Install en PDF
Install en PDF
Install en PDF
This document contains installation instructions for the Ubuntu 16.04 system (codename “‘Xenial Xerus’”), for
the 32-bit PC (“i386”) architecture. It also contains pointers to more information and information on how to make
the most of your new Ubuntu system.
This manual is free software; you may redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License. Please refer to the
license in Appendix F.
Table of Contents
Installing Ubuntu 16.04 “Xenial Xerus” For i386 ........................................................................... x
1. Welcome to Ubuntu ........................................................................................................................ 1
1.1. What is Ubuntu?................................................................................................................... 1
1.1.1. Sponsorship by Canonical ....................................................................................... 1
1.2. What is Debian? ................................................................................................................... 1
1.2.1. Ubuntu and Debian.................................................................................................. 2
1.2.1.1. Package selection ........................................................................................ 2
1.2.1.2. Releases....................................................................................................... 3
1.2.1.3. Development community............................................................................ 3
1.2.1.4. Freedom and Philosophy............................................................................. 3
1.2.1.5. Ubuntu and other Debian derivatives.......................................................... 4
1.3. What is GNU/Linux? ........................................................................................................... 4
1.4. Getting Ubuntu..................................................................................................................... 5
1.5. Getting the Newest Version of This Document.................................................................... 5
1.6. Organization of This Document........................................................................................... 5
1.7. Your Documentation Help is Welcome................................................................................ 6
1.8. About Copyrights and Software Licenses............................................................................ 6
2. System Requirements ..................................................................................................................... 8
2.1. Supported Hardware............................................................................................................. 8
2.1.1. Supported Architectures .......................................................................................... 8
2.1.2. CPU, Main Boards, and Video Support................................................................... 8
2.1.2.1. CPU............................................................................................................. 8
2.1.2.2. I/O Bus ........................................................................................................ 9
2.1.3. Laptops .................................................................................................................... 9
2.1.4. Multiple Processors ................................................................................................. 9
2.1.5. Graphics Hardware Support .................................................................................... 9
2.1.6. Network Connectivity Hardware........................................................................... 10
2.1.6.1. Wireless Network Cards ........................................................................... 10
2.1.7. Braille Displays ..................................................................................................... 10
2.1.8. Hardware Speech Synthesis .................................................................................. 10
2.1.9. Peripherals and Other Hardware ........................................................................... 11
2.2. Devices Requiring Firmware ............................................................................................. 11
2.3. Purchasing Hardware Specifically for GNU/Linux ........................................................... 11
2.3.1. Avoid Proprietary or Closed Hardware ................................................................. 12
2.4. Installation Media .............................................................................................................. 12
2.4.1. CD-ROM/DVD-ROM/BD-ROM .......................................................................... 12
2.4.2. USB Memory Stick ............................................................................................... 13
2.4.3. Network ................................................................................................................. 13
2.4.4. Hard Disk............................................................................................................... 13
2.4.5. Un*x or GNU system ............................................................................................ 13
2.4.6. Supported Storage Systems ................................................................................... 14
2.5. Memory and Disk Space Requirements............................................................................. 14
3. Before Installing Ubuntu.............................................................................................................. 15
3.1. Overview of the Installation Process.................................................................................. 15
3.2. Back Up Your Existing Data!............................................................................................. 16
3.3. Information You Will Need................................................................................................ 16
3.3.1. Documentation ...................................................................................................... 16
3.3.1.1. Installation Manual ................................................................................... 16
iii
3.3.1.2. Hardware documentation .......................................................................... 16
3.3.2. Finding Sources of Hardware Information............................................................ 16
3.3.3. Hardware Compatibility ........................................................................................ 17
3.3.3.1. Testing hardware compatibility with a Live-System ................................ 18
3.3.4. Network Settings ................................................................................................... 19
3.4. Meeting Minimum Hardware Requirements ..................................................................... 19
3.5. Pre-Partitioning for Multi-Boot Systems ........................................................................... 20
3.6. Pre-Installation Hardware and Operating System Setup.................................................... 21
3.6.1. Invoking the BIOS Set-Up Menu .......................................................................... 21
3.6.2. Boot Device Selection ........................................................................................... 21
3.6.3. Systems with UEFI firmware ................................................................................ 22
3.6.4. Disabling the Windows 8 “fast boot” feature ........................................................ 23
3.6.5. Hardware Issues to Watch Out For........................................................................ 23
4. Obtaining System Installation Media ......................................................................................... 24
4.1. Official Ubuntu CD-ROMs ................................................................................................ 24
4.2. Downloading Files from Ubuntu Mirrors .......................................................................... 24
4.2.1. Where to Find Installation Images ........................................................................ 24
4.3. Preparing Files for USB Memory Stick Booting ............................................................... 24
4.3.1. Preparing a USB stick using a hybrid CD or DVD image .................................... 25
4.3.2. Manually copying files to the USB stick ............................................................... 26
4.3.3. Manually copying files to the USB stick — the flexible way ............................... 26
4.3.3.1. Partitioning the USB stick ........................................................................ 26
4.3.3.2. Adding the installer image ........................................................................ 27
4.4. Preparing Files for Hard Disk Booting .............................................................................. 27
4.4.1. Hard disk installer booting from Linux using LILO or GRUB............................ 27
4.5. Preparing Files for TFTP Net Booting............................................................................... 28
4.5.1. Setting up a DHCP server...................................................................................... 28
4.5.1.1. Enabling PXE Booting in the DHCP configuration.................................. 29
4.5.2. Setting up a BOOTP server ................................................................................... 30
4.5.3. Enabling the TFTP Server ..................................................................................... 30
4.5.4. Move TFTP Images Into Place.............................................................................. 31
4.6. Automatic Installation........................................................................................................ 31
4.6.1. Automatic Installation Using the Ubuntu Installer................................................ 31
4.6.2. Automatic Installation Using Kickstart ................................................................. 31
4.6.2.1. Additions................................................................................................... 32
4.6.2.2. Missing features ........................................................................................ 32
4.6.2.3. Example .................................................................................................... 33
5. Booting the Installation System................................................................................................... 36
5.1. Booting the Installer on 32-bit PC ..................................................................................... 36
5.1.1. Booting from USB Memory Stick......................................................................... 36
5.1.2. Booting from a CD-ROM...................................................................................... 36
5.1.3. Booting from Linux using LILO or GRUB ......................................................... 36
5.1.4. Booting with TFTP................................................................................................ 37
5.1.4.1. NIC or Motherboard that support PXE..................................................... 37
5.1.4.2. NIC with Network BootROM................................................................... 37
5.1.4.3. Etherboot................................................................................................... 38
5.1.5. The Boot Screen .................................................................................................... 38
5.2. Accessibility....................................................................................................................... 39
5.2.1. Installer front-end .................................................................................................. 39
5.2.2. USB Braille Displays ............................................................................................ 39
5.2.3. Serial Braille Displays........................................................................................... 40
iv
5.2.4. Software Speech Synthesis.................................................................................... 40
5.2.5. Hardware Speech Synthesis .................................................................................. 40
5.2.6. Board Devices........................................................................................................ 40
5.2.7. High-Contrast Theme ............................................................................................ 41
5.2.8. Zoom...................................................................................................................... 41
5.2.9. Preseeding.............................................................................................................. 41
5.2.10. Accessibility of the installed system ................................................................... 41
5.3. Boot Parameters ................................................................................................................. 41
5.3.1. Boot console .......................................................................................................... 41
5.3.2. Ubuntu Installer Parameters .................................................................................. 42
5.3.3. Using boot parameters to answer questions .......................................................... 45
5.3.4. Passing parameters to kernel modules................................................................... 46
5.3.5. Blacklisting kernel modules .................................................................................. 46
5.4. Troubleshooting the Installation Process ........................................................................... 47
5.4.1. CD-ROM Reliability ............................................................................................. 47
5.4.1.1. Common issues ......................................................................................... 47
5.4.1.2. How to investigate and maybe solve issues .............................................. 47
5.4.2. Boot Configuration ................................................................................................ 49
5.4.3. Software Speech Synthesis.................................................................................... 49
5.4.4. Common 32-bit PC Installation Problems............................................................. 49
5.4.4.1. System Freeze During the PCMCIA Configuration Phase ....................... 49
5.4.5. Interpreting the Kernel Startup Messages ............................................................. 50
5.4.6. Reporting Installation Problems ............................................................................ 50
5.4.7. Submitting Installation Reports............................................................................. 50
6. Using the Ubuntu Installer........................................................................................................... 52
6.1. How the Installer Works..................................................................................................... 52
6.2. Components Introduction................................................................................................... 52
6.3. Using Individual Components............................................................................................ 55
6.3.1. Setting up Ubuntu Installer and Hardware Configuration ..................................... 55
6.3.1.1. Check available memory / low memory mode ......................................... 55
6.3.1.2. Selecting Localization Options ................................................................. 56
6.3.1.3. Choosing a Keyboard................................................................................ 57
6.3.1.4. Looking for the Ubuntu Installer ISO Image ............................................ 57
6.3.1.5. Configuring the Network .......................................................................... 57
6.3.1.5.1. Automatic network configuration................................................. 58
6.3.1.5.2. Manual network configuration ..................................................... 58
6.3.1.5.3. IPv4 and IPv6 ............................................................................... 58
6.3.1.6. Configuring the Clock and Time Zone ..................................................... 58
6.3.2. Setting Up Users And Passwords .......................................................................... 59
6.3.2.1. Create an Ordinary User ........................................................................... 59
6.3.3. Partitioning and Mount Point Selection ................................................................ 59
6.3.3.1. Supported partitioning options.................................................................. 60
6.3.3.2. Guided Partitioning................................................................................... 61
6.3.3.3. Manual Partitioning .................................................................................. 62
6.3.3.4. Configuring Multidisk Devices (Software RAID) .................................... 63
6.3.3.5. Configuring the Logical Volume Manager (LVM) ................................... 66
6.3.3.6. Configuring Encrypted Volumes............................................................... 67
6.3.4. Installing the Base System..................................................................................... 69
6.3.5. Installing Additional Software .............................................................................. 70
6.3.5.1. Configuring apt ......................................................................................... 70
6.3.5.1.1. Installing from more than one CD or DVD.................................. 71
v
6.3.5.1.2. Using a network mirror ................................................................ 71
6.3.5.1.3. Choosing a network mirror........................................................... 72
6.3.5.2. Selecting and Installing Software ............................................................. 72
6.3.6. Making Your System Bootable.............................................................................. 73
6.3.6.1. Detecting other operating systems ............................................................ 73
6.3.6.2. Install the Grub Boot Loader on a Hard Disk.......................................... 73
6.3.6.3. Install the LILO Boot Loader on a Hard Disk ......................................... 74
6.3.6.4. Continue Without Boot Loader................................................................. 74
6.3.7. Finishing the Installation ....................................................................................... 74
6.3.7.1. Setting the System Clock .......................................................................... 75
6.3.7.2. Reboot the System .................................................................................... 75
6.3.8. Troubleshooting..................................................................................................... 75
6.3.8.1. Saving the installation logs ....................................................................... 75
6.3.8.2. Using the Shell and Viewing the Logs...................................................... 75
6.3.9. Installation Over the Network ............................................................................... 76
6.4. Loading Missing Firmware ................................................................................................ 77
6.4.1. Preparing a medium............................................................................................... 78
6.4.2. Firmware and the Installed System ....................................................................... 78
7. Booting Into Your New Ubuntu System...................................................................................... 79
7.1. The Moment of Truth......................................................................................................... 79
7.2. Mounting encrypted volumes............................................................................................. 79
7.2.1. Troubleshooting..................................................................................................... 80
7.3. Log In ................................................................................................................................. 80
8. Next Steps and Where to Go From Here .................................................................................... 82
8.1. Shutting down the system .................................................................................................. 82
8.2. If You Are New to Unix ..................................................................................................... 82
8.3. Orienting Yourself to Ubuntu............................................................................................. 82
8.3.1. Ubuntu Packaging System..................................................................................... 82
8.3.2. Additional Software Available for Ubuntu............................................................ 83
8.3.3. Application Version Management ......................................................................... 83
8.3.4. Cron Job Management........................................................................................... 83
8.4. Further Reading and Information....................................................................................... 83
8.5. Setting Up Your System To Use E-Mail ............................................................................ 84
8.5.1. Default E-Mail Configuration................................................................................ 84
8.5.2. Sending E-Mails Outside The System................................................................... 85
8.5.3. Configuring the Exim4 Mail Transport Agent ...................................................... 85
8.6. Compiling a New Kernel.................................................................................................... 86
8.6.1. Kernel Image Management ................................................................................... 87
8.7. Recovering a Broken System ............................................................................................. 88
A. Installation Howto........................................................................................................................ 89
A.1. Booting the installer .......................................................................................................... 89
A.1.1. CDROM................................................................................................................ 89
A.1.2. USB memory stick................................................................................................ 89
A.1.3. Booting from network .......................................................................................... 89
A.2. Installation......................................................................................................................... 89
A.3. And finally. . . .................................................................................................................... 91
vi
B. Automating the installation using preseeding ........................................................................... 92
B.1. Introduction ....................................................................................................................... 92
B.1.1. Preseeding methods .............................................................................................. 92
B.1.2. Limitations ............................................................................................................ 93
B.1.3. Debconf basics...................................................................................................... 93
B.2. Using preseeding ............................................................................................................... 93
B.2.1. Loading the preconfiguration file.......................................................................... 94
B.2.2. Using boot parameters to preseed questions......................................................... 94
B.2.3. Auto mode............................................................................................................. 95
B.2.4. Aliases useful with preseeding ............................................................................. 97
B.2.5. Using a DHCP server to specify preconfiguration files ........................................ 97
B.3. Creating a preconfiguration file ......................................................................................... 98
B.4. Contents of the preconfiguration file (for xenial) .............................................................. 99
B.4.1. Localization .......................................................................................................... 99
B.4.2. Network configuration ........................................................................................ 100
B.4.3. Network console ................................................................................................. 102
B.4.4. Mirror settings..................................................................................................... 102
B.4.5. Account setup ..................................................................................................... 102
B.4.6. Clock and time zone setup .................................................................................. 104
B.4.7. Partitioning.......................................................................................................... 104
B.4.7.1. Partitioning example............................................................................... 104
B.4.7.2. Partitioning using RAID......................................................................... 106
B.4.7.3. Controlling how partitions are mounted................................................. 107
B.4.8. Base system installation...................................................................................... 107
B.4.9. Apt setup ............................................................................................................. 108
B.4.10. Package selection .............................................................................................. 109
B.4.11. Boot loader installation..................................................................................... 110
B.4.12. Finishing up the installation.............................................................................. 111
B.4.13. Preseeding other packages ................................................................................ 111
B.5. Advanced options ............................................................................................................ 111
B.5.1. Running custom commands during the installation............................................ 111
B.5.2. Using preseeding to change default values ......................................................... 112
B.5.3. Chainloading preconfiguration files.................................................................... 112
C. Partitioning for Ubuntu............................................................................................................. 114
C.1. Deciding on Ubuntu Partitions and Sizes ........................................................................ 114
C.2. The Directory Tree .......................................................................................................... 114
C.3. Recommended Partitioning Scheme................................................................................ 116
C.4. Device Names in Linux ................................................................................................... 116
C.5. Ubuntu Partitioning Programs ......................................................................................... 117
C.5.1. Partitioning for 32-bit PC ................................................................................... 117
D. Random Bits ............................................................................................................................... 119
D.1. Linux Devices ................................................................................................................. 119
D.1.1. Setting Up Your Mouse ...................................................................................... 119
D.2. Disk Space Needed for Tasks.......................................................................................... 120
D.3. Disk Space Needed ......................................................................................................... 121
D.4. Installing Ubuntu from a Unix/Linux System................................................................. 121
D.4.1. Getting Started.................................................................................................... 121
D.4.2. Install debootstrap............................................................................................. 122
D.4.3. Run debootstrap ................................................................................................ 122
D.4.4. Configure The Base System ............................................................................... 123
D.4.4.1. Create device files .................................................................................. 123
vii
D.4.4.2. Mount Partitions..................................................................................... 123
D.4.4.3. Setting Timezone ................................................................................... 125
D.4.4.4. Configure Networking............................................................................ 125
D.4.4.5. Configure Apt......................................................................................... 126
D.4.4.6. Configure Locales and Keyboard........................................................... 126
D.4.5. Install a Kernel.................................................................................................... 127
D.4.6. Set up the Boot Loader ....................................................................................... 127
D.4.7. Remote access: Installing SSH and setting up access ........................................ 128
D.4.8. Finishing touches................................................................................................ 128
D.4.9. Create a User ...................................................................................................... 129
D.4.10. Install the Ubuntu Desktop ............................................................................... 129
D.5. Installing Ubuntu over Parallel Line IP (PLIP)............................................................... 130
D.5.1. Requirements ...................................................................................................... 130
D.5.2. Setting up source ................................................................................................ 130
D.5.3. Installing target ................................................................................................... 131
D.6. Installing Ubuntu using PPP over Ethernet (PPPoE) ...................................................... 131
E. Administrivia.............................................................................................................................. 133
E.1. About This Document ..................................................................................................... 133
E.2. Contributing to This Document ....................................................................................... 133
E.3. Major Contributions......................................................................................................... 133
E.4. Trademark Acknowledgement......................................................................................... 134
F. GNU General Public License .................................................................................................... 135
F.1. Preamble........................................................................................................................... 135
F.2. GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE............................................................................. 135
F.3. How to Apply These Terms to Your New Programs........................................................ 139
viii
List of Tables
3-1. Hardware Information Helpful for an Install .............................................................................. 17
3-2. Recommended Minimum System Requirements ........................................................................ 19
ix
Installing Ubuntu 16.04 “Xenial Xerus” For
i386
We are delighted that you have decided to try Ubuntu, and are sure that you will find that Ubuntu’s
GNU/Linux distribution is unique. Ubuntu brings together high-quality free software from around the
world, integrating it into a coherent whole. We believe that you will find that the result is truly more
than the sum of the parts.
We understand that many of you want to install Ubuntu without reading this manual, and the Ubuntu
installer is designed to make this possible. If you don’t have time to read the whole Installation Guide
right now, we recommend that you read the Installation Howto, which will walk you through the basic
installation process, and links to the manual for more advanced topics or for when things go wrong.
The Installation Howto can be found in Appendix A.
With that said, we hope that you have the time to read most of this manual, and doing so will lead to
a more informed and likely more successful installation experience.
x
Chapter 1. Welcome to Ubuntu
This chapter provides an overview of the Ubuntu Project, and the Debian Project upon which it is
based. If you already know about the Ubuntu Project’s history and the Ubuntu distribution, feel free
to skip to the next chapter.
• Ubuntu will always be free of charge, and there is no extra fee for the “enterprise edition”, we make
our very best work available to everyone on the same Free terms.
• Ubuntu includes the very best in translations and accessibility infrastructure that the Free Software
community has to offer, to make Ubuntu usable by as many people as possible.
• Ubuntu is shipped in stable and regular release cycles; a new release will be shipped every six
months. You can use the current stable release or the current development release. A release will be
supported for 18 months.
• Ubuntu is entirely committed to the principles of open source software development; we encourage
people to use open source software, improve it and pass it on.
Ubuntu is suitable for both desktop and server use. The current Ubuntu release supports Intel x86
(IBM-compatible PC), AMD64 (x86-64), ARMv7, ARMv8 (ARM64), IBM POWER8, IBM zSeries
(zEC12/zEC13), and PowerPC architectures.
Ubuntu includes more than 1000 pieces of software, starting with the Linux kernel version 4.4 and
GNOME 3.18, and covering every standard desktop application from word processing and spread-
sheet applications to internet access applications, web server software, email software, programming
languages and tools and of course several games.
