This is Sabotage, an experimental distribution based on musl libc and busybox.
Currently Sabotage supports i386, x86_64, MIPS, PowerPC32 and ARM(v4t+). ARM hardfloat (hf) is supported via crosscompilation of stage1, since it requires a recent GCC which we can't easily bootstrap in stage0 due to library dependencies of GCC introduced with 4.3.
The preferred way to build Sabotage is using a native Linux environment for the desired architecture. It is now also possible to cross-compile large parts of it. As cross-compiling is hairy and support for it is quite new, expect breakage. Native builds are well tested and considered stable.
- ~4G free disk space.
- A Linux 3.8+ host kernel with USER_NS support, for entering native chroots without root.
- A Linux 2.6+ host kernel can be used, but requires root access.
- A
gcc
4.x tool chain. git
, to check out the repository.bzip2
,sed
,patch
,tar
,wc
,wget
andxz
are needed to run the build script.- Lots of time and a fair bit of Linux knowledge.
This system has built natively on Debian 6 & 7, Fedora 18 & 21, Ubuntu 14.04, Ubuntu 16.04, openSUSE 13.2, Alpine 3.1.2 and Void Linux.
You can bootstrap your own build from the scripts at:
https://github.com/sabotage-linux/sabotage
Download ready-to-boot QEMU/VirtualBox disk images that you may also extract the rootfs from:
- DE : http://ftp.barfooze.de/pub/sabotage/
- GR : http://foss.aueb.gr/mirrors/linux/sabotage/
- FR : http://mirrors.2f30.org/sabotage/
The DE mirror is the master from which the other mirrors are periodically synced.
SHA512 checksums for releases get posted on the mailing lists, archived here:
http://openwall.com/lists/sabotage/
READ THE COOKBOOK FIRST BEFORE POSTING.
DO NOT RUN SCRIPTS YOU HAVE NOT READ.
$ cp KEEP/config.stage0 config
$ vi config
Set the SABOTAGE_BUILDDIR
, A
, and MAKE_THREADS
variables.
You may usually ignore the other values.
Both the config file and the COOKBOOK cover the meaning of these variables.
NOTE: It is possible to build an i386 Sabotage from within an existing 32-bit
chroot on a 64-bit system.
The enter-chroot
script automatically handles this scenario.
$ ./build-stage0 # ~2min on 3GHz 8core, 75min on ARM A8 800Mhz
$ ./enter-chroot
Once inside the chroot:
$ butch install stage1 # Installs core system + build chain
ATTENTION: if you're using void or arch linux, building gcc630 in stage1 might fail due to a buggy ld. there's a workaround though: #505
At this point, stage1 is complete and your Sabotage chroot is set up. There are two optional steps to consider at this time:
$ /src/utils/clean-stage1.sh # remove unneeded bootstrap packages
$ /src/utils/rebuild-stage1.sh # rebuild core packages with the stage1 gcc
Rebuilding stage1 will not only optimize the packages built with the older bootstrap compiler, but will also ensure that your builds are reproducible and will match the results of others.
You may also install optional packages:
$ butch install core # base developer system
$ butch install xorg # install everything needed for X11
$ butch install world # almost everything
You may list available packages by using ls /src/pkg
.
If you wish to build the default kernel:
$ butch install kernel
Run butch
and look at the usage information for further options.
butch
uses build templates that allow for a high level of customization.
KEEP/butch_build_template.txt
is the base template used by Sabotage.
It provides a tuned config.cache
for faster configure runs.
It also installs packages into /opt
, creates file lists, etc.
An alternative bootstrap path is also available (for x86_64 and i386) which minimises the influence of the host system on the stage0 build. It builds a small chroot containing bootsh and the sabotage sources, which can then bootstrap itself into the stage0 build in an isolated environment. This effectively reduces the binary seed provided by the host system from around 50MB to under 1MB. The procedure differs slightly from above:
$ ./create-minimal-rootfs # ~10s on 3GHz 16-core
$ ./enter-chroot boot.sh
Once inside the chroot:
$ /src/utils/boot-stage0.sh
$ butch install stage1
When finished compiling, exit the chroot and either:
- Run
utils/root-perms.sh /path/to/rootfs
to fix permissions - Use the rootfs directly, by copying it to some disk.
- Use
utils/run-emulator.sh
to boot the system in QEMU. Running in QEMU has poor HDD performance, as the FS is mounted via 9P protocol. It's not recommended for building packages, but it's practical for testing. - Use
utils/write-hd-image.sh
to create an image file. The image file boots in QEMU. To convert it into VirtualBox format useVBoxManage convertfromraw
.
The default root password is "sabotage".
Start the sshd service using sv u sshd
, which will create keys on first use.
To make the service autostart on boot, remove /etc/service/sshd/down
.
Edit /etc/rc.local
for other things to autostart, such as network
configuration, DHCP, console keymapping...
If you have X installed, edit the example /bin/X
for the correct evdev
settings, then run startx
.
Check /etc/xinitrc
for X11 keyboard configuration.
