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1dracut
2======
3Harald Hoyer <harald@redhat.com>
4v2.0, March 2011
5
6:language: bash
7
8= Introduction
9This section is a modified version of
10http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Initrd which is licensed under the
11Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
12
13== Definition
14An _initial ramdisk_ is a temporary file system used in the boot process of the
15Linux kernel. _initrd_ and _initramfs_ refer to slightly different schemes for
16loading this file system into memory. Both are commonly used to make
17preparations before the real root file system can be mounted.
18
19== Rationale
20Many Linux distributions ship a single, generic kernel image that is intended to
21boot as wide a variety of hardware as possible. The device drivers for this
22generic kernel image are included as loadable modules, as it is not possible to
23statically compile them all into the one kernel without making it too large to
24boot from computers with limited memory or from lower-capacity media like floppy
25disks.
26
27This then raises the problem of detecting and loading the modules necessary to
28mount the root file system at boot time (or, for that matter, deducing where or
29what the root file system is).
30
31To further complicate matters, the root file system may be on a software RAID
32volume, LVM, NFS (on diskless workstations), or on an encrypted partition. All
33of these require special preparations to mount.
34
35Another complication is kernel support for hibernation, which suspends the
36computer to disk by dumping an image of the entire system to a swap partition or
37a regular file, then powering off. On next boot, this image has to be made
38accessible before it can be loaded back into memory.
39
40To avoid having to hardcode handling for so many special cases into the kernel,
41an initial boot stage with a temporary root file system
42—now dubbed early user space— is used. This root file system would contain
43user-space helpers that would do the hardware detection, module loading and
44device discovery necessary to get the real root file system mounted.
45
46== Implementation
47An image of this initial root file system (along with the kernel image) must be
48stored somewhere accessible by the Linux bootloader or the boot firmware of the
49computer. This can be:
50
51* The root file system itself
52* A boot image on an optical disc
53* A small ext2/ext3 or FAT-formatted partition on a local disk
54 (a _boot partition_)
55* A TFTP server (on systems that can boot from Ethernet)
56
57The bootloader will load the kernel and initial root file system image into
58memory and then start the kernel, passing in the memory address of the image.
59
60Depending on which algorithms were compiled statically into it, the kernel can
61currently unpack initrd/initramfs images compressed with gzip, bzip2 and LZMA.
62
63== Mount preparations
64dracut can generate a customized initrams image which contains only whatever is
65necessary to boot some particular computer, such as ATA, SCSI and filesystem
66kernel modules (host-only mode).
67
68dracut can also generate a more generic initramfs image (default mode).
69
70dracut's initramfs starts only with the device name of the root file system (or
71its UUID) and must discover everything else at boot time. A complex cascade of
72tasks must be performed to get the root file system mounted:
73
74* Any hardware drivers that the boot process depends on must be loaded. All
75kernel modules for common storage devices are packed onto the initramfs and then
76udev pulls in modules matching the computer's detected hardware.
77
78* On systems which display a boot rd.splash screen, the video hardware must be
79initialized and a user-space helper started to paint animations onto the display
80in lockstep with the boot process.
81
1d22c670 82* If the root file system is on NFS, dracut does then:
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83** Bring up the primary network interface.
84** Invoke a DHCP client, with which it can obtain a DHCP lease.
85** Extract the name of the NFS share and the address of the NFS server from the
86lease.
87** Mount the NFS share.
88
89* If the root file system appears to be on a software RAID device, there is no
90way of knowing which devices the RAID volume spans; the standard MD utilities
91must be invoked to scan all available block devices with a raid signature and
92bring the required ones online.
93
94* If the root file system appears to be on a logical volume, the LVM utilities
95must be invoked to scan for and activate the volume group containing it.
96
97* If the root file system is on an encrypted block device:
98** Invoke a helper script to prompt the user to type in a passphrase and/or
99insert a hardware token (such as a smart card or a USB security dongle).
100
101* Create a decryption target with the device mapper.
102
103dracut uses udev, an event-driven hotplug agent, which invokes helper programs
104as hardware devices, disk partitions and storage volumes matching certain rules
105come online. This allows discovery to run in parallel, and to progressively
106cascade into arbitrary nestings of LVM, RAID or encryption to get at the root
107file system.
108
109When the root file system finally becomes visible:
110
111* Any maintenance tasks which cannot run on a mounted root file system
112are done.
113* The root file system is mounted read-only.