1
Chapter 1. Welcome to Ubuntu
an open invitation to software developers to contribute to a complete and coherent software distri-
bution based on the relatively new Linux kernel. That relatively small band of dedicated enthusiasts,
originally funded by the Free Software Foundation (http://www.fsf.org/) and influenced by the GNU
(http://www.gnu.org/gnu/the-gnu-project.html) philosophy, has grown over the years into an organi-
zation of around 1026 Debian Developers.
Debian Developers are involved in a variety of activities, including Web (http://www.debian.org/)
and FTP (ftp://ftp.debian.org/) site administration, graphic design, legal analysis of software licenses,
writing documentation, and, of course, maintaining software packages.
In the interest of communicating our philosophy and attracting developers who believe in the princi-
ples that Debian stands for, the Debian Project has published a number of documents that outline our
values and serve as guides to what it means to be a Debian Developer:
Debian developers are also involved in a number of other projects; some specific to Debian, others
involving some or all of the Linux community. Some examples include:
• The Linux Standard Base (http://www.linuxbase.org/) (LSB) is a project aimed at standardizing the
basic GNU/Linux system, which will enable third-party software and hardware developers to easily
design programs and device drivers for Linux-in-general, rather than for a specific GNU/Linux
distribution.
• The Filesystem Hierarchy Standard (http://www.pathname.com/fhs/) (FHS) is an effort to standard-
ize the layout of the Linux file system. The FHS will allow software developers to concentrate their
efforts on designing programs, without having to worry about how the package will be installed in
different GNU/Linux distributions.
• Debian Jr. (http://www.debian.org/devel/debian-jr/) is an internal project, aimed at making sure
Debian has something to offer to our youngest users.
For more general information about Debian, see the Debian FAQ (http://www.debian.org/doc/FAQ/).
2
Chapter 1. Welcome to Ubuntu
1.2.1.2. Releases
Ubuntu makes a release every six months, and supports those releases for 18 months with daily secu-
rity fixes and patches to critical bugs.
As Ubuntu prepares for release, we “freeze” a snapshot of Debian’s development archive (“sid”). We
start from “sid” in order to give ourselves the freedom to make our own decisions with regard to
release management, independent of Debian’s release-in-preparation. This is necessary because our
release criteria are very different from Debian’s.
As a simple example, a package might be excluded from Debian “testing” due to a build failure on
any of the 11 architectures supported by Debian “sarge”, but it is still suitable for Ubuntu if it builds
and works on only three of them. A package will also be prevented from entering Debian “testing” if
it has release-critical bugs according to Debian criteria, but a bug which is release-critical for Debian
may not be as important for Ubuntu.
As a community, we choose places to diverge from Debian in ways that minimize the difference
between Debian and Ubuntu. For example, we usually choose to update to the very latest version of
Gnome rather than the older version in Debian, and we might do the same for key other pieces of
infrastructure such as X or GCC. Those decisions are listed as Feature Goals for that release, and we
work as a community to make sure that they are in place before the release happens.
3
Chapter 1. Welcome to Ubuntu
Differences between the groups lie in their treatment of non-computer applications (like documenta-
tion, fonts and binary firmware) and non-free software. Debian distributes a small amount of non-free
software from their Internet servers. Ubuntu will also distribute binary drivers in the "restricted" com-
ponent on its Internet servers but will not distribute any other software applications that do not meet
its own Ubuntu Licensing Guidelines.
4
Chapter 1. Welcome to Ubuntu
The Linux kernel (http://www.kernel.org/) first appeared in 1991, when a Finnish computing
science student named Linus Torvalds announced an early version of a replacement kernel for
Minix to the Usenet newsgroup comp.os.minix. See Linux International’s Linux History Page
(http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~awb/linux.history.html).
Linus Torvalds continues to coordinate the work of several hundred developers with the help of a
number of subsystem maintainers. There is an official website (http://www.kernel.org/) for the Linux
kernel. Information about the linux-kernel mailing list can be found on the linux-kernel mailing
list FAQ (http://www.tux.org/lkml/).
Linux users have immense freedom of choice in their software. For example, Linux users can choose
from a dozen different command line shells and several graphical desktops. This selection is often
bewildering to users of other operating systems, who are not used to thinking of the command line or
desktop as something that they can change.
Linux is also less likely to crash, better able to run more than one program at the same time, and more
secure than many operating systems. With these advantages, Linux is the fastest growing operating
system in the server market. More recently, Linux has begun to be popular among home and business
users as well.
1. Determine whether your hardware meets the requirements for using the installation system, in
Chapter 2.
5
Chapter 1. Welcome to Ubuntu
2. Backup your system, perform any necessary planning and hardware configuration prior to in-
stalling Ubuntu, in Chapter 3. If you are preparing a multi-boot system, you may need to create
partitionable space on your hard disk for Ubuntu to use.
3. In Chapter 4, you will obtain the necessary installation files for your method of installation.
4. Chapter 5 describes booting into the installation system. This chapter also discusses troubleshoot-
ing procedures in case you have problems with this step.
5. Perform the actual installation according to Chapter 6. This involves choosing your language,
configuring peripheral driver modules, configuring your network connection, so that remaining
installation files can be obtained directly from an Ubuntu server (if you are not installing from a
CD), partitioning your hard drives and installation of a base system, then selection and installation
of tasks. (Some background about setting up the partitions for your Ubuntu system is explained
in Appendix C.)
6. Boot into your newly installed base system, from Chapter 7.
Once you’ve got your system installed, you can read Chapter 8. That chapter explains where to look
to find more information about Unix and Ubuntu, and how to replace your kernel.
Finally, information about this document and how to contribute to it may be found in Appendix E.
Note: The Ubuntu project, as a pragmatic concession to its users, does make some packages
available that do not meet our criteria for being free. These packages are not part of the official
distribution, however, and are only available from the multiverse area of Ubuntu mirrors; see
the Ubuntu web site (http://www.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/components) for more information about the
layout and contents of the archives.
6
Chapter 1. Welcome to Ubuntu
Many of the programs in the system are licensed under the GNU General Public License, often simply
referred to as “the GPL”. The GPL requires you to make the source code of the programs available
whenever you distribute a binary copy of the program; that provision of the license ensures that any
user will be able to modify the software. Because of this provision, the source code1 for all such
programs is available in the Ubuntu system.
There are several other forms of copyright statements and software licenses used on the programs
in Ubuntu. You can find the copyrights and licenses for every package installed on your system by
looking in the file /usr/share/doc/package-name/copyright once you’ve installed a package
on your system.
For more information about licenses and how Ubuntu determines whether software is
free enough to be included in the main distribution, see the Ubuntu License Policy
(http://www.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/licensing).
The most important legal notice is that this software comes with no warranties. The programmers
who have created this software have done so for the benefit of the community. No guarantee is made
as to the suitability of the software for any given purpose. However, since the software is free, you
are empowered to modify that software to suit your needs — and to enjoy the benefits of the changes
made by others who have extended the software in this way.
1. For information on how to locate, unpack, and build binaries from Ubuntu source packages, see the Debian FAQ
(http://www.debian.org/doc/FAQ/), under “Basics of the Debian Package Management System”.
7
Chapter 2. System Requirements
This section contains information about what hardware you need to get started with Ubuntu. You will
also find links to further information about hardware supported by GNU and Linux.
2.1.2.1. CPU
Nearly all x86-based (IA-32) processors still in use in personal computers are supported. This also
includes 32-bit AMD and VIA (former Cyrix) processors, and processors like the Athlon XP and Intel
8
Chapter 2. System Requirements
P4 Xeon.
However, Ubuntu xenial will not run on 586 (Pentium) or earlier processors. Support for i586 and
lower processors, as well as for i686 processors without the cmov instruction, was dropped in Ubuntu
10.10. Most i686 and later processors are still supported. The Intel Quark is not supported, due to
hardware errata.
Note: If your system has a 64-bit processor from the AMD64 or Intel 64 families, you will probably
want to use the installer for the amd64 architecture instead of the installer for the (32-bit) i386
architecture.
2.1.3. Laptops
From a technical point of view, laptops are normal PCs, so all information regarding PC systems
applies to laptops as well. Installations on laptops nowadays usually work out of the box, including
things like automatically suspending the system on closing the lid and laptop specfic hardware buttons
like those for disabling the wifi interfaces (“airplane mode”). Nonetheless sometimes the hardware
vendors use specialized or proprietary hardware for some laptop-specific functions which might not
be supported. To see if your particular laptop works well with GNU/Linux, see for example the Linux
Laptop pages (http://www.linux-laptop.net/).
9
Chapter 2. System Requirements
even for basic graphics support, but these have been rare exceptions. For quite a lot of hardware, 3D
acceleration also works well out of the box, but there is still some hardware that needs binary blobs
to work well.
Details on supported graphics hardware and pointing devices can be found at
http://xorg.freedesktop.org/. Ubuntu 16.04 ships with X.Org version 7.7.
10
Chapter 2. System Requirements
devices can be found on the speakup website (http://www.linux-speakup.org/). Ubuntu 16.04 ships
with speakup version 3.1.6.
11
Chapter 2. System Requirements
If you do have to buy a machine with Windows bundled, carefully read the software license that comes
with Windows; you may be able to reject the license and obtain a rebate from your vendor. Searching
the Internet for “Microsoft Windows Rebate” will provide information on how to go about getting a
rebate.
Whether or not you are purchasing a system with Linux bundled, or even a used system, it is still
important to check that your hardware is supported by the Linux kernel. Check if your hardware is
listed in the references found above. Let your salesperson (if any) know that you’re shopping for a
Linux system. Support Linux-friendly hardware vendors.
12
Chapter 2. System Requirements
2.4.1. CD-ROM/DVD-ROM/BD-ROM
Note: Whenever you see “CD-ROM” in this manual, it applies to all of CD-ROMs, DVD-ROMs and
BD-ROMs, because all these technologies are really the same from the operating system’s point
of view.
2.4.3. Network
The network can be used during the installation to retrieve files needed for the installation. Whether
the network is used or not depends on the installation method you choose and your answers to certain
questions that will be asked during the installation. The installation system supports most types of
network connections (including PPPoE, but not ISDN or PPP), via either HTTP or FTP. After the
installation is completed, you can also configure your system to use ISDN and PPP.
You can also boot the installation system over the network without needing any local media like
CDs/DVDs or USB sticks. If you already have a netboot-infrastructure available (i.e. you are already
running DHCP and TFTP services in your network), this allows an easy and fast deployment of a
large number of machines. Setting up the necessary infrastructure requires a certain level of technical
experience, so this is not recommended for novice users.
Diskless installation, using network booting from a local area network and NFS-mounting of all local
filesystems, is another option.
13
Chapter 2. System Requirements
in this technique, skip to the Section D.4. This installation method is only recommended for advanced
users when no other installation method is available.
14
Chapter 3. Before Installing Ubuntu
This chapter deals with the preparation for installing Ubuntu before you even boot the installer. This
includes backing up your data, gathering information about your hardware, and locating any necessary
information.
1. Back up any existing data or documents on the hard disk where you plan to install.
2. Gather information about your computer and any needed documentation, before starting the in-
stallation.
3. Locate and/or download the installer software and any specialized driver or firmware files your
machine requires.
4. Set up boot media such as CDs/DVDs/USB sticks or provide a network boot infrastructure from
which the installer can be booted.
5. Boot the installation system.
6. Select the installation language.
7. Activate the ethernet network connection, if available.
8. If necessary, resize existing partitions on your target harddisk to make space for the installation.
9. Create and mount the partitions on which Ubuntu will be installed.
10. Watch the automatic download/install/setup of the base system.
11. Install a boot loader which can start up Ubuntu and/or your existing system.
12. Load the newly installed system for the first time.
If you have problems during the installation, it helps to know which packages are involved in which
steps. Introducing the leading software actors in this installation drama:
The installer software, debian-installer, is the primary concern of this manual. It detects
hardware and loads appropriate drivers, uses dhcp-client to set up the network connection, runs
debootstrap to install the base system packages, and runs tasksel to allow you to install certain
15
Chapter 3. Before Installing Ubuntu
additional software. Many more actors play smaller parts in this process, but debian-installer
has completed its task when you load the new system for the first time.
To tune the system to your needs, tasksel allows you to choose to install various predefined bundles
of software like a Web server or a Desktop environment.
Just be aware that the X Window System is completely separate from debian-installer, and in
fact is much more complicated. Troubleshooting of the X Window System is not within the scope of
this manual.
3.3.1. Documentation
• install.en.txt
• install.en.html
• install.en.pdf
16
Chapter 3. Before Installing Ubuntu
17
Chapter 3. Before Installing Ubuntu
This has advantages and disadvantages. An advantage is that a driver for one chipset works with lots of
different products from different manufacturers, as long as their product is based on the same chipset.
The disadvantage is that it is not always easy to see which actual chipset is used in a certain prod-
uct/brand. Unfortunately sometimes device manufacturers change the hardware base of their product
without changing the product name or at least the product version number, so that when having two
items of the same brand/product name bought at different times, they can sometimes be based on two
different chipsets and therefore use two different drivers or there might be no driver at all for one of
them.
For USB and PCI/PCI-Express/ExpressCard devices, a good way to find out on which chipset they are
based is to look at their device IDs. All USB/PCI/PCI-Express/ExpressCard devices have so called
“vendor” and “product” IDs, and the combination of these two is usually the same for any product
based on the same chipset.
On Linux systems, these IDs can be read with the lsusb command for USB devices and with the lspci
-nn command for PCI/PCI-Express/ExpressCard devices. The vendor and product IDs are usually
given in the form of two hexadecimal numbers, seperated by a colon, such as “1d6b:0001”.
An example for the output of lsusb: “Bus 001 Device 001: ID 1d6b:0002 Linux Foundation 2.0 root
hub”, whereby 1d6b is the vendor ID and 0002 is the product ID.
An example for the output of lspci -nn for an Ethernet card: “03:00.0 Ethernet controller [0200]: Re-
altek Semiconductor Co., Ltd. RTL8111/8168B PCI Express Gigabit Ethernet controller [10ec:8168]
(rev 06)”. The IDs are given inside the rightmost square brackets, i.e. here 10ec is the vendor- and
8168 is the product ID.
As another example, a graphics card could give the following output: “04:00.0 VGA compatible
controller [0300]: Advanced Micro Devices [AMD] nee ATI RV710 [Radeon HD 4350] [1002:954f]”.
On Windows systems, the IDs for a device can be found in the Windows device manager on the tab
“details”, where the vendor ID is prefixed with VEN_ and the product ID is prefixed with DEV_. On
Windows 7 systems, you have to select the property “Hardware IDs” in the device manager’s details
tab to actually see the IDs, as they are not displayed by default.
Searching on the internet with the vendor/product ID, “Linux” and “driver” as the search terms often
results in information regarding the driver support status for a certain chipset. If a search for the
vendor/product ID does not yield usable results, a search for the chip code names, which are also often
provided by lsusb and lspci (“RTL8111”/“RTL8168B” in the network card example and “RV710” in
the graphics card example), can help.
18
Chapter 3. Before Installing Ubuntu
required firmware files like in the debian-installer, so installation of non-free components must
be done manually if needed.
Information about the available variants of the Ubuntu live images can be found at the download web
page (http://www.ubuntu.com/download/).
• Your host name (you may be able to decide this on your own).
• Your domain name.
• Your computer’s IP address.
• The netmask to use with your network.
• The IP address of the default gateway system you should route to, if your network has a gateway.
• The system on your network that you should use as a DNS (Domain Name Service) server.
If the network you are connected to uses DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol) for configur-
ing network settings, you don’t need this information because the DHCP server will provide it directly
to your computer during the installation process.
If you have internet access via DSL or cable modem (i.e. over a cable tv network) and have a router
(often provided preconfigured by your phone or catv provider) which handles your network connec-
tivity, DHCP is usually available by default.
As a rule of thumb: if you run a Windows system in your home network and did not have to manually
perform any network settings there to achieve Internet access, network connectivity in Ubuntu will
also be configured automatically.
If you use a WLAN/WiFi network, you should find out:
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Chapter 3. Before Installing Ubuntu
The actual minimum memory requirements are a lot less than the numbers listed in this table. De-
pending on the architecture, it is possible to install Ubuntu with as little as 60MB (for amd64). The
same goes for the disk space requirements, especially if you pick and choose which applications to
install; see Section D.3 for additional information on disk space requirements.
It is possible to run a graphical desktop environment on older or low-end systems, but in that case it
is recommended to install a window manager that is less resource-hungry than those of the GNOME
or KDE desktop environments; alternatives include xfce4, icewm and wmaker, but there are others
to choose from.
It is practically impossible to give general memory or disk space requirements for server installations
as those very much depend on what the server is to be used for.
Remember that these sizes don’t include all the other materials which are usually to be found, such
as user files, mail, and data. It is always best to be generous when considering the space for your own
files and data.
Disk space required for the smooth operation of the Ubuntu system itself is taken into account in these
recommended system requirements. Notably, the /var partition contains a lot of state information
specific to Ubuntu in addition to its regular contents, like logfiles. The dpkg files (with information
on all installed packages) can easily consume 40MB. Also, apt-get puts downloaded packages here
before they are installed. You should usually allocate at least 200MB for /var, and a lot more if you
install a graphical desktop environment.
20
Chapter 3. Before Installing Ubuntu
isting data. Even though this works quite well in most cases, making changes to the partitioning of a
disk is an inherently dangerous action and should only be done after having made a full backup of all
data. For FAT/FAT32 and NTFS partitions as used by DOS and Windows systems, the ability to move
and resize them losslessly is provided both by debian-installer as well as by the integrated Disk
Manager of Windows 7.
To losslessly resize an existing FAT or NTFS partition from within debian-installer, go to the
partitioning step, select the option for manual partitioning, select the partition to resize, and simply
specify its new size.
Creating and deleting partitions can be done from within debian-installer as well as from
an existing operating system. As a rule of thumb, partitions should be created by the system for
which they are to be used, i.e. partitions to be used by Ubuntu should be created from within
debian-installer and partitions to be used from another operating system should be created
from there. debian-installer is capable of creating non-Linux partitions, and partitions created
this way usually work without problems when used in other operating systems, but there are a
few rare corner cases in which this could cause problems, so if you want to be sure, use the native
partitioning tools to create partitions for use by other operating systems.
If you are going to install more than one operating system on the same machine, you should install all
other system(s) before proceeding with the Ubuntu installation. Windows and other OS installations
may destroy your ability to start Ubuntu, or encourage you to reformat non-native partitions.
You can recover from these actions or avoid them, but installing the native system first saves you
trouble.
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Chapter 3. Before Installing Ubuntu
Most BIOS versions allow you to call up a boot menu on system startup in which you select from
which device the computer should start for the current session. If this option is available, the BIOS
usually displays a short message like “press F12 for boot menu” on system startup. The actual key
used to select this menu varies from system to system; commonly used keys are F12, F11 and F8.
Choosing a device from this menu does not change the default boot order of the BIOS, i.e. you can
start once from a USB stick while having configured the internal harddisk as the normal primary boot
device.
If your BIOS does not provide you with a boot menu to do ad-hoc choices of the current boot device,
you will have to change your BIOS setup to make the device from which the debian-installer
shall be booted the primary boot device.
Unfortunately some computers contain buggy BIOS versions. Booting debian-installer from a
USB stick might not work even if there is an appropriate option in the BIOS setup menu and the stick
is selected as the primary boot device. On some of these systems using a USB stick as boot medium
is impossible; others can be tricked into booting from the stick by changing the device type in the
BIOS setup from the default “USB harddisk” or “USB stick” to “USB ZIP” or “USB CDROM”. In
particular if you use an isohybrid CD/DVD image on a USB stick (see Section 4.3.1), changing the
device type to “USB CDROM” helps on some BIOSes which will not boot from a USB stick in USB
harddisk mode.
If you cannot manipulate the BIOS to boot directly from a USB stick you still have the option of using
an ISO copied to the stick. Boot debian-installer using Section 4.4 and, after scanning the hard
drives for an installer ISO image, select the USB device and choose an installation image.
