This is a fork of archiso with support for creating aarch64 (ARM64) Arch Linux ARM (referred to as ALARM) generic UEFI ISOs.
I wanted to be able to easily install ALARM in a Parallels VM on my M1 Mac. This repo will allow anyone to fairly easily create ALARM ISOs to be able to run in VMs on their aarch64 computers. It will almost certainly be helpful to people wanting to install ALARM on their aarch64 computers that have UEFI firmwares that allow for booting from multiple storage devices (e.g., devices that can boot from USB flash drives).
- Modified archiso/mkarchiso script with aarch64 support, removed hardcoded ucodes that are unavailable on aarch64
- Modified configs/releng/pacman.conf to remove packages that are unavailable on aarch64, and add
linux-aarch64
kernel - Removed config files + systemd services for packages have been removed
- Updated various files with aarch64 branding (e.g., replace "x64" strings with "aarch64")
- Replace x64 Arch Linux specific config files with ALARM versions (e.g., use ALARM pacman config + mirrorlist)
- Add new journald.conf.d config "audit.conf" to disable outputting audit messages to the Linux TTY
- TTY would otherwise get filled with audit messages, which would make it very hard to install ALARM
- Move archiso
initcpio
files directly into the releng airootfs - Modified archiso_kms hooks to not show warnings
when running archiso in the mkintcpio section, as there are modules which are unavailable in
linux-aarch64
- Note: this fork is currently based off of the
v57
release, which is the last version that has these files included in in the archiso project. They have since been moved here, as x64 Arch Linux now has those files added to the ISO through themkinitcpio-archiso
package. This package IS available from the ALARM packages (as the package is flagged as "any" architecture), however those files can't be modified with the changes noted above. Maybe at some point the changes can get merged upstream or an ALARM-specifc fork can be created, but for now, having them inside theairootfs
is fine
- Modified archiso_kms hooks to not show warnings
when running archiso in the mkintcpio section, as there are modules which are unavailable in
- Move archiso
Check the commits to this repo to see all the changes.
Note: I will occasionally push new ISOs to the releases section of this repository, so if you don't want to build the ISO yourself, check there first
I assume these commands are being run from an existing Arch Linux install, whether that be x64 or ARM)
- Install the packages mentioned in Requirements. Note that you don't need the virtualized test environment packages.
git clone
this repository andcd
into it- run
sudo ./archiso/mkarchiso -v configs/releng
. This will download all the packages and build the ISO - You can find the generated ISO in in work once it has been built
- If you want to run it again (e.g., you want to build a more up-to-date ISO, or you want to add packages to be installed
to the ISO), first run
sudo rm -rf work
andsudo rm -rf out
to delete the working tree and ISO. Then re-run from step #3.
The archiso project features scripts and configuration templates to build installation media (.iso images and .tar.gz bootstrap images) as well as netboot artifacts for BIOS and UEFI based systems on the x86_64 architecture. Currently creating the images is only supported on Arch Linux but may work on other operating systems as well.
The following packages need to be installed to be able to create an image with the included scripts:
- arch-install-scripts
- awk
- dosfstools
- e2fsprogs
- erofs-utils (optional)
- findutils
- gzip
- libarchive
- libisoburn
- mtools
- openssl
- pacman
- sed
- squashfs-tools
For running the images in a virtualized test environment the following packages are required:
- edk2-ovmf
- qemu
For linting the shell scripts the following package is required:
- shellcheck
Archiso comes with two profiles: baseline and releng. While both can serve as starting points for creating
custom live media, releng is used to create the monthly installation medium.
They can be found below configs/baseline/ and configs/releng/
(respectively). Both profiles are defined by files to be placed into overlays (e.g. airootfs → the image's /
).
Read README.profile.rst to learn more about how to create profiles.
Usually the archiso tools are installed as a package. However, it is also possible to clone this repository and create images without installing archiso system-wide.
As filesystems are created and various mount actions have to be done when creating an image, root is required to run the scripts.
When archiso is installed system-wide and the modification of a profile is desired, it is necessary to copy it to a
writeable location, as /usr/share/archiso
is tracked by the package manager and only writeable by root (changes will
be lost on update).
The examples below will assume an unmodified profile in a system location (unless noted otherwise).
It is advised to consult the help output of mkarchiso:
mkarchiso -h
mkarchiso -w path/to/work_dir -o path/to/out_dir path/to/profile
Clone this repository and run:
./archiso/mkarchiso -w path/to/work_dir -o path/to/out_dir path/to/profile
The convenience script run_archiso is provided to boot into the medium using qemu. It is advised to consult its help output:
run_archiso -h
Run the following to boot the iso using BIOS:
run_archiso -i path/to/an/arch.iso
Run the following to boot the iso using UEFI:
run_archiso -u -i path/to/an/arch.iso
The script can of course also be executed from this repository:
./scripts/run_archiso.sh -i path/to/an/arch.iso
To install archiso system-wide use the included Makefile
:
make install
Optionally install archiso's mkinitcpio hooks:
make install-initcpio
Optional features
The iso image contains a GRUB environment block holding the iso name and version. This allows to boot the iso image from GRUB with a version specific cow directory to mitigate overlay clashes.
Development of archiso takes place on Arch Linux' Gitlab: https://gitlab.archlinux.org/archlinux/archiso.
Please read our distribution-wide Code of Conduct before contributing, to understand what actions will and will not be tolerated.
Read our contributing guide to learn more about how to provide fixes or improvements for the code base.
Discussion around archiso takes place on the arch-releng mailing list and in #archlinux-releng on Libera Chat.
All past and present authors of archiso are listed in AUTHORS.
Releases of archiso are created by its current maintainer
David Runge. Tags are signed using the PGP key with the ID
C7E7849466FE2358343588377258734B41C31549
.
To verify a tag, first import the relevant PGP key:
gpg --auto-key-locate wkd --search-keys [email protected]
Afterwards a tag can be verified from a clone of this repository:
git verify-tag <tag>
Archiso is licensed under the terms of the GPL-3.0-or-later (see LICENSE).