- musl-cross or musl-cross-make for your target arch.
butch
installed for the build host in $PATH (since it lives in KEEP/bin, adding that to $PATH will also do).pkgconf
symlinked as pkg-config in $PATH, before other pkg-config versions. a standardpkg-config
installed on the host may also work, but is untested.- Packages may have a
deps.host
section listing further packages required on the host.
The only supported cross-compile setup is using a Sabotage host that has the same packages installed as the ones you wish to compile, but it was also successfully used on non-sabotage hosts.
If you intend to cross-compile only packages written in C, the choice of the
version of your cross-compiler is not important. If you however intend to
compile also C++ packages, you should use the same GCC version that is built
as default during stage1 (currently GCC 6.5.0) from musl-cross-make
repo.
that is necessary so the applications are built against the same libstdc++
they'll be bundled together with (if they use dynamic linking).
additionally, the cross toolchain needs to use the identical (currently 2.27)
or an older binutils version as in our binutils
package.
newer binutils often immediately default to new features that the older versions
can't deal with (e.g. richfelker/musl-cross-make#73 )
The cross-compile setup of sabotage can be used to either build individual packages for a different architecture, or a complete sabotage environment. If using the former, you may want to export STATICBUILD=1 to build the packages statically, if possible (some packages depend on dynamic linking to work correctly, for example to load modules/plugins at runtime).
$ mkdir x-prefix/powerpc
$ cd x-prefix/powerpc
$ cp SABOTAGEDIR/KEEP/config.cross config
$ vi config # set your vars
$ CONFIG=./config SABOTAGEDIR/utils/setup-rootfs.sh # initialize rootfs
$ CONFIG=./config butch install nano # start building stuff
Much like a native build, a config file is copied and edited.
utils/setup-rootfs.sh
is run instead of ./build-stage0
to construct the
new root.
Finally, we use butch
to start cross-compiling and installing packages into
it.
Unlike native compilation, you don't have to build any stages, you can
immediately start compiling the packages you're interested in. If you intend
to use the resulting rootfs to boot into, you should however start with building
musl
, stage1
, and if you want to use the resulting rootfs as a full sabotage
installation with development tools, also the package base-dev
.
Please use unified diff
format (diff -u
) for patches.
It is necessary that you create git
branches for your work.
This allows your changes to be checked out and rebased as needed, without merge
conflicts.
Do not commit more than one change/package in a single commit. Use a meaningful commit message that mentions the package name. Please follow the style and conventions of your fellow contributors.
When creating packages, try starting from the autoconf template:
$ cp KEEP/pkg_skel/autoconf pkg/my-new-pkg
There are other convenient templates located in KEEP/pkg_skel/
as well.
Try running utils/dlinfo.sh
:
$ utils/dlinfo.sh http://1.2.3.4/my_new_pkg.tar.xz
utils/dlinfo.sh
will return the file stats and sha512sum for easy copying
and pasting into your new package.
Package names may consist of the following characters: a-z 0-9 - i.e: lower-case and numbers only, dash to separate.
Perl5 modules from cpan must be named as perl5-Module-Submodule, for examples perl5-XML-Parser. Uppercase should be applied exactly as in the module name.
Python modules must be named as python-module. example: python-setuptools
Following this convention makes it possible to use package names in regexes or URLs without having to escape or encode/decode them.
Sabotage is designed with limited internet availability in mind. After downloading packages in advance, when you have internet, you may build later offline at your leisure.
Space considerations are a top issue, both bandwidth and HD image size. Sabotage ISOs and images ship with all tarballs to fulfill the GPL. ALWAYS USE a TAR.XZ (preferred) or TAR.BZ2 download URL.
Please do not use FTP mirrors. FTP is a broken, ancient protocol.
Downloads from git or other source repositories are not desired. This would add an internet connection as a build-time dependency.
Even though the sabotage linux team is at the moment rather small, we try to
keep all packages up-to-date, if possible. Updating a package usually requires
at least one test build, and eventually one or more fixes and another rebuild
for each fix. So under some circumstances, this might require several hours of
work. Since our time is limited, some non-core packages that lack a maintainer
and we consider of low importance will be updated (upstream URL) without a build
test and marked as [untested]
in the commit message.
Those packages may or may not build. If you find a build error in such a package
feel free to report the error or even better, fix it, make a PR and claim
maintainership.
Sabotage originally was a distribution curated by chris2, based around shell scripts and Plan 9's mk. This was possible through the help and inspiration of dalias, niklata, garbeam, pikhq, xmw, gaf and Arch Linux. Special thanks go to @AequoreaVictoria for years of support and countless contributions.
There is was a mailing list: [email protected]
Email [email protected] and follow its instructions to
subscribe.
Archives available: http://openwall.com/lists/sabotage/
The mailing list is currently unmaintained. please use IRC.
/join #sabotage on irc.libera.chat for real time help.
READ THE COOKBOOK FIRST BEFORE POSTING.
Bitcoins are welcome:
1HXhSKSyBUGAAga29WbpTkKGpruQq9J8Bb