+=encoding utf8
+
=head1 NAME
-febootstrap - Bootstrap a basic Fedora system (like Debian debootstrap)
+febootstrap - Bootstrapping tool for creating supermin appliances
=head1 SYNOPSIS
- febootstrap [--options] REPO TARGET [MIRROR]
-
-=head1 EXAMPLES
-
- febootstrap fedora-10 /tmp/f10
- febootstrap rawhide /tmp/rawhide
- febootstrap rawhide /tmp/rawhide http://mymirror/rawhide/x86_64/os
- febootstrap --groupinstall="Mail Server" rawhide /tmp/rawhide
+ febootstrap [-o OUTPUTDIR] --names LIST OF PKGS ...
+ febootstrap [-o OUTPUTDIR] PKG FILE NAMES ...
=head1 DESCRIPTION
-febootstrap creates a Fedora root filesystem, based on the Fedora
-version specified by I<REPO> under the directory specified by
-I<TARGET>. Optionally I<MIRROR> can point to a local mirror
-(otherwise the public Fedora mirrors are used). I<REPO> names are
-C<fedora-I<VERSION>> (eg. C<fedora-10>) or C<rawhide>.
-
-febootstrap does I<not> need to be run as root. If for some reason
-you do run it as root, then it works slightly differently and may have
-side effects such as stopping or starting system daemons.
-
-For more advanced needs, take a look at L<mock(1)> and
-C<livecd-creator>.
-
-The normal output is a root directory located at I<TARGET> and
-a fakeroot logfile at C<I<TARGET>/fakeroot.log>.
+febootstrap is a tool for building supermin appliances. These are
+tiny appliances (similar to virtual machines), usually around 100KB in
+size, which get fully instantiated on-the-fly in a fraction of a
+second when you need to boot one of them.
+
+Originally "fe" in febootstrap stood for "Fedora", but this tool is
+now distro-independent and can build supermin appliances for several
+popular Linux distros, and adding support for others is reasonably
+easy.
+
+Note that this manual page documents febootstrap 3.x which is a
+complete rewrite and quite different from version 2.x. If you are
+looking for the febootstrap 2.x tools, then this is not the right
+place.
+
+=head2 BASIC OPERATION
+
+There are two modes for using febootstrap. With the I<--names>
+parameter, febootstrap takes a list of package names and creates a
+supermin appliance containing those packages and all dependencies that
+those packages require. In this mode febootstrap usually needs
+network access because it may need to consult package repositories in
+order to work out dependencies and download packages.
+
+Without I<--names>, febootstrap takes a list of packages (ie.
+filenames of locally available packages). This package set must be
+complete and consistent with no dependencies outside the set of
+packages you provide. In this mode febootstrap does not require any
+network access. It works by looking at the package files themselves.
+
+By "package" we mean the RPM, DEB, (etc.) package. A package name
+might be the fully qualified name (eg. C<coreutils-8.5-7.fc14.x86_64>)
+or some abbreviation (eg. C<coreutils>). The precise format of the
+name and what abbreviations are allowed depends on the package
+manager.
+
+The supermin appliance that febootstrap writes consists of two files
+called C<hostfiles> and C<base.img> (it is common for users to add
+more files). By default these are written to the current directory.
+If you specify the I<-o OUTPUTDIR> option then these files are written
+to the named directory instead (traditionally this directory is named
+C<supermin.d> but you can call it whatever you want).
+
+In all cases febootstrap can only build a supermin appliance which is
+identical in distro, version and architecture to the host. It does
+I<not> do cross-builds.
+
+=head2 MINIMIZING THE SUPERMIN APPLIANCE
+
+You may want to "minimize" the supermin appliance in order to save
+time and space when it is instantiated. Typically you might want to
+remove documentation, info files, man pages and locales. We used to
+provide a separate tool called C<febootstrap-minimize> for this
+purpose, but it is no longer provided. Instead you can post-process
+C<hostfiles> yourself to remove any files or directories that you
+don't want (by removing lines from the file). Be careful what you
+remove because files may be necessary for correct operation of the
+appliance.
+
+=head2 KERNEL AND KERNEL MODULES
+
+Usually the kernel and kernel modules are I<not> included in the
+supermin appliance. When the appliance is instantiated, the kernel
+modules from the host kernel are copied in, and it is booted using the
+host kernel.
+
+=head2 BOOTING AND CACHING THE SUPERMIN APPLIANCE
+
+To instantiate and boot the supermin appliance you need to use the
+separate tool L<febootstrap-supermin-helper(8)>. For fastest boot
+times you should cache the output of that tool. See the libguestfs
+source file C<src/appliance.c> for an example of how this is done.
+
+=head2 ENFORCING AVAILABILITY OF HOSTFILES
+
+L<febootstrap-supermin-helper(8)> builds the appliance by copying in
+host files as listed in C<hostfiles>. For this to work those host
+files must be available. We usually enforce this by adding
+requirements (eg. RPM C<Requires:> lines) on the package that uses the
+supermin appliance, so that package cannot be installed without
+pulling in the dependent packages and thus making sure the host files
+are available.
=head1 OPTIONS
=over 4
-=item B<-i package>
-
-=item B<--install=package>
-
-=item B<-g "group">
+=item B<--help>
-=item B<--groupinstall="group">
+Display brief command line usage, and exit.
