You will first need to create a preconfiguration file and place it in
the location from where you want to use it. Creating the preconfiguration file
is covered later in this appendix. Putting it in the correct location is fairly
straightforward for network preseeding or if you want to read the file off
a floppy or usb-stick. If you want to include the file on a CD or DVD, you
will have to remaster the ISO image. How to get the preconfiguration file
included in the initrd is outside the scope of this document; please consult
the developers' documentation for debian-installer
.
An example preconfiguration file that you can use as basis for your own preconfiguration file is available from http://help.ubuntu.com/8.10/installation-guide/example-preseed.txt. This file is based on the configuration fragments included in this appendix.
If you are using initrd preseeding, you only have to make sure a file named
preseed.cfg
is included in the root directory of the
initrd. The installer will automatically check if this file is present and
load it.
For the other preseeding methods you need to tell the installer what file
to use when you boot it. This is normally done by passing the kernel a boot
parameter, either manually at boot time or by editing the bootloader
configuration file (e.g. syslinux.cfg
) and adding the
parameter to the end of the append line(s) for the kernel.
If you do specify the preconfiguration file in the bootloader configuration,
you might change the configuration so you don't need to hit enter to boot the
installer. For syslinux this means setting the timeout to 1
in syslinux.cfg
.
To make sure the installer gets the right preconfiguration file, you can optionally specify a checksum for the file. Currently this needs to be a md5sum, and if specified it must match the preconfiguration file or the installer will refuse to use it.
Boot parameters to specify: - if you're netbooting: preseed/url=http://host/path/to/preseed.cfg preseed/url/checksum=5da499872becccfeda2c4872f9171c3d - if you're booting a remastered CD: preseed/file=/cdrom/preseed.cfg preseed/file/checksum=5da499872becccfeda2c4872f9171c3d - if you're installing from USB media (put the preconfiguration file in the toplevel directory of the USB stick): preseed/file=/hd-media/preseed.cfg preseed/file/checksum=5da499872becccfeda2c4872f9171c3d
Note that preseed/url
can be shortened to just
url
and preseed/file
to just
file
when they are passed as boot parameters.
If a preconfiguration file cannot be used to preseed some steps, the install can still be fully automated, since you can pass preseed values on the command line when booting the installer.
Boot parameters can also be used if you do not really want to use preseeding, but just want to provide an answer for a specific question. Some examples where this can be useful are documented elsewhere in this manual.
To set a value to be used inside debian-installer
, just pass
for any of the preseed variables listed in the examples in this appendix.
If a value is to be used to configure packages for the target system, you
will need to prepend the owner[17] of the variable as in
path/to/variable
=value
.
If you don't specify the owner, the value for the variable will not be
copied to the debconf database in the target system and thus remain unused
during the configuration of the relevant package.
owner
:path/to/variable
=value
Normally, preseeding a question in this way will mean that the question will not be asked. To set a specific default value for a question, but still have the question asked, use “?=” instead of “=” as operator. See also the section called “Using preseeding to change default values”.
Note that some variables that are frequently set at the boot prompt
have a shorter alias. If an alias is available, it is used in the
examples in this appendix instead of the full variable. The
preseed/url
variable for example has been aliased as
url
. Another example is the tasks
alias, which translates to tasksel:tasksel/first
.
A “--” in the boot options has special meaning. Kernel parameters that appear after the last “--” may be copied into the bootloader configuration for the installed system (if supported by the installer for the bootloader). The installer will automatically filter out any options (like preconfiguration options) that it recognizes.
Current linux kernels (2.6.9 and later) accept a maximum of 32 command line options and 32 environment options, including any options added by default for the installer. If these numbers are exceeded, the kernel will panic (crash). (For earlier kernels, these numbers were lower.) |
For most installations some of the default options in your bootloader
configuration file, like vga=normal
, may be safely
removed which may allow you to add more options for preseeding.
It may not always be possible to specify values with spaces for boot parameters, even if you delimit them with quotes. |
There are several features of Debian Installer that combine to allow fairly simple command lines at the boot prompt to result in arbitrarily complex customized automatic installs. To illustrate this, here are some examples that can be used at the boot prompt:
auto url=autoserver
This relies on there being a DHCP server that will get the machine to
the point where autoserver
can be resolved by DNS,
perhaps after adding the local domain if that was provided by DHCP.
If this was done at a site where the domain is
example.com
, and they have a reasonably sane DHCP
setup, it would result in the preseed file being retrieved from
http://autoserver.example.com/d-i/intrepid/./preseed.cfg
.
