From 877afe5cad6733d96dabe796c672a2d64363a3d6 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Holger Levsen Date: Wed, 5 Dec 2012 10:43:43 +0100 Subject: rename job, make them match preseed files --- bin/cd_tester.sh | 25 +- job-cfg/cd-test.yaml | 24 +- .../debian-edu-squeeze-test-standalone-preseed.cfg | 401 -------------------- .../debian-edu-wheezy-workstation-preseed.cfg | 402 --------------------- userContent/lxde-wheezy-preseed.cfg | 373 ------------------- .../squeeze-test-debian-edu-standalone-preseed.cfg | 401 ++++++++++++++++++++ .../wheezy-debian-edu-workstation-preseed.cfg | 402 +++++++++++++++++++++ userContent/wheezy-lxde-preseed.cfg | 373 +++++++++++++++++++ 8 files changed, 1207 insertions(+), 1194 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 userContent/debian-edu-squeeze-test-standalone-preseed.cfg delete mode 100644 userContent/debian-edu-wheezy-workstation-preseed.cfg delete mode 100644 userContent/lxde-wheezy-preseed.cfg create mode 100644 userContent/squeeze-test-debian-edu-standalone-preseed.cfg create mode 100644 userContent/wheezy-debian-edu-workstation-preseed.cfg create mode 100644 userContent/wheezy-lxde-preseed.cfg diff --git a/bin/cd_tester.sh b/bin/cd_tester.sh index aedfbb94..c489ad0c 100755 --- a/bin/cd_tester.sh +++ b/bin/cd_tester.sh @@ -75,16 +75,29 @@ bootstrap() { echo "Doing cd tests for $NAME now." qemu-img create -f qcow $NAME.qcow 20g case $NAME in - debian-edu-wheezy) - echo "fire up qemu now..." + wheezy-debian-edu-workstation) + # FIXME: this obviously needs to be moved to a function + echo "Preseeding used:" + echo + curl -s http://localhost/userContent/${NAME}-preseed.cfg | grep -v ^# |grep -v "^$" + echo + echo "Starting QEMU now:" sudo qemu-system-x86_64 -cdrom $IMAGE -hda $NAME.qcow -boot d -m 1024 -display vnc=localhost:$DISPLAY --kernel $IMAGE_MNT/install.amd/vmlinuz --append "auto=true priority=critical locale=en_US keymap=us url=http://10.0.2.2/userContent/${NAME}-preseed.cfg video=vesa:ywrap,mtrr vga=788 initrd=/install.amd/gtk/initrd.gz -- quiet" --initrd $IMAGE_MNT/install.amd/gtk/initrd.gz & ;; - debian-edu-squeeze-test-standalone) - echo "fire up qemu now..." + squeeze-test-debian-edu-standalone) + echo "Preseeding used:" + echo + curl -s http://localhost/userContent/${NAME}-preseed.cfg | grep -v ^# |grep -v "^$" + echo + echo "Starting QEMU now:" sudo qemu-system-x86_64 -cdrom $IMAGE -hda $NAME.qcow -boot d -m 1024 -display vnc=localhost:$DISPLAY --kernel $IMAGE_MNT/install.amd/vmlinuz --append "auto=true priority=critical locale=en_US keymap=us url=http://10.0.2.2/userContent/${NAME}-preseed.cfg video=vesa:ywrap,mtrr vga=788 initrd=/install.amd/gtk/initrd.gz -- quiet" --initrd $IMAGE_MNT/install.amd/gtk/initrd.gz & ;; - lxde-wheezy) - echo "fire up qemu now..." + wheezy-lxde) + echo "Preseeding used:" + echo + curl -s http://localhost/userContent/${NAME}-preseed.cfg | grep -v ^# |grep -v "^$" + echo + echo "Starting QEMU now:" sudo qemu-system-x86_64 -hda $NAME.qcow -boot c -m 1024 -display vnc=localhost:$DISPLAY --kernel $KERNEL --append "auto=true priority=critical desktop=lxde locale=en_US keymap=us url=http://10.0.2.2/userContent/${NAME}-preseed.cfg video=vesa:ywrap,mtrr vga=788 --" --initrd $INITRD & ;; *) echo "unsupported distro." diff --git a/job-cfg/cd-test.yaml b/job-cfg/cd-test.yaml index 3c805a3c..2718b235 100644 --- a/job-cfg/cd-test.yaml +++ b/job-cfg/cd-test.yaml @@ -37,30 +37,30 @@ - job-template: defaults: cd-test - name: '{name}_debian_edu_workstation_wheezy' + name: '{name}_wheezy_debian_edu_workstation' - job-template: defaults: cd-test - name: '{name}_debian_edu_standalone_squeeze_test' + name: '{name}_squeeze-test_debian_edu_standalone' - job-template: defaults: cd-test - name: '{name}_lxde_wheezy' + name: '{name}_wheezy_lxde' - project: name: cd-test do_not_edit: '