22
Chapter 3. Before Installing Ubuntu
can be different from what is actually used when booting from hard disk, so when booting the in-
staller from a USB stick in a different mode from what is used when booting another already installed
operating system from the hard disk, the wrong bootloader might be installed and the system might
be unbootable after finishing the installation. When choosing the boot device from a firmware boot
menu, some systems offer two seperate choices for each device, so that the user can select whether
booting shall happen in CSM or in native UEFI mode.
23
Chapter 4. Obtaining System Installation
Media
24
Chapter 4. Obtaining System Installation Media
a letter in the range a-z. You should be able to see to which device the USB stick was mapped by
running the command dmesg after inserting it. To write to your stick, you may have to turn off its
write protection switch.
Warning
The procedures described in this section will destroy anything already on the device! Make very sure
that you use the correct device name for your USB stick. If you use the wrong device the result could
be that all information on for example a hard disk could be lost.
The CD or DVD image you choose should be written directly to the USB stick, overwriting its current
contents. For example, when using an existing GNU/Linux system, the CD or DVD image file can be
written to a USB stick as follows, after having made sure that the stick is unmounted:
# cp debian.iso /dev/sdX
# sync
Important: The image must be written to the whole-disk device and not a partition, e.g. /dev/sdb
and not /dev/sdb1. Do not use tools like unetbootin which alter the image.
Important: Simply writing the CD or DVD image to USB like this should work fine for most users.
The other options below are more complex, mainly for people with specialised needs.
The hybrid image on the stick does not occupy all the storage space, so it may be worth considering
using the free space to hold firmware files or packages or any other files of your choice. This could be
useful if you have only one stick or just want to keep everything you need on one device.
Create a second, FAT partition on the stick, mount the partition and copy or unpack the firmware onto
it. For example:
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Chapter 4. Obtaining System Installation Media
You might have written the mini.iso to the USB stick. In this case the second partition doesn’t have
to be created as, very nicely, it will already be present. Unplugging and replugging the USB stick
should make the two partitions visible.
Note: Since most USB sticks come pre-configured with a single FAT16 partition, you probably
won’t have to repartition or reformat the stick. If you have to do that anyway, use cfdisk or any
other partitioning tool to create a FAT16 partition1, install an MBR using:
# install-mbr /dev/sdX
The install-mbr command is contained in the mbr Ubuntu package. Then create the filesystem
using:
# mkdosfs /dev/sdX1
Take care that you use the correct device name for your USB stick. The mkdosfs command is
contained in the dosfstools Ubuntu package.
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Chapter 4. Obtaining System Installation Media
In order to start the kernel after booting from the USB stick, we will put a boot loader on the stick.
Although any boot loader (e.g. lilo) should work, it’s convenient to use syslinux, since it uses
a FAT16 partition and can be reconfigured by just editing a text file. Any operating system which
supports the FAT file system can be used to make changes to the configuration of the boot loader.
To put syslinux on the FAT16 partition on your USB stick, install the syslinux and mtools
packages on your system, and do:
# syslinux /dev/sdX1
Again, take care that you use the correct device name. The partition must not be mounted when start-
ing syslinux. This procedure writes a boot sector to the partition and creates the file ldlinux.sys
which contains the boot loader code.
For the graphical installer you should add vga=788 to the line. Other parameters can be appended as
desired.
To enable the boot prompt to permit further parameter appending, add a prompt 1 line.
If you used an hd-media image, you should now copy the ISO file of an Ubuntu ISO image2 onto the
stick. When you are done, unmount the USB memory stick (umount /mnt).
2. You can use either a netinst or a full CD image (see Section 4.1). Be sure to select one that fits. Note that the “netboot
mini.iso” image is not usable for this purpose.
27
Chapter 4. Obtaining System Installation Media
Note: For an Ubuntu or Debian server we recommend tftpd-hpa. It’s written by the same author
as the syslinux bootloader and is therefore least likely to cause issues. A good alternative is
atftpd.
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Chapter 4. Obtaining System Installation Media
server-name "servername";
host clientname {
filename "/tftpboot.img";
server-name "servername";
next-server servername;
hardware ethernet 01:23:45:67:89:AB;
fixed-address 192.168.1.90;
}
In this example, there is one server servername which performs all of the work of DHCP server,
TFTP server, and network gateway. You will almost certainly need to change the domain-name op-
tions, as well as the server name and client hardware address. The filename option should be the
name of the file which will be retrieved via TFTP.
After you have edited the dhcpd configuration file, restart it with /etc/init.d/isc-dhcp-server
restart.
default-lease-time 600;
max-lease-time 7200;
allow booting;
allow bootp;
group {
next-server 192.168.1.3;
host tftpclient {
# tftp client hardware address
hardware ethernet 00:10:DC:27:6C:15;
filename "pxelinux.0";
}
}
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Chapter 4. Obtaining System Installation Media
Note that for PXE booting, the client filename pxelinux.0 is a boot loader, not a kernel image (see
Section 4.5.4 below).
Now, you must create an /etc/bootptab file. This has the same sort of familiar and cryptic format
as the good old BSD printcap, termcap, and disktab files. See the bootptab manual page for
more information. For CMU bootpd, you will need to know the hardware (MAC) address of the
client. Here is an example /etc/bootptab:
client:\
hd=/tftpboot:\
bf=tftpboot.img:\
ip=192.168.1.90:\
sm=255.255.255.0:\
sa=192.168.1.1:\
ha=0123456789AB:
You will need to change at least the “ha” option, which specifies the hardware address of the client.
The “bf” option specifies the file a client should retrieve via TFTP; see Section 4.5.4 for more details.
By contrast, setting up BOOTP with ISC dhcpd is really easy, because it treats BOOTP clients as
a moderately special case of DHCP clients. Some architectures require a complex configuration for
booting clients via BOOTP. If yours is one of those, read the section Section 4.5.1. Otherwise you
will probably be able to get away with simply adding the allow bootp directive to the configura-
tion block for the subnet containing the client in /etc/dhcp/dhcpd.conf, and restart dhcpd with
/etc/init.d/isc-dhcp-server restart.
Note: Historically, TFTP servers used /tftpboot as directory to serve images from. However,
Ubuntu packages may use other directories to comply with the Filesystem Hierarchy Standard
(http://www.pathname.com/fhs/). For example, tftpd-hpa by default uses /srv/tftp. You may
have to adjust the configuration examples in this section accordingly.
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Chapter 4. Obtaining System Installation Media
All in.tftpd alternatives available in Ubuntu should log TFTP requests to the system logs by default.
Some of them support a -v argument to increase verbosity. It is recommended to check these log
messages in case of boot problems as they are a good starting point for diagnosing the cause of errors.
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Chapter 4. Obtaining System Installation Media
requires the installer to be able to set up the network via DHCP on the first connected interface
without asking any questions; you may also need to add ksdevice=eth1 or similar if the installer fails
to determine the correct interface automatically.
Similarly, to make the installer use a Kickstart file on an NFS server, add ks=nfs:server:/path/to/ks.cfg
to the kernel boot parameters. The method supported by Anaconda of adding a plain "ks" boot param-
eter to work out the location of the Kickstart file from a DHCP response is not yet supported by the
Ubuntu installer.
To place a Kickstart file on a CD, you would need to remaster the ISO image to include your Kickstart
file, and add ks=cdrom:/path/to/ks.cfg to the kernel boot parameters. See the manual page for mkisofs
for details. Alternatively, put the Kickstart file on a floppy, and add ks=floppy:/path/to/ks.cfg to the
kernel boot parameters.
4.6.2.1. Additions
The Ubuntu installer supports a few extensions to Kickstart that were needed to support automatic
installations of Ubuntu:
• The rootpw command now takes the --disabled option to disable the root password. If this is
used, the initial user will be given root privileges via sudo.
• A new user command has been added to control the creation of the initial user:
The --disabled option prevents any non-root users from being created. The --fullname option
specifies the user’s full name, as opposed to the Unix username. The --password option supplies
the user’s password, by default in the clear (in which case make sure your Kickstart file is kept
confidential!); the --iscrypted option may be used to state that the password is already MD5-
hashed.
• A new preseed command has been added to provide a convenient way to preseed additional items
in the debconf database that are not directly accessible using the ordinary Kickstart syntax:
Note that if the value contains any special characters, then the value must be quoted, as follows:
The --owner option sets the name of the package that owns the question; if omitted, it defaults
to d-i, which is generally appropriate for items affecting the first stage of the installer. The three
mandatory arguments are the question name, question type, and answer, in that order, just as would
be supplied as input to the debconf-set-selections command.
• As of Ubuntu 6.10, the keyboard option takes X layout names. To use an X keyboard variant, set
this option to layout_variant, with appropriate values of layout and variant. For example,
in_guj selects the Gujarati variant of the Indian layout.
• You may use the apt-install command to install packages in %post --nochroot scripts (although
you might also choose to generate a %packages section in a %pre script and include it using
%include). Note that this does not work if the post-installation script is run in the chroot environ-
ment.
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Chapter 4. Obtaining System Installation Media
4.6.2.3. Example
Here is an example Kickstart file that can be used as a starting point:
#
#Generic Kickstart template for Ubuntu
#Platform: x86 and x86-64
#
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Chapter 4. Obtaining System Installation Media
#System language
lang en_US
#System keyboard
keyboard us
#System mouse
mouse
#System timezone
timezone America/New_York
#Root password
rootpw --disabled
#Installation media
cdrom
#nfs --server=server.com --dir=/path/to/ubuntu/
#Advanced partition
#part /boot --fstype=ext4 --size=500 --asprimary
#part pv.aQcByA-UM0N-siuB-Y96L-rmd3-n6vz-NMo8Vr --grow --size=1
#volgroup vg_mygroup --pesize=4096 pv.aQcByA-UM0N-siuB-Y96L-rmd3-n6vz-NMo8Vr
#logvol / --fstype=ext4 --name=lv_root --vgname=vg_mygroup --grow --size=10240 --maxsize=
#logvol swap --name=lv_swap --vgname=vg_mygroup --grow --size=1024 --maxsize=8192
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Chapter 4. Obtaining System Installation Media
#Network information
network --bootproto=dhcp --device=eth0
#Firewall configuration
firewall --disabled --trust=eth0 --ssh
35
Chapter 5. Booting the Installation System
Warning
If you have any other operating systems on your system that you wish to keep (dual boot setup),
you should make sure that they have been properly shut down before you boot the installer. Installing
an operating system while another operating system is in hibernation (has been suspended to disk)
could result in loss of, or damage to the state of the suspended operating system which could cause
problems when it is rebooted.
36
Chapter 5. Booting the Installation System
image=/boot/newinstall/vmlinuz
label=newinstall
initrd=/boot/newinstall/initrd.gz
For more details, refer to the initrd(4) and lilo.conf(5) man pages. Now run lilo and reboot.
The procedure for GRUB1 is quite similar. Locate your menu.lst in the /boot/grub/ directory (or
sometimes /boot/boot/grub/) and add an entry for the installer, for example (assuming /boot is
on the first partition of the first disk in the system):
The procedure for GRUB2 is very similar. The file is named grub.cfg instead of menu.lst. An
entry for the installer would be for instance for example:
37
Chapter 5. Booting the Installation System
5.1.4.3. Etherboot
The etherboot project (http://www.etherboot.org) provides bootdiskettes and even bootroms that do a
TFTPboot.
Install
Advanced options >
Help
Install with speech synthesis
Note: This graphical screen will look very slightly different depending on how your computer has
booted (BIOS or UEFI), but the same options will be shown.
Depending on the installation method you are using, the “Graphical install” option may not be avail-
able.
For a normal installation, select the “Install” entry — using either the arrow keys on your keyboard
or by typing the first (highlighted) letter — and press Enter to boot the installer. The “Install” entry
is already selected by default.
The “Advanced options” entry gives access to a second menu that allows to boot the installer in expert
mode, in rescue mode and for automated installs.
If you wish or need to add any boot parameters for either the installer or the kernel, press Tab (BIOS
boot) or e (UEFI boot). This will display the boot command for the selected menu entry and allow
you to edit it to suit your needs. The help screens (see below) list some common possible options.
Press Enter (BIOS boot) or F10 (UEFI boot) to boot the installer with your options; pressing Esc will
return you to the boot menu and undo any changes you made.
Choosing the “Help” entry will result in the first help screen being displayed which gives an overview
of all available help screens. To return to the boot menu after the help screens have been displayed,
type ’menu’ at the boot prompt and press Enter. All help screens have a boot prompt at which the
boot command can be typed:
38
Chapter 5. Booting the Installation System
At this boot prompt you can either just press Enter to boot the installer with default options or
enter a specific boot command and, optionally, boot parameters. A number of boot parameters which
might be useful can be found on the various help screens. If you do add any parameters to the boot
command line, be sure to first type the boot method (the default is install) and a space before the
first parameter (e.g., install fb=false).
Note: The keyboard is assumed to have a default American English layout at this point. This
means that if your keyboard has a different (language-specific) layout, the characters that appear
on the screen may be different from what you’d expect when you type parameters. Wikipedia has a
schema of the US keyboard layout (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keyboard_layout#United_States)
which can be used as a reference to find the correct keys to use.
Note: If you are using a system that has the BIOS configured to use serial console, you may not
be able to see the initial graphical splash screen upon booting the installer; you may even not see
the boot menu. The same can happen if you are installing the system via a remote management
device that provides a text interface to the VGA console. Examples of these devices include the
text console of Compaq’s “integrated Lights Out” (iLO) and HP’s “Integrated Remote Assistant”
(IRA).
To bypass the graphical boot screen you can either blindly press Esc to get a text boot prompt,
or (equally blindly) press “H” followed by Enter to select the “Help” option described above. After
that your keystrokes should be echoed at the prompt. To prevent the installer from using the
framebuffer for the rest of the installation, you will also want to add vga=normal fb=false to the
boot prompt, as described in the help text.
5.2. Accessibility
Some users may need specific support because of e.g. some visual impairment. USB braille displays
are detected automatically (not serial displays connected via a serial-to-USB converter), but most
other accessibility features have to be enabled manually. On machines that support it, the boot menu
emits a beep when it is ready to receive keystrokes. Some boot parameters can then be appended to
enable accessibility features (see also Section 5.1.5). Note that on most architectures the boot loader
interprets your keyboard as a QWERTY keyboard.
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Chapter 5. Booting the Installation System
braille table by entering the preference menu. Documentation on key bindings for braille devices is
available on the brltty website (http://brltty.com/doc/KeyBindings/).
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Chapter 5. Booting the Installation System
ing the vga=normal fb=false boot parameter. This will however reduce the number of available
languages.
If desired a textual version of the bootloader can be activated before adding the boot parameter by
typing h Enter.
5.2.8. Zoom
For users with low vision, the graphical installer has a very basic zoom support: the Control-+ and
Control-- shortcuts increase and decrease the font size.
5.2.9. Preseeding
Alternatively, Ubuntu can be installed completely automatically by using preseeding. This is docu-
mented in Appendix B.
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Chapter 5. Booting the Installation System
You may need to specify parameters for the serial port, such as speed and parity, for instance
console=ttyS0,9600n8; other typical speeds may be 57600 or 115200. Be sure to specify this
option after “---”, so that it is copied into the bootloader configuration for the installed system (if
supported by the installer for the bootloader).
In order to ensure the terminal type used by the installer matches your terminal emulator, the pa-
rameter TERM=type can be added. Note that the installer only supports the following terminal types:
linux, bterm, ansi, vt102 and dumb. The default for serial console in debian-installer is
vt102. If you are using a virtualization tool which does not provide conversion into such terminals
types itself, e.g. QEMU/KVM, you can start it inside a screen session. That will indeed perform
translation into the screen terminal type, which is very close to vt102.
debconf/priority (priority)
This parameter sets the lowest priority of messages to be displayed.
The default installation uses priority=high. This means that both high and critical priority
messages are shown, but medium and low priority messages are skipped. If problems are en-
countered, the installer adjusts the priority as needed.
If you add priority=medium as boot parameter, you will be shown the installation menu and
gain more control over the installation. When priority=low is used, all messages are shown
(this is equivalent to the expert boot method). With priority=critical, the installation sys-
tem will display only critical messages and try to do the right thing without fuss.
DEBIAN_FRONTEND
This boot parameter controls the type of user interface used for the installer. The current possible
parameter settings are:
• DEBIAN_FRONTEND=noninteractive
• DEBIAN_FRONTEND=text
• DEBIAN_FRONTEND=newt
• DEBIAN_FRONTEND=gtk
1. With current kernels (2.6.9 or newer) you can use 32 command line options and 32 environment options. If these numbers
are exceeded, the kernel will panic.
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Chapter 5. Booting the Installation System
BOOT_DEBUG
Setting this boot parameter to 2 will cause the installer’s boot process to be verbosely logged.
Setting it to 3 makes debug shells available at strategic points in the boot process. (Exit the shells
to continue the boot process.)
BOOT_DEBUG=0
BOOT_DEBUG=1
BOOT_DEBUG=2
Lots of debugging information.
BOOT_DEBUG=3
Shells are run at various points in the boot process to allow detailed debugging. Exit the
shell to continue the boot.
INSTALL_MEDIA_DEV
The value of the parameter is the path to the device to load the Ubuntu installer from. For exam-
ple, INSTALL_MEDIA_DEV=/dev/floppy/0
The boot floppy, which normally scans all floppies it can to find the root floppy, can be overridden
by this parameter to only look at the one device.
log_host
log_port
Causes the installer to send log messages to a remote syslog on the specified host and port as
well as to a local file. If not specified, the port defaults to the standard syslog port 514.
lowmem
Can be used to force the installer to a lowmem level higher than the one the installer sets by
default based on available memory. Possible values are 1 and 2. See also Section 6.3.1.1.
noshell
Prevents the installer from offering interactive shells on tty2 and tty3. Useful for unattended
installations where physical security is limited.
debian-installer/framebuffer (fb)
Some architectures use the kernel framebuffer to offer installation in a number of languages. If
framebuffer causes a problem on your system you can disable the feature using the parameter
vga=normal fb=false. Problem symptoms are error messages about bterm or bogl, a blank
screen, or a freeze within a few minutes after starting the install.
debian-installer/theme (theme)
A theme determines how the user interface of the installer looks (colors, icons, etc.). What themes
are available differs per frontend. Currently both the newt and gtk frontends only have a “dark”
theme that was designed for visually impaired users. Set the theme by booting with theme=dark .
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Chapter 5. Booting the Installation System
netcfg/disable_autoconfig
By default, the debian-installer automatically probes for network configuration via IPv6
autoconfiguration and DHCP. If the probe succeeds, you won’t have a chance to review and
change the obtained settings. You can get to the manual network setup only in case the automatic
configuration fails.
If you have an IPv6 router or a DHCP server on your local network, but want
to avoid them because e.g. they give wrong answers, you can use the parameter
netcfg/disable_autoconfig=true to prevent any automatic configuration of the network
(neither v4 nor v6) and to enter the information manually.
hw-detect/start_pcmcia
Set to false to prevent starting PCMCIA services, if that causes problems. Some laptops are
well known for this misbehavior.
disk-detect/dmraid/enable (dmraid)
Set to true to enable support for Serial ATA RAID (also called ATA RAID, BIOS RAID or
fake RAID) disks in the installer. Note that this support is currently experimental. Additional
information can be found on the Debian Installer Wiki (http://wiki.debian.org/DebianInstaller/).
preseed/url (url)
Specify the url to a preconfiguration file to download and use for automating the install. See
Section 4.6.
preseed/file (file)
Specify the path to a preconfiguration file to load for automating the install. See Section 4.6.
preseed/interactive
Set to true to display questions even if they have been preseeded. Can be useful for testing or
debugging a preconfiguration file. Note that this will have no effect on parameters that are passed
as boot parameters, but for those a special syntax can be used. See Section B.5.2 for details.
auto-install/enable (auto)
Delay questions that are normally asked before preseeding is possible until after the network is
configured. See Section B.2.3 for details about using this to automate installs.
finish-install/keep-consoles
During installations from serial or management console, the regular virtual consoles (VT1 to
VT6) are normally disabled in /etc/inittab. Set to true to prevent this.
cdrom-detect/eject
By default, before rebooting, debian-installer automatically ejects the optical media used
during the installation. This can be unnecessary if the system does not automatically boot off the
CD. In some cases it may even be undesirable, for example if the optical drive cannot reinsert the
media itself and the user is not there to do it manually. Many slot loading, slim-line, and caddy
style drives cannot reload media automatically.