The last part of that url (d-i/intrepid/./preseed.cfg
)
is taken from auto-install/defaultroot
. By default
this includes the directory intrepid
to allow future versions
to specify their own codename and let people migrate forwards in a
controlled manner. The /./
bit is used to indicate
a root, relative to which subsequent paths can be anchored (for use in
preseed/include and preseed/run). This allows files to be specified
either as full URLs, paths starting with / that are thus anchored, or
even paths relative to the location where the last preseed file was
found. This can be used to construct more portable scripts where an
entire hierarchy of scripts can be moved to a new location without
breaking it, for example copying the files onto a USB stick when they
started out on a web server. In this example, if the preseed file
sets preseed/run
to
/scripts/late_command.sh
then the file will be
fetched from
http://autoserver.example.com/d-i/intrepid/./scripts/late_command.sh
.
If there is no local DHCP or DNS infrastructure, or if you do not want to
use the default path to preseed.cfg
, you can still
use an explicit url, and if you don't use the /./
element it will be anchored to the start of the path (i.e. the third
/
in the URL). Here is an example that requires minimal
support from the local network infrastructure:
auto url=http://192.168.1.2/path/to/mypreseed.file
The way this works is that:
-
if the URL is missing a protocol, http is assumed,
-
if the hostname section contains no periods, it has the domain derived from DHCP appended to it, and
-
if there's no
/
's after the hostname, then the default path is added.
In addition to specifying the url, you can also specify settings that
do not directly affect the behavior of debian-installer
itself, but can be passed
through to scripts specified using preseed/run
in the loaded preseed file. At present, the only example of
this is auto-install/classes
, which has an alias
classes
. This can be used thus:
auto url=example.com
classes=class_A;class_B
The classes could for example denote the type of system to be installed, or the localization to be used.
It is of course possible to extend this concept, and if you do, it is
reasonable to use the auto-install namespace for this. So one might have
something like auto-install/style
which is then used
in your scripts. If you feel the need to do this, please mention it on
the <[email protected]>
mailing list so that we
can avoid namespace conflicts, and perhaps add an alias for the parameter
for you.
The auto
boot label is not yet defined on all
architectures. The same effect may be achieved by simply adding the two
parameters auto=true priority=critical
to the kernel
command line. The auto
parameter is an alias for
auto-install/enable
and controls the delay of the
locale and keyboard questions until after there has been a chance to
preseed them, while priority
is an alias for
debconf/priority
and setting it to
critical
stops any questions with a lower priority
from being asked.
Additional options that may be of interest while attempting to
automate an install while using DHCP are: interface=auto
netcfg/dhcp_timeout=60
which makes the machine choose the
first viable NIC and be more patient about getting a reply to its
DHCP query.
An extensive example of how to use this framework, including example scripts and classes, can be found on the website of its developer. The examples available there also show many other nice effects that can be achieved by creative use of preconfiguration. |
The following aliases can be useful when using (auto mode) preseeding.
auto | auto-install/enable |
classes | auto-install/classes |
fb | debian-installer/framebuffer |
locale | debian-installer/locale |
priority | debconf/priority |
file | preseed/file |
url | preseed/url |
interface | netcfg/choose_interface |
hostname | netcfg/get_hostname |
domain | netcfg/get_domain |
protocol | mirror/protocol |
suite | mirror/suite |
It's also possible to use DHCP to specify a preconfiguration file to download from the network. DHCP allows specifying a filename. Normally this is a file to netboot, but if it appears to be an URL then installation media that support network preseeding will download the file from the URL and use it as a preconfiguration file. Here is an example of how to set it up in the dhcpd.conf for version 3 of the ISC DHCP server (the dhcp3-server Ubuntu package).
if substring (option vendor-class-identifier, 0, 3) = "d-i" { filename "http://host/preseed.cfg"; }
Note that the above example limits this filename to DHCP clients that identify themselves as "d-i", so it will not affect regular DHCP clients, but only the installer. You can also put the text in a stanza for only one particular host to avoid preseeding all installs on your network.
A good way to use the DHCP preseeding is to only preseed values specific to your network, such as the Ubuntu mirror to use. This way installs on your network will automatically get a good mirror selected, but the rest of the installation can be performed interactively. Using DHCP preseeding to fully automate Ubuntu installs should only be done with care.
[17] The owner of a debconf variable (or template) is normally the name of the package that contains the corresponding debconf template. For variables used in the installer itself the owner is “d-i”. Templates and variables can have more than one owner which helps to determine whether they can be removed from the debconf database if the package is purged.