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The easiest way to build 'Minimal Linux Live' is to run the following script: ./build_minimal_linux_live.sh Note that the build process requires proper toolchain already installed and configured. Check the project website for more information: http://minimal.idzona.com For Ubuntu and other Debian based operating systems you can use the following command in order to resolve the required build dependencies: sudo apt install wget make gawk gcc bc bison flex xorriso libelf-dev libssl-dev Once you have your ISO image up and running perhaps you'd like to examine the configuration file '.config' and see what options you have there. For example, you can change the property 'OVERLAY_BUNDLES' and build your own flavor of MLL. Currently available overlay bundles: all - this indicates to build all available overlay bundles. This is useful mostly for testing purposes. You are encouraged to use only the overlay bundles that you actually want. GLIBC - set of all core GNU C libraries packaged together. This overlay bundle is not host specific and can always be built. The libraries are useful if you plan to use more software in MLL. This overlay bundle depends on the GLIBC build process. adopt_openjdk - JDK from AdoptOpenJDK with VM from either HotSpot or OpenJ9. bosh_cli - BOSH command line tool. It can be used as landscape manager for virtual network and server infrastructures in cloud environments, e.g. AWS, Google Cloud, etc. Common use case for this tool is to manage Cloud Foundry infrastructures. c2048 - console version of the game 2048. cf_cli - Cloud Foundry command line tool. It can be used to manage all aspects of already existing Cloud Foundry installation, including the full software development lifecycle in cloud based environment. cf_tools - meta-package which installs all available BOSH and Cloud Foundry tools. Note that in MLL context these tools are mostly useful as remote managers for existing BOSH and Cloud Foundry infrastructures. coreutils - set of commonly used GNU executable utilities. dhcp - DHCP (client) and DNS (resolver) functionality. dialog - shell scripting library for 'ncurses'. This overlay bundle requires 'ncurses'. Dropbear - SSH server/client. This overlay bundle requires some GLIBC libraries. The build process generates new 'root' user with password 'toor'. These are sample commands which demonstrate how to use Dropbear: SSH server (Alt + F1): dropbear -E -F SSH client (Alt + F2): dbclient 10.0.2.15 -l root Felix OSGi - Apache Felix OSGi framework. Use the 'felix-start' command to run the Apache Felix OSGi framework. This overlay bundle requires JRE or JDK. fio - I/O load generator that can simulate a wide variety of workloads on RAM or disks. 'fio' is essential for troubleshooting data I/O bottlenecks. Golang - Go is an open source programming language that makes it easy to build simple, reliable, and efficient software. GraalVM - Universal virtual machine for running applications written in JavaScript, Python, Ruby, R, JVM-based languages like Java, Scala, Clojure, Kotlin, and LLVM-based languages such as C and C++. kbd - keyboard utilities and keymaps. For example, you can load German keyboard layout like this: loadkeys de kernel_modules - kernel modules and 'mdev' hotplug manager. kexec_tools - these tools can be used to boot another kernel and initramfs from userspace. libevent - event notification library API provides a mechanism to execute a callback function when a specific event occurs on a file descriptor or after a timeout has been reached. Links - text-based web browser. Use the 'links' command to activate the browser. OpenJDK - the open source JDK. No need for manual steps. This overlay bundle requires GLIBC and ZLIB. Lua - the Lua Scripting Language. Use the 'lua' command to run an interactive Lua interpreter. make - GNU make utility. MLL Hello - Simple educational overlay bundle with detailed comments for each build step. MLL Logo - custom MLL boot logo. MLL Utils - set of experimental shell scripts (mll-*.sh) which provide additional functionality, e.g. installer and useful tools. This overlay bundle is currently experimental and its build process depends on the host machine. MLL Source - this overlay bundle provides all MLL source code in the directory 'usr/src'. nano - simple command-line text editor with on-screen shortcuts. This overlay bundle requires 'ncurses'. ncurses - 'GUI-like' API that runs within a terminal emulator. nweb - 'nweb' is a very small and easy to use webserver, it runs automatically on port 80. To portforward port 80 from the QEMU guest (minimal) to port 8080 on the host, add '-net nic,model=e1000 -net user,hostfwd=tcp::8080-:80' to 'cmd' in the qemu.sh file. openjdk - Free and open-source JDK from OpenJDK. static_get - portable binaries for Linux (http://s.minos.io). stress - simple workload generator. Imposes a configurable amount of CPU, memory, I/O, and disk stress on the system. stress is useful for troubleshooting CPU and RAM issues. util_linux - set of executable utilities distributed by the Linux kernel, similar to busybox or GNU Core Utils. Some packages in this overlay bundle require 'ncurses'. vim - advanced text editor that seeks to provide the power of the de-facto Unix editor 'vi', with a more complete feature set. This package will create symlinks on top of 'vi'. vitetris - console mode tetris game with lots of options. These options are disabled in order to make the game as small as possible. Type 'tetris' in order to start the game. ZLIB - software library used for data compression. Zulu JDK - Zulu is an enterprise quality, certified build of OpenJDK that can be deployed on multiple platforms. Zulu is free to download, use and redistribute. This overlay bundle requires GLIBC and ZLIB. The overlay bundles can be found in this directory: minimal_overlay/bundles Each overlay bundle can have its own '.config' file. All properties in this configuration file will override the same properties in the main 'config' file. Also, each overlay bundle can declare list of bundle dependencies in the file 'bundle_deps'. The bundles in this file are built before the main bundle. The overlay build system is independent from the main build system. However, some bundles depend on build artifacts from the main build process, so it is highly recommended to build MLL before you use the overlay build system. Take a look at the 'mll_hello' overlay bundle for detailed explanation of the internal overlay system build process and the corresponding directories that are involved in the process. You can build all bundles declared in the main '.config' file like this: cd minimal_overlay ./overlay_build.sh You can build individual overlay bundle like this: cd minimal_overlay ./overlay_build.sh mll_hello You can build more two or more bundles if you separate them with comma: cd minimal_overlay ./overlay_build.sh mll_hello,dhcp,mll_source The simplest way to add something to MLL is to put whatever you want in the following folder: minimal_overlay/rootfs The content of this folder becomes visible at runtime. You can add your own software or configurations. The content in this folder takes higher priority which means that you can override everything which is provided by Minimal Linux Live. As already mentioned, the main configuration file is '.config'. It is extensively documented and you can refer to it for detailed information regarding all configuration properties. ### ### ### I only provide the build scripts. It's entirely up to you to configure and prepare your build environment. I use Linux Mint and Ubuntu, both 32 and 64 bit editions. Your distribution might have different build dependencies but most of the time there is a single meta-package which installs most of the stuff that you need. The build proces is slow, so be prepared to wait. In the end you should have the ISO image file 'minimal_linux_live.iso' in the same folder where you started the build process. You can burn the ISO image on CD/DVD or (better) run it with PC emulator like QEMU, VirtualBox or VMware Workstation Player.