SCHROOT-SETUP

Section: Debian sbuild (5)
Updated:
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NAME

schroot-setup - schroot chroot setup scripts  

DESCRIPTION

schroot uses scripts to set up and then clean up the chroot environment. The directory contains scripts run when a chroot is created and destroyed. Several environment variables are set while the scripts are being run, which allows their behaviour to be customised, depending upon, for example, the type of chroot in use.

The scripts are run in name order, like those run by init(8), by using the same style of execution as run-parts(8).

The setup scripts are all invoked with two options:

1
The action to perform.
When a session is first started, the chroot is set up by running the scripts in with the 'setup-start' option. When the session is ended, the scripts in are run in reverse order with the 'setup-stop' option.
2
The chroot status.
This is either 'ok' if there are no problems, or 'fail' if something went wrong. For example, particular actions may be skipped on failure.

Note that the scripts should be idempotent. They must be idempotent during the 'setup-stop' phase, because they may be run more than once, for example on failure.  

ENVIRONMENT

 

General variables

AUTH_USER
The username of the user the command in the chroot will run as.
CHROOT_NAME
The chroot name. Note that this is the name of the orignal chroot before session creation; you probably want SESSION_ID.
HOST
HOST_OS
HOST_VENDOR
HOST_CPU
The host system architecture schroot is running upon. This may be used to introduce architecture-specific behaviour into the setup scripts where required. HOST is the GNU triplet for the architecture, while HOST_OS, HOST_VENDOR and HOST_CPU are the component parts of the triplet.
LIBEXEC_DIR
The directory under which helper programs are located.
MOUNT_DIR
The directory under which non-filesystem chroots are mounted (e.g. block devices and LVM snapshots).
PID
The process ID of the schroot process.
PLATFORM
The operating system platform schroot is running upon. This may be used to introduce platform-specific behaviour into the setup scripts where required. Note that the HOST variables are probably what are required. In the context of schroot, the platform is the supported configuration and behaviour for a given architecture, and may be identical between different architectures.
SESSION_ID
The session identifier.
VERBOSE
Set to 'quiet' if only error messages should be printed, 'normal' if other messages may be printed as well, and 'verbose' if all messages may be printed. Previously called AUTH_VERBOSITY.
CHROOT_SESSION_CREATE
Set to 'true' if a session will be created, otherwise 'false'.
CHROOT_SESSION_CLONE
Set to 'true' if a session will be cloned, otherwise 'false'.
CHROOT_SESSION_PURGE
Set to 'true' if a session will be purged, otherwise 'false'.
CHROOT_TYPE
The type of the chroot. This is useful for restricting a setup task to particular types of chroot (e.g. only block devices or LVM snapshots).
CHROOT_NAME
The name of the chroot. This is useful for restricting a setup task to a particular chroot, or set of chroots.
CHROOT_ALIAS
The name of the alias used to select the chroot. This is useful for specialising a setup task based upon one of its alternative alias names, or the default chroot name. For example, it could be used to specify additional sources in /etc/apt/sources.list, such as a stable-security alias for a stable chroot, or an experimental alias for an unstable chroot.
CHROOT_DESCRIPTION
The description of the chroot.
CHROOT_MOUNT_LOCATION
The location to mount the chroot. It is used for mount point creation and mounting.
CHROOT_LOCATION
The location of the chroot inside the mount point. This is to allow multiple chroots on a single filesystem. Set for all mountable chroot types.
CHROOT_PATH
The absolute path to the chroot. This is typically CHROOT_MOUNT_LOCATION and CHROOT_LOCATION concatenated together. This is the path which should be used to access the chroots.
 

Plain and directory chroot variables

These chroot types use only general variables.  

File variables

CHROOT_FILE
The file containing the chroot files.
CHROOT_FILE_REPACK
Set to 'true' to repack the chroot into an archive file on ending a session, otherwise 'false'.
 

Mountable chroot variables

These variables are only set for directly mountable chroot types.

CHROOT_MOUNT_DEVICE
The device to mount containing the chroot. mounting.
CHROOT_MOUNT_OPTIONS
Options to pass to mount(8).
CHROOT_LOCATION
The location of the chroot inside the mount point. This allows the existence of multiple chroots on a single filesystem.
 

Filesystem union variables

CHROOT_UNION_TYPE
Union filesystem type.
CHROOT_UNION_MOUNT_OPTIONS
Union filesystem mount options.
CHROOT_UNION_OVERLAY_DIRECTORY
Union filesystem overlay directory (writable).
CHROOT_UNION_UNDERLAY_DIRECTORY
Union filesystem underlay directory (read-only).
 

Block device variables

CHROOT_DEVICE
The device containing the chroot root filesystem. This is usually, but not necessarily, the device which will be mounted. For example, an LVM snapshot this will be the original logical volume.
 

LVM snapshot variables

CHROOT_LVM_SNAPSHOT_NAME
Snapshot name to pass to lvcreate(8).
CHROOT_LVM_SNAPSHOT_DEVICE
The name of the LVM snapshot device.
CHROOT_LVM_SNAPSHOT_OPTIONS
Options to pass to lvcreate(8).
 

Custom variables

Custom keys set in schroot.conf will be uppercased and set in the environment as described in schroot.conf(5).  

FILES

 

Setup script configuration

The directory /default contains the default settings used by setup scripts.
config
Main configuration file read by setup scripts. The format of this file is described in schroot-script-config(5). This is the default value for the script-config key. Note that this was formerly named /script-defaults. The following files are referenced by default:
copyfiles
A list of files to copy into the chroot from the host system. Note that this was formerly named /copyfiles-defaults.
fstab
A file in the format decribed in fstab(5), used to mount filesystems inside the chroot. The mount location is relative to the root of the chroot. Note that this was formerly named /mount-defaults.
nssdatabases
System databases (as described in /etc/nsswitch.conf on GNU/Linux systems) to copy into the chroot from the host. Note that this was formerly named /nssdatabases-defaults.
 

Setup scripts

The directory contains the chroot setup scripts.
00check
Print debugging diagnostics and perform basic sanity checking.
05file
Unpack, clean up, and repack file-based chroots.
05fsunion
Create and remove union filesystems.
05lvm
Create and remove LVM snapshots.
10mount
Mount and unmount filesystems.
15binfmt
Sets up the QEMU user emulator using binfmt-support. This permits a chroot for a different CPU architecture to be used transparently, providing an alternative to cross-compiling or whole-machine emulation.
15killprocs
Kill processes still running inside the chroot when ending a session, which would prevent unmounting of filesystems and cleanup of any other resources.
20copyfiles
Copy files from the host system into the chroot. Configure networking by copying hosts and resolv.conf, for example.
20nssdatabases
Configure system databases by copying passwd, shadow, group etc. into the chroot.
50chrootname
Set the chroot name (/etc/debian_chroot) in the chroot. This may be used by the shell prompt to display the current chroot.
 

AUTHORS

Roger Leigh.  

COPYRIGHT

Copyright © 2005-2012 Roger Leigh <rleigh@debian.org>

is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.  

SEE ALSO

schroot(1), fstab(5), schroot.conf(5), schroot-script-config(5), run-parts(8).


 

Index

NAME
DESCRIPTION
ENVIRONMENT
General variables
Plain and directory chroot variables
File variables
Mountable chroot variables
Filesystem union variables
Block device variables
LVM snapshot variables
Custom variables
FILES
Setup script configuration
Setup scripts
AUTHORS
COPYRIGHT
SEE ALSO

This document was created by man2html, using the manual pages.
Time: 04:27:00 GMT, June 16, 2012