slackware-current/README.initrd
Patrick J Volkerding 0cde31b79d Fri Dec 25 00:52:08 UTC 2020
Here are some updates to provide a little holiday cheer. The kernels are
rebuilt (yeah, we'll probably have new ones tomorrow but whatever) to build in
HWMON making NVMe temperature monitoring available, and there's also a massive
cleanup of polkit/dbus related packages to move most of the config files out
of /etc and not install them as .new. Local config files that override the
shipped ones may be placed in the directories in /etc to override the ones that
we ship. Thanks to Robby Workman for this!
None of the packages included in Slackware place any files in
/etc/polkit-1/rules.d/ or /etc/dbus-1/system.d/ any more, but there may be
third-party packages that still do. However, since Slackware's packages
originally installed these as .new files, the leftover configs will remain.
You'll probably want to take a look in those directories to clean out any
config files that you haven't modified yourself or that belong to packages that
aren't part of Slackware itself.
Hope everyone has a great day. :-)
a/dbus-1.12.20-x86_64-3.txz:  Rebuilt.
  Added local config override directory /etc/dbus-1/system.d/ since no other
  package provides it now.
a/kernel-generic-5.10.2-x86_64-2.txz:  Upgraded.
a/kernel-huge-5.10.2-x86_64-2.txz:  Upgraded.
a/kernel-modules-5.10.2-x86_64-2.txz:  Upgraded.
a/udisks-1.0.5-x86_64-6.txz:  Rebuilt.
  Move D-Bus configs from /etc to the system location. Thanks to Robby Workman.
a/udisks2-2.9.1-x86_64-2.txz:  Rebuilt.
  Include 20-plugdev-group-mount-override.rules, installed in the system
  location. Thanks to Robby Workman.
ap/cups-2.3.3-x86_64-3.txz:  Rebuilt.
  Move D-Bus configs from /etc to the system location. Thanks to Robby Workman.
ap/hplip-3.20.6-x86_64-4.txz:  Rebuilt.
  Use --enable-qt5.
  Move D-Bus configs from /etc to the system location.
  Drop HAL support (LOL!)
  Thanks to Robby Workman.
ap/mpg123-1.26.4-x86_64-1.txz:  Upgraded.
d/gnucobol-3.1.2-x86_64-1.txz:  Upgraded.
d/kernel-headers-5.10.2-x86-2.txz:  Upgraded.
k/kernel-source-5.10.2-noarch-2.txz:  Upgraded.
   HWMON m -> y
  +NVME_HWMON y
  +POWER_SUPPLY_HWMON y
  +THERMAL_HWMON y
  Thanks to Daedra.
kde/sddm-0.19.0-x86_64-4.txz:  Rebuilt.
  Don't include the /etc/dbus-1/system.d/ directory.
l/GConf-3.2.6-x86_64-5.txz:  Rebuilt.
  Move D-Bus configs from /etc to the system location. Thanks to Robby Workman.
l/accountsservice-0.6.55-x86_64-2.txz:  Rebuilt.
  Move D-Bus configs from /etc to the system location. Thanks to Robby Workman.
l/cryptopp-8.3.0-x86_64-1.txz:  Upgraded.
l/harfbuzz-2.7.3-x86_64-1.txz:  Upgraded.
l/polkit-0.118-x86_64-3.txz:  Rebuilt.
  Remove D-Bus rules for udisks2 and NetworkManager (moved to those packages).
  Move D-Bus configs from /etc to the system location. Thanks to Robby Workman.
l/pulseaudio-14.0-x86_64-2.txz:  Rebuilt.
  Move D-Bus configs from /etc to the system location. Thanks to Robby Workman.
l/system-config-printer-1.5.12-x86_64-6.txz:  Rebuilt.
  Move D-Bus configs from /etc to the system location. Thanks to Robby Workman.
n/ModemManager-1.14.8-x86_64-2.txz:  Rebuilt.
  Added elogind support.
  Move D-Bus configs from /etc to the system location.
  Thanks to Robby Workman.
n/NetworkManager-1.28.0-x86_64-2.txz:  Rebuilt.
  Include 10-org.freedesktop.NetworkManager.rules, installed in the system
  location. Thanks to Robby Workman.
n/bluez-5.55-x86_64-2.txz:  Rebuilt.
  Move D-Bus configs from /etc to the system location. Thanks to Robby Workman.
n/netatalk-3.1.12-x86_64-5.txz:  Rebuilt.
  Patched to fix failure to build from source with gcc10.
  Move D-Bus configs from /etc to the system location.
  Thanks to Robby Workman.
n/wpa_supplicant-2.9-x86_64-3.txz:  Rebuilt.
  Move D-Bus configs from /etc to the system location. Thanks to Robby Workman.
x/mesa-20.3.1-x86_64-2.txz:  Rebuilt.
  [PATCH] vulkan/device_select: Store Vulkan vendorID and deviceID as uint32_t.
  Thanks to sasha69 for the link to the upstream discussion/commit.
xap/blueman-2.1.4-x86_64-3.txz:  Rebuilt.
  Move D-Bus configs from /etc to the system location. Thanks to Robby Workman.
xap/xgames-0.3-x86_64-6.txz:  Rebuilt.
