genimage
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tool to generate multiple filesystem and flash images from a tree
================================== Genimage - The Image Creation Tool
genimage is a tool to generate multiple filesystem and flash/disk images from a given root filesystem tree. genimage is intended to be run in a fakeroot environment. It also supports creating flash/disk images out of different file-system images and files.
Configuration is done in a config file parsed by libconfuse. Options like the path to tools can be given via environment variables, the config file or from commandline switches.
The Configuration File
The config file of genimage uses a simple configuration language, provided by libconfuse
_.
This supports nested sections, as well as simple key-value pairs.
.. _libconfuse: https://github.com/martinh/libconfuse
Single-line comments can be introduced with #
or //
,
multi-line comments look like /* … */
(as in C).
The config file is separated into the main sections image
, flash
and config
,
and provides an include
primitive.
The image section
An image section describes a single filesystem or disk image to be built. It can be given multiple times to generate multiple images. An image can also have multiple partitions which refer to images themselves. Each image must have a type which can have different suboptions depending on the type.
Let's have a look at an example::
image nand-pcm038.img { flash { } flashtype = "nand-64M-512" partition barebox { image = "barebox-pcm038.bin" size = 512K } partition root { image = "root-nand.jffs2" size = 24M } }
This would generate a nand-pcm038.img which is a flash of type "nand-64M-512" The image contains two partitions, "barebox-pcm038.bin" and "root-nand.jffs2" which must refer to images described elsewhere in the config file. For example "root-nand.jffs2" partition could be described like this::
image root-nand.jffs2 { name = "root" jffs2 {} size = 24M mountpoint = "/" }
In this case a single jffs2 image is generated from the root mountpoint.
Here are all options for images:
:name: The name of this image. This is used for some image types
to set the name of the image.
:size: Size of this image in bytes. 'k', 'M' or 'G' can be used as
suffix to specify the size in multiple of 1024
etc. The suffix 's' specifies a multiple of the
(traditional) sector size of 512. If the image if
filled from a mountpoint then '%' as suffix indicates
a percentage. '200%' means the resulting filesystem
should be about 50% filled. Note that is is only a
rough estimate based on the original size of the
content.
:mountpoint: mountpoint if image refers to a filesystem image. The
default is "/". The content of "${rootpath}${mountpoint}"
will be used to fill the filesystem.
:srcpath: If this is set, specified path will be directly used
to fill the filesystem. Ignoring rootpath/mountpoint logic.
Path might be absolute or relative
to current working directory.
:empty: If this is set to true, then the specified rootpath and
mountpoint are ignored for this image and an empty
filesystem is created. This option is only used for
writeable filesystem types, such as extX, vfat, ubifs and
jffs2. This defaults to false.
:temporary: If this is set to true, the image is created in
tmppath
rather than outputpath
. This can be
useful for intermediate images defined in the
configuration file which are not needed by themselves
after the main image is created. This defaults to
false.
:exec-pre: Custom command to run before generating the image.
:exec-post: Custom command to run after generating the image.
:flashtype: refers to a flash section. Optional for non flash like images
like hd images
:partition: can be given multiple times and refers to a partition described
below
Additionally each image can have one of the following sections describing the type of the image:
cpio, cramfs, ext2, ext3, ext4, file, flash, hdimage, iso, jffs2, qemu, squashfs, tar, ubi, ubifs, vfat.
Partition options:
:offset: The offset of this partition as a total offset to the beginning
of the device.
:size: The size of this partition in bytes. If the size and
autoresize are both not set then the size of the partition
image is used.
:align: Alignment value to use for automatic computation of offset
and size
. Defaults to 1 for partitions not in the partition
table, otherwise to the image's align
value.
:partition-type: Used by dos partition tables to specify the partition type.
:image: The image file this partition shall be filled with
:autoresize: Boolean specifying that the partition should be resized
automatically. For UBI volumes this means that the
autoresize
flag is set. Only one volume can have this flag.
For hd images this can be used for the last partition. If set
the partition will fill the remaining space of the image.
:bootable: Boolean specifying whether to set the bootable flag.
:in-partition-table: Boolean specifying whether to include this partition in
the partition table. Defaults to true.
