NAME¶
kernel-img.conf - site wide configuration file for kernel image packages
SYNOPSIS¶
/etc/kernel-img.conf
DESCRIPTION¶
The file
/etc/kernel-img.conf is a simple file looked at by the kernel
image post installation process to allow local options for handling some
aspects of the installation, overriding the defaults built into the image
itself.
The format of the file is a simple
VAR=VALUE pair. Boolean
values may be specified as
Yes,
True,
1, and
No,
False,
0, and are case insensitive. This file is automatically
created by the installation script in certain circumstances.
At the moment, the user modifiable variables supported are:
- postinst_hook
- DEPRECATED: Set this variable to a script to be executed during
installation. The path can be a relative path if the script lives in a
safe path -- that is, if it lives in /bin, /sbin, /usr/bin, or /usr/sbin,
or must be an absolute path instead. Before calling this script, the env
variable STEM shall be set to the value of the --stem
argument (or the default value, linux), and KERNEL_PACKAGE_VERSION
shall be set to the version of the kernel-package that created the
package. This script shall be called with two arguments, the first being
the version of the kernel image, and the second argument being the
location of the kernel image itself. Errors in the script shall
cause the postinst to fail. Since debconf is in use before the script is
called, this script should issue no diagnostic messages to stdout -- while
the postinst does call db_stop, debconf does not restore stdout, so
messages to stdout disappear. An example script for grub users is present
in /usr/share/doc/kernel-package/ directory. This script is run
after the scripts in /etc/kernel/postinst.d directory.
- postrm_hook
- DEPRECATED: Set this variable to a script to be executed in the
postrm (that is, after the image has been removed) after all the remove
actions have been performed. The path can be a relative path if the script
lives in a safe path -- that is, if it lives in /bin, /sbin, /usr/bin, or
/usr/sbin, or must be an absolute path instead. The environment variable
KERNEL_PACKAGE_VERSION shall be set to the version of the
kernel-package that created the package. This script shall be called with
two arguments, the first being the version of the kernel image, and
the second argument being the location of the kernel image itself.
Errors in the script shall produce a warning message, but shall be
otherwise ignored. Since debconf is in use before the script is called,
this script should issue no diagnostic messages to stdout -- while the
postinst does call db_stop, debconf does not restore stdout, so
messages to stdout disappear. This script is run after the scripts
in /etc/kernel/postrm.d directory.
- preinst_hook
- DEPRECATED: Set this variable to a script to be executed before the
package is unpacked, and can be used to put in additional checks. The path
can be a relative path if the script lives in a safe path -- that is, if
it lives in /bin, /sbin, /usr/bin, or /usr/sbin, or must be an absolute
path instead. The environment variable KERNEL_PACKAGE_VERSION shall
be set to the version of the kernel-package that created the package. This
script shall be called with two arguments, the first being the
version of the kernel image, and the second argument being the
location of the kernel image itself. This script is run
after the scripts in /etc/kernel/preinst.d directory.
- prerm_hook
- DEPRECATED: Set this variable to a script to be executed before the
package files are removed (so any added files may be removed) . The path
can be a relative path if the script lives in a safe path -- that is, if
it lives in /bin, /sbin, /usr/bin, or /usr/sbin, or must be an absolute
path instead. The environment variable KERNEL_PACKAGE_VERSION shall
be set to the version of the kernel-package that created the package. This
script shall be called with two arguments, the first being the
version of the kernel image, and the second argument being the
location of the kernel image itself. Errors in the script shall
cause the prerm to fail. Since debconf is in use before the script is
called, this script should issue no diagnostic messages to stdout -- while
the postinst does call db_stop, debconf does not restore stdout, so
messages to stdout disappear. This script is run after the scripts
in /etc/kernel/prerm.d directory.
- src_postinst_hook
- DEPRECATED: Unlike the other hook variables, this is meant for a
script run during the post inst of a docs, headers or a source package.
Using this hook for the headers package is now being deprecated, at some
point the headers post install script shall only run the
header_postinst_hook. The path can be a relative path if the script lives
in a safe path -- that is, if it lives in /bin, /sbin, /usr/bin, or
/usr/sbin, or must be an absolute path instead. The environment variable
KERNEL_PACKAGE_VERSION shall be set to the version of the
kernel-package that created the package. This script shall be called with
two arguments, the first being the name of the package being
installed (could be kernel source or headers), and the second argument
being the version of the package being installed. Errors in the
script shall cause the postinst to fail. This script is run after
the scripts in /etc/kernel/src_postinst.d directory.
- header_postinst_hook
- DEPRECATED: Unlike the other hook variables, this is meant for a
script run during the post inst of a headers package only. The path can be
a relative path if the script lives in a safe path -- that is, if it lives
in /bin, /sbin, /usr/bin, or /usr/sbin, or must be an absolute path
instead. The environment variable KERNEL_PACKAGE_VERSION shall be
set to the version of the kernel-package that created the package. This
script shall be called with two arguments, the first being the name
of the package being installed, and the second argument being the
version of the package being installed. Errors in the script shall
cause the postinst to fail. This script is run after the scripts in
/etc/kernel/header_postinst.d directory.
- clobber_modules
- If set, the preinst shall silently try to move /lib/modules/version out of
the way if it is the same version as the image being installed. Use at
your own risk. This variable is unset by default.
- warn_reboot
- This variable can be used to turn off the warning given when installing a
kernel image which is the same version as the currently running version.
If the modules list is changed, the modules dependencies may have been
changed, and the modules for the new kernel may not run correctly on the
running kernel if the kernel ABI has changed in the meanwhile. It is a
good idea to reboot, and this is a note to remind you. If you know what
you are doing, you can set this variable to no. This variable is set by
default.
- relink_build_link
- This option manipulates the build link created by recent kernels. If the
link is a dangling link, and if a the corresponding kernel headers appear
to have been installed on the system, a new symlink shall be created to
point to them. The default is to relink the build link (YES).
- force_build_link
- This option manipulates the build link created by recent kernels. If the
link is a dangling link, a new symlink shall be created to point to kernel
headers data in /usr/src, whether they have been installed or not. The
default is unset, we don't create potentially dangling symlinks by
default.
- relink_src_link
- This option manipulates the source link created by recent kernels. If the
link is a dangling link it is deleted at install time. The default is to
relink (delete) the source link (YES).
- silent_modules
- This option has been put in for the people who are vastly irritated on
being warned about preexisting modules directory
/lib/modules/$version. That directory may belong to an old or
defunct kernel image package, in which case problems may arise with
leftover modules in that directory tree, or the directory may legitimately
exist due to a independent modules package being installed for this kernel
version that has already been unpacked. In this latter case the existence
of the directory is benign. If you set this variable, you shall no longer
be given a chance to abort if a preexisting modules directory
/lib/modules/$version is detected. This is unset by default.
- ignore_depmod_err
- If set, does not prompt to continue after a depmod problem in the
postinstall script. This facilitates automated installs, though it may
mask a problem with the kernel image. A diagnostic is still issued. This
is unset be default.
FILES¶
The file described here is
/etc/kernel-img.conf. Also, there are example
scripts suitable for dropping into
/etc/kernel/*.d installed in
/usr/share/doc/kernel-common/examples.
SEE ALSO¶
make(1),
make-kpkg(1),
kernel-pkg.conf(5),
The GNU Make
manual
BUGS¶
There are no bugs. Any resemblance thereof is delirium. Really.
AUTHOR¶
This manual page was written by Manoj Srivastava <srivasta@debian.org>,
for the Debian GNU/Linux system.