Configured by jenkins-job-builder, do not edit this job through the web UI.' jobs: - - '{name}_debian_edu_workstation_wheezy': - my_shell: '/srv/jenkins/bin/cd_tester.sh 1 debian-edu-wheezy http://ftp.skolelinux.org/cd-edu-testing-nolocal-netinst/debian-edu-amd64-i386-NETINST-1.iso' - my_description: 'Do a fully automated installation of a Debian Edu Wheezy workstation installation - via d-i preseeding (with this preseed.cfg) using the netinst CD image.' + - '{name}_wheezy_debian_edu_workstation': + my_shell: '/srv/jenkins/bin/cd_tester.sh 1 wheezy-debian-edu-workstation http://ftp.skolelinux.org/cd-edu-testing-nolocal-netinst/debian-edu-amd64-i386-NETINST-1.iso' + my_description: 'Do a fully automated installation of a Debian Edu Wheezy workstation installation - via d-i preseeding (with this preseed.cfg) using the netinst CD image.' my_timed: '42 23 * * *' - - '{name}_debian_edu_standalone_squeeze_test': - my_shell: '/srv/jenkins/bin/cd_tester.sh 2 debian-edu-squeeze-test-standalone http://ftp.skolelinux.org/cd-squeeze-test-amd64-i386-netinst/debian-edu-amd64-i386-NETINST-1.iso' - my_description: 'Do a fully automated installation of a Debian Edu Squeeze (suite: squeeze-test) standalone installation - via d-i preseeding (with this preseed.cfg) using the netinst CD image.' + - '{name}_squeeze-test_debian_edu_standalone': + my_shell: '/srv/jenkins/bin/cd_tester.sh 2 squeeze-test-debian-edu-standalone http://ftp.skolelinux.org/cd-squeeze-test-amd64-i386-netinst/debian-edu-amd64-i386-NETINST-1.iso' + my_description: 'Do a fully automated installation of a Debian Edu Squeeze (suite: squeeze-test) standalone installation - via d-i preseeding (with this preseed.cfg) using the netinst CD image.' my_timed: '42 3 * * *' - - '{name}_lxde_wheezy': - my_shell: '/srv/jenkins/bin/cd_tester.sh 3 lxde-wheezy http://d-i.debian.org/daily-images/amd64/daily/netboot/gtk/debian-installer/amd64/' - my_description: 'Do a fully automated installation of Debian installing the LXDE desktop - via d-i preseeding (with this preseed.cfg) using netboot gtk.' + - '{name}_wheezy_lxde': + my_shell: '/srv/jenkins/bin/cd_tester.sh 3 wheezy-lxde http://d-i.debian.org/daily-images/amd64/daily/netboot/gtk/debian-installer/amd64/' + my_description: 'Do a fully automated installation of Debian installing the LXDE desktop - via d-i preseeding (with this preseed.cfg) using netboot gtk.' my_timed: '42 17 * * *' diff --git a/userContent/debian-edu-squeeze-test-standalone-preseed.cfg b/userContent/debian-edu-squeeze-test-standalone-preseed.cfg deleted file mode 100644 index 3470c0f4..00000000 --- a/userContent/debian-edu-squeeze-test-standalone-preseed.cfg +++ /dev/null @@ -1,401 +0,0 @@ -#### Contents of the preconfiguration file (for squeeze) -### Localization -# Preseeding only locale sets language, country and locale. -d-i debian-installer/locale string en_US - -# The values can also be preseeded individually for greater flexibility. -#d-i debian-installer/language string en -#d-i debian-installer/country string NL -#d-i debian-installer/locale string en_GB.UTF-8 -# Optionally specify additional locales to be generated. -#d-i localechooser/supported-locales multiselect en_US.UTF-8, nl_NL.UTF-8 - -# Keyboard selection. -# keymap is an alias for keyboard-configuration/xkb-keymap -d-i keymap select us -# d-i keyboard-configuration/toggle select No toggling - -### Network configuration -# Disable network configuration entirely. This is useful for cdrom -# installations on non-networked devices where the network questions, -# warning and long timeouts are a nuisance. -#d-i netcfg/enable boolean false - -# 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 - -# To pick a particular interface instead: -#d-i netcfg/choose_interface select eth1 - -# To set a different link detection timeout (default is 3 seconds). -# Values are interpreted as seconds. -#di netcfg/link_detection_timeout string 10 - -# 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 - -# If you prefer to configure the network manually, uncomment this line and -# the static network configuration below. -#d-i netcfg/disable_dhcp 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 - -# Static network configuration. -#d-i netcfg/get_nameservers string 192.168.1.1 -#d-i netcfg/get_ipaddress string 192.168.1.42 -#d-i netcfg/get_netmask string 255.255.255.0 -#d-i netcfg/get_gateway string 192.168.1.1 -#d-i netcfg/confirm_static boolean true - -# 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 - -# Disable that annoying WEP key dialog. -d-i netcfg/wireless_wep string -# The wacky dhcp hostname that some ISPs use as a password of sorts. -#d-i netcfg/dhcp_hostname string radish - -# 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 - -### Network console -# 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 - -# Enable the Debian Edu installer overrides -d-i anna/choose_modules multiselect debian-edu-install-udeb: Execute Debian-Edu debian-installer profile - -#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 - -### Mirror settings -# 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 http.de.debian.org -d-i mirror/http/directory string /debian -d-i mirror/http/proxy string http://10.0.2.2:3128/ - -# Suite to install. -#d-i mirror/suite string testing -# Suite to use for loading installer components (optional). -#d-i mirror/udeb/suite string testing - -### Account setup -# Skip creation of a root account (normal user account will be able to -# use sudo). -#d-i passwd/root-login boolean false -# Alternatively, to skip creation of a normal user account. -#d-i passwd/make-user boolean false - -# Root password, either in clear text -d-i passwd/root-password password r00tme -d-i passwd/root-password-again password r00tme -# or encrypted using an MD5 hash. -#d-i passwd/root-password-crypted password [MD5 hash] - -# To create a normal user account. -d-i passwd/user-fullname string Jenkins Testuser -d-i passwd/username string jenkins -# Normal user's password, either in clear text -d-i passwd/user-password password insecure -d-i passwd/user-password-again password insecure -# or encrypted using an MD5 hash. -#d-i passwd/user-password-crypted password [MD5 hash] -# Create the first user with the specified UID instead of the default. -#d-i passwd/user-uid string 1010 - -# The user account will be added to some standard initial groups. To -# override that, use this. -#d-i passwd/user-default-groups string audio cdrom video - -### Clock and time zone setup -# Controls whether or not the hardware clock is set to UTC. -d-i clock-setup/utc boolean true - -# 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 - -### Partitioning -## Partitioning example -# 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. -#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/hda or -# /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 -# In addition, you'll need to specify the method to use. -# The presently available methods are: -# - regular: use the usual partition types for your architecture -# - lvm: use LVM to partition the disk -# - crypto: use LVM within an encrypted partition -d-i partman-auto/method string lvm - -# If one of the disks that are going to be automatically partitioned -# contains an old LVM configuration, the user will normally receive a -# warning. This can be preseeded away... -d-i partman-lvm/device_remove_lvm boolean true -# The same applies to pre-existing software RAID array: -d-i partman-md/device_remove_md boolean true -# And the same goes for the confirmation to write the lvm partitions. -d-i partman-lvm/confirm boolean true -d-i partman-lvm/confirm_nooverwrite boolean true - -# You can choose one of the three predefined partitioning recipes: -# - atomic: all files in one partition -# - home: separate /home partition -# - multi: separate /home, /usr, /var, and /tmp partitions -d-i partman-auto/choose_recipe select atomic - -# Or provide a recipe of your own... -# If you have a way to get a recipe file into the d-i environment, you can -# just point at it. -#d-i partman-auto/expert_recipe_file string /hd-media/recipe - -# 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{ } \ -# . - -# The full recipe format is documented in the file partman-auto-recipe.txt -# included in the 'debian-installer' package or available from D-I source -# repository. This also documents how to specify settings such as file -# system labels, volume group names and which physical devices to include -# in a volume group. - -# This makes partman automatically partition without confirmation, provided -# that you told it what to do using one of the methods above. -d-i partman-partitioning/confirm_write_new_label boolean true -d-i partman/choose_partition select finish -d-i partman/confirm boolean true -d-i partman/confirm_nooverwrite boolean true - -## Partitioning using RAID -# The method should be set to "raid". -#d-i partman-auto/method string raid -# Specify the disks to be partitioned. They will all get the same layout, -# so this will only work if the disks are the same size. -#d-i partman-auto/disk string /dev/sda /dev/sdb - -# 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: -# \ -# - -#d-i partman-auto-raid/recipe string \ -# 1 2 0 ext3 / \ -# /dev/sda1#/dev/sdb1 \ -# . \ -# 1 2 0 swap - \ -# /dev/sda5#/dev/sdb5 \ -# . \ -# 0 2 0 ext3 /home \ -# /dev/sda6#/dev/sdb6 \ -# . - -# For additional information see the file partman-auto-raid-recipe.txt -# included in the 'debian-installer' package or available from D-I source -# repository. - -# This makes partman automatically partition without confirmation. -d-i partman-md/confirm boolean true -d-i partman-partitioning/confirm_write_new_label boolean true -d-i partman/choose_partition select finish -d-i partman/confirm boolean true -d-i partman/confirm_nooverwrite boolean true - -## Controlling how partitions are mounted -# 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 - -### Base system installation -# Configure APT to not install recommended packages by default. Use of this -# option can result in an incomplete system and should only be used by very -# experienced users. -#d-i base-installer/install-recommends boolean false - -# The kernel image (meta) package to be installed; "none" can be used if no -# kernel is to be installed. -#d-i base-installer/kernel/image string linux-image-2.6-486 - -### Apt setup -# You can choose to install non-free and contrib software. -#d-i apt-setup/non-free boolean true -#d-i apt-setup/contrib boolean true -# Uncomment this if you don't want to use a network mirror. -#d-i apt-setup/use_mirror boolean false -# Select which update services to use; define the mirrors to be used. -# Values shown below are the normal defaults. -#d-i apt-setup/services-select multiselect security, volatile -#d-i apt-setup/security_host string security.debian.org -#d-i apt-setup/volatile_host string volatile.debian.org - -# Additional repositories, local[0-9] available -#d-i apt-setup/local0/repository string \ -# http://local.server/debian stable main -#d-i apt-setup/local0/comment string local server -# Enable deb-src lines -#d-i apt-setup/local0/source boolean true -# URL to the public key of the local repository; you must provide a key or -# apt will complain about the unauthenticated repository and so the -# sources.list line will be left commented out -#d-i apt-setup/local0/key string http://local.server/key - -# By default the installer requires that repositories be authenticated -# using a known gpg key. This setting can be used to disable that -# authentication. Warning: Insecure, not recommended. -#d-i debian-installer/allow_unauthenticated boolean true - -# Profile for debian-edu-install versions 1.519 - 1.528 -d-i debian-edu-install/profile-expert multiselect Standalone - -# Profile for debian-edu-install versions 0.1 - 1.518, 1.529 -> -d-i debian-edu-install/profile multiselect Standalone - -d-i debian-edu-install/confirm boolean true - -### Package selection -#tasksel tasksel/first multiselect standard, web-server -# If the desktop task is selected, install the kde and xfce desktops -# instead of the default gnome desktop. -#tasksel tasksel/desktop multiselect kde, xfce - -# Individual additional packages to install -#d-i pkgsel/include string openssh-server build-essential -# Whether to upgrade packages after debootstrap. -# Allowed values: none, safe-upgrade, full-upgrade -#d-i pkgsel/upgrade select none - -# 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 - -### Finishing up the installation -# During installations from serial console, the regular virtual consoles -# (VT1-VT6) are normally disabled in /etc/inittab. Uncomment the next -# line to prevent this. -#d-i finish-install/keep-consoles boolean true - -# Avoid that last message about the install being complete. -d-i finish-install/reboot_in_progress note - -# 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 - -### Preseeding other packages -# Depending on what software you choose to install, or if things go wrong -# during the installation process, it's possible that other questions may -# be asked. You can preseed those too, of course. To get a list of every -# possible question that could be asked during an install, do an -# installation, and then run these commands: -# debconf-get-selections --installer > file -# debconf-get-selections >> file - - -#### Advanced options -### Running custom commands during the installation -# d-i preseeding is inherently not secure. Nothing in the installer checks -# for attempts at buffer overflows or other exploits of the values of a -# preconfiguration file like this one. Only use preconfiguration files from -# trusted