Set to false to disable automatic ejection, and be aware that you may need to ensure that the
system does not automatically boot from the optical drive after the initial installation.
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Chapter 5. Booting the Installation System
base-installer/install-recommends (recommends)
By setting this option to false, the package management system will be configured to not
automatically install “Recommends”, both during the installation and for the installed system.
See also Section 6.3.4.
Note that this option allows to have a leaner system, but can also result in features being missing
that you might normally expect to be available. You may have to manually install some of the
recommended packages to obtain the full functionality you want. This option should therefore
only be used by very experienced users.
debian-installer/allow_unauthenticated
By default the installer requires that repositories be authenticated using a known gpg key. Set to
true to disable that authentication. Warning: insecure, not recommended.
rescue/enable
Set to true to enter rescue mode rather than performing a normal installation. See Section 8.7.
debian-installer/language (language)
debian-installer/country (country)
debian-installer/locale (locale)
There are two ways to specify the language, country and locale to use for the installation and the
installed system.
The first and easiest is to pass only the parameter locale. Language and country will then be
derived from its value. You can for example use locale=de_CH to select German as language
and Switzerland as country (de_CH.UTF-8 will be set as default locale for the installed system).
Limitation is that not all possible combinations of language, country and locale can be achieved
this way.
The second, more flexible option is to specify language and country separately. In this case
locale can optionally be added to specify a specific default locale for the installed system.
Example: language=en country=DE locale=en_GB.UTF-8.
anna/choose_modules (modules)
Can be used to automatically load installer components that are not loaded by default. Examples
of optional components that may be useful are openssh-client-udeb (so you can use scp
during the installation) and ppp-udeb (see Section D.6).
netcfg/disable_autoconfig
Set to true if you want to disable IPv6 autoconfiguration and DHCP and instead force static
network configuration.
mirror/protocol (protocol)
By default the installer will use the http protocol to download files from Ubuntu mirrors and
changing that to ftp is not possible during installations at normal priority. By setting this param-
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Chapter 5. Booting the Installation System
eter to ftp, you can force the installer to use that protocol instead. Note that you cannot select
an ftp mirror from a list, you have to enter the hostname manually.
tasksel:tasksel/first (tasks)
Can be used to select tasks that are not available from the interactive task list, such as the
kde-desktop task. See Section 6.3.5.2 for additional information.
apt-setup/restricted=false apt-setup/multiverse=false
This is the equivalent of enabling the “Free Software Only” boot mode. This will disable the
restricted and multiverse repositories at the earliest stages of the debian-installer. This can
be helpful is you don’t need them at all or don’t mirror those repositoriesat your local mirror.’
module_name.parameter_name=value
If you need to pass multiple parameters to the same or different modules, just repeat this. For example,
to set an old 3Com network interface card to use the BNC (coax) connector and IRQ 10, you would
pass:
3c509.xcvr=3 3c509.irq=10
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Chapter 5. Booting the Installation System
• If the CD-ROM does not boot, check that it was inserted correctly and that it is not dirty.
• If the installer fails to recognize a CD-ROM, try just running the option Detect and mount CD-
ROM a second time. Some DMA related issues with very old CD-ROM drives are known to be
resolved in this way.
If this does not work, then try the suggestions in the subsections below. Most, but not all, suggestions
discussed there are valid for both CD-ROM and DVD, but we’ll use the term CD-ROM for simplicity.
If you cannot get the installation working from CD-ROM, try one of the other installation methods
that are available.
• Some older CD-ROM drives do not support reading from discs that were burned at high speeds
using a modern CD writer.
• Some very old CD-ROM drives do not work correctly if “direct memory access” (DMA) is enabled
for them.
• Check that your BIOS actually supports booting from CD-ROM (only an issue for very old systems)
and that CD booting is enabled in the BIOS.
• If you downloaded an iso image, check that the md5sum of that image matches the one listed for
the image in the MD5SUMS file that should be present in the same location as where you downloaded
the image from.
$ md5sum debian-testing-i386-netinst.iso
a20391b12f7ff22ef705cee4059c6b92 debian-testing-i386-netinst.iso
Next, check that the md5sum of the burned CD-ROM matches as well. The following command
should work. It uses the size of the image to read the correct number of bytes from the CD-ROM.
$ dd if=/dev/cdrom | \
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Chapter 5. Booting the Installation System
If, after the installer has been booted successfully, the CD-ROM is not detected, sometimes simply
trying again may solve the problem. If you have more than one CD-ROM drive, try changing the
CD-ROM to the other drive. If that does not work or if the CD-ROM is recognized but there are errors
when reading from it, try the suggestions listed below. Some basic knowledge of Linux is required
for this. To execute any of the commands, you should first switch to the second virtual console (VT2)
and activate the shell there.
• Switch to VT4 or view the contents of /var/log/syslog (use nano as editor) to check for any
specific error messages. After that, also check the output of dmesg.
• Check in the output of dmesg if your CD-ROM drive was recognized. You should see something
like (the lines do not necessarily have to be consecutive):
If you don’t see something like that, chances are the controller your CD-ROM is connected to was
not recognized or may be not supported at all. If you know what driver is needed for the controller,
you can try loading it manually using modprobe.
• Check that there is a device node for your CD-ROM drive under /dev/. In the example above, this
would be /dev/hdc. There should also be a /dev/cdrom.
• Use the mount command to check if the CD-ROM is already mounted; if not, try mounting it
manually:
$ cd /proc/ide/hdc
$ grep using_dma settings
using_dma 1 0 1 rw
A “1” in the first column after using_dma means it is enabled. If it is, try disabling it:
Make sure that you are in the directory for the device that corresponds to your CD-ROM drive.
• If there are any problems during the installation, try checking the integrity of the CD-ROM using
the option near the bottom of the installer’s main menu. This option can also be used as a general
test if the CD-ROM can be read reliably.
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Chapter 5. Booting the Installation System
• dmesg
• lspci
• lsmod
• amixer
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Chapter 5. Booting the Installation System
common resource range options in the System resource settings section of the PCMCIA HOWTO
(http://pcmcia-cs.sourceforge.net/ftp/doc/PCMCIA-HOWTO-1.html#ss1.12). Note that you have to
omit the commas, if any, when you enter this value in the installer.
Package: installation-reports
Boot method: <How did you boot the installer? CD? floppy? network?>
Image version: <Full URL to image you downloaded is best>
Date: <Date and time of the install>
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Chapter 5. Booting the Installation System
Initial boot: [ ]
Detect network card: [ ]
Configure network: [ ]
Detect CD: [ ]
Load installer modules: [ ]
Detect hard drives: [ ]
Partition hard drives: [ ]
Install base system: [ ]
Clock/timezone setup: [ ]
User/password setup: [ ]
Install tasks: [ ]
Install boot loader: [ ]
Overall install: [ ]
Comments/Problems:
In the bug report, describe what the problem is, including the last visible kernel messages in the event
of a kernel hang. Describe the steps that you did which brought the system into the problem state.
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Chapter 6. Using the Ubuntu Installer
In the character-based environment the use of a mouse is not supported. Here are the keys you can
use to navigate within the various dialogs. The Tab or right arrow keys move “forward”, and the
Shift-Tab or left arrow keys move “backward” between displayed buttons and selections. The up and
down arrow select different items within a scrollable list, and also scroll the list itself. In addition, in
long lists, you can type a letter to cause the list to scroll directly to the section with items starting with
the letter you typed and use Pg-Up and Pg-Down to scroll the list in sections. The space bar selects
an item such as a checkbox. Use Enter to activate choices.
Some dialogs may offer additional help information. If help is available this will be indicated on the
bottom line of the screen by displaying that help information can be accessed by pressing the F1 key.
Error messages and logs are redirected to the fourth console. You can access this console by pressing
Left Alt-F4 (hold the left Alt key while pressing the F4 function key); get back to the main installer
process with Left Alt-F1.
These messages can also be found in /var/log/syslog. After installation, this log is copied to
/var/log/installer/syslog on your new system. Other installation messages may be found in
/var/log/ during the installation, and /var/log/installer/ after the computer has been booted
into the installed system.
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main-menu
Shows the list of components to the user during installer operation, and starts a component when
it is selected. Main-menu’s questions are set to priority medium, so if your priority is set to high
or critical (high is the default), you will not see the menu. On the other hand, if there is an error
which requires your intervention, the question priority may be downgraded temporarily to allow
you to resolve the problem, and in that case the menu may appear.
You can get to the main menu by selecting the Go Back button repeatedly to back all the way
out of the currently running component.
localechooser
Allows the user to select localization options for the installation and the installed system: lan-
guage, country and locales. The installer will display messages in the selected language, unless
the translation for that language is not complete in which case some messages may be shown in
English.
console-setup
Shows a list of keyboards, from which the user chooses the model which matches his own.
hw-detect
Automatically detects most of the system’s hardware, including network cards, disk drives, and
PCMCIA.
cdrom-detect
Looks for and mounts an Ubuntu installation CD.
netcfg
Configures the computer’s network connections so it can communicate over the internet.
iso-scan
Searches for ISO images (.iso files) on hard drives.
choose-mirror
Presents a list of Ubuntu archive mirrors. The user may choose the source of his installation
packages.
cdrom-checker
Checks integrity of a CD-ROM. This way, the user may assure him/herself that the installation
CD-ROM was not corrupted.
lowmem
Lowmem tries to detect systems with low memory and then does various tricks to remove un-
necessary parts of debian-installer from the memory (at the cost of some features).
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anna
Anna’s Not Nearly APT. Installs packages which have been retrieved from the chosen mirror or
CD.
user-setup
Sets up the root password, and adds a non-root user.
clock-setup
Updates the system clock and determines whether the clock is set to UTC or not.
tzsetup
Selects the time zone, based on the location selected earlier.
partman
Allows the user to partition disks attached to the system, create file systems on the selected
partitions, and attach them to the mountpoints. Included are also interesting features like a fully
automatic mode or LVM support. This is the preferred partitioning tool in Ubuntu.
lvmcfg
Helps the user with the configuration of the LVM (Logical Volume Manager).
mdcfg
Allows the user to set up Software RAID (Redundant Array of Inexpensive Disks). This Software
RAID is usually superior to the cheap IDE (pseudo hardware) RAID controllers found on newer
motherboards.
base-installer
Installs the most basic set of packages which would allow the computer to operate under Ubuntu
when rebooted.
apt-setup
Configures apt, mostly automatically, based on what media the installer is running from.
pkgsel
Uses tasksel to select and install additional software.
os-prober
Detects currently installed operating systems on the computer and passes this information to the
bootloader-installer, which may offer you an ability to add discovered operating systems to the
bootloader’s start menu. This way the user could easily choose at the boot time which operating
system to start.
bootloader-installer
The various bootloader installers each install a boot loader program on the hard disk, which is
necessary for the computer to start up using Linux without using a floppy or CD-ROM. Many
boot loaders allow the user to choose an alternate operating system each time the computer boots.
shell
Allows the user to execute a shell from the menu, or in the second console.
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save-logs
Provides a way for the user to record information on a floppy disk, network, hard disk, or other
media when trouble is encountered, in order to accurately report installer software problems to
Ubuntu developers later.
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Chapter 6. Using the Ubuntu Installer
the installation process. Note that heavy use of swap will reduce performance of your system and may
lead to high disk activity.
Despite these measures, it is still possible that your system freezes, that unexpected errors occur or
that processes are killed by the kernel because the system runs out of memory (which will result in
“Out of memory” messages on VT4 and in the syslog).
For example, it has been reported that creating a big ext3 file system fails in low memory mode when
there is insufficient swap space. If a larger swap doesn’t help, try creating the file system as ext2
(which is an essential component of the installer) instead. It is possible to change an ext2 partition to
ext3 after the installation.
It is possible to force the installer to use a higher lowmem level than the one based on available
memory by using the boot parameter “lowmem” as described in Section 5.3.2.
Note: It is important to select the country where you live or where you are located as it determines
the time zone that will be configured for the installed system.
If you selected a combination of language and country for which no locale is defined and there exist
multiple locales for the language, then the installer will allow you to choose which of those locales
1. In technical terms: where multiple locales exist for that language with differing country codes.
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Chapter 6. Using the Ubuntu Installer
you prefer as the default locale for the installed system2. In all other cases a default locale will be
selected based on the selected language and country.
Any default locale selected as described in the previous paragraph will use UTF-8 as character en-
coding.
If you are installing at low priority, you will have the option of selecting additional locales, including
so-called “legacy” locales3, to be generated for the installed system; if you do, you will be asked
which of the selected locales should be the default for the installed system.
2. At medium and low priority you can always select your preferred locale from those available for the selected language (if
there’s more than one).
3. Legacy locales are locales which do not use UTF-8, but one of the older standards for character encoding such as
ISO 8859-1 (used by West European languages) or EUC-JP (used by Japanese).
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Chapter 6. Using the Ubuntu Installer
want to use for installation. The other interfaces won’t be configured at this time. You may configure
additional interfaces after installation is complete; see the interfaces(5) man page.
Note: Some technical details you might, or might not, find handy: the program assumes the
network IP address is the bitwise-AND of your system’s IP address and your netmask. The default
broadcast address is calculated as the bitwise OR of your system’s IP address with the bitwise
negation of the netmask. It will also guess your gateway. If you can’t find any of these answers, use
the offered defaults — if necessary, you can change them by editing /etc/network/interfaces
once the system has been installed.
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In expert mode or when installing at medium priority, you will have the additional option to select
“Coordinated Universal Time” (UTC) as time zone.
If for some reason you wish to set a time zone for the installed system that does not match the selected
location, there are two options.
1. The simplest option is to just select a different time zone after the installation has been completed
and you’ve booted into the new system. The command to do this is:
# dpkg-reconfigure tzdata
2. Alternatively, the time zone can be set at the very start of the installation by passing the parameter
time/zone=value when you boot the installation system. The value should of course be a valid
time zone, for example Europe/London or UTC.
For automated installations the time zone can be set to any desired value using preseeding.
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Chapter 6. Using the Ubuntu Installer
creating filesystems, assigning mountpoints and optionally configuring closely related options like
RAID, LVM or encrypted devices.
If you are uncomfortable with partitioning, or just want to know more details, see Appendix C.
First you will be given the opportunity to automatically partition either an entire drive, or available
free space on a drive. This is also called “guided” partitioning. If you do not want to autopartition,
choose Manual from the menu.
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Chapter 6. Using the Ubuntu Installer
Existing partitions will be recognized and it is possible to assign mount points for them. It is not
possible to create new qnx4 partitions.
• FAT16, FAT32
• NTFS (read-only)
Existing NTFS partitions can be resized and it is possible to assign mount points for them. It is not
possible to create new NTFS partitions.
Note: The option to use (encrypted) LVM may not be available on all architectures.
When using LVM or encrypted LVM, the installer will create most partitions inside one big partition;
the advantage of this method is that partitions inside this big partition can be resized relatively easily
later. In the case of encrypted LVM the big partition will not be readable without knowing a special
key phrase, thus providing extra security of your (personal) data.
When using encrypted LVM, the installer will also automatically erase the disk by writing random
data to it. This further improves security (as it makes it impossible to tell which parts of the disk are in
use and also makes sure that any traces of previous installations are erased), but may take some time
depending on the size of your disk.
Note: If you choose guided partitioning using LVM or encrypted LVM, some changes in the par-
tition table will need to be written to the selected disk while LVM is being set up. These changes
effectively erase all data that is currently on the selected hard disk and you will not be able to undo
them later. However, the installer will ask you to confirm these changes before they are written to
disk.
If you choose guided partitioning (either classic or using (encrypted) LVM) for a whole disk, you will
first be asked to select the disk you want to use. Check that all your disks are listed and, if you have
several disks, make sure you select the correct one. The order they are listed in may differ from what
you are used to. The size of the disks may help to identify them.
Any data on the disk you select will eventually be lost, but you will always be asked to confirm any
changes before they are written to the disk. If you have selected the classic method of partitioning,
you will be able to undo any changes right until the end; when using (encrypted) LVM this is not
possible.
Next, you will be able to choose from the schemes listed in the table below. All schemes have their
pros and cons, some of which are discussed in Appendix C. If you are unsure, choose the first one.
Bear in mind that guided partitioning needs a certain minimal amount of free space to operate with.
If you don’t give it at least about 1GB of space (depends on chosen scheme), guided partitioning will
fail.
4. The installer will encrypt the LVM volume group using a 256 bit AES key and makes use of the kernel’s “dm-crypt”
support.
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If you choose guided partitioning using (encrypted) LVM, the installer will also create a separate
/boot partition. The other partitions, including the swap partition, will be created inside the LVM
partition.
If you have booted in EFI mode then within the guided partitioning setup there will be an additional
partition, formatted as a FAT32 bootable filesystem, for the EFI boot loader. This partition is known
as an EFI System Partition (ESP). There is also an additional menu item in the formatting menu to
manually set up a partition as an ESP.
After selecting a scheme, the next screen will show your new partition table, including information
on whether and how partitions will be formatted and where they will be mounted.
The list of partitions might look like this:
This example shows two hard drives divided into several partitions; the first disk has some free space.
Each partition line consists of the partition number, its type, size, optional flags, file system, and
mountpoint (if any). Note: this particular setup cannot be created using guided partitioning but it does
show possible variation that can be achieved using manual partitioning.
This concludes the guided partitioning. If you are satisfied with the generated partition table, you can
choose Finish partitioning and write changes to disk from the menu to implement the new partition
table (as described at the end of this section). If you are not happy, you can choose to Undo changes
to partitions and run guided partitioning again, or modify the proposed changes as described below
for manual partitioning.
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If you select some free space, you will have the opportunity to create a new partition. You will have to
answer a quick series of questions about its size, type (primary or logical), and location (beginning or
end of the free space). After this, you will be presented with a detailed overview of your new partition.
The main setting is Use as:, which determines if the partition will have a file system on it, or be used
for swap, software RAID, LVM, an encrypted file system, or not be used at all. Other settings include
mountpoint, mount options, and bootable flag; which settings are shown depends on how the partition
is to be used. If you don’t like the preselected defaults, feel free to change them to your liking. E.g.
by selecting the option Use as:, you can choose a different filesystem for this partition, including
options to use the partition for swap, software RAID, LVM, or not use it at all. When you are satisfied
with your new partition, select Done setting up the partition and you will return to partman’s main
screen.
If you decide you want to change something about your partition, simply select the partition, which
will bring you to the partition configuration menu. This is the same screen as is used when creating a
new partition, so you can change the same settings. One thing that may not be very obvious at a first
glance is that you can resize the partition by selecting the item displaying the size of the partition.
Filesystems known to work are at least fat16, fat32, ext2, ext3 and swap. This menu also allows you
to delete a partition.
Be sure to create at least two partitions: one for the root filesystem (which must be mounted as /) and
one for swap. If you forget to mount the root filesystem, partman won’t let you continue until you
correct this issue.
If you boot in EFI mode but forget to select and format an EFI System Partition, partman will detect
this and will not let you continue until you allocate one.
Capabilities of partman can be extended with installer modules, but are dependent on your system’s
architecture. So if you can’t see all promised goodies, check if you have loaded all required modules
(e.g. partman-ext3, partman-xfs, or partman-lvm).