114* Any processes which must continue running (such as the rd.splash screen helper
115and its command FIFO) are hoisted into the newly-mounted root file system.
116
117The final root file system cannot simply be mounted over /, since that would
118make the scripts and tools on the initial root file system inaccessible for any
119final cleanup tasks. On an initramfs, the initial root file system cannot be
120rotated away. Instead, it is simply emptied and the final root file system
121mounted over the top.
122
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123== Dracut on shutdown
124
125On a systemd driven system, the dracut initramfs is also used for the shutdown procedure.
126
127The following steps are executed during a shutdown:
128
129* systemd switches to the shutdown.target
130* systemd starts /lib/systemd/system/shutdown.target.wants/dracut-shutdown.service
131* dracut-shutdown.service executes /usr/lib/dracut/dracut-initramfs-restore
132 which unpacks the initramfs to /run/initramfs
133* systemd finishes shutdown.target
134* systemd kills all processes
135* systemd tries to unmount everything and mounts the remaining read-only
136* systemd checks, if there is a /run/initramfs/shutdown executable
137* if yes, it does a pivot_root to /run/initramfs and executes ./shutdown.
138 The old root is then mounted on /oldroot. /usr/lib/dracut/modules.d/99shutdown/shutdown.sh is the shutdown executable.
139* shutdown will try to umount every /oldroot mount and calls the various shutdown hooks from the dracut modules
140
141This ensures, that all devices are disassembled and unmounted cleanly.
142
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143= User Manual
144
145== Creating an initramfs Image
146To create a initramfs image, the most simple command is:
147----
148# dracut
149----
150
151This will generate a general purpose initramfs image, with all possible
152functionality resulting of the combination of the installed dracut modules and
153system tools. The image is /boot/initramfs-_++<kernel version>++_.img and
154contains the kernel modules of the currently active kernel with version
155_++<kernel version>++_.
156
157If the initramfs image already exists, dracut will display an error message, and
158to overwrite the existing image, you have to use the --force option.
159----
160# dracut --force
161----
162
163If you want to specify another filename for the resulting image you would issue
164a command like:
165----
166# dracut foobar.img
167----
168
169To generate an image for a specific kernel version, the command would be:
170----
171# dracut foobar.img 2.6.40-1.rc5.f20
172----
173
174A shortcut to generate the image at the default location for a specific kernel
175version is:
176----
e65caf36 177# dracut --kver 2.6.40-1.rc5.f20
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178----
179
180If you want to create lighter, smaller initramfs images, you may want to specify
181the --host-only or -H option. Using this option, the resulting image will
182contain only those dracut modules, kernel modules and filesystems, which are
183needed to boot this specific machine. This has the drawback, that you can't put
184the disk on another controller or machine, and that you can't switch to another
185root filesystem, without recreating the initramfs image. The usage of the
186--host-only option is only for experts and you will have to keep the broken
187pieces. At least keep a copy of a general purpose image (and corresponding
188kernel) as a fallback to rescue your system.
189
190=== Inspecting the Contents
191To see the contents of the image created by dracut, you can use the lsinitrd tool.
192----
193# lsinitrd /boot/initramfs-$(uname -r).img | less
194----
195
196To display the contents of a file in the initramfs also use the lsinitrd tool:
197----
198# lsinitrd /boot/initramfs-$(uname -r).img /etc/ld.so.conf
199include ld.so.conf.d/*.conf
200----
201
202=== Adding dracut Modules
203Some dracut modules are turned off by default and have to be activated manually.
204You can do this by adding the dracut modules to the configuration file
205_/etc/dracut.conf_ or _/etc/dracut.conf.d/myconf.conf_. See <<dracutconf5>>.