:partition-uuid: UUID string used by GPT partition tables to specify the partition
id. Defaults to a random value.
:partition-type-uuid: String used by GPT partition tables to specify the partition type.
Either a UUID or a shortcut:
* L: Linux filesystem (0fc63daf-8483-4772-8e79-3d69d8477de4)
* S: Swap (0657fd6d-a4ab-43c4-84e5-0933c84b4f4f)
* H: Home (933ac7e1-2eb4-4f13-b844-0e14e2aef915)
* U: EFI System (c12a7328-f81f-11d2-ba4b-00a0c93ec93b)
* R: Linux RAID (a19d880f-05fc-4d3b-a006-743f0f84911e)
* V: Linux LVM (e6d6d379-f507-44c2-a23c-238f2a3df928)
* F: FAT32 / Basic Data Partition (ebd0a0a2-b9e5-4433-87c0-68b6b72699c7)
Defaults to L.
For each partition, its final alignment, offset and size are determined as follows:
-
If the
align
option is not present, it defaults to the value of the image'salign
option if the partition is in the partition table, otherwise to 1. -
If the
offset
option is absent or zero, andin-partition-table
is true, the partition is placed after the end of all previously defined partitions, with the final offset rounded up to the partition'salign
value. -
Otherwise, the
offset
option is used as-is. Note that if absent, that option defaults to 0, so in practice one must specify anoffset
for any partition that is not in the partition table (with at most one exception, e.g. a bootloader). -
If the partition has the
autoresize
flag set, its size is computed as the space remaining in the image from its offset (for a GPT image, space is reserved at the end for the backup GPT table), rounded down to the partition'salign
value. If the partition also has asize
option, it is ensured that the computed value is not less than that size. -
Otherwise, if the
size
option is present and non-zero, its value is used as-is. -
Otherwise, if the partition has an
image
option, the size of that image, rounded up to the partition'salign
value, is used to determine the size of the partition.
The following sanity checks are done on these final values (in many cases, these will automatically be satisfied when the value has been determined via one of the above rules rather than given explicitly):
-
For a partition in the partition table, the partition's
align
value must be greater than or equal to the image'salign
value. -
The partition's
offset
andsize
must both be multiples of itsalign
. -
The size must not be 0.
-
The partition must not overlap any other partition, or the areas occupied by the partition table.
The image configuration options
android-sparse
Generate android sparse images. The are typically used by fastboot. Sparse images encode "don't care" areas and areas that are filled with a single 32 bit value. As a result, they are often much smaller than raw disk images. Genimage assumes that all 'holes' in the input file are "don't care" areas. This is a reasonable assumption: Tools to generate filesystems typically operate on devices. So they only create holes in areas they don't care about. Genimage itself operates the same way when generating HD images.
Options:
:image: The source image that will be converted. :block-size: The granularity that the sparse image uses to find "don't care" or "fill" blocks. The supported block sizes depend on the user. The default is 4k.
cpio
Generates cpio images.
Options:
:format: archive format. Passed to the -H
option to the cpio command.
Valid options are bin
, odc
, newc
, crc
, tar
,
ustar
, hpbin
and hpodc
:extraargs: Extra arguments passed to the cpio tool
:compress: If given, pipe image through compression tool. Valid options are
for example gzip
, lzop
or any other tool that compresses
from stdin to stdout.
cramfs
Generates cramfs images.
Options:
:extraargs: Extra arguments passed to mkcramfs
ext2, ext3, ext4
Generates ext* images.
Options:
:use-mke2fs: If set to true, then mke2fs is used to create the
image. Otherwise, genext2fs is used. Defaults to false.
:mke2fs-conf: mke2fs.conf that should be used. If unspecified, the system
default is used.
:extraargs: Extra arguments passed to genext2fs or mke2fs.
:features: Filesystem features. Passed to the -O
option of tune2fs. This
is a comma separated list of enabled or disabled features. See
man ext4
for features.
For genext2fs all feature are specified. Default for ext3 images is
has_journal
. Default for ext4 images is
extents,uninit_bg,dir_index,has_journal
.
For mke2fs these features are added in addition to the default
features of the ext type. Already enabled features can be disabled
by prefixing the feature with ^
.