locations! To drive that home, and because it's generally useful, -# here's a way to run any shell command you'd like inside the installer, -# automatically. - -# This first command is run as early as possible, just after -# preseeding is read. -#d-i preseed/early_command string anna-install some-udeb -# This command is run immediately before the partitioner starts. It may be -# useful to apply dynamic partitioner preseeding that depends on the state -# of the disks (which may not be visible when preseed/early_command runs). -#d-i partman/early_command \ -# string debconf-set partman-auto/disk "$(list-devices disk | head -n1)" -# This command is run just before the install finishes, but when there is -# still a usable /target directory. You can chroot to /target and use it -# directly, or use the apt-install and in-target commands to easily install -# packages and run commands in the target system. -#d-i preseed/late_command string apt-install zsh; in-target chsh -s /bin/zsh - -# -# edu specific settings -# - -# the popcon question needs special preseeding as the template -# being shown is the one in debian-edu-install, which is copied from -# popularity-contest to ensure all questions show up before packages are -# downloaded. -d-i debian-edu-install/participate-popcon boolean false - -# Tell LTSP to not use the CDROM, but a HTTP mirror -d-i ltsp-client-builder/use_cdrom boolean false -d-i ltsp-client-builder/build-client-opts string --mirror http://ftp.skolelinux.org/debian --dist squeeze - -portmap portmap/loopback boolean false - -nslcd nslcd/ldap-base string dc=skole,dc=skolelinux,dc=no -nslcd nslcd/ldap-uris string DNS diff --git a/userContent/debian-edu-wheezy-workstation-preseed.cfg b/userContent/debian-edu-wheezy-workstation-preseed.cfg deleted file mode 100644 index f20561ae..00000000 --- a/userContent/debian-edu-wheezy-workstation-preseed.cfg +++ /dev/null @@ -1,402 +0,0 @@ -#### Contents of the preconfiguration file (for wheezy) -### Localization -# Preseeding only locale sets language, country and locale. -d-i debian-installer/locale string en_US - -# The values can also be preseeded individually for greater flexibility. -#d-i debian-installer/language string en -#d-i debian-installer/country string NL -#d-i debian-installer/locale string en_GB.UTF-8 -# Optionally specify additional locales to be generated. -#d-i localechooser/supported-locales multiselect en_US.UTF-8, nl_NL.UTF-8 - -# Keyboard selection. -# keymap is an alias for keyboard-configuration/xkb-keymap -d-i keymap select us -# d-i keyboard-configuration/toggle select No toggling - -### Network configuration -# Disable network configuration entirely. This is useful for cdrom -# installations on non-networked devices where the network questions, -# warning and long timeouts are a nuisance. -#d-i netcfg/enable boolean false - -# 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 - -# To pick a particular interface instead: -#d-i netcfg/choose_interface select eth1 - -# To set a different link detection timeout (default is 3 seconds). -# Values are interpreted as seconds. -#di netcfg/link_detection_timeout string 10 - -# 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 - -# If you prefer to configure the network manually, uncomment this line and -# the static network configuration below. -#d-i netcfg/disable_dhcp 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 - -# Static network configuration. -#d-i netcfg/get_nameservers string 192.168.1.1 -#d-i netcfg/get_ipaddress string 192.168.1.42 -#d-i netcfg/get_netmask string 255.255.255.0 -#d-i netcfg/get_gateway string 192.168.1.1 -#d-i netcfg/confirm_static boolean true - -# 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 - -# Disable that annoying WEP key dialog. -d-i netcfg/wireless_wep string -# The wacky dhcp hostname that some ISPs use as a password of sorts. -#d-i netcfg/dhcp_hostname string radish - -# 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 - -### Network console -# 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 - -# Enable the Debian Edu installer overrides -d-i anna/choose_modules multiselect debian-edu-install-udeb: Execute Debian-Edu debian-installer profile - -#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 - -### Mirror settings -# 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 http.de.debian.org -d-i mirror/http/directory