206You can also add dracut modules on the command line
207by using the -a or --add option:
208----
209# dracut --add bootchart initramfs-bootchart.img
210----
211
212To see a list of available dracut modules, use the --list-modules option:
213----
214# dracut --list-modules
215----
216
217or, if you have a dracut version earlier than +008+, issue the command:
218----
219# for mod in /usr/lib/dracut/modules.d/*; do echo ${mod##*/??}; done
220----
221
222=== Omitting dracut Modules
223Sometimes you don't want a dracut module to be included for reasons of speed,
224size or functionality. To do this, either specify the omit_dracutmodules
225variable in the _dracut.conf_ or _/etc/dracut.conf.d/myconf.conf_ configuration
226file (see <<dracutconf5>>), or use the -o or --omit option
227on the command line:
228----
229# dracut -o "multipath lvm" no-multipath-lvm.img
230----
231
232=== Adding Kernel Modules
233If you need a special kernel module in the initramfs, which is not
234automatically picked up by dracut, you have the use the --add-drivers option
235on the command line or the drivers vaiable in the _/etc/dracut.conf_
236or _/etc/dracut.conf.d/myconf.conf_ configuration file (see <<dracutconf5>>):
237----
238# dracut --add-drivers mymod initramfs-with-mymod.img
239----
240
241== Boot parameters
242The generated initramfs.img file normally does not contain any system
243configuration files (except for some special exceptions), so the configuration
244has to be done on the kernel command line. With this flexibility, you can easily
245boot from a changed root partition, without the need to recompile the initramfs
246image. So, you could completly change your root partition (move it inside a md
247raid with encryption and LVM on top), as long as you specify the correct
248filesystem LABEL or UUID on the kernel command line for your root device, dracut
249will find it and boot from it.
250
251The kernel command line usually can be configured in _/boot/grub/grub.conf_, if
252grub is your bootloader and it also can be edited in the real boot process in
253the grub menu.
254
255The kernel command line can also be provided by the dhcp server with the
256root-path option. See <<NetworkBoot>>.
257
258For a full reference of all kernel command line parameters, see <<dracut8>>.
259
260=== Specifying the root Device
261This is the only option dracut really needs to boot from your root partition.
262Because your root partition can live in various environments, there are a lot of
263formats for the root= option. The most basic one is root=_++<path to device
264node>++_:
265----
266root=/dev/sda2
267----
268
269Because device node names can change, dependent on the drive ordering, you are
270encouraged to use the filesystem identifier (UUID) or filesystem label (LABEL)
271to specify your root partition:
272----
273root=UUID=19e9dda3-5a38-484d-a9b0-fa6b067d0331
274----
275
276or
277
278----
279root=LABEL=myrootpartitionlabel
280----
281
282To see all UUIDs or LABELs on your system, do:
283----
284# ls -l /dev/disk/by-uuid
285----
286
287or
288
289----
290# ls -l /dev/disk/by-label
291----
292
293If your root partition is on the network see <<NetworkBoot>>.
294
295=== Keyboard Settings
296If you have to input passwords for encrypted disk volumes, you might want to set
297the keyboard layout and specify a display font.
298
299A typical german kernel command would contain:
300----
301vconsole.font=latarcyrheb-sun16 vconsole.keymap=de-latin1-nodeadkeys locale.LANG=de_DE.UTF-8
302----
303
304Setting these options can override the setting stored on your system, if you use
305a modern init system, like systemd.
306
307For dracut versions prior to version +008+ the line would look like:
308----
309LANG=de_DE.UTF-8 SYSFONT=latarcyrheb-sun16 KEYBOARDTYPE=pc KEYTABLE=de-latin1-nodeadkeys
310----
311
312=== Blacklisting Kernel Modules
313Sometimes it is required to prevent the automatic kernel module loading of a
314specific kernel module. To do this, just add rd.blacklist=_++<kernel module
315name>++_, with _++<kernel module name>++_ not containing the _.ko_
316suffix, to the kernel command line. For example:
317----
318rd.driver.blacklist=mptsas rd.driver.blacklist=nouveau
319----
320
321The option can be specified multiple times on the kernel command line.
322
323=== Speeding up the Boot Process
324If you want to speed up the boot process, you can specify as much information
325for dracut on the kernel command as possible. For example, you can tell dracut,
326that you root partition is not on a LVM volume or not on a raid partition, or
327that it lives inside a specific crypto LUKS encrypted volume. By default, dracut
328searches everywhere. A typical dracut kernel command line for a plain primary or
329logical partition would contain:
330----
331rd.luks=0 rd.lvm=0 rd.md=0 rd.dm=0
332----
333
334On systems with dracut version prior to +008+ the line would look like:
335----
336rd_NO_LUKS rd_NO_LVM rd_NO_MD rd_NO_DM
337----
338
339This turns off every automatic assembly of LVM, MD raids, DM raids and crypto LUKS.
340
341Of course, you could also omit the dracut modules in the initramfs creation
342process, but then you would lose the posibility to turn it on on demand.
343
344
345[[Injecting]]
346=== Injecting custom Files
347To add your own files to the initramfs image, you have several possibilities.