:label: Specify the volume-label. Passed to the -L
option of tune2fs
:fs-timestamp: Sets different timestamps in the image. Sets the given timestamp
using the debugfs commands set_current_time
,
set_super_value mkfs_time
and set_super_value lastcheck
:root-owner: User and group IDs for the root directory. Defaults to 0:0
.
Only valid with mke2fs.
:usage-type: Specify the usage type for the filesystem. Only valid with mke2fs.
More details can be found in the mke2fs man-page.
file
This represents a pre-existing image which will be used as-is. When a
partition section references an image that is not defined elsewhere in
the configuration file, a file
rule is implicitly generated. It is
up to the user to ensure that the image exists in the input directory,
or to use an absolute path to the image.
It is possible to add a file
image explicitly, which allows one to
provide genimage
with some information about the image which can
not be deduced automatically. Currently, one such option exists:
:holes: A list of "(<start>;<end>)"
pairs specifying ranges of the
file that do not contain meaningful data, and which can therefore
be allowed to overlap other partitions or image metadata.
For example::
image foo { hdimage { gpt = true gpt-location = 64K }
partition bootloader {
in-partition-table = false
offset = 0
image = "/path/to/bootloader.img"
}
partition rootfs {
offset = 1M
image = "rootfs.ext4"
}
}
image /path/to/bootloader.img { file { holes = {"(440; 1K)", "(64K; 80K)"} } }
This tells genimage
that despite the bootloader
partition
overlapping both the last 72 bytes of the MBR (where the DOS partition
table is located) and the GPT header occupying the sector starting at
offset 512, this is all OK because bootloader.img
does not contain
useful data in that range. Further, in this example, the bootloader
image has been carefully crafted to also allow placing the GPT array
at offset 64K (the GPT header is always at offset 512).
If the bootloader image is not declared explicitly and only used once then the holes can also be configured in the partition. This simplifies the config file for simple use-cases.
For example::
image bar { hdimage {}
partition bootloader {
in-partition-table = false
offset = 0
image = "/path/to/bootloader.img"
holes = {"(440; 512)"}
}
partition rootfs {
offset = 1M
image = "rootfs.ext4"
}
}
FIT
Generates U-Boot FIT images.
Options:
:its: String option holding the path of the input its file :keydir: String option holding the directory containing the keys used for signing.
flash
Generates flash images. These are basically the partition contents padded to the partition sizes concatenated together. There is no partition table. Needs a valid flashtype where the flash parameters are read from.
hdimage
Generates DOS partition images.
Options:
:align: Partition alignment. Defaults to 512 bytes
:partition-table: Boolean. If true, writes a partition table. If false, no
partition table is generated. Defaults to true.
Deprecated: use partition-table-type
instead.
:partition-table-type: Define what kind of partition table should be used.
Valid options are:
* none
: No partition table at all. In this case, the
in-partition-table
option for each partition is ignored.
* mbr
: Legacy DOS/MBR partition table
* gpt
: GUID Partition Table
* hybrid
: A hybrid MBR/GPT partition table. Partitions with
an explicit partition-type
will be placed in in the MBR
table. At most 3 such partitions are allowed. This limit does
not effect the maximum number of GPT partition entries in the
same image.
:extended-partition: Number of the extended partition. Contains the number of the
extended partition between 1 and 4 or 0 for automatic. Defaults
to 0.
:disk-signature: 32 bit integer used as disk signature (offset 440 in the
MBR). Using a special value random
will result in
using random 32 bit number.
:gpt: Boolean. If true, a GPT type partition table is written. If false
a DOS type partition table is written. Defaults to false.
Deprecated: use partition-table-type
instead.
:gpt-location: Location of the GPT table. Occasionally useful for moving the GPT
table away from where a bootloader is placed due to hardware
requirements. All partitions in the table must begin after this
table. Regardless of this setting, the GPT header will still be
placed at 512 bytes (sector 1). Defaults to 1024 bytes (sector 2).
:gpt-no-backup: Boolean. If true, then the backup partition table at the end of
the image is not written.
:disk-uuid: UUID string used as disk id in GPT partitioning. Defaults to a
random value.