  Fixed spider failing to build from source with gcc10.
  Removed the ancient version of xsnow.
xap/xscreensaver-5.45-x86_64-2.txz:  Rebuilt.
  Make the description of the xscreensaver settings be clearly for xscreensaver
  as opposed to a generic "screensaver" settings. Thanks to Robby Workman.
xap/xsnow-3.1.9-x86_64-1.txz:  Added.
  Merry Christmas / Happy Holidays! :-)
xfce/mousepad-0.5.1-x86_64-1.txz:  Upgraded.
xfce/xfce4-screensaver-0.1.11-x86_64-2.txz:  Rebuilt.
  Make the description of the xfce4-screensaver settings be clearly for
  xfce4-screensaver as opposed to a generic "screensaver" settings.
  Thanks to Robby Workman.
xfce/xfce4-session-4.14.2-x86_64-2.txz:  Rebuilt.
  Use xfce4-screensaver by default and don't ship the xscreensaver.desktop
  autostart file. Thanks to Robby Workman.
extra/pure-alsa-system/*:  Removed.
  This served a purpose during the pure ALSA to PulseAudio transition, but
  it's time for it to go away. If the latency is an issue for your use case,
  a look around should turn up documentation on how to reduce it, or how to
  send output directly to ALSA without having to uninstall PulseAudio or
  recompile anything that's linked to it. As an example, see this one (which
  was mentioned here before):
  https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/PulseAudio/Examples#PulseAudio_as_a_minimal_unintrusive_dumb_pipe_to_ALSA
isolinux/initrd.img:  Rebuilt.
kernels/*:  Upgraded.
usb-and-pxe-installers/usbboot.img:  Rebuilt.
2020-12-25 08:59:52 +01:00

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Text

Slackware initrd mini HOWTO
by Patrick Volkerding, volkerdi@slackware.com
Fri Dec 25 00:29:32 UTC 2020
This document describes how to create and install an initrd, which may be
required to use the 4.x kernel. Also see "man mkinitrd".
1. What is an initrd?
2. Why to I need an initrd?
3. How do I build the initrd?
4. Now that I've built an initrd, how do I use it?
1. What is an initrd?
Initrd stands for "initial ramdisk". An initial ramdisk is a very small
Linux filesystem that is loaded into RAM and mounted as the kernel boots,
and before the main root filesystem is mounted.
2. Why do I need an initrd?
The usual reason to use an initrd is because you need to load kernel
modules before mounting the root partition. Usually these modules are
required to support the filesystem used by the root partition (ext3, ext4,
btrfs, xfs), or perhaps the controller that the hard drive is attached
to (SCSI, RAID, etc). Essentially, there are so many different options
available in modern Linux kernels that it isn't practical to try to ship
many different kernels to try to cover everyone's needs. It's a lot more
flexible to ship a generic kernel and a set of kernel modules for it.
3. How do I build the initrd?
The easiest way to make the initrd is to use the mkinitrd script included
in Slackware's mkinitrd package. We'll walk through the process of
upgrading to the generic 5.10.2 Linux kernel using the packages
found in Slackware's slackware/a/ directory.
First, make sure the kernel, kernel modules, and mkinitrd package are
installed (the current version numbers might be a little different, so
this is just an example):
installpkg kernel-generic-5.10.2-x86_64-2.txz
installpkg kernel-modules-5.10.2-x86_64-2.txz
installpkg mkinitrd-1.4.11-x86_64-16.txz
Change into the /boot directory:
cd /boot
Now you'll want to run "mkinitrd". I'm using ext4 for my root filesystem,
and since the disk controller requires no special support the ext4 module
will be the only one I need to load:
mkinitrd -c -k 5.10.2 -m ext4
This should do two things. First, it will create a directory
/boot/initrd-tree containing the initrd's filesystem. Then it will
create an initrd (/boot/initrd.gz) from this tree. If you wanted to,
you could make some additional changes in /boot/initrd-tree/ and
then run mkinitrd again without options to rebuild the image. That's
optional, though, and only advanced users will need to think about that.
Here's another example: Build an initrd image using Linux 5.10.2
kernel modules for a system with an ext4 root partition on /dev/sdb3:
mkinitrd -c -k 5.10.2 -m ext4 -f ext4 -r /dev/sdb3
4. Now that I've built an initrd, how do I use it?
Now that you've got an initrd (/boot/initrd.gz), you'll want to load
it along with the kernel at boot time. If you use LILO for your boot
loader you'll need to edit /etc/lilo.conf and add a line to load the
initrd. Here's an example section of lilo.conf showing how this is
done:
# Linux bootable partition config begins
image = /boot/vmlinuz-generic
initrd = /boot/initrd.gz
root = /dev/sda6
label = Slackware
read-only
# Linux bootable partition config ends
The initrd is loaded by the "initrd = /boot/initrd.gz" line.
Just add the line right below the line for the kernel image you use.
Save the file, and then run LILO again ('lilo' at the command line).
You'll need to run lilo every time you edit lilo.conf or rebuild the
initrd.
Other bootloaders such as syslinux also support the use of an initrd.
See the documentation for those programs for details on using an
initrd with them.
---------
Have fun!