348
349The --include option let you specify a source path and a target path. For example
350----
3cff5fb5 351# dracut --include cmdline-preset /etc/cmdline.d/mycmdline.conf initramfs-cmdline-pre.img
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352----
353will create an initramfs image, where the file cmdline-preset will be copied
3cff5fb5 354inside the initramfs to _/etc/cmdline.d/mycmdline.conf_. --include can only be specified once.
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355
356
357----
358# mkdir rd.live.overlay
359# mkdir rd.live.overlay/etc
360# mkdir rd.live.overlay/etc/conf.d
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361# mkdir rd.live.overlay/etc/cmdline.d
362# echo "ip=auto" >> rd.live.overlay/etc/cmdline.d/mycmdline.conf
363# echo export FOO=testtest >> rd.live.overlay/etc/conf.d/testvar.conf
364# echo export BAR=testtest >> rd.live.overlay/etc/conf.d/testvar.conf
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365# tree rd.live.overlay/
366rd.live.overlay/
367└── etc
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368 ├── cmdline.d
369 │   └── mycmdline.conf
370 └── conf.d
371 └── testvar.conf
372
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373# dracut --include rd.live.overlay / initramfs-rd.live.overlay.img
374----
375
376This will put the contents of the rd.live.overlay directory into the root of the
377initramfs image.
378
379The --install option let you specify several files, which will get installed in
380the initramfs image at the same location, as they are present on initramfs
381creation time.
382
383
384----
385# dracut --install 'strace fsck.ext3 ssh' initramfs-dbg.img
386----
387
388This will create an initramfs with the strace, fsck.ext3 and ssh executables,
389together with the libraries needed to start those. The --install option can be
390specified multiple times.
391
392
393[[NetworkBoot]]
394== Network Boot
395
396If your root partition is on a network drive, you have to have the network
397dracut modules installed to create a network aware initramfs image.
398
399On a Red Hat Enterprise Linux or Fedora system, this means, you have to install
400the _dracut-network_ rpm package:
401
402
403----
404# yum install dracut-network
405----
406
407The resulting initramfs image can be served by a boot manager residing on your
408local hard drive or it can be served by a PXE/TFTP server.
409
410How to setup your PXE/TFTP server can be found in the
411http://docs.redhat.com/docs/en-US/Red_Hat_Enterprise_Linux/6/html/Storage_Administration_Guide/[Red
412Hat Enterprise Linux Storage Administration Guide].
413
0ae480dc 414If you specify ip=auto on the kernel command line, then dracut asks a dhcp
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415server about the ip adress for the machine. The dhcp server can also serve an
416additional root-path, which will set the root device for dracut. With this
417mechanism, you have static configuration on your client machine and a
418centralized boot configuration on your TFTP/DHCP server. If you can't pass a
3cff5fb5 419kernel command line, then you can inject _/etc/cmdline.d/mycmdline.conf_, with a method described
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420in <<Injecting>>.
421
422
423
424
425=== Reducing the Image Size
426
427To reduce the size of the initramfs, you should create it with by ommitting all
428dracut modules, which you know, you don't need to boot the machine.
429
430You can also specify the exact dracut and kernel modules to produce a very tiny
431initramfs image.
432
433For example for a NFS image, you would do:
434
435
436----
437# dracut -m "nfs network base" initramfs-nfs-only.img
438----
439
440Then you would boot from this image with your target machine and reduce the size
441once more by creating it on the target machine with the --host-only option:
442
443
444----
445# dracut -m "nfs network base" --host-only initramfs-nfs-host-only.img
446----
447
448This will reduce the size of the initramfs image significantly.
449
450
451
452=== NFS Root Device
453
454FIXME
455
456=== iSCSI Root Device
457
458FIXME
459
460=== FCoE Root Device
461
462FIXME
463
464== Troubleshooting
465
466If the boot process does not succeed, you have several options to debug the
467situation. Some of the basic operations are covered here. For more information
468you should also visit:
469http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/How_to_debug_Dracut_problems
470
471
472[[identifying-your-problem-area]]
473=== Identifying your problem area
474. Remove ''rhgb'' and ''quiet'' from the kernel command line
475. Add ''rd.shell'' to the kernel command line. This will present a shell should
476dracut be unable to locate your root device
477. Add ''rd.shell rd.debug log_buf_len=1M'' to the kernel command line so that
478dracut shell commands are printed as they are executed
479. With dracut >= 002-11, you can inspect the rd.debug output with:
480+
481----
482# less /run/initramfs/init.log
483# dmesg | less
484----
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485. With dracut >= 022 and systemd, you can inspect the rd.debug output with:
486----
487# journalctl -ab
488----
64d144ae 489. With dracut >= 025 the file /run/initramfs/sosreport.txt is generated, which contains all the logs and the output of all significant tools, which are mentioned later.