:fill: If this is set to true, then the image file will be filled
up to the end of the last partition. This might make the file
bigger. This is necessary if the image will be processed by
such tools as libvirt, libguestfs or parted.
iso
Generates an ISO image.
Options:
:boot-image: Path to the El Torito boot image. Passed to the -b
option
of genisofs
:bootargs: Bootargs for the El Torito boot image. Defaults to
-no-emul-boot -boot-load-size 4 -boot-info-table -c boot.cat -hide boot.cat
:extraargs: Extra arguments passed to genisofs
:input-charset: The input charset. Passed to the -input-charset option of genisofs.
Defaults to default
:volume-id: Volume ID. Passed to the -V
option of genisofs
jffs2
Generates a JFFS image. Needs a valid flashtype where the flash parameters are read from.
Options:
:extraargs: Extra arguments passed to mkfs.jffs2
qemu
Generates a QEMU image. Needs at least one valid partition.
Options:
:format: A valid qemu-img
like qcow
, qcow2
, parallels
, vdi
,
vhdx
or vmdk
. Check qemu-img convert --help
for the complete
list of possible values. Defaults to qcow2
.
:extraargs: Extra arguments passed to qemu-img convert
squashfs
Generates a squashfs image.
Options:
:extraargs: Extra arguments passed to mksquashfs
:compression: compression type for the image. Possible values are gzip
(default), lzo
, xz
or none
:block-size: Block size. Passed to the -b
option of mksquashfs. Defaults
to 4096.
rauc
Generates a RAUC update bundle.
Options:
:extraargs: Extra arguments passed to RAUC
:file: Specify a file to be added into the RAUC bundle. Usage is:
file foo { image = "bar" }
which adds a file "foo" in the
RAUC bundle from then input file "bar"
:files: A list of filenames added into the RAUC bundle. Like file
above, but without the ability to add the files under different
name.
:key: Path to the key file or PKCS#11 URI. Passed to the --key
option of
RAUC
:cert: Path to the certificate file or PKCS#11 URI. Passed to the --cert
option of RAUC
:keyring: Optional path to the keyring file. Passed to the --keyring
option of RAUC
:manifest: content of the manifest file
tar
Generates a tar image. The image will be compressed as defined by the filename suffix.
ubi
Generates an UBI image. Needs a valid flashtype where the flash parameters are read from.
Options:
:extraargs: Extra arguments passed to ubinize
ubifs
Generates a UBIFS image. Needs a valid flashtype where the flash parameters are read from.
Options:
:extraargs: Extra arguments passed to mkubifs :max-size: Maximum size of the UBIFS image
vfat
Generates a VFAT image.
Options:
:extraargs: Extra arguments passed to mkdosfs
:label: Specify the volume-label. Passed to the -n
option of mkdosfs
:file: Specify a file to be added into the filesystem image. Usage is:
file foo { image = "bar" }
which adds a file "foo" in the
filesystem image from the input file "bar"
:files: A list of filenames added into the filesystem image. Like file
above, but without the ability to add the files under different
name.
Note: If no content is specified with file
or files
then
rootpath
and mountpoint
are used to provide the content.
fip
Generates a Firmware Image Package (FIP). A format used to bundle firmware to be loaded by ARM Trusted Firmware.