-Specify the package or group to install. To list multiple packages or
-groups, you must give multiple C<-i> or C<-g> options. Group names
-can contain spaces, so use quotes where necessary.
+=item B<--exclude REGEXP>
-These are passed directly to C<yum install> or C<yum groupinstall>
-commands, and thus any dependencies are also resolved by yum. You can
-also use shell globs and filenames here, as with ordinary yum.
+After doing dependency resolution, exclude packages which match the
+regular expression.
-If no packages or groups are given, then we install the C<Core> group
-which is the smallest working Fedora installation. Use C<yum
-groupinfo Core> to list the packages currently in the C<Core> group.
+This option is only used with I<--names>, and it can be given multiple
+times on the command line.
-=back
-
-=head1 REPOSITORIES
-
-You can list available repositories by visiting this URL:
-
-L<http://mirrors.fedoraproject.org/mirrorlist?repo=help&arch=i386>
+=item B<--names>
-(If necessary replace C<i386> with your architecture, but it seems
-unlikely that this list will change based on architecture).
+Provide a list of package names, instead of providing packages
+directly. In this mode febootstrap may require network access. See
+L</BASIC OPERATION> above.
-=head1 FAKEROOT LOGFILE
+=item B<--no-warnings>
-When febootstrap is run as non-root (the normal case) we use fakeroot
-so that yum thinks it is running as root. Fakeroot keeps track of
-"real" file permissions in a log file which is saved into the target
-directory as C<I<TARGET>/fakeroot.log>.
+Don't print warnings about packaging problems.
-You can use the fakeroot logfile in a number of ways:
+=item B<-o outputdir>
-=over 4
+Select the output directory where the two supermin appliance files are
+written (C<hostfiles> and C<base.img>). The default directory is the
+current directory. Note that if this files exist already in the
+output directory then they will be overwritten.
-=item *
+=item B<-v>
-Run C<fakeroot -i fakeroot.log I<command>> in order to run a
-command with the faked file permissions.
+=item B<--verbose>
-=item *
+Enable verbose messages.
-Generate an initramfs (compressed cpio) file containing the correct
-permissions using the tool C<febootstrap-to-initramfs>.
+=item B<-V>
-=item *
+=item B<--version>
-Apply the permissions to the target directory using the tool
-C<febootstrap-fix-root> (requires root).
+Print the package name and version number, and exit.
=back
-=head1 COMPARISON TO debootstrap
-
-febootstrap cannot do cross-architecture installs (C<debootstrap
---foreign>). The reason is that C<%pre> and C<%post> scripts cannot
-run. It may be possible to defer running of scriptlets (which is
-basically how debootstrap works), and patches to do this are welcomed.
-
-febootstrap cannot do 32-on-64 bit installs. The reason is that
-fakeroot and fakechroot do not load the correct preload library. This
-is really a bug in fakeroot/fakechroot, which we think would be easy
-to fix. (debootstrap deals with this case the same as for
-C<--foreign> installs - see previous point).
-
-=head1 OTHER RESTRICTIONS AND BUGS
-
-Some C<%post> scripts do not run correctly. The most common case is
-C</sbin/ldconfig>. Since this binary is statically linked, fakeroot
-and fakechroot's LD_PRELOAD hack does not work, so effectively
-ldconfig tries to update the system cache. You will see the following
-error:
-
- /sbin/ldconfig: Can't create temporary cache file /etc/ld.so.cache~: Permission denied
-
-This error is mostly harmless. Just run C</sbin/ldconfig> the first
-time you boot into the newly created Fedora system.
-
-Another error you will see is with C</usr/sbin/glibc_post_upgrade>
-which is caused for the same reason - this binary is statically
-linked. We have examined what this binary does, and it is not really
-necessary for installs. If it makes you happier, you can run it the
-first time you boot the new system.
-
-febootstrap recreates the repository anew each time, and this causes
-yum to download all the RPMs every time. This is very wasteful, and
-we should provide a way to cache the repository.
+=head1 SEE ALSO
-=head1 HOME PAGE
+L<febootstrap-supermin-helper(8)>,
+L<http://people.redhat.com/~rjones/febootstrap/>,
+L<guestfs(3)>,
+L<http://libguestfs.org/>.
-L<http://et.redhat.com/~rjones/febootstrap>
+=head1 AUTHORS
-=head1 SEE ALSO
+=over 4
-L<febootstrap-to-initramfs(8)>,
-L<febootstrap-fix-root(8)>,
-L<fakeroot(1)>,
-L<fakechroot(1)>,
-L<yum(8)>,
-L<rpm(8)>.
+=item *
-=head1 ALTERNATIVES
+Richard W.M. Jones L<http://people.redhat.com/~rjones/>
-L<mock(1)>,
-L<http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/FedoraLiveCD/LiveCDHowTo>,
-L<debootstrap(8)>.
+=item *
-=head1 AUTHORS
+Matthew Booth L<mbooth@redhat.com>
-Richard W.M. Jones <rjones @ redhat . com>
+=back
=head1 COPYRIGHT
-(C) Copyright 2009 Red Hat Inc.,
-L<http://et.redhat.com/~rjones/febootstrap>.
+Copyright (C) 2009-2010 Red Hat Inc.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by