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490
491If you want to save that output, simply mount /boot by hand or insert an USB stick and mount that.
492Then you can store the output for later inspection.
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493
494[[information-to-include-in-your-report]]
495=== Information to include in your report
496
497[[all-bug-reports]]
498==== All bug reports
499In all cases, the following should be mentioned and attached to your bug report:
500
501* The exact kernel command-line used. Typically from the bootloader
502configuration file (e.g. _/etc/grub.conf_) or from _/proc/cmdline_.
503* A copy of your disk partition information from _/etc/fstab_, which might be
504obtained booting an old working initramfs or a rescue medium.
505* A device listing from device-mapper. This can be obtained by running the
a844fb15 506command
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507+
508----
509# dmsetup ls --tree
510----
511+
cce69be6 512* A list of block device attributes. This can be obtained by running the commands:
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513+
514----
515# blkid -p
516# blkid -p -o udev
517----
518* Turn on dracut debugging (see _the 'debugging dracut' section_), and attach
519all relevant information from the boot log. This can be obtained by running the
520command
521+
522----
523# dmesg|grep dracut
524----
525+
526* If you use a dracut configuration file, please include _/etc/dracut.conf_ and
527all files in _/etc/dracut.conf.d/*.conf_
528
529[[logical-volume-management-related-problems]]
530==== Logical Volume Management related problems
531As well as the information from <<all-bug-reports>> include the following
532information:
533
534* Include physical volume information by running the command:
535+
536----
537# lvm pvdisplay
538----
539+
540* Include volume group information by running the command:
541+
542----
543# lvm vgdisplay
544----
545+
546* Include logical volume information by running the command:
547+
548----
549# lvm lvdisplay
550----
551
552[[software-raid-related-problems]]
553==== Software RAID related problems
554As well as the information from <<all-bug-reports>>, include the following
555information:
556
557* If using software RAID disk partitions, please include the output of
558+
559----
560# cat /proc/mdstat
561----
562
563[[network-root-device-related-problems]]
564==== Network root device related problems
565This section details information to include when experiencing problems on a
566system whose root device is located on a network attached volume (e.g. iSCSI,
567NFS or NBD). As well as the information from <<all-bug-reports>>, include the
568following information:
569
570
571* Please include the output of
572+
573----
574# /sbin/ifup <interfacename>
575# ip addr show
576----
577
578[[debugging-dracut]]
579=== Debugging dracut
580
581
582[[configure-a-serial-console]]
583==== Configure a serial console
584
585Successfully debugging dracut will require some form of console
586logging during the system boot. This section documents configuring a
587serial console connection to record boot messages.
588
589. First, enable serial console output for both the kernel and the bootloader.
590. Open the file _/etc/grub.conf_ for editing. Below the line ''timeout=5'', add
591the following:
592+
593----
594serial --unit=0 --speed=9600
595terminal --timeout=5 serial console
596----
597+
598. Also in _/etc/grub.conf_, add the following boot arguemnts to the ''kernel''
599line:
600+
601----
602console=tty0 console=ttyS0,9600
603----
604+
605. When finished, the _/etc/grub.conf_ file should look similar to the example
606below.
607+
608----
609default=0
610timeout=5
611serial --unit=0 --speed=9600
612terminal --timeout=5 serial console
613title Fedora (2.6.29.5-191.fc11.x86_64)
614 root (hd0,0)
615 kernel /vmlinuz-2.6.29.5-191.fc11.x86_64 ro root=/dev/mapper/vg_uc1-lv_root console=tty0 console=ttyS0,9600
616 initrd /dracut-2.6.29.5-191.fc11.x86_64.img
617----
618+
619. More detailed information on how to configure the kernel for console output
620can be found at
621http://www.faqs.org/docs/Linux-HOWTO/Remote-Serial-Console-HOWTO.html#CONFIGURE-KERNEL.
