installation instructions for Turris Omnia

feels like a milestone, or at least a big step towards one
This commit is contained in:
Daniel Barlow 2024-02-04 18:20:04 +00:00
parent c8154a2db9
commit 49ec4a2961
2 changed files with 112 additions and 12 deletions

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@ -10,19 +10,119 @@
to work (and provides you an easy rollback if you decide you don't
like Liminix after all).
The install process is designed so that you should not need to open
the device and add a serial console (although it may be handy
for visibility and in case anything goes wrong). In outline
The install process has two stages, and is intended that you
should not need to open the device and add a serial console
(although it may be handy for visibility, and in case anything
goes wrong). First we build a minimal installation/recovery
system, then we reboot into that recovery image to prepare the
device for the full target install.
1. build a "recovery" system with useful btrfs tools
2. boot that system using TFTP or a USB stick
3. once booted, mount the real root filesystem on /mnt
4. take a snapshot using schnapps, and then delete everything
5. use min-copy-closure -d /mnt/@ to copy the real configuration
to the device
6. reboot into a fully operational system
Installation using a USB stick
==============================
First, build the image for the USB stick. Review
:file:`examples/recovery.nix` in order to change the default
root password (which is ``secret``) and/or the SSH keys, then
build it with
$ nix-build -I liminix-config=./examples/recovery.nix \
--arg device "import ./devices/turris-omnia" \
-A outputs.mbrimage -o mbrimage
$ file -L mbrimage
mbrimage: DOS/MBR boot sector; partition 1 : ID=0x83, active, start-CHS (0x0,0,5), end-CHS (0x6,130,26), startsector 4, 104602 sectors
Next, copy the image from your build machine to a USB storage
medium using :command:`dd` or your other most favoured file copying
tool, which might be a comand something like this:
$ dd if=mbrimage of=/dev/path/to/the/usb/stick \
bs=1M conv=fdatasync status=progress
The Omnia's default boot order only checks USB after it has failed
to boot from eMMC, which is not ideal for our purpose. Unless you
have a serial cable, the easiest way to change this is by booting
to TurrisOS and logging in with ssh:
root@turris:/# fw_printenv boot_targets
boot_targets=mmc0 nvme0 scsi0 usb0 pxe dhcp
root@turris:/# fw_setenv boot_targets usb0 mmc0
root@turris:/# fw_printenv boot_targets
boot_targets=usb0 mmc0
root@turris:/# reboot -f
It should now boot into the recovery image. It expects a network
cable to be plugged into LAN2 with something on the other end of
it that serves DHCP requests. Check your DHCP server logs for a
request from a ``liminix-recovery`` host and figure out what IP
address was assigned.
$ ssh liminix-recovery.lan
You should get a "Busybox" banner and a root prompt. Now you can
start preparing the device to install Liminix on it. First we'll
mount the root filesystem and take a snapshot:
# mkdir /dest && mount /dev/mmcblk0p1 /dest
# schnapps -d /dest create "pre liminix"
# schnapps -d /dest list
ERROR: not a valid btrfs filesystem: /
# | Type | Size | Date | Description
------+-----------+-------------+---------------------------+------------------------------------
1 | single | 16.00KiB | 1970-01-01 00:11:49 +0000 | pre liminix
(``not a valid btrfs filesystem: /`` is not a real error)
then we can remove all the files
# rm -r /dest/@/*
and then it's ready to install the real Liminix system onto. On
your build system, create the Liminix configuration you wish to
install: here we'll use the ``rotuer`` example.
build$ nix-build -I liminix-config=./examples/rotuer.nix \
--arg device "import ./devices/turris-omnia" \
-A outputs.systemConfiguration
and then use :command:`min-copy-closure` to copy it to the device.
build$ nix-shell --run \
"min-copy-closure -r /dest/@ root@liminix-recovery.lan result"
and activate it
build$ ssh root@liminix-recovery.lan \
"/dest/@/$(readlink result)/bin/install /dest/@"
The final steps are performed directly on the device again: add
a symlink so U-Boot can find :file:`/boot`, then restore the
default boot order and reboot into the new configuration.
# cd /dest && ln -s @/boot .
# fw_setenv boot_targets "mmc0 nvme0 scsi0 usb0 pxe dhcp"
# cd / ; umount /dest
# reboot
Installation using a TFTP server and serial console
===================================================
If you have a :ref:`serial` console connection and a TFTP server,
and would rather use them than fiddling with USB sticks, the
:file:`examples/recovery.nix` configuration also works
using the ``tftpboot`` output. So you can do
build$ nix-build -I liminix-config=./examples/recovery.nix \
--arg device "import ./devices/turris-omnia" \
-A outputs.tftpboot
and then paste the generated :file:`result/boot.scr` into
U-Boot, and you will end up with the same system as you would
have had after booting from USB. If you don't have a serial
console connection you could probably even get clever with
elaborate use of :command:`fw_setenv`, but that is left as
an exercise for the reader.
Detailed instructions to follow...
'';
system = {

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@ -36,7 +36,7 @@ in rec {
};
boot.loader.extlinux.enable = true;
hostname = "recovery";
hostname = "liminix-recovery";
services.dhcpc = svc.network.dhcp.client.build {
interface = config.hardware.networkInterfaces.lan2;