Application Image Builder ========================= Application Images (or appimgs for short) are created with this builder framework. The build is controlled by a configuration file which can customize the build process in various ways such as adding extra packages and specifying shell functions to be run at certain stages. The configuration file is really just a shell script but it should follow the conventions described in the Configuration File section of this document. The builder bind mounts a package cache directory into /var/cache/apt of the chroot so packages will only need to be downloaded once no matter how many times you repeat the build. As a nice consequence of this the cached packages don't have to be removed from the final image because they are merely unmounted when the process completes. Unless you disable it with a command line option, a tmpfs will be mounted on the directory the rootfs is built on.If you are tweaking a config and making repeated builds this is not only a lot faster, but will also avoid hammering SSD drives with excessive writes (and write amplification). By default the application image builder is self-hosting and can always be run from inside images that it creates. Building an image is as easy as: mkdir work && cd work : Make a directory to work in appimg-builder --new : writes a template file build.conf in current directory vim build.conf : (optionally) make some changes to the template sudo appimg-build : Build an application image If you want you can even skip the steps of creating and editing a config file and just run appimg-build in a work directory and it will build the default appimg we use with Citadel. Stage One --------- The Stage One builder uses debootstrap to build a very minimal debian installation. Then a chroot is set up and stage-two.sh is executed inside the chroot to perform most of the installation. Stage Two --------- The stage-two.sh script mostly just orchestrates the execution of small fragments of shell script code that are called 'modules'. The base framework modules can be found in the directory /usr/share/appimg-builder/appimg-modules. It imports the configuration file with the 'source' command after all the key variables and functions have been defined. It's possible to override any of these variables and functions simply by defining another version with the same name in the configuration file, but you should almost never need to do this. Configuration File ------------------ - Variables PACKAGES can be set to a list of additional packages to add to the base set of packages. PACKAGES="extremetuxracer biff anarchism" PRE_INSTALL_MODULES can be set to a list of modules to run before the main package installation stage happens. The contents will be appended to a pre-defined list of 'base' modules that run. PRE_INSTALL_MODULES="my-cool-module another-module" If complete control over the modules to run is required, you can override the variable BASE_PRE_INSTALL_MODULES entirely rather than providing PRE_INSTALL_MODULES. Other modules depend on 'utility-library' so it is usually required and should be the first module listed. BASE_PRE_INSTALL_MODULES="utility-library configure-locale custom-create-user" POST_INSTALL_MODULES is a list of modules to execute after packages have been installed. It works exactly the same way as PRE_INSTALL_MODULES and also has a corresponding 'base' variable that could be overidden if necessary. - Modules Modules can be functions that you define or they can be loaded from files on disk. To use files rather than functions a directory named 'appimg-modules' must exist as a subdirectory of the directory containing the configuration file. Any files you place in this directory will be found by name during the module execution stages. - Installing Files If you would like to have external files such as configuration files copied into the image, create 'appimg-files' as a subdirectory of the directory containing the configuration file. You can then use the install_file command inside of a module to copy the files from this directory. You can either store the files to install in a flat directory or organize them into subdirectories mirroring the location in which they will be installed. Depending on which option you use, the install_file command how two different modes. In the examples below BASE refers to the directory in which your configuration file is located. (1): install_file [mode] [file] [target directory] Example: Install BASE/appimg-files/my_config.conf to /etc/mydaemon/my_config.conf install_file 0644 my_config.conf /etc/mydaemon (2): install_file [mode] [full path] Example: Install BASE/appimg-files/etc/mydaemon/my_config.conf to /etc/mydaemon/my_config.conf install_file 0644 /etc/mydaemon/my_config.conf