622. Redirecting non-interactive output
623+
624--
625NOTE: You can redirect all non-interactive output to _/dev/kmsg_ and the kernel
626will put it out on the console when it reaches the kernel buffer by doing
627
628----
629# exec >/dev/kmsg 2>&1 </dev/console
630----
631--
632
633[[using-the-dracut-shell]]
634==== Using the dracut shell
635
600c8769 636dracut offers a shell for interactive debugging in the event dracut fails to
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637locate your root filesystem. To enable the shell:
638
639. Add the boot parameter ''rd.shell'' to your bootloader configuration file
640(e.g. _/etc/grub.conf_)
641. Remove the boot arguments ''rhgb'' and ''quiet''
642+
643A sample _/etc/grub.conf_ bootloader configuration file is listed below.
644+
645----
646default=0
647timeout=5
648serial --unit=0 --speed=9600
649terminal --timeout=5 serial console
650title Fedora (2.6.29.5-191.fc11.x86_64)
651 root (hd0,0)
652 kernel /vmlinuz-2.6.29.5-191.fc11.x86_64 ro root=/dev/mapper/vg_uc1-lv_root console=tty0 rd.shell
653 initrd /dracut-2.6.29.5-191.fc11.x86_64.img
654----
655+
656. If system boot fails, you will be dropped into a shell as seen in the example below.
657+
658----
659No root device found
660Dropping to debug shell.
661
662#
663----
664+
665. Use this shell prompt to gather the information requested above (see <<all-bug-reports>>).
666
667[[accessing-the-root-volume-from-the-dracut-shell]]
668==== Accessing the root volume from the dracut shell
669From the dracut debug shell, you can manually perform the task of locating and
670preparing your root volume for boot. The required steps will depend on how your
671root volume is configured. Common scenarios include:
672
673* A block device (e.g. _/dev/sda7_)
674* A LVM logical volume (e.g. _/dev/VolGroup00/LogVol00_)
675* An encrypted device (e.g. _/dev/mapper/luks-4d5972ea-901c-4584-bd75-1da802417d83_)
676* A network attached device (e.g. netroot=iscsi:@192.168.0.4::3260::iqn.2009-02.org.fedoraproject:for.all)
677
678The exact method for locating and preparing will vary. However, to continue with
679a successful boot, the objective is to locate your root volume and create a
680symlink _/dev/root_ which points to the file system. For example, the following
681example demonstrates accessing and booting a root volume that is an encrypted
682LVM Logical volume.
683
684. Inspect your partitions using parted
685+
686----
687# parted /dev/sda -s p
688Model: ATA HTS541060G9AT00 (scsi)
689Disk /dev/sda: 60.0GB
690Sector size (logical/physical): 512B/512B
691Partition Table: msdos
692Number Start End Size Type File system Flags
6931 32.3kB 10.8GB 107MB primary ext4 boot
6942 10.8GB 55.6GB 44.7GB logical lvm
695----
696+
697. You recall that your root volume was a LVM logical volume. Scan and activate
698any logical volumes.
699+
700----
701# lvm vgscan
702# lvm vgchange -ay
703----
704+
705. You should see any logical volumes now using the command blkid:
706+
707----
708# blkid
709/dev/sda1: UUID="3de247f3-5de4-4a44-afc5-1fe179750cf7" TYPE="ext4"
710/dev/sda2: UUID="Ek4dQw-cOtq-5MJu-OGRF-xz5k-O2l8-wdDj0I" TYPE="LVM2_member"
711/dev/mapper/linux-root: UUID="def0269e-424b-4752-acf3-1077bf96ad2c" TYPE="crypto_LUKS"
712/dev/mapper/linux-home: UUID="c69127c1-f153-4ea2-b58e-4cbfa9257c5e" TYPE="ext3"
713/dev/mapper/linux-swap: UUID="47b4d329-975c-4c08-b218-f9c9bf3635f1" TYPE="swap"
714----
715+
716. From the output above, you recall that your root volume exists on an encrypted
717block device. Following the guidance disk encryption guidance from the
718Installation Guide, you unlock your encrypted root volume.
719+
720----
721# UUID=$(cryptsetup luksUUID /dev/mapper/linux-root)
722# cryptsetup luksOpen /dev/mapper/linux-root luks-$UUID
723Enter passphrase for /dev/mapper/linux-root:
724Key slot 0 unlocked.
725----
726+
727. Next, make a symbolic link to the unlocked root volume
728+
729----
730# ln -s /dev/mapper/luks-$UUID /dev/root
731----
732+
733. With the root volume available, you may continue booting the system by exiting
734the dracut shell
735+
736----
737# exit
738----
739
740[[additional-dracut-boot-parameters]]
741==== Additional dracut boot parameters
742For more debugging options, see <<dracutkerneldebug>> in <<dracutcmdline7>>.