Options:
:extraargs: Extra arguments passed to fiptool
:fw-config: Firmware Configuration (device tree), usually provided by BL2 (Trusted Firmware)
:nt-fw: Non-Trusted Firmware (BL33)
:hw-config: Hardware Configuration (device tree), passed to BL33
:tos-fw: Trusted OS (BL32) binaries. Second and third binary are used as
extra1 and extra2 binaries if specified. Example:
tos-fw = {"tee-header_v2.bin", "tee-pager_v2.bin", "tee-pageable_v2.bin"}
:scp-fwu-cfg: SCP Firmware Updater Configuration FWU SCP_BL2U
:ap-fwu-cfg: AP Firmware Updater Configuration BL2U
:fwu: Firmware Updater NS_BL2U
:fwu-cert: Non-Trusted Firmware Updater certificate
:tb-fw: Trusted Boot Firmware BL2
:scp-fw: SCP Firmware SCP_BL2
:soc-fw: EL3 Runtime Firmware BL31
:tb-fw-config: TB_FW_CONFIG
:soc-fw-config: SOC_FW_CONFIG
:tos-fw-config: TOS_FW_CONFIG
:nt-fw-config: NT_FW_CONFIG
:rot-cert: Root Of Trust key certificate
:trusted-key-cert: Trusted key certificate
:scp-fw-key-cert: SCP Firmware key certificate
:soc-fw-key-cert: SoC Firmware key certificate
:tos-fw-key-cert: Trusted OS Firmware key certificate
:nt-fw-key-cert: Non-Trusted Firmware key certificate
:tb-fw-cert: Trusted Boot Firmware BL2 certificate
:scp-fw-cert: SCP Firmware content certificate
:soc-fw-cert: SoC Firmware content certificate
:tos-fw-cert: Trusted OS Firmware content certificate
:nt-fw-cert: Non-Trusted Firmware content certificate
:sip-sp-cert: SiP owned Secure Partition content certificate
:plat-sp-cert: Platform owned Secure Partition content certificate
The Flash Section
The flash section can be given multiple times and each section describes a flash chip. The option names are mostly derived from the UBI terminology. There are the following options:
:pebsize: The size of a physical eraseblock in bytes :lebsize: The size of a logical eraseblock in bytes (for ubifs) :numpebs: Number of physical eraseblocks on this device. The total size of the device is determined by pebsize * numpebs :minimum-io-unit-size: The minimum size in bytes accessible on this device :vid-header-offset: offset of the volume identifier header :sub-page-size: The size of a sub page in bytes.
Several flash related image types need a valid flash section. From the image types
the flash type section is referred to using the flashtype
option which contains
the name of the flash type to be used.
For more information of the meaning of these values see the ubi(fs) and mtd FAQs:
http://www.linux-mtd.infradead.org/faq/general.html
Example flash section::
flash nand-64M-512 { pebsize = 16384 lebsize = 15360 numpebs = 4096 minimum-io-unit-size = 512 vid-header-offset = 512 sub-page-size = 512 } ... image jffs2 { flashtype = "nand-64M-512" }
The config section
In this section the global behaviour of the program is
described. Except as noted below, all options here can be given from
either environment variables, the config file or command line
switches. For instance, a config option foo
can be passed as a
--foo
command line switch or as a GENIMAGE_FOO environment
variable.
:config: default: genimage.cfg
Path to the genimage config file.
:loglevel: default: 1 genimage log level.
:outputpath: default: images
Mandatory path where all images are written to (must exist).
:inputpath: default: input
This mandatory path is searched for input images, for example
bootloader binaries, kernel images (must exist).
:rootpath: default: root
Mandatory path to the root filesystem (must exist).
:tmppath: default: tmp
Optional path to a temporary directory. There must be enough space
available here to hold a copy of the root filesystem.
:includepath: Colon-separated list of directories to search for files
included via the include
function. The current
directory is searched after these. Thus, if this
option is not given, only the current directory is
searched. This has no effect when given in the config file.
:configdump: File to write the final configuration to. This includes
the results of all include
directives, expansions
of environment variables and application of default
values - think gcc -E
. Use -
for stdout.
:cpio: path to the cpio program (default cpio) :dd: path to the dd program (default dd) :e2fsck: path to the e2fsck program (default e2fsck) :genext2fs: path to the genext2fs program (default genext2fs) :genisoimage: path to the genisoimage program (default genisoimage) :mcopy: path to the mcopy program (default mcopy) :mmd: path to the mmd program (default mmd) :mkcramfs: path to the mkcramfs program (default mkcramfs) :mkdosfs: path to the mkdosfs program (default mkdosfs) :mkfsjffs2: path to the mkfs.jffs2 program (default mkfs.jffs2) :mkfsubifs: path to the mkfs.ubifs program (default mkfs.ubifs) :mksquashfs: path to the mksquashfs program (default mksquashfs) :qemu-img: path to the qemu-img program (default qemu-img) :tar: path to the tar program (default tar) :tune2fs: path to the tune2fs program (default tune2fs) :ubinize: path to the ubinize program (default ubinize)
Include Configurations Fragments
To include a "foo.cfg"
config file, use the following statement::
include("foo.cfg")
This allows to re-use, for example flash configuration files, across different image configurations.