sys-apps/attr static-libs EOF root # ego sync && emerge sys-boot/shim jfsutils grub haveged intel-microcode linux-firmware fchroot eix discord-bin firefox-bin media-fonts/noto etcher-bin logmein-hamachi fortune-mod cowsay
you can also install Package:Brave or other browsers.
- funtoo's official chat:
- Set your startup services:
root # rc-update del swap boot && rc-update add haveged && rc-update add busybox-ntpd && rc-update add logmein-hamachi && rc-update add gpm
/etc/boot.conf
- Deploy your boot.conf:
root # cat > /etc/boot.conf << "EOF" boot { generate grub default "Funtoo Linux" timeout 0 } "Funtoo Linux" { kernel kernel[-v] initrd initramfs[-v] params += real_root=auto rootfstype=auto scandelay=10 params += quiet gfxpayload=auto loglevel=1 splash=silent } EOF
GRUB
- Install grub:
root # mount -o remount,rw /sys/firmware/efi/efivars root # grub-install --target=i386-pc /dev/funtoo root # grub-install --target=x86_64-efi --efi-directory=/boot --bootloader-id="BOOT" --recheck --no-nvram /dev/funtoo root # cp /usr/share/shim/* /boot/EFI/BOOT/ root # ego boot update
final install size is around 15,000MB without noto. gnome can fit in a 16gb usb stick, but it's a very tight squeeze and unix file systems degrade in performance at around 80%-90% full. 32gb keys are good, 64gb are excellent, 128gb keys can emerge the world. We suggest several 32gb drives over few larger drives.
video
- rebuild the kernel video drivers, or switch to nouveau to make your usb more universal.
root # emerge -1 x11-drivers/nvidia-kernel-modules
- To run nouveau instead of nvidia:
root # cd /etc/modprobe.d && mkdir .backup root # mv /etc/modprobe.d/n* .backup root # ego profile mix-in gfxcard-nouveau root # ego profile mix-in -gfxcard-nvidia
Profile Update
- Set your profile before emerging world:
- The magic words to update everything:
root # emerge -avuND @world root # emerge -av --depclean root # ego boot update
every so often you will want to purge sources to keep the stick as low memory usage as possible
root # rm /var/cache/portage/distfiles/*.tar.bz2 root # rm /var/cache/portage/distfiles/*.tar.xz root # rm /var/cache/portage/distfiles/*.tar.gz
DONE!
- If you would like to take this further to compress into a live cd see: Undead_USB_Install/undead2live
- If you used a generic stage3 now would be a good time to merge in a DE: Install/Stage3_Desktop
clean dismount
root # exit root # cd .. && sync root # umount -lR funtoo root # eject /dev/funtoo root # udisksctl power-off -b /dev/funtoo
uefi secure boot
- press the f1 f2 f8 f9 f10 esc or delete to load bios.
- set bios to load uefi usb devices first, disable secure boot, and enable legacy mode. save settings and exit.
- press the f1 f2 f8 f9 f10 esc or delete to load your boot selection menu.
- load EFI from file, point to /boot/EFI/BOOT/BOOTX64.EFI
- shim will greet you with access violation warnings.
- fiddle around to get mok manager to load up.
- select add key
- point to /boot/EFI/BOOT/grubx86.efi
- press the f1 f2 f8 f9 f10 esc or delete key to load your boot selection menu.
- load EFI from file, and again point to /boot/EFI/BOOT/BOOTX64.EFI which will now load funtoo under secure boot.
further securing
i use Package:Sudo, and disable root login.
i use Package:Dnsmasq to block advertising, and cache DNS traffic to accelerate web browsing.
i use Package:Dnscrypt to encrypt all dns requests so the vast majority of the web traffic from my undead usb is encrypted.
Admining
use Package:Eix to browse portage to see packages you can emerge.
use Package:Eselect to set various system options.
Branding
root # echo "www.funtoo.org" > /etc/motd
add fortunes piped through cowsay to the shells
root # emerge fortune-mod cowsay root # cd && echo "fortune | cowsay" >> .bashrc
Tweeks
If you're having problems with nouveau not playing sound over HDMI restart pulse audio:
root # pkill pulseaudio
Disable DPMS
dpms disrespects screen blanking settings, so you can't watch movies in VLC without the screen turning off.
root # xset s off -dpms
root # cat > /etc/X11/xorg.conf.d/10-monitor.conf << "EOF" Section "Extensions" Option "DPMS" "Disable" EndSection EOF
Alternate Drives
avoid adding fstab entries for drives that will not be present on other computers. JFS will mount read only if fsck fails!
I have a jfs home drive labeled HOME. This is the fstab entry to have funtoo use my rotating hard drive as /home
root # echo "LABEL=HOME /home jfs noatime 0 2" >> /etc/fstab
Swapping by file
Loop mounts have performance penalties, prefer using swap partitions.
- For a swap file on $HOME:
root # dd if=/dev/zero of=/home/swapfile bs=1M count=4096 status=progress chmod 600 /home/swapfile mkswap /home/swapfile swapon /home/swapfile echo "/home/swapfile none swap defaults 0 0" >> /etc/fstab rc-update add swap boot echo 'rc_need="localmount"' >> /etc/conf.d/swap
For a swap file on $VAR:
root # dd if=/dev/zero of=/var/swapfile bs=1M count=4096 status=progress chmod 600 /var/swapfile mkswap /var/swapfile swapon /var/swapfile echo "/var/swapfile none swap defaults 0 0" >> /etc/fstab rc-update add swap boot echo 'rc_need="localmount"' >> /etc/conf.d/swap
windows 10 utc
if you're running ntp on undead usb you will want to set any dual booting windows clocks to be universal. in an administrator run command prompt run this:
reg add "HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\System\CurrentControlSet\Control\TimeZoneInformation" /v RealTimeIsUniversal /d 1 /t REG_QWORD /f
Remote Help
Package:Logmein-hamachi is a easy to setup VPN allowing friends easy access to SSH should you run into trouble.
Install Video
coming soon.