743
744= Developer Manual
745
746== dracut Components
747
748dracut uses a modular system to build and extend the initramfs image. All
749modules are located in _/usr/lib/dracut/modules.d_ or in _<git-src>/modules.d_.
750The most basic dracut module is _99base_. In _99base_ the initial shell script
751init is defined, which gets run by the kernel after initramfs loading. Although
752you can replace init with your own version of _99base_, this is not encouraged.
753Instead you should use, if possible, the hooks of dracut. All hooks, and the
754point of time in which they are executed, are described in <<stages>>.
755
756The main script, which creates the initramfs is dracut itsself. It parses all
757arguments and sets up the directory, in which everything is installed. It then
758executes all check, install, installkernel scripts found in the modules, which
759are to be processed. After everything is installed, the install directory is
760archived and compressed to the final initramfs image. All helper functions used
761by check, install and installkernel are found in in the file _dracut-functions_.
762These shell functions are available to all module installer (install,
763installkernel) scripts, without the need to source _dracut-functions_.
764
765A module can check the preconditions for install and installkernel with the
766check script. Also dependencies can be expressed with check. If a module passed
767check, install and installkernel will be called to install all of the necessary
768files for the module. To split between kernel and non-kernel parts of the
769installation, all kernel module related parts have to be in installkernel. All
770other files found in a module directory are module specific and mostly are hook
771scripts and udev rules.
772
773
774[[stages]]
775== Boot Process Stages
776
777The init script in _99base_ is the main script, which prepares the root file
778system for usage, runs udev, mounts the real root device, kills the remaining
779processes, and switches to the real root device for further booting. dracut
780modules can insert custom script at various points, to control the boot process.
781These hooks are plain directories containing shell scripts ending with ".sh",
782which are sourced by init.
783Common used functions are in _dracut-lib.sh_, which can be sourced by any script.
784
785
786
787=== Basic Setup
788
789The first thing init does, is to mount _/proc_ and _/sys_ and manually create
790the basic device nodes and symbolic links in _/dev_ needed to execute basic
791commands. Then logging is setup according to kernel command line arguments.
792_/dev/pts_ and _/dev/shm_ are mounted and the first hook is sourced.
793
794
795
796=== Hook: cmdline
797
798The _cmdline_ hook is a place to insert scripts to parse the kernel command line
799and prepare the later actions, like setting up udev rules and configuration
800files.
801
802In this hook the most important environment variable is defined: root. The
803second one is rootok, which indicates, that a module claimed to be able to parse
804the root defined. So for example, **root=**__iscsi:....__ will be claimed by the
805iscsi dracut module, which then sets rootok.
806
807=== Hook: pre-udev
808
809This hook is executed right after the cmdline hook and a check if root and
810rootok were set. Here modules can take action with the final root, and before
811udev has been run.
812
813
814
815=== Start Udev
816
817Now udev is started and the logging for udev is setup.
818
819
820
821=== Hook: pre-trigger
822
823In this hook, you can set udev environment variables with **udevadm control
824--property=KEY=_value_** or control the further execution of udev with
825udevadm.
826
827
828
829=== Trigger Udev
830
831udev is triggered by calling udevadm trigger, which sends add events for all
832devices and subsystems.
833
834
835
836=== Main Loop
837
838Now the main loop of 99base/init begins. Here we loop until udev has settled and
839all scripts in _initqueue/finished_ returned true. In this loop there are three
840hooks, where scripts can be inserted by calling /sbin/initqueue.
841
842
843
844==== Initqueue
845
846This hook gets executed every time a script is inserted here, regardless of the
847udev state.
848
849
850
851==== Initqueue settled
852
853This hooks gets executed every time udev has settled.
854
855
856
857==== Initqueue timeout
858
859This hooks gets executed, when the main loop counter becomes half of the
860rd.retry counter.
861
862
863
864==== Initqueue finished
865
866This hook is called after udev has settled and if all scripts herein return 0
867the main loop will be ended.
868
869
870
871=== Hook: pre-mount
872
873Before the root device is mounted all scripts in the hook pre-mount are
874executed. In some cases (e.g. NFS) the real root device is already mounted,
875though.
876
877
878
879=== Hook: mount
880
881This hook is mainly to mount the real root device.
882
883
884
885=== Hook: pre-pivot
886
eef7649e 887This hook is called before cleanup hook, This is a good place for
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DY
888actions other than cleanups which need to be called before pivot.