After you are satisfied with partitioning, select Finish partitioning and write changes to disk from
the partitioning menu. You will be presented with a summary of changes made to the disks and asked
to confirm that the filesystems should be created as requested.
RAID0
Is mainly aimed at performance. RAID0 splits all incoming data into stripes and distributes
them equally over each disk in the array. This can increase the speed of read/write operations,
but when one of the disks fails, you will lose everything (part of the information is still on the
healthy disk(s), the other part was on the failed disk).
5. To be honest, you can construct an MD device even from partitions residing on single physical drive, but that won’t give
any benefits.
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RAID1
Is suitable for setups where reliability is the first concern. It consists of several (usually two)
equally-sized partitions where every partition contains exactly the same data. This essentially
means three things. First, if one of your disks fails, you still have the data mirrored on the
remaining disks. Second, you can use only a fraction of the available capacity (more precisely, it
is the size of the smallest partition in the RAID). Third, file-reads are load-balanced among the
disks, which can improve performance on a server, such as a file server, that tends to be loaded
with more disk reads than writes.
Optionally you can have a spare disk in the array which will take the place of the failed disk in
the case of failure.
RAID5
Is a good compromise between speed, reliability and data redundancy. RAID5 splits all incoming
data into stripes and distributes them equally on all but one disk (similar to RAID0). Unlike
RAID0, RAID5 also computes parity information, which gets written on the remaining disk.
The parity disk is not static (that would be called RAID4), but is changing periodically, so the
parity information is distributed equally on all disks. When one of the disks fails, the missing
part of information can be computed from remaining data and its parity. RAID5 must consist of
at least three active partitions. Optionally you can have a spare disk in the array which will take
the place of the failed disk in the case of failure.
As you can see, RAID5 has a similar degree of reliability to RAID1 while achieving less re-
dundancy. On the other hand, it might be a bit slower on write operations than RAID0 due to
computation of parity information.
RAID6
Is similar to RAID5 except that it uses two parity devices instead of one.
A RAID6 array can survive up to two disk failures.
RAID10
RAID10 combines striping (as in RAID0) and mirroring (as in RAID1). It creates n copies of
incoming data and distributes them across the partitions so that none of the copies of the same
data are on the same device. The default value of n is 2, but it can be set to something else in
expert mode. The number of partitions used must be at least n. RAID10 has different layouts for
distributing the copies. The default is near copies. Near copies have all of the copies at about the
same offset on all of the disks. Far copies have the copies at different offsets on the disks. Offset
copies copy the stripe, not the individual copies.
RAID10 can be used to achieve reliability and redundancy without the drawback of having to
calculate parity.
To sum it up:
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If you want to know more about Software RAID, have a look at Software RAID HOWTO
(http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/Software-RAID-HOWTO.html).
To create an MD device, you need to have the desired partitions it should consist of marked for use
in a RAID. (This is done in partman in the Partition settings menu where you should select Use
as:−→physical volume for RAID.)
Note: Make sure that the system can be booted with the partitioning scheme you are planning.
In general it will be necessary to create a separate file system for /boot when using RAID for the
root (/) file system. Most boot loaders (including lilo and grub) do support mirrored (not striped!)
RAID1, so using for example RAID5 for / and RAID1 for /boot can be an option.
Next, you should choose Configure software RAID from the main partman menu. (The menu will
only appear after you mark at least one partition for use as physical volume for RAID.) On the first
screen of mdcfg simply select Create MD device. You will be presented with a list of supported
types of MD devices, from which you should choose one (e.g. RAID1). What follows depends on the
type of MD you selected.
• RAID0 is simple — you will be issued with the list of available RAID partitions and your only task
is to select the partitions which will form the MD.
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• RAID1 is a bit more tricky. First, you will be asked to enter the number of active devices and
the number of spare devices which will form the MD. Next, you need to select from the list of
available RAID partitions those that will be active and then those that will be spare. The count
of selected partitions must be equal to the number provided earlier. Don’t worry. If you make a
mistake and select a different number of partitions, debian-installer won’t let you continue
until you correct the issue.
• RAID5 has a setup procedure similar to RAID1 with the exception that you need to use at least
three active partitions.
• RAID6 also has a setup procedure similar to RAID1 except that at least four active partitions are
required.
• RAID10 again has a setup procedure similar to RAID1 except in expert mode. In expert mode,
debian-installer will ask you for the layout. The layout has two parts. The first part is the
layout type. It is either n (for near copies), f (for far copies), or o (for offset copies). The second
part is the number of copies to make of the data. There must be at least that many active devices so
that all of the copies can be distributed onto different disks.
It is perfectly possible to have several types of MD at once. For example, if you have three 200
GB hard drives dedicated to MD, each containing two 100 GB partitions, you can combine the first
partitions on all three disks into the RAID0 (fast 300 GB video editing partition) and use the other
three partitions (2 active and 1 spare) for RAID1 (quite reliable 100 GB partition for /home).
After you set up MD devices to your liking, you can Finish mdcfg to return back to the partman to
create filesystems on your new MD devices and assign them the usual attributes like mountpoints.
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• Display configuration details: shows LVM device structure, names and sizes of logical volumes
and more
• Create volume group
• Create logical volume
• Delete volume group
• Delete logical volume
• Extend volume group
• Reduce volume group
• Finish: return to the main partman screen
Use the options in that menu to first create a volume group and then create your logical volumes inside
it.
After you return to the main partman screen, any created logical volumes will be displayed in the
same way as ordinary partitions (and you should treat them as such).
Note: Please note that the performance of encrypted partitions will be less than that of unen-
crypted ones because the data needs to be decrypted or encrypted for every read or write. The
performance impact depends on your CPU speed, chosen cipher and a key length.
To use encryption, you have to create a new partition by selecting some free space in the main parti-
tioning menu. Another option is to choose an existing partition (e.g. a regular partition, an LVM logi-
cal volume or a RAID volume). In the Partition settings menu, you need to select physical volume
for encryption at the Use as: option. The menu will then change to include several cryptographic
options for the partition.
The encryption method supported by debian-installer is dm-crypt (included in newer Linux
kernels, able to host LVM physical volumes).
Let’s have a look at the options available when you select encryption via Device-mapper
(dm-crypt). As always: when in doubt, use the defaults, because they have been carefully chosen
with security in mind.
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Encryption: aes
This option lets you select the encryption algorithm (cipher) which will be used to encrypt the
data on the partition. debian-installer currently supports the following block ciphers: aes,
blowfish, serpent, and twofish. It is beyond the scope of this document to discuss the qualities
of these different algorithms, however, it might help your decision to know that in 2000, AES
was chosen by the American National Institute of Standards and Technology as the standard
encryption algorithm for protecting sensitive information in the 21st century.
IV algorithm: xts-plain64
The Initialization Vector or IV algorithm is used in cryptography to ensure that applying the
cipher on the same clear text data with the same key always produces a unique cipher text. The
idea is to prevent the attacker from deducing information from repeated patterns in the encrypted
data.
From the provided alternatives, the default xts-plain64 is currently the least vulnerable to
known attacks. Use the other alternatives only when you need to ensure compatibility with some
previously installed system that is not able to use newer algorithms.
Passphrase
The encryption key will be computed6 on the basis of a passphrase which you will be able
to enter later in the process.
Random key
A new encryption key will be generated from random data each time you try to bring up
the encrypted partition. In other words: on every shutdown the content of the partition will
be lost as the key is deleted from memory. (Of course, you could try to guess the key with
a brute force attack, but unless there is an unknown weakness in the cipher algorithm, it is
not achievable in our lifetime.)
Random keys are useful for swap partitions because you do not need to bother yourself
with remembering the passphrase or wiping sensitive information from the swap partition
before shutting down your computer. However, it also means that you will not be able to use
the “suspend-to-disk” functionality offered by newer Linux kernels as it will be impossible
(during a subsequent boot) to recover the suspended data written to the swap partition.
6. Using a passphrase as the key currently means that the partition will be set up using LUKS
(https://gitlab.com/cryptsetup/cryptsetup).
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attacker to discern which parts of the partition are in use and which are not. In addition, this will
make it harder to recover any leftover data from previous installations7.
After you have selected the desired parameters for your encrypted partitions, return back to the main
partitioning menu. There should now be a new menu item called Configure encrypted volumes.
After you select it, you will be asked to confirm the deletion of data on partitions marked to be erased
and possibly other actions such as writing a new partition table. For large partitions this might take
some time.
Next you will be asked to enter a passphrase for partitions configured to use one. Good passphrases
should be longer than 8 characters, should be a mixture of letters, numbers and other characters
and should not contain common dictionary words or information easily associable with you (such as
birthdates, hobbies, pet names, names of family members or relatives, etc.).
Warning
Before you input any passphrases, you should have made sure that your keyboard is configured cor-
rectly and generates the expected characters. If you are unsure, you can switch to the second virtual
console and type some text at the prompt. This ensures that you won’t be surprised later, e.g. by try-
ing to input a passphrase using a qwerty keyboard layout when you used an azerty layout during the
installation. This situation can have several causes. Maybe you switched to another keyboard layout
during the installation, or the selected keyboard layout might not have been set up yet when entering
the passphrase for the root file system.
If you selected to use methods other than a passphrase to create encryption keys, they will be generated
now. Because the kernel may not have gathered a sufficient amount of entropy at this early stage of
the installation, the process may take a long time. You can help speed up the process by generating
entropy: e.g. by pressing random keys, or by switching to the shell on the second virtual console and
generating some network and disk traffic (downloading some files, feeding big files into /dev/null,
etc.). This will be repeated for each partition to be encrypted.
After returning to the main partitioning menu, you will see all encrypted volumes as additional parti-
tions which can be configured in the same way as ordinary partitions. The following example shows
a volume encrypted via dm-crypt.
Now is the time to assign mount points to the volumes and optionally change the file system types if
the defaults do not suit you.
Pay attention to the identifiers in parentheses (sda2_crypt in this case) and the mount points you
assigned to each encrypted volume. You will need this information later when booting the new system.
The differences between the ordinary boot process and the boot process with encryption involved will
be covered later in Section 7.2.
Once you are satisfied with the partitioning scheme, continue with the installation.
7. It is believed that the guys from three-letter agencies can restore the data even after several rewrites of the magnetooptical
media, though.
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Note: For technical reasons packages installed during the installation of the base system are
installed without their “Recommends”. The rule described above only takes effect after this point
in the installation process.
8. Note that the program which actually installs the packages is called dpkg. However, this program is more of a low-level
tool. apt-get is a higher-level tool, which will invoke dpkg as appropriate. It knows how to retrieve packages from your CD,
the network, or wherever. It is also able to automatically install other packages which are required to make the package you’re
trying to install work correctly.
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If you are installing at a lower priority (e.g. in expert mode), you will be able to make more decisions
yourself. You can choose whether or not to use the security and/or stable-updates services, and you
can choose to add packages from the “contrib” and “non-free” sections of the archive.
Note: Packages are included on CDs (and DVDs) in the order of their popularity. This means that
for most uses only the first CDs in a set are needed and that only very few people actually use
any of the packages included on the last CDs in a set.
It also means that buying or downloading and burning a full CD set is just a waste of money as
you’ll never use most of them. In most cases you are better off getting only the first 3 to 8 CDs and
installing any additional packages you may need from the Internet by using a mirror. The same
goes for DVD sets: the first DVD, or maybe the first two DVDs will cover most needs.
If you do scan multiple CDs or DVDs, the installer will prompt you to exchange them when it needs
packages from another CD/DVD than the one currently in the drive. Note that only CDs or DVDs that
belong to the same set should be scanned. The order in which they are scanned does not really matter,
but scanning them in ascending order will reduce the chance of mistakes.
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always use that. The amount of data that will be downloaded if you do select a mirror thus depends
on
Note that the last point means that, even if you choose not to use a network mirror, some packages
may still be downloaded from the Internet if there is a security or stable-updates update available for
them and those services have been configured.
Tip: In the standard user interface of the installer, you can use the space bar to toggle selection
of a task.
9. You should know that to present this list, the installer is merely invoking the tasksel program. It can be run at any time
after installation to install more packages (or remove them), or you can use a more fine-grained tool such as aptitude. If
you are looking for a specific single package, after installation is complete, simply run aptitude install package, where
package is the name of the package you are looking for.
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The various server tasks will install software roughly as follows. Web server: apache2; Print server:
cups;
The “Standard system” task will install any package that has a priority “standard”. This includes a lot
of common utilities that are normally available on any Linux or Unix system. You should leave this
task selected unless you know what you are doing and want a really minimal system.
If during language selection a default locale other than the “C” locale was selected, tasksel will
check if any localization tasks are defined for that locale and will automatically try to install relevant
localization packages. This includes for example packages containing word lists or special fonts for
your language. If a desktop environment was selected, it will also install appropriate localization
packages for that (if available).
Once you’ve selected your tasks, select Continue. At this point, aptitude will install the packages
that are part of the selected tasks. If a particular program needs more information from the user, it will
prompt you during this process.
You should be aware that especially the Desktop task is very large. Especially when installing from a
normal CD-ROM in combination with a mirror for packages not on the CD-ROM, the installer may
want to retrieve a lot of packages over the network. If you have a relatively slow Internet connection,
this can take a long time. There is no option to cancel the installation of packages once it has started.
Even when packages are included on the CD-ROM, the installer may still retrieve them from the
mirror if the version available on the mirror is more recent than the one included on the CD-ROM. If
you are installing the stable distribution, this can happen after a point release (an update of the original
stable release); if you are installing the testing distribution this will happen if you are using an older
image.
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If you do not want to install grub, use the Go Back button to get to the main menu, and from there
select whatever bootloader you would like to use.
Note: Currently the LILO installation will only create menu entries for other operating systems if
these can be chainloaded. This means you may have to manually add a menu entry for operating
systems like GNU/Linux and GNU/Hurd after the installation.
debian-installer offers you three choices on where to install the LILO boot loader:
Other choice
Useful for advanced users who want to install LILO somewhere else. In this case you will be
asked for desired location. You can use traditional device names such as /dev/sda.
If you can no longer boot into Windows 9x (or DOS) after this step, you’ll need to use a Windows 9x
(MS-DOS) boot disk and use the fdisk /mbr command to reinstall the MS-DOS master boot record
— however, this means that you’ll need to use some other way to get back into Ubuntu!
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6.3.8. Troubleshooting
The components listed in this section are usually not involved in the installation process, but are
waiting in the background to help the user in case something goes wrong.
10. That is: press the Alt key on the left-hand side of the space bar and the F2 function key at the same time.
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and by typing help. The shell is a Bourne shell clone called ash and has some nice features like
autocompletion and history.
To edit and view files, use the text editor nano. Log files for the installation system can be found in
the /var/log directory.
Note: Although you can do basically anything in a shell that the available commands allow you to
do, the option to use a shell is really only there in case something goes wrong and for debugging.
Doing things manually from the shell may interfere with the installation process and result in
errors or an incomplete installation. In particular, you should always use let the installer activate
your swap partition and not do this yourself from a shell.
Where install_host is either the name or IP address of the computer being installed. Before the
actual login the fingerprint of the remote system will be displayed and you will have to confirm that
it is correct.
Note: The ssh server in the installer uses a default configuration that does not send keep-alive
packets. In principle, a connection to the system being installed should be kept open indefinitely.
However, in some situations — depending on your local network setup — the connection may be
lost after some period of inactivity. One common case where this can happen is when there is
some form of Network Address Translation (NAT) somewhere between the client and the system
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being installed. Depending on at which point of the installation the connection was lost, you may
or may not be able to resume the installation after reconnecting.
You may be able to avoid the connection being dropped by adding the option
-o ServerAliveInterval=value when starting the ssh connection, or by adding that option in
your ssh configuration file. Note however that in some cases adding this option may also cause
a connection to be dropped (for example if keep-alive packets are sent during a brief network
outage, from which ssh would otherwise have recovered), so it should only be used when
needed.
Note: If you install several computers in turn and they happen to have the same IP address
or hostname, ssh will refuse to connect to such host. The reason is that it will have different
fingerprint, which is usually a sign of a spoofing attack. If you are sure this is not the case, you
will need to delete the relevant line from ~/.ssh/known_hosts11 and try again.
After the login you will be presented with an initial screen where you have two possibilities called
Start menu and Start shell. The former brings you to the main installer menu, where you can
continue with the installation as usual. The latter starts a shell from which you can examine and
possibly fix the remote system. You should only start one SSH session for the installation menu, but
may start multiple sessions for shells.
Warning
After you have started the installation remotely over SSH, you should not go back to the installation
session running on the local console. Doing so may corrupt the database that holds the configuration
of the new system. This in turn may result in a failed installation or problems with the installed system.
Note: Which devices are scanned and which file systems are supported depends on the architec-
ture, the installation method and the stage of the installation. Especially during the early stages
of the installation, loading the firmware is most likely to succeed from a FAT-formatted floppy disk
or USB stick. On i386 and amd64 firmware can also be loaded from an MMC or SD card.
Note that it is possible to skip loading the firmware if you know the device will also function without
it, or if the device is not needed during the installation.
11. The following command will remove an existing entry for a host: ssh-keygen -R <hostname|IP address>.
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debian-installer only prompts for firmware needed by kernel modules loaded during the instal-
lation. Not all drivers are included in debian-installer, in particular radeon is not, so this implies
that the capabilities of some devices may be no different at the end of the installation from what they
were at the beginning. Consequently, some of your hardware may not be being used to its full poten-
tial. If you suspect this is the case, or are just curious, it is not a bad idea to check the output of the
dmesg command on the newly booted system and search for “firmware”.
• http://cdimage.debian.org/cdimage/unofficial/non-free/firmware/
Just download the tarball or zip file for the correct release and unpack it to the file system on the
medium.
If the firmware you need is not included in the tarball, you can also download specific firmware
packages from the (non-free section of the) archive. The following overview should list most available
firmware packages but is not guaranteed to be complete and may also contain non-firmware packages:
• http://packages.debian.org/search?keywords=firmware
It is also possible to copy individual firmware files to the medium. Loose firmware could be obtained
for example from an already installed system or from a hardware vendor.
Note: If the firmware was loaded from loose firmware files, the firmware copied to the installed
system will not be automatically updated unless the corresponding firmware package (if available)
is installed after the installation is completed.
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System
In the first line of the prompt, part is the name of the underlying partition, e.g. sda2 or md0. You are
now probably wondering for which volume you are actually entering the passphrase. Does it relate to
your /home? Or to /var? Of course, if you have just one encrypted volume, this is easy and you can
just enter the passphrase you used when setting up this volume. If you set up more than one encrypted
volume during the installation, the notes you wrote down as the last step in Section 6.3.3.6 come in
handy. If you did not make a note of the mapping between part_crypt and the mount points before,
you can still find it in /etc/crypttab and /etc/fstab of your new system.
The prompt may look somewhat different when an encrypted root file system is mounted. This de-
pends on which initramfs generator was used to generate the initrd used to boot the system. The
example below is for an initrd generated using initramfs-tools:
No characters (even asterisks) will be shown while entering the passphrase. If you enter the wrong
passphrase, you have two more tries to correct it. After the third try the boot process will skip this
volume and continue to mount the next filesystem. Please see Section 7.2.1 for further information.
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7.2.1. Troubleshooting
If some of the encrypted volumes could not be mounted because a wrong passphrase was entered, you
will have to mount them manually after the boot. There are several cases.
• The first case concerns the root partition. When it is not mounted correctly, the boot process will
halt and you will have to reboot the computer to try again.
• The easiest case is for encrypted volumes holding data like /home or /srv. You can simply mount
them manually after the boot.
However for dm-crypt this is a bit tricky. First you need to register the volumes with device mapper
by running:
# /etc/init.d/cryptdisks start
This will scan all volumes mentioned in /etc/crypttab and will create appropriate devices un-
der the /dev directory after entering the correct passphrases. (Already registered volumes will be
skipped, so you can repeat this command several times without worrying.) After successful regis-
tration you can simply mount the volumes the usual way:
# mount /mount_point
• If any volume holding noncritical system files could not be mounted (/usr or /var), the sys-
tem should still boot and you should be able to mount the volumes manually like in the previous
case. However, you will also need to (re)start any services usually running in your default runlevel
because it is very likely that they were not started. The easiest way is to just reboot the computer.