889
890
eef7649e 891=== Hook: cleanup
2e7257a2 892
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893This hook is the last hook and is called before init finally switches root to
894the real root device. This is a good place to clean up and kill processes not
895needed anymore.
896
897
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898=== Cleanup and switch_root
899
900Init kills all udev processes, cleans up the environment, sets up the arguments
901for the real init process and finally calls switch_root. switch_root removes the
902whole filesystem hierarchy of the initramfs, chroot()s to the real root device
903and calls /sbin/init with the specified arguments.
904
905To ensure all files in the initramfs hierarchy can be removed, all processes
906still running from the initramfs should not have any open file descriptors left.
907
908
909
910== Network Infrastructure
911
912
913FIXME
914
915
916== Writing a Module
917
918A simple example module is _96insmodpost_, which modprobes a kernel module after
919udev has settled and the basic device drivers have been loaded.
920
921All module installation information is in the file module-setup.sh.
922
923First we create a check() function, which just exits with 0 indicating that this
924module should be included by default.
925
926check():
927
928
929----
930return 0
931----
932
933The we create the install() function, which installs a cmdline hook with
934priority number 20 called _parse-insmodpost.sh_. It also installs the
935_insmodpost.sh_ script in _/sbin_.
936
937install():
938
939
940----
941inst_hook cmdline 20 "$moddir/parse-insmodpost.sh"
942inst_simple "$moddir/insmodpost.sh" /sbin/insmodpost.sh
943----
944
945The _pase-instmodpost.sh_ parses the kernel command line for a argument
946rd.driver.post, blacklists the module from being autoloaded and installs the
947hook _insmodpost.sh_ in the _initqueue/settled_.
948
949_parse-insmodpost.sh_:
950
951
952----
953for p in $(getargs rd.driver.post=); do
954 echo "blacklist $p" >> /etc/modprobe.d/initramfsblacklist.conf
955 _do_insmodpost=1
956done
957
958[ -n "$_do_insmodpost" ] && /sbin/initqueue --settled --unique --onetime /sbin/insmodpost.sh
959unset _do_insmodpost
960
961----
962
963_insmodpost.sh_, which is called in the _initqueue/settled_ hook will just
964modprobe the kernel modules specified in all rd.driver.post kernel command line
965parameters. It runs after udev has settled and is only called once (--onetime).
966
967_insmodpost.sh_:
968
969
970----
971. /lib/dracut-lib.sh
972
973for p in $(getargs rd.driver.post=); do
974 modprobe $p
975done
976
977----
978
979
980
981=== check()
982
983_check()_ is called by dracut to evaluate the inclusion of a dracut module in
984the initramfs.
985
986$hostonly:: If the $hostonly variable is set, then the module check() function
987should be in "hostonly" mode, which means, that the check() should only return
9880, if the module is really needed to boot this specific host.
989
990check() should return with:
991
9920:: Include the dracut module in the initramfs.
993
9941:: Do not include the dracut module. The requirements are not fullfilled
995(missing tools, etc.)
996
997255:: Only include the dracut module, if another module requires it or if
998explicitly specified in the config file or on the argument list.
999
1000
1001
1002=== depends()
1003
1004The function depends() should echo all other dracut module names the module
1005depends on.
1006
1007
1008
1009=== install()
1010
1011dracut_install
1012
1013inst
1014
1015inst_hook
1016
1017inst_rules
1018
1019
1020
1021
1022
1023=== installkernel()
1024
1025instmods
1026
1027
1028
1029=== Creation Functions
1030
1031
1032FIXME
1033
1034
1035=== Initramfs Functions
1036
1037
1038FIXME
1039
1040
1041=== Network Modules
1042
1043FIXME
1044
3d3f32ae
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1045
1046:leveloffset: 1
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1047[[dracut8]]
1048include::dracut.8.asc[]
1049
1050[[dracutconf5]]
1051include::dracut.conf.5.asc[]
1052
1053[[dracutcmdline7]]
1054include::dracut.cmdline.7.asc[]
1055
e5efb6a7
HH
1056[[lsinitrd1]]
1057include::lsinitrd.1.asc[]
1058
1059[[mkinitrd8]]
1060include::mkinitrd.8.asc[]
1061
3d3f32ae 1062:leveloffset: 0
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HH
1063[appendix]
1064License
1065-------
1066This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike
1067License. To view a copy of this license, visit
1068http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/ or send a letter to Creative
1069Commons, 559 Nathan Abbott Way, Stanford, California 94305, USA.
1070