7.3. Log In
Once your system boots, you’ll be presented with the login prompt. Log in using the personal login
and password you selected during the installation process. Your system is now ready for use.
If you are a new user, you may want to explore the documentation which is already installed on your
system as you start to use it. There are currently several documentation systems, work is proceeding
on integrating the different types of documentation. Here are a few starting points.
Documentation accompanying programs you have installed can be found in /usr/share/doc/, un-
der a subdirectory named after the program (or, more precise, the Ubuntu package that contains the
program). However, more extensive documentation is often packaged separately in special documen-
tation packages that are mostly not installed by default. For example, documentation about the pack-
age management tool apt can be found in the packages apt-doc or apt-howto.
In addition, there are some special folders within the /usr/share/doc/ hierarchy. Linux HOWTOs
are installed in .gz (compressed) format, in /usr/share/doc/HOWTO/en-txt/. After installing
dhelp, you will find a browsable index of documentation in /usr/share/doc/HTML/index.html.
One easy way to view these documents using a text based browser is to enter the following commands:
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$ cd /usr/share/doc/
$ w3m .
The dot after the w3m command tells it to show the contents of the current directory.
If you have a graphical desktop environment installed, you can also use its web browser. Start the web
browser from the application menu and enter /usr/share/doc/ in the address bar.
You can also type info command or man command to see documentation on most commands available
at the command prompt. Typing help will display help on shell commands. And typing a command
followed by --help will usually display a short summary of the command’s usage. If a command’s
results scroll past the top of the screen, type | more after the command to cause the results to pause
before scrolling past the top of the screen. To see a list of all commands available which begin with a
certain letter, type the letter and then two tabs.
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Here
1. Under the SysV init system halt had the same effect as poweroff, but with systemd as init system (the default in jessie)
their effects are different.
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• /sbin
• /lib
For instance, if you replace /usr/bin/perl, that will work, but then if you upgrade your perl
package, the file you put there will be replaced. Experts can get around this by putting packages on
“hold” in aptitude.
One of the best installation methods is apt. You can use the command line version apt-get, the full-
screen text version aptitude, or the graphical version synaptic. Note apt will also let you merge main,
contrib, and non-free so you can have export-restricted packages as well as standard versions.
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small but very flexible. By default it will be configured to only handle e-mail local to the system itself
and e-mails addressed to the system administrator (root account) will be delivered to the regular user
account created during the installation3.
When system e-mails are delivered they are added to a file in /var/mail/account_name. The e-mails
can be read using mutt.
# dpkg-reconfigure exim4-config
After entering that command (as root), you will be asked if you want split the configuration into small
files. If you are unsure, select the default option.
Next you will be presented with several common mail scenarios. Choose the one that most closely
resembles your needs.
internet site
Your system is connected to a network and your mail is sent and received directly using SMTP.
On the following screens you will be asked a few basic questions, like your machine’s mail name,
or a list of domains for which you accept or relay mail.
3. The forwarding of mail for root to the regular user account is configured in /etc/aliases. If no regular user account
was created, the mail will of course be delivered to the root account itself.
4. You can of course also remove exim4 and replace it with an alternative MTA/MDA.
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• handle special hardware needs, or hardware conflicts with the pre-supplied kernels
• use options of the kernel which are not supported in the pre-supplied kernels (such as high memory
support)
• optimize the kernel by removing useless drivers to speed up boot time
• create a monolithic instead of a modularized kernel
• run an updated or development kernel
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This method will make a .deb of your kernel source, and, if you have non-standard modules, make
a synchronized dependent .deb of those too. It’s a better way to manage kernel images; /boot will
hold the kernel, the System.map, and a log of the active config file for the build.
Note that you don’t have to compile your kernel the “Debian/Ubuntu way”; but we find that using
the packaging system to manage your kernel is actually safer and easier. In fact, you can get your
kernel sources right from Linus instead of linux-source-2.6, yet still use the kernel-package
compilation method.
Note that you’ll find complete
documentation on using kernel-package under
/usr/share/doc/kernel-package. This section just contains a brief tutorial.
Hereafter, we’ll assume you have free rein over your machine and will extract your kernel source to
somewhere in your home directory5. We’ll also assume that your kernel version is 4.4. Make sure
you are in the directory to where you want to unpack the kernel sources, extract them using tar
xf /usr/src/linux-source-4.4.tar.xz and change to the directory linux-source-4.4 that
will have been created.
Now, you can configure your kernel. Run make xconfig if X11 is installed, configured and being
run; run make menuconfig otherwise (you’ll need libncurses5-dev installed). Take the time to
read the online help and choose carefully. When in doubt, it is typically better to include the device
driver (the software which manages hardware peripherals, such as Ethernet cards, SCSI controllers,
and so on) you are unsure about. Be careful: other options, not related to a specific hardware, should
be left at the default value if you do not understand them. Do not forget to select “Kernel module
loader” in “Loadable module support” (it is not selected by default). If not included, your Ubuntu
installation will experience problems.
Clean the source tree and reset the kernel-package parameters. To do that, do make-kpkg clean.
Now, compile the kernel: fakeroot make-kpkg --initrd --revision=1.0.custom
kernel_image. The version number of “1.0” can be changed at will; this is just a version number
that you will use to track your kernel builds. Likewise, you can put any word you like in place of
“custom” (e.g., a host name). Kernel compilation may take quite a while, depending on the power of
your machine.
Once the compilation is complete, you can install your custom kernel like any package. As
root, do dpkg -i ../linux-image-4.4-subarchitecture_1.0.custom_i386.deb. The
subarchitecture part is an optional sub-architecture, such as “686”, depending on what kernel
options you set. dpkg -i will install the kernel, along with some other nice supporting files. For
instance, the System.map will be properly installed (helpful for debugging kernel problems), and
/boot/config-4.4 will be installed, containing your current configuration set. Your new kernel
package is also clever enough to automatically update your boot loader to use the new kernel. If you
have created a modules package, you’ll need to install that package as well.
5. There are other locations where you can extract kernel sources and build your custom kernel, but this is easiest as it does
not require special permissions.
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It is time to reboot the system: read carefully any warning that the above step may have produced,
then shutdown -r now.
For more information on Debian/Ubuntu kernels and kernel compilation, see the Debian Linux Kernel
Handbook (http://kernel-handbook.alioth.debian.org/). For more information on kernel-package,
read the fine documentation in /usr/share/doc/kernel-package.
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Appendix A. Installation Howto
This document describes how to install Ubuntu 16.04 “Xenial Xerus” for the 32-bit PC (“i386”). It is
a quick walkthrough of the installation process which should contain all the information you will need
for most installs. When more information can be useful, we will link to more detailed explanations in
other parts of this document.
A.1.1. CDROM
Download the image for your architecture and burn it to a CD. To boot the CD, you may need to
change your BIOS configuration, as explained in Section 3.6.1.
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A.2. Installation
Once the installer starts, you will be greeted with an initial screen. Press Enter to boot, or read the
instructions for other boot methods and parameters (see Section 5.3).
After a while you will be asked to select your language. Use the arrow keys to pick a language
and press Enter to continue. Next you’ll be asked to select your country, with the choices including
countries where your language is spoken. If it’s not on the short list, a list of all the countries in the
world is available.
You may be asked to confirm your keyboard layout. Choose the default unless you know better.
Now sit back while the installer detects some of your hardware, and loads the rest of itself from CD,
floppy, USB, etc.
Next the installer will try to detect your network hardware and set up networking by DHCP. If you are
not on a network or do not have DHCP, you will be given the opportunity to configure the network
manually.
The next step is setting up your clock and time zone. The installer will try to contact a time server on
the Internet to ensure the clock is set correctly. The time zone is based on the country selected earlier
and the installer will only ask to select one if a country has multiple zones.
Setting up your clock and time zone is followed by the creation of user accounts. By default you
are asked to provide a password for the “root” (administrator) account and information necessary to
create one regular user account. If you do not specify a password for the “root” user this account will
be disabled but the sudo package will be installed later to enable administrative tasks to be carried
out on the new system.
Now it is time to partition your disks. First you will be given the opportunity to automatically partition
either an entire drive, or available free space on a drive (see Section 6.3.3.2). This is recommended for
new users or anyone in a hurry. If you do not want to autopartition, choose Manual from the menu.
If you have an existing DOS or Windows partition that you want to preserve, be very careful with
automatic partitioning. If you choose manual partitioning, you can use the installer to resize existing
FAT or NTFS partitions to create room for the Ubuntu install: simply select the partition and specify
its new size.
If you want to customize the partition layout, choose Manually edit partition table from the menu,
and the next screen will show you your partition table, how the partitions will be formatted, and
where they will be mounted. Select a partition to modify or delete it. Remember to assign at least one
partition for swap space and to mount a partition on /. For more detailed information on how to use
the partitioner, please refer to Section 6.3.3; the appendix Appendix C has more general information
about partitioning.
Now the installer formats your partitions and starts to install the base system, which can take a while.
That is followed by installing a kernel.
The base system that was installed earlier is a working, but very minimal installation. To make the
system more functional the next step allows you to install additional packages by selecting tasks.
Before packages can be installed apt needs to be configured as that defines from where the packages
will be retrieved. The “Standard system” task will be selected by default and should normally be
installed. Select the “Desktop environment” task if you would like to have a graphical desktop after
the installation. See Section 6.3.5.2 for additional information about this step.
The last step is to install a boot loader. If the installer detects other operating systems on your com-
puter, it will add them to the boot menu and let you know. By default GRUB will be installed to the
master boot record of the first harddrive, which is generally a good choice.
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The installer will now tell you that the first stage of installation has finished. Remove the CD and hit
Enter to reboot your machine. It should boot up into the newly installed system and allow you to log
in. This is explained in Chapter 7.
If you need more information on the install process, see Chapter 6.
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using preseeding
This appendix explains how to preseed answers to questions in debian-installer to automate
your installation.
The configuration fragments used in this appendix are also available as an example preconfiguration
file from ../example-preseed.txt.
B.1. Introduction
Preseeding provides a way to set answers to questions asked during the installation process, without
having to manually enter the answers while the installation is running. This makes it possible to
fully automate most types of installation and even offers some features not available during normal
installations.
Preseeding is not required. If you use an empty preseed file, the installer will behave just the same
way as in a normal manual installation. Each question you preseed will (if you got it right!) modify
the installation in some way from that baseline.
An important difference between the preseeding methods is the point at which the preconfiguration
file is loaded and processed. For initrd preseeding this is right at the start of the installation, before
the first question is even asked. Preseeding from the kernel command line happens just after. It is thus
possible to override configuration set in the initrd by editing the kernel command line (either in the
bootloader configuration or manually at boot time for bootloaders that allow it). For file preseeding
this is after the CD or CD image has been loaded. For network preseeding it is only after the network
has been configured.
Important: Obviously, any questions that have been processed before the preconfiguration file is
loaded cannot be preseeded (this will include questions that are only displayed at medium or low
priority, like the first hardware detection run). A not so convenient way to avoid these questions
from being asked is to preseed them through the boot parameters, as described in Section B.2.2.
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In order to easily avoid the questions that would normally appear before the preseeding occurs,
you can start the installer in “auto” mode. This delays questions that would normally be asked too
early for preseeding (i.e. language, country and keyboard selection) until after the network comes
up, thus allowing them to be preseeded. It also runs the installation at critical priority, which avoids
many unimportant questions. See Section B.2.3 for details.
B.1.2. Limitations
Although most questions used by debian-installer can be preseeded using this method, there are
some notable exceptions. You must (re)partition an entire disk or use available free space on a disk; it
is not possible to use existing partitions.
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An example preconfiguration file that you can use as basis for your own preconfiguration file is avail-
able from ../example-preseed.txt. This file is based on the configuration fragments included in this
appendix.
- if you’re installing from USB media (put the preconfiguration file in the
toplevel directory of the USB stick):
preseed/file=/hd-media/preseed.cfg
preseed/file/checksum=5da499872becccfeda2c4872f9171c3d
Note that preseed/url can be shortened to just url, preseed/file to just file and
preseed/file/checksum to just preseed-md5 when they are passed as boot parameters.
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figure packages for the target system, you will need to prepend the owner1 of the variable as in
owner :path/to/variable=value. If you don’t specify the owner, the value for the variable will not
be copied to the debconf database in the target system and thus remain unused during the configuration
of the relevant package.
Normally, preseeding a question in this way will mean that the question will not be asked. To set
a specific default value for a question, but still have the question asked, use “?=” instead of “=” as
operator. See also Section B.5.2.
Note that some variables that are frequently set at the boot prompt have a shorter alias. If an alias is
available, it is used in the examples in this appendix instead of the full variable. The preseed/url
variable for example has been aliased as url. Another example is the tasks alias, which translates
to tasksel:tasksel/first.
A “---” in the boot options has special meaning. Kernel parameters that appear after the last “---” may
be copied into the bootloader configuration for the installed system (if supported by the installer for
the bootloader). The installer will automatically filter out any options (like preconfiguration options)
that it recognizes.
Note: Current linux kernels (2.6.9 and later) accept a maximum of 32 command line options and
32 environment options, including any options added by default for the installer. If these numbers
are exceeded, the kernel will panic (crash). (For earlier kernels, these numbers were lower.)
For most installations some of the default options in your bootloader configuration file, like
vga=normal, may be safely removed which may allow you to add more options for preseeding.
Note: It may not always be possible to specify values with spaces for boot parameters, even if
you delimit them with quotes.
auto url=autoserver
This relies on there being a DHCP server that will get the machine to the point where
autoserver can be resolved by DNS, perhaps after adding the local domain if that was
provided by DHCP. If this was done at a site where the domain is example.com, and they
have a reasonably sane DHCP setup, it would result in the preseed file being retrieved from
http://autoserver.example.com/d-i/xenial/./preseed.cfg.
1. The owner of a debconf variable (or template) is normally the name of the package that contains the corresponding
debconf template. For variables used in the installer itself the owner is “d-i”. Templates and variables can have more than one
owner which helps to determine whether they can be removed from the debconf database if the package is purged.
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auto url=http://192.168.1.2/path/to/mypreseed.file
In addition to specifying the url, you can also specify settings that do not directly affect the behavior
of debian-installer itself, but can be passed through to scripts specified using preseed/run in
the loaded preseed file. At present, the only example of this is auto-install/classes, which has
an alias classes. This can be used thus:
The classes could for example denote the type of system to be installed, or the localization to be used.
It is of course possible to extend this concept, and if you do, it is reasonable to use the
auto-install namespace for this. So one might have something like auto-install/style
which is then used in your scripts. If you feel the need to do this, please mention it on the
<debian-boot@lists.debian.org> mailing list so that we can avoid namespace conflicts, and
perhaps add an alias for the parameter for you.
The auto boot choice is not yet defined on all arches. The same effect may be achieved by sim-
ply adding the two parameters auto=true priority=critical to the kernel command line. The
auto kernel parameter is an alias for auto-install/enable and setting it to true delays the lo-
cale and keyboard questions until after there has been a chance to preseed them, while priority is
an alias for debconf/priority and setting it to critical stops any questions with a lower priority
from being asked.
Additional options that may be of interest while attempting to automate an install while using DHCP
are: interface=auto netcfg/dhcp_timeout=60 which makes the machine choose the first vi-
able NIC and be more patient about getting a reply to its DHCP query.
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Tip: An extensive example of how to use this framework, including example scripts and classes,
can be found on the website of its developer (http://hands.com/d-i/). The examples available there
also show many other nice effects that can be achieved by creative use of preconfiguration.
priority debconf/priority
fb debian-installer/framebuffer
language debian-installer/language
country debian-installer/country
locale debian-installer/locale
theme debian-installer/theme
auto auto-install/enable
classes auto-install/classes
file preseed/file
url preseed/url
domain netcfg/get_domain
hostname netcfg/get_hostname
interface netcfg/choose_interface
protocol mirror/protocol
suite mirror/suite
modules anna/choose_modules
recommends base-installer/install-recommends
tasks tasksel:tasksel/first
desktop tasksel:tasksel/desktop
dmraid disk-detect/dmraid/enable
keymap keyboard-configuration/xkb-keymap
preseed-md5 preseed/file/checksum
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Note that the above example limits this filename to DHCP clients that identify themselves as "d-i", so
it will not affect regular DHCP clients, but only the installer. You can also put the text in a stanza for
only one particular host to avoid preseeding all installs on your network.
A good way to use the DHCP preseeding is to only preseed values specific to your network, such
as the Ubuntu mirror to use. This way installs on your network will automatically get a good mirror
selected, but the rest of the installation can be performed interactively. Using DHCP preseeding to
fully automate Ubuntu installs should only be done with care.
There are a few rules to keep in mind when writing a preconfiguration file.
• Put only a single space or tab between type and value: any additional whitespace will be interpreted
as belonging to the value.
• A line can be split into multiple lines by appending a backslash (“\”) as the line continuation
character. A good place to split a line is after the question name; a bad place is between type and
value. Split lines will be joined into a single line with all leading/trailing whitespace condensed to
a single space.
• For debconf variables (templates) used only in the installer itself, the owner should be set to “d-i”;
to preseed variables used in the installed system, the name of the package that contains the corre-
sponding debconf template should be used. Only variables that have their owner set to something
other than “d-i” will be propagated to the debconf database for the installed system.
• Most questions need to be preseeded using the values valid in English and not the translated values.
However, there are some questions (for example in partman) where the translated values need to
be used.
• Some questions take a code as value instead of the English text that is shown during installation.
The easiest way to create a preconfiguration file is to use the example file linked in Section B.4 as
basis and work from there.
An alternative method is to do a manual installation and then, after rebooting, use the debconf-get-
selections from the debconf-utils package to dump both the debconf database and the installer’s
cdebconf database to a single file:
However, a file generated in this manner will have some items that should not be preseeded, and the
example file is a better starting place for most users.
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Note: This method relies on the fact that, at the end of the installation, the installer’s cdebconf
database is saved to the installed system in /var/log/installer/cdebconf. However, because
the database may contain sensitive information, by default the files are only readable by root.
The directory /var/log/installer and all files in it will be deleted from your system if you purge
the package installation-report.
To check possible values for questions, you can use nano to examine the files in
/var/lib/cdebconf while an installation is in progress. View templates.dat for the raw
templates and questions.dat for the current values and for the values assigned to variables.
To check if the format of your preconfiguration file is valid before performing an install, you can use
the command debconf-set-selections -c preseed.cfg .
B.4.1. Localization
During a normal install the questions about localization are asked first, so these values can only be
preseeded via the initrd or kernel boot parameter methods. Auto mode (Section B.2.3) includes the
setting of auto-install/enable=true (normally via the auto preseed alias). This delays the
asking of the localisation questions, so that they can be preseeded by any method.
The locale can be used to specify both language and country and can be any combination of a language
supported by debian-installer and a recognized country. If the combination does not form a valid
locale, the installer will automatically select a locale that is valid for the selected language. To specify
the locale as a boot parameter, use locale=en_US .
Although this method is very easy to use, it does not allow preseeding of all possible combinations
of language, country and locale2. So alternatively the values can be preseeded individually. Language
and country can also be specified as boot parameters.
2. Preseeding locale to en_NL would for example result in en_US.UTF-8 as default locale for the installed system. If e.g.
en_GB.UTF-8 is preferred instead, the values will need to be preseeded individually.
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Keyboard configuration consists of selecting a keymap and (for non-latin keymaps) a toggle key to
switch between the non-latin keymap and the US keymap. Only basic keymap variants are avail-
able during installation. Advanced variants are available only in the installed system, through dpkg-
reconfigure keyboard-configuration.
To specify the keymap as a boot parameter, use console-setup/ask_detect=false
keyboard-configuration/xkb-keymap=us. The keymap is an X layout name, as would be used
in the XkbLayout option in /etc/X11/xorg.conf.
# Keyboard selection.
# Disable automatic (interactive) keymap detection.
d-i console-setup/ask_detect boolean false
d-i keyboard-configuration/xkb-keymap select us
# To select a variant of the selected layout:
#d-i keyboard-configuration/xkb-keymap select us(dvorak)
# d-i keyboard-configuration/toggle select No toggling
To skip keyboard configuration, preseed keymap with SKIP. This will result in the kernel keymap
remaining active.
kill-all-dhcp; netcfg
# netcfg will choose an interface that has link if possible. This makes it
# skip displaying a list if there is more than one interface.
d-i netcfg/choose_interface select auto
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# If you have a slow dhcp server and the installer times out waiting for
# it, this might be useful.
#d-i netcfg/dhcp_timeout string 60
#d-i netcfg/dhcpv6_timeout string 60
# If you prefer to configure the network manually, uncomment this line and
# the static network configuration below.
#d-i netcfg/disable_autoconfig boolean true
# If you want the preconfiguration file to work on systems both with and
# without a dhcp server, uncomment these lines and the static network
# configuration below.
#d-i netcfg/dhcp_failed note
#d-i netcfg/dhcp_options select Configure network manually
# Any hostname and domain names assigned from dhcp take precedence over
# values set here. However, setting the values still prevents the questions
# from being shown, even if values come from dhcp.
d-i netcfg/get_hostname string unassigned-hostname
d-i netcfg/get_domain string unassigned-domain
# If non-free firmware is needed for the network or other hardware, you can
# configure the installer to always try to load it, without prompting. Or
# change to false to disable asking.
#d-i hw-detect/load_firmware boolean true
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Please note that netcfg will automatically determine the netmask if netcfg/get_netmask is not
preseeded. In this case, the variable has to be marked as seen for automatic installations. Similarly,
netcfg will choose an appropriate address if netcfg/get_gateway is not set. As a special case, you
can set netcfg/get_gateway to “none” to specify that no gateway should be used.
# Use the following settings if you wish to make use of the network-console
# component for remote installation over SSH. This only makes sense if you
# intend to perform the remainder of the installation manually.
#d-i anna/choose_modules string network-console
#d-i network-console/authorized_keys_url string http://10.0.0.1/openssh-key
#d-i network-console/password password r00tme
#d-i network-console/password-again password r00tme
# Use this instead if you prefer to use key-based authentication
#d-i network-console/authorized_keys_url http://host/authorized_keys
# If you select ftp, the mirror/country string does not need to be set.
#d-i mirror/protocol string ftp
d-i mirror/country string manual
d-i mirror/http/hostname string archive.ubuntu.com
d-i mirror/http/directory string /ubuntu
d-i mirror/http/proxy string
# Suite to install.
#d-i mirror/suite string xenial
# Suite to use for loading installer components (optional).
#d-i mirror/udeb/suite string xenial
# Components to use for loading installer components (optional).
#d-i mirror/udeb/components multiselect main, restricted
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Warning
Be aware that preseeding passwords is not completely secure as everyone with access to the precon-
figuration file will have the knowledge of these passwords. Storing hashed passwords is considered
secure unless a weak hashing algorithm like DES or MD5 is used which allow for bruteforce attacks.
Recommended password hashing algorithms are SHA-256 and SHA512.
# Set to true if you want to encrypt the first user’s home directory.
d-i user-setup/encrypt-home boolean false
mkpasswd -m sha-512
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# You may set this to any valid setting for $TZ; see the contents of
# /usr/share/zoneinfo/ for valid values.
d-i time/zone string US/Eastern
# Controls whether to use NTP to set the clock during the install
d-i clock-setup/ntp boolean true
# NTP server to use. The default is almost always fine here.
#d-i clock-setup/ntp-server string ntp.example.com
B.4.7. Partitioning
Using preseeding to partition the harddisk is limited to what is supported by partman-auto. You
can choose to partition either existing free space on a disk or a whole disk. The layout of the disk can
be determined by using a predefined recipe, a custom recipe from a recipe file or a recipe included in
the preconfiguration file.
Preseeding of advanced partition setups using RAID, LVM and encryption is supported, but not with
the full flexibility possible when partitioning during a non-preseeded install.
The examples below only provide basic information on the use of recipes. For detailed informa-
tion see the files partman-auto-recipe.txt and partman-auto-raid-recipe.txt included
in the debian-installer package. Both files are also available from the debian-installer
source repository (http://anonscm.debian.org/gitweb/?p=d-i/debian-installer.git;a=tree;f=doc/devel).
Note that the supported functionality may change between releases.
Warning
The identification of disks is dependent on the order in which their drivers are loaded. If there are
multiple disks in the system, make very sure the correct one will be selected before using preseeding.
# If the system has free space you can choose to only partition that space.
# This is only honoured if partman-auto/method (below) is not set.
# Alternatives: custom, some_device, some_device_crypto, some_device_lvm.
#d-i partman-auto/init_automatically_partition select biggest_free
# Alternatively, you may specify a disk to partition. If the system has only
# one disk the installer will default to using that, but otherwise the device
# name must be given in traditional, non-devfs format (so e.g. /dev/sda
# and not e.g. /dev/discs/disc0/disc).
# For example, to use the first SCSI/SATA hard disk:
#d-i partman-auto/disk string /dev/sda
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# For LVM partitioning, you can select how much of the volume group to use
# for logical volumes.
#d-i partman-auto-lvm/guided_size string max
#d-i partman-auto-lvm/guided_size string 10GB
#d-i partman-auto-lvm/guided_size string 50%
# If not, you can put an entire recipe into the preconfiguration file in one
# (logical) line. This example creates a small /boot partition, suitable
# swap, and uses the rest of the space for the root partition:
#d-i partman-auto/expert_recipe string \
# boot-root :: \
# 40 50 100 ext3 \
# $primary{ } $bootable{ } \
# method{ format } format{ } \
# use_filesystem{ } filesystem{ ext3 } \
# mountpoint{ /boot } \
# . \
# 500 10000 1000000000 ext3 \
# method{ format } format{ } \
# use_filesystem{ } filesystem{ ext3 } \
# mountpoint{ / } \
# . \
# 64 512 300% linux-swap \
# method{ swap } format{ } \
# .
# If you just want to change the default filesystem from ext3 to something
# else, you can do that without providing a full recipe.
#d-i partman/default_filesystem string ext4
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Warning
This type of automated partitioning is easy to get wrong. It is also functionality that receives relatively
little testing from the developers of debian-installer. The responsibility to get the various recipes
right (so they make sense and don’t conflict) lies with the user. Check /var/log/syslog if you run into
problems.
# Next you need to specify the physical partitions that will be used.
#d-i partman-auto/expert_recipe string \
# multiraid :: \
# 1000 5000 4000 raid \
# $primary{ } method{ raid } \
# . \
# 64 512 300% raid \
# method{ raid } \
# . \
# 500 10000 1000000000 raid \
# method{ raid } \
# .
# Last you need to specify how the previously defined partitions will be
# used in the RAID setup. Remember to use the correct partition numbers
# for logical partitions. RAID levels 0, 1, 5, 6 and 10 are supported;
# devices are separated using "#".
# Parameters are:
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Warning
Traditional device names may change based on the order in which the kernel discovers devices at
boot, which may cause the wrong filesystem to be mounted. Similarly, labels are likely to clash if you
plug in a new disk or a USB drive, and if that happens your system’s behaviour when started will be
random.
# The default is to mount by UUID, but you can also choose "traditional" to
# use traditional device names, or "label" to try filesystem labels before
# falling back to UUIDs.
#d-i partman/mount_style select uuid
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• kubuntu-desktop
• edubuntu-desktop
• lubuntu-desktop
• ubuntu-gnome-desktop
• xubuntu-desktop
• ubuntu-mate-desktop
• lamp-server
To install a different set of language packs, you can use the parameter pkgsel/language-packs.
The value of this parameter should be a list of ISO-639 language codes. If not set, the language packs
matching the language selected in the installer will be installed.
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Appendix B. Automating the installation using preseeding
# Some versions of the installer can report back on what software you have
# installed, and what software you use. The default is not to report back,
# but sending reports helps the project determine what software is most
# popular and include it on CDs.
#popularity-contest popularity-contest/participate boolean false
# Grub is the default boot loader (for x86). If you want lilo installed
# instead, uncomment this:
#d-i grub-installer/skip boolean true
# To also skip installing lilo, and install no bootloader, uncomment this
# too:
#d-i lilo-installer/skip boolean true
# This is fairly safe to set, it makes grub install automatically to the MBR
# if no other operating system is detected on the machine.
d-i grub-installer/only_debian boolean true
# This one makes grub-installer install to the MBR if it also finds some other
# OS, which is less safe as it might not be able to boot that other OS.
d-i grub-installer/with_other_os boolean true
# Due notably to potential USB sticks, the location of the MBR can not be
# determined safely in general, so this needs to be specified:
#d-i grub-installer/bootdev string /dev/sda
# To install to the first device (assuming it is not a USB stick):
#d-i grub-installer/bootdev string default
# Use the following option to add additional boot parameters for the
# installed system (if supported by the bootloader installer).
# Note: options passed to the installer will be added automatically.
#d-i debian-installer/add-kernel-opts string nousb
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Appendix B. Automating the installation using preseeding
An MD5 hash for a password for grub can be generated using grub-md5-crypt, or using the com-
mand from the example in Section B.4.5.
# This will prevent the installer from ejecting the CD during the reboot,
# which is useful in some situations.
#d-i cdrom-detect/eject boolean false
# This is how to make the installer shutdown when finished, but not
# reboot into the installed system.
#d-i debian-installer/exit/halt boolean true
# This will power off the machine instead of just halting it.
#d-i debian-installer/exit/poweroff boolean true
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Appendix B. Automating the installation using preseeding
# here’s a way to run any shell command you’d like inside the installer,
# automatically.
The same effect can be achieved for all questions by setting the parameter
preseed/interactive=true at the boot prompt. This can also be useful for testing or debugging
your preconfiguration file.
Note that the “d-i” owner should only be used for variables used in the installer itself. For variables
belonging to packages installed on the target system, you should use the name of that package instead.
See the footnote to Section B.2.2.
If you are preseeding using boot parameters, you can make the installer ask the corresponding question
by using the “?=” operator, i.e. foo/bar ?=value (or owner :foo/bar ?=value). This will of course
only have effect for parameters that correspond to questions that are actually displayed during an
installation and not for “internal” parameters.
For more debugging information, use the boot parameter DEBCONF_DEBUG=5. This will cause
debconf to print much more detail about the current settings of each variable and about its progress
through each package’s installation scripts.
# More than one file can be listed, separated by spaces; all will be
# loaded. The included files can have preseed/include directives of their
# own as well. Note that if the filenames are relative, they are taken from
# the same directory as the preconfiguration file that includes them.
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Appendix B. Automating the installation using preseeding
# More flexibly, this runs a shell command and if it outputs the names of
# preconfiguration files, includes those files.
#d-i preseed/include_command \
# string if [ "‘hostname‘" = bob ]; then echo bob.cfg; fi
# Most flexibly of all, this downloads a program and runs it. The program
# can use commands such as debconf-set to manipulate the debconf database.
# More than one script can be listed, separated by spaces.
# Note that if the filenames are relative, they are taken from the same
# directory as the preconfiguration file that runs them.
#d-i preseed/run string foo.sh
It is also possible to chainload from the initrd or file preseeding phase, into network preseeding by
setting preseed/url in the earlier files. This will cause network preseeding to be performed when the
network comes up. You need to be careful when doing this, since there will be two distinct runs at
preseeding, meaning for example that you get another chance to run the preseed/early command, the
second one happening after the network comes up.
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Appendix C. Partitioning for Ubuntu
Directory Content
bin Essential command binaries
boot Static files of the boot loader
dev Device files
etc Host-specific system configuration
home User home directories
lib Essential shared libraries and kernel modules
media Contains mount points for replaceable media
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Appendix C. Partitioning for Ubuntu
Directory Content
mnt Mount point for mounting a file system
temporarily
proc Virtual directory for system information
root Home directory for the root user
run Run-time variable data
sbin Essential system binaries
sys Virtual directory for system information
tmp Temporary files
usr Secondary hierarchy
var Variable data
srv Data for services provided by the system
opt Add-on application software packages
The following is a list of important considerations regarding directories and partitions. Note that disk
usage varies widely given system configuration and specific usage patterns. The recommendations
here are general guidelines and provide a starting point for partitioning.
• The root partition / must always physically contain /etc, /bin, /sbin, /lib and /dev, otherwise
you won’t be able to boot. Typically 150–310MB is needed for the root partition.
• /usr: contains all user programs (/usr/bin), libraries (/usr/lib), documentation
(/usr/share/doc), etc. This is the part of the file system that generally takes up most space.
You should provide at least 500MB of disk space. This amount should be increased depending
on the number and type of packages you plan to install. A standard Ubuntu desktop requires a
minimum of 1.5GB here. A generous workstation or server installation should allow 4–6GB.
• It is now recommended to have /usr on the root partition /, otherwise it could cause some trouble
at boot time. This means that you should provide at least 600–750MB of disk space for the root
partition including /usr, or 5–6GB for a workstation or a server installation.
• It is now recommended to have /usr on the root partition /, otherwise it could cause some trouble
at boot time. This means that you should provide at least 600–750MB of disk space for the root
partition including /usr, or 5–6GB for a workstation or a server installation.
• /var: variable data like news articles, e-mails, web sites, databases, the packaging system cache,
etc. will be placed under this directory. The size of this directory depends greatly on the usage of
your system, but for most people will be dictated by the package management tool’s overhead. If
you are going to do a full installation of just about everything Ubuntu has to offer, all in one session,
setting aside 2 or 3 GB of space for /var should be sufficient. If you are going to install in pieces
(that is to say, install services and utilities, followed by text stuff, then X, ...), you can get away
with 300–500 MB. If hard drive space is at a premium and you don’t plan on doing major system
updates, you can get by with as little as 30 or 40 MB.
• /tmp: temporary data created by programs will most likely go in this directory. 40–100MB should
usually be enough. Some applications — including archive manipulators, CD/DVD authoring tools,
and multimedia software — may use /tmp to temporarily store image files. If you plan to use such
applications, you should adjust the space available in /tmp accordingly.
• /home: every user will put his personal data into a subdirectory of this directory. Its size depends
on how many users will be using the system and what files are to be stored in their directories.
Depending on your planned usage you should reserve about 100MB for each user, but adapt this
115
Appendix C. Partitioning for Ubuntu
value to your needs. Reserve a lot more space if you plan to save a lot of multimedia files (pictures,
MP3, movies) in your home directory.
116
Appendix C. Partitioning for Ubuntu
partman
Recommended partitioning tool in Ubuntu. This Swiss army knife can also resize partitions,
create filesystems (“format” in Windows speak) and assign them to the mountpoints.
fdisk
The original Linux disk partitioner, good for gurus.
Be careful if you have existing FreeBSD partitions on your machine. The installation
kernels include support for these partitions, but the way that fdisk represents them
(or not) can make the device names differ. See the Linux+FreeBSD HOWTO
(http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/Linux+FreeBSD-2.html).
cfdisk
A simple-to-use, full-screen disk partitioner for the rest of us.
Note that cfdisk doesn’t understand FreeBSD partitions at all, and, again, device names may
differ as a result.
One of these programs will be run by default when you select Partition disks (or similar). It may
be possible to use a different partitioning tool from the command line on VT2, but this is not recom-
mended.
Remember to mark your boot partition as “Bootable”.
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Appendix C. Partitioning for Ubuntu
you get to the installer’s partitioning step, select the option Manual and then simply select an existing
partition and change its size.
The PC BIOS generally adds additional constraints for disk partitioning. There is a limit to how
many “primary” and “logical” partitions a drive can contain. Additionally, with pre 1994–98 BIOSes,
there are limits to where on the drive the BIOS can boot from. More information can be found in
the Linux Partition HOWTO (http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/Partition/), but this section will include a
brief overview to help you plan most situations.
“Primary” partitions are the original partitioning scheme for PC disks. However, there can only be
four of them. To get past this limitation, “extended” and “logical” partitions were invented. By setting
one of your primary partitions as an extended partition, you can subdivide all the space allocated to
that partition into logical partitions. You can create up to 60 logical partitions per extended partition;
however, you can only have one extended partition per drive.
Linux limits the partitions per drive to 255 partitions for SCSI disks (3 usable primary partitions,
252 logical partitions), and 63 partitions on an IDE drive (3 usable primary partitions, 60 logical
partitions). However the normal Ubuntu system provides only 20 devices for partitions, so you may
not install on partitions higher than 20 unless you first manually create devices for those partitions.
If you have a large IDE disk, and are using neither LBA addressing, nor overlay drivers (sometimes
provided by hard disk manufacturers), then the boot partition (the partition containing your kernel im-
age) must be placed within the first 1024 cylinders of your hard drive (usually around 524 megabytes,
without BIOS translation).
This restriction doesn’t apply if you have a BIOS newer than around 1995–98 (depending on the
manufacturer) that supports the “Enhanced Disk Drive Support Specification”. Both Lilo, the Linux
loader, and Ubuntu’s alternative mbr must use the BIOS to read the kernel from the disk into RAM.
If the BIOS int 0x13 large disk access extensions are found to be present, they will be utilized. Oth-
erwise, the legacy disk access interface is used as a fall-back, and it cannot be used to address any
location on the disk higher than the 1023rd cylinder. Once Linux is booted, no matter what BIOS your
computer has, these restrictions no longer apply, since Linux does not use the BIOS for disk access.
If you have a large disk, you might have to use cylinder translation techniques, which you can set
from your BIOS setup program, such as LBA (Logical Block Addressing) or CHS translation mode
(“Large”). More information about issues with large disks can be found in the Large Disk HOWTO
(http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/Large-Disk-HOWTO.html). If you are using a cylinder translation
scheme, and the BIOS does not support the large disk access extensions, then your boot partition has
to fit within the translated representation of the 1024th cylinder.
The recommended way of accomplishing this is to create a small (25–50MB should suffice) partition
at the beginning of the disk to be used as the boot partition, and then create whatever other partitions
you wish to have, in the remaining area. This boot partition must be mounted on /boot, since that is
the directory where the Linux kernel(s) will be stored. This configuration will work on any system,
regardless of whether LBA or large disk CHS translation is used, and regardless of whether your
BIOS supports the large disk access extensions.
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Appendix D. Random Bits
119
Appendix D. Random Bits
Certain kernel modules must be loaded in order for your mouse to work. In most cases the correct
modules are autodetected, but not always for old-style serial and bus mice1, which are quite rare except
on very old computers. Summary of Linux kernel modules needed for different mouse types:
Module Description
psmouse PS/2 mice (should be autodetected)
usbhid USB mice (should be autodetected)
sermouse Most serial mice
logibm Bus mouse connected to Logitech adapter card
inport Bus mouse connected to ATI or Microsoft InPort
card
To load a mouse driver module, you can use the modconf command (from the package with the same
name) and look in the category kernel/drivers/input/mouse.
Important: In both cases this is the actual disk space used after the installation is finished and
any temporary files deleted. It also does not take into account overhead used by the file system,
for example for journal files. This means that significantly more disk space is needed both during
the installation and for normal system use.
The following table lists sizes reported by aptitude for the tasks listed in tasksel. Note that some tasks
have overlapping constituents, so the total installed size for two tasks together may be less than the
total obtained by adding up the numbers.
By default the installer will install the GNOME desktop environment, but alternative desktop envi-
ronments can be selected either by using one of the special CD images, or by specifying the desired
desktop environment when the installer is booted (see Section 6.3.5.2).
Note that you will need to add the sizes listed in the table to the size of the standard installation when
determining the size of partitions. Most of the size listed as “Installed size” will end up in /usr and
in /lib; the size listed as “Download size” is (temporarily) required in /var.
1. Serial mice usually have a 9-hole D-shaped connector; bus mice have an 8-pin round connector, not to be confused with
the 6-pin round connector of a PS/2 mouse or the 4-pin round connector of an ADB mouse.
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Appendix D. Random Bits
If you install in a language other than English, tasksel may automatically install a localization task,
if one is available for your language. Space requirements differ per language; you should allow up to
350MB in total for download and installation.
Note: As this is a mostly manual procedure, you should bear in mind that you will need to do
a lot of basic configuration of the system yourself, which will also require more knowledge of
Ubuntu and of Linux in general than performing a regular installation. You cannot expect this
procedure to result in a system that is identical to a system from a regular installation. You should
also keep in mind that this procedure only gives the basic steps to set up a system. Additional
installation and/or configuration steps may be needed. In general, this method of installation is
not recommended for casual or first time users.
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Appendix D. Random Bits
# mke2fs -j /dev/sda6
# mkswap /dev/sda5
# sync
# swapon /dev/sda5
Mount one partition as /mnt/ubuntu (the installation point, to be the root (/) filesystem on your new
system). The mount point name is strictly arbitrary, it is referenced later below.
# mkdir /mnt/ubuntu
# mount /dev/sda6 /mnt/ubuntu
Note: If you want to have parts of the filesystem (e.g. /usr) mounted on separate partitions, you
will need to create and mount these directories manually before proceding with the next stage.
# mkdir work
# cd work
The debootstrap binary is located in the Ubuntu archive (be sure to select the
proper file for your architecture). Download the debootstrap .deb from the pool
(http://archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/pool/main/d/debootstrap/), copy the package to the work folder,
and extract the files from it. You will need to have root privileges to install the files.
# ar -x debootstrap_0.X.X_all.deb
# cd /
# zcat /full-path-to-work/work/data.tar.gz | tar xv
2. These include the GNU core utilities and commands like sed, grep, tar and gzip.
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Appendix D. Random Bits
After chrooting you may need to set the terminal definition to be compatible with the Ubuntu base
system, for example:
# export TERM=xterm-color
Depending on the value of TERM, you may have to install the ncurses-term package to get support
for it.
• install the makedev package, and create a default set of static device files using (after chrooting)
123
Appendix D. Random Bits
# editor /etc/fstab
Use mount -a to mount all the file systems you have specified in your /etc/fstab, or, to mount
file systems individually, use:
Current Ubuntu systems have mountpoints for removable media under /media, but keep compatibil-
ity symlinks in /. Create these as as needed, for example:
# cd /media
# mkdir cdrom0
# ln -s cdrom0 cdrom
# cd /
# ln -s media/cdrom
You can mount the proc and sysfs file systems multiple times and to arbitrary locations, though /proc
and /sys respectively are customary. If you didn’t use mount -a, be sure to mount proc and sysfs
before continuing:
The command ls /proc should now show a non-empty directory. Should this fail, you may be able
to mount proc from outside the chroot:
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Appendix D. Random Bits
# editor /etc/adjtime
Here is a sample:
0.0 0 0.0
0
UTC
# dpkg-reconfigure tzdata
# editor /etc/network/interfaces
######################################################################
# /etc/network/interfaces -- configuration file for ifup(8), ifdown(8)
# See the interfaces(5) manpage for information on what options are
# available.
######################################################################
# To use dhcp:
#
# auto eth0
# iface eth0 inet dhcp
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Appendix D. Random Bits
# network 192.168.0.0
# netmask 255.255.255.0
# broadcast 192.168.0.255
# gateway 192.168.0.1
# editor /etc/resolv.conf
search hqdom.local
nameserver 10.1.1.36
nameserver 192.168.9.100
127.0.0.1 localhost
127.0.1.1 UbuntuHostName
If you have multiple network cards, you should arrange the names of driver modules in the
/etc/modules file into the desired order. Then during boot, each card will be associated with the
interface name (eth0, eth1, etc.) that you expect.
Make sure to run aptitude update after you have made changes to the sources list.
126
Appendix D. Random Bits
Note that the keyboard cannot be set while in the chroot, but will be configured for the next reboot.
Then install the kernel package of your choice using its package name.
The second command will install grub2 (in this case in the MBR of sda). The last command will
create a sane and working /boot/grub/grub.cfg.
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Appendix D. Random Bits
Note that this assumes that a /dev/sda device file has been created. There are alternative methods to
install grub2, but those are outside the scope of this appendix.
Here is a basic /etc/lilo.conf as an example:
boot=/dev/sda6
root=/dev/sda6
install=menu
delay=20
lba32
image=/vmlinuz
initrd=/initrd.img
label=Ubuntu
Root login with password is disabled by default, so setting up access can be done by setting a password
and re-enable root login with password:
# passwd
# editor /etc/ssh/sshd_config
PermitRootLogin yes
Access can also be set up by adding an ssh key to the root account:
# mkdir /root/.ssh
# cat << EOF > /root/.ssh/authorized_keys
ssh-rsa ....
EOF
Lastly, access can be set up by adding a non-root user and setting a password:
# adduser joe
# passwd joe
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Appendix D. Random Bits
Of course, you can also just use aptitude to install packages individually.
After the installation there will be a lot of downloaded packages in /var/cache/apt/archives/.
You can free up some diskspace by running:
# aptitude clean
# adduser myusername
You can now use the visudo command to add these lines to the end of /etc/sudoers, so that any
user in the admin group can administer the system:
If you don’t want to follow this configuration, then remember to set a root password:
# passwd root
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Appendix D. Random Bits
You will need to enter your password to authorise sudo to run as root.
tasksel will now get on with installing the packages that make up the Ubuntu desktop, which will take
a while. When it’s finished, you should be presented with a graphical login prompt. The installation
is now complete, so go ahead and log in.
D.5.1. Requirements
#!/bin/sh
# Configure the plip interface (plip0 for me, see dmesg | grep plip)
ifconfig plip0 192.168.0.2 pointopoint 192.168.0.1 netmask 255.255.255.255 up
130
Appendix D. Random Bits
# Configure gateway
modprobe iptable_nat
iptables -t nat -A POSTROUTING -o ppp0 -j MASQUERADE
echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward
Below are the answers that should be given during various stages of the installation.
131
Appendix D. Random Bits
The PPPoE connection set up during the installation will also be available after the reboot into the
installed system (see Chapter 7).
To have the option of setting up and using PPPoE during the installation, you will need to install using
one of the CD-ROM/DVD images that are available. It is not supported for other installation methods
(e.g. netboot).
Installing over PPPoE is mostly the same as any other installation. The following steps explain the
differences.
• Boot the installer with the boot parameter modules=ppp-udeb3. This will ensure the component
responsible for the setup of PPPoE (ppp-udeb) will be loaded and run automatically.
• Follow the regular initial steps of the installation (language, country and keyboard selection; the
loading of additional installer components4).
• The next step is the detection of network hardware, in order to identify any Ethernet cards present
in the system.
• After this the actual setup of PPPoE is started. The installer will probe all the detected Ethernet
interfaces in an attempt to find a PPPoE concentrator (a type of server which handles PPPoE con-
nections).
It is possible that the concentrator will not to be found at the first attempt. This can happen occa-
sionally on slow or loaded networks or with faulty servers. In most cases a second attempt to detect
the concentrator will be successful; to retry, select Configure and start a PPPoE connection
from the main menu of the installer.
• After a concentrator is found, the user will be prompted to type the login information (the PPPoE
username and password).
• At this point the installer will use the provided information to establish the PPPoE connection. If
the correct information was provided, the PPPoE connection should be configured and the installer
should be able to use it to connect to the Internet and retrieve packages over it (if needed). If the
login information is not correct or some error appears, the installer will stop, but the configuration
can be attempted again by selecting the menu entry Configure and start a PPPoE connection.
132
Appendix E. Administrivia
133
Appendix E. Administrivia
The section on chrooted installations in this manual (Section D.4) was derived in part from documents
copyright Karsten M. Self.
The section on installations over plip in this manual (Section D.5) was based on the PLIP-Install-
HOWTO (http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/PLIP-Install-HOWTO.html) by Gilles Lamiral.
134
Appendix F. GNU General Public License
Version 2, June 1991
F.1. Preamble
The licenses for most software are designed to take away your freedom to share and change it. By
contrast, the gnu General Public License is intended to guarantee your freedom to share and change
free software — to make sure the software is free for all its users. This General Public License applies
to most of the Free Software Foundation’s software and to any other program whose authors commit
to using it. (Some other Free Software Foundation software is covered by the gnu Library General
Public License instead.) You can apply it to your programs, too.
When we speak of free software, we are referring to freedom, not price. Our General Public Licenses
are designed to make sure that you have the freedom to distribute copies of free software (and charge
for this service if you wish), that you receive source code or can get it if you want it, that you can
change the software or use pieces of it in new free programs; and that you know you can do these
things.
To protect your rights, we need to make restrictions that forbid anyone to deny you these rights or to
ask you to surrender the rights. These restrictions translate to certain responsibilities for you if you
distribute copies of the software, or if you modify it.
For example, if you distribute copies of such a program, whether gratis or for a fee, you must give the
recipients all the rights that you have. You must make sure that they, too, receive or can get the source
code. And you must show them these terms so they know their rights.
We protect your rights with two steps: (1) copyright the software, and (2) offer you this license which
gives you legal permission to copy, distribute and/or modify the software.
Also, for each author’s protection and ours, we want to make certain that everyone understands that
there is no warranty for this free software. If the software is modified by someone else and passed on,
we want its recipients to know that what they have is not the original, so that any problems introduced
by others will not reflect on the original authors’ reputations.
Finally, any free program is threatened constantly by software patents. We wish to avoid the danger
that redistributors of a free program will individually obtain patent licenses, in effect making the
program proprietary. To prevent this, we have made it clear that any patent must be licensed for
everyone’s free use or not licensed at all.
The precise terms and conditions for copying, distribution and modification follow.
135
Appendix F. GNU General Public License
0. This License applies to any program or other work which contains a notice placed by the copyright
holder saying it may be distributed under the terms of this General Public License. The "Program", be-
low, refers to any such program or work, and a "work based on the Program" means either the Program
or any derivative work under copyright law: that is to say, a work containing the Program or a por-
tion of it, either verbatim or with modifications and/or translated into another language. (Hereinafter,
translation is included without limitation in the term "modification".) Each licensee is addressed as
"you".
Activities other than copying, distribution and modification are not covered by this License; they are
outside its scope. The act of running the Program is not restricted, and the output from the Program
is covered only if its contents constitute a work based on the Program (independent of having been
made by running the Program). Whether that is true depends on what the Program does.
1. You may copy and distribute verbatim copies of the Program’s source code as you receive it, in
any medium, provided that you conspicuously and appropriately publish on each copy an appropriate
copyright notice and disclaimer of warranty; keep intact all the notices that refer to this License and
to the absence of any warranty; and give any other recipients of the Program a copy of this License
along with the Program.
You may charge a fee for the physical act of transferring a copy, and you may at your option offer
warranty protection in exchange for a fee.
2. You may modify your copy or copies of the Program or any portion of it, thus forming a work
based on the Program, and copy and distribute such modifications or work under the terms of Section
1 above, provided that you also meet all of these conditions:
a. You must cause the modified files to carry prominent notices stating that you changed the files
and the date of any change.
b. You must cause any work that you distribute or publish, that in whole or in part contains or is
derived from the Program or any part thereof, to be licensed as a whole at no charge to all third
parties under the terms of this License.
c. If the modified program normally reads commands interactively when run, you must cause it,
when started running for such interactive use in the most ordinary way, to print or display an
announcement including an appropriate copyright notice and a notice that there is no warranty
(or else, saying that you provide a warranty) and that users may redistribute the program under
these conditions, and telling the user how to view a copy of this License. (Exception: if the
Program itself is interactive but does not normally print such an announcement, your work based
on the Program is not required to print an announcement.)
These requirements apply to the modified work as a whole. If identifiable sections of that work are
not derived from the Program, and can be reasonably considered independent and separate works in
themselves, then this License, and its terms, do not apply to those sections when you distribute them
as separate works. But when you distribute the same sections as part of a whole which is a work based
on the Program, the distribution of the whole must be on the terms of this License, whose permissions
for other licensees extend to the entire whole, and thus to each and every part regardless of who wrote
it.
Thus, it is not the intent of this section to claim rights or contest your rights to work written entirely
by you; rather, the intent is to exercise the right to control the distribution of derivative or collective
works based on the Program.
In addition, mere aggregation of another work not based on the Program with the Program (or with a
work based on the Program) on a volume of a storage or distribution medium does not bring the other
work under the scope of this License.
136
Appendix F. GNU General Public License
3. You may copy and distribute the Program (or a work based on it, under Section 2) in object code
or executable form under the terms of Sections 1 and 2 above provided that you also do one of the
following:
a. Accompany it with the complete corresponding machine-readable source code, which must be
distributed under the terms of Sections 1 and 2 above on a medium customarily used for software
interchange; or,
b. Accompany it with a written offer, valid for at least three years, to give any third party, for a
charge no more than your cost of physically performing source distribution, a complete machine-
readable copy of the corresponding source code, to be distributed under the terms of Sections 1
and 2 above on a medium customarily used for software interchange; or,
c. Accompany it with the information you received as to the offer to distribute corresponding source
code. (This alternative is allowed only for noncommercial distribution and only if you received
the program in object code or executable form with such an offer, in accord with Subsection b
above.)
The source code for a work means the preferred form of the work for making modifications to it. For
an executable work, complete source code means all the source code for all modules it contains, plus
any associated interface definition files, plus the scripts used to control compilation and installation of
the executable. However, as a special exception, the source code distributed need not include anything
that is normally distributed (in either source or binary form) with the major components (compiler,
kernel, and so on) of the operating system on which the executable runs, unless that component itself
accompanies the executable.
If distribution of executable or object code is made by offering access to copy from a designated place,
then offering equivalent access to copy the source code from the same place counts as distribution of
the source code, even though third parties are not compelled to copy the source along with the object
code.
4. You may not copy, modify, sublicense, or distribute the Program except as expressly provided
under this License. Any attempt otherwise to copy, modify, sublicense or distribute the Program is
void, and will automatically terminate your rights under this License. However, parties who have
received copies, or rights, from you under this License will not have their licenses terminated so long
as such parties remain in full compliance.
5. You are not required to accept this License, since you have not signed it. However, nothing else
grants you permission to modify or distribute the Program or its derivative works. These actions
are prohibited by law if you do not accept this License. Therefore, by modifying or distributing the
Program (or any work based on the Program), you indicate your acceptance of this License to do so,
and all its terms and conditions for copying, distributing or modifying the Program or works based on
it.
6. Each time you redistribute the Program (or any work based on the Program), the recipient automat-
ically receives a license from the original licensor to copy, distribute or modify the Program subject
to these terms and conditions. You may not impose any further restrictions on the recipients’ exercise
of the rights granted herein. You are not responsible for enforcing compliance by third parties to this
License.
7. If, as a consequence of a court judgment or allegation of patent infringement or for any other reason
(not limited to patent issues), conditions are imposed on you (whether by court order, agreement or
otherwise) that contradict the conditions of this License, they do not excuse you from the conditions
of this License. If you cannot distribute so as to satisfy simultaneously your obligations under this
License and any other pertinent obligations, then as a consequence you may not distribute the Program
at all. For example, if a patent license would not permit royalty-free redistribution of the Program by
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Appendix F. GNU General Public License
all those who receive copies directly or indirectly through you, then the only way you could satisfy
both it and this License would be to refrain entirely from distribution of the Program.
If any portion of this section is held invalid or unenforceable under any particular circumstance, the
balance of the section is intended to apply and the section as a whole is intended to apply in other
circumstances.
It is not the purpose of this section to induce you to infringe any patents or other property right claims
or to contest validity of any such claims; this section has the sole purpose of protecting the integrity of
the free software distribution system, which is implemented by public license practices. Many people
have made generous contributions to the wide range of software distributed through that system in
reliance on consistent application of that system; it is up to the author/donor to decide if he or she is
willing to distribute software through any other system and a licensee cannot impose that choice.
This section is intended to make thoroughly clear what is believed to be a consequence of the rest of
this License.
8. If the distribution and/or use of the Program is restricted in certain countries either by patents or by
copyrighted interfaces, the original copyright holder who places the Program under this License may
add an explicit geographical distribution limitation excluding those countries, so that distribution is
permitted only in or among countries not thus excluded. In such case, this License incorporates the
limitation as if written in the body of this License.
9. The Free Software Foundation may publish revised and/or new versions of the General Public
License from time to time. Such new versions will be similar in spirit to the present version, but may
differ in detail to address new problems or concerns. Each version is given a distinguishing version
number. If the Program specifies a version number of this License which applies to it and "any later
version", you have the option of following the terms and conditions either of that version or of any
later version published by the Free Software Foundation. If the Program does not specify a version
number of this License, you may choose any version ever published by the Free Software Foundation.
10. If you wish to incorporate parts of the Program into other free programs whose distribution con-
ditions are different, write to the author to ask for permission. For software which is copyrighted by
the Free Software Foundation, write to the Free Software Foundation; we sometimes make exceptions
for this. Our decision will be guided by the two goals of preserving the free status of all derivatives of
our free software and of promoting the sharing and reuse of software generally.
NO WARRANTY
11. BECAUSE THE PROGRAM IS LICENSED FREE OF CHARGE, THERE IS NO
WARRANTY FOR THE PROGRAM, TO THE EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE
LAW. EXCEPT WHEN OTHERWISE STATED IN WRITING THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS
AND/OR OTHER PARTIES PROVIDE THE PROGRAM "AS IS" WITHOUT WARRANTY OF
ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR
PURPOSE. THE ENTIRE RISK AS TO THE QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE OF THE
PROGRAM IS WITH YOU. SHOULD THE PROGRAM PROVE DEFECTIVE, YOU ASSUME
THE COST OF ALL NECESSARY SERVICING, REPAIR OR CORRECTION.
12. IN NO EVENT UNLESS REQUIRED BY APPLICABLE LAW OR AGREED TO IN WRITING
WILL AND COPYRIGHT HOLDER, OR ANY OTHER PARTY WHO MAY MODIFY AND/OR
REDISTRIBUTE THE PROGRAM AS PERMITTED ABOVE, BE LIABLE TO YOU FOR DAM-
AGES, INCLUDING ANY GENERAL, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAM-
AGES ARISING OUT OF THE USE OR INABILITY TO USE THE PROGRAM (INCLUDING
BUT NOT LIMITED TO LOSS OF DATA OR DATA BEING RENDERED INACCURATE OR
LOSSES SUSTAINED BY YOU OR THIRD PARTIES OR A FAILURE OF THE PROGRAM TO
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Appendix F. GNU General Public License
OPERATE WITH ANY OTHER PROGRAMS), EVEN IF SUCH HOLDER OR OTHER PARTY
HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.
END OF TERMS AND CONDITIONS
one line to give the program’s name and a brief idea of what it does.
Copyright (C) year name of author
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA.
Also add information on how to contact you by electronic and paper mail.
If the program is interactive, make it output a short notice like this when it starts in an interactive
mode:
The hypothetical commands ‘show w’ and ‘show c’ should show the appropriate parts of the General
Public License. Of course, the commands you use may be called something other than ‘show w’ and
‘show c’; they could even be mouse-clicks or menu items — whatever suits your program.
You should also get your employer (if you work as a programmer) or your school, if any, to sign a
"copyright disclaimer" for the program, if necessary. Here is a sample; alter the names:
139
Appendix F. GNU General Public License
This General Public License does not permit incorporating your program into proprietary programs.
If your program is a subroutine library, you may consider it more useful to permit linking proprietary
applications with the library. If this is what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General Public
License instead of this License.
140