string /debian -d-i mirror/http/proxy string http://10.0.2.2:3128/ - -# Suite to install. -#d-i mirror/suite string testing -# Suite to use for loading installer components (optional). -#d-i mirror/udeb/suite string testing - -### Account setup -# Skip creation of a root account (normal user account will be able to -# use sudo). -#d-i passwd/root-login boolean false -# Alternatively, to skip creation of a normal user account. -#d-i passwd/make-user boolean false - -# Root password, either in clear text -d-i passwd/root-password password r00tme -d-i passwd/root-password-again password r00tme -# or encrypted using an MD5 hash. -#d-i passwd/root-password-crypted password [MD5 hash] - -# To create a normal user account. -d-i passwd/user-fullname string Jenkins Testuser -d-i passwd/username string jenkins -# Normal user's password, either in clear text -d-i passwd/user-password password insecure -d-i passwd/user-password-again password insecure -# or encrypted using an MD5 hash. -#d-i passwd/user-password-crypted password [MD5 hash] -# Create the first user with the specified UID instead of the default. -#d-i passwd/user-uid string 1010 - -# The user account will be added to some standard initial groups. To -# override that, use this. -#d-i passwd/user-default-groups string audio cdrom video - -### Clock and time zone setup -# Controls whether or not the hardware clock is set to UTC. -d-i clock-setup/utc boolean true - -# 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 - -### Partitioning -## Partitioning example -# 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. -#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/hda or -# /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 -# In addition, you'll need to specify the method to use. -# The presently available methods are: -# - regular: use the usual partition types for your architecture -# - lvm: use LVM to partition the disk -# - crypto: use LVM within an encrypted partition -d-i partman-auto/method string lvm - -# If one of the disks that are going to be automatically partitioned -# contains an old LVM configuration, the user will normally receive a -# warning. This can be preseeded away... -d-i partman-lvm/device_remove_lvm boolean true -# The same applies to pre-existing software RAID array: -d-i partman-md/device_remove_md boolean true -# And the same goes for the confirmation to write the lvm partitions. -d-i partman-lvm/confirm boolean true -d-i partman-lvm/confirm_nooverwrite boolean true - -# You can choose one of the three predefined partitioning recipes: -# - atomic: all files in one partition -# - home: separate /home partition -# - multi: separate /home, /usr, /var, and /tmp partitions -d-i partman-auto/choose_recipe select atomic - -# Or provide a recipe of your own... -# If you have a way to get a recipe file into the d-i environment, you can -# just point at it. -#d-i partman-auto/expert_recipe_file string /hd-media/recipe - -# 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{ } \ -# . - -# The full recipe format is documented in the file partman-auto-recipe.txt -# included in the 'debian-installer' package or available from D-I source -# repository. This also documents how to specify settings such as file -# system labels, volume group names and which physical devices to include -# in a volume group. - -# This makes partman automatically partition without confirmation, provided -# that you told it what to do using one of the methods above. -d-i partman-partitioning/confirm_write_new_label boolean true -d-i partman/choose_partition select finish -d-i partman/confirm boolean true -d-i partman/confirm_nooverwrite boolean true - -## Partitioning using RAID -# The method should be set to "raid". -#d-i partman-auto/method string raid -# Specify the disks to be partitioned. They will all get the same layout, -# so this will only work if the disks are the same size. -#d-i partman-auto/disk string /dev/sda /dev/sdb - -# 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: -# \ -# - -#d-i partman-auto-raid/recipe string \ -# 1 2 0 ext3 / \ -# /dev/sda1#/dev/sdb1 \ -# . \ -# 1 2 0 swap - \ -# /dev/sda5#/dev/sdb5 \ -# . \ -# 0 2 0 ext3 /home \ -# /dev/sda6#/dev/sdb6 \ -# . - -# For additional information see the file partman-auto-raid-recipe.txt -# included in the 'debian-installer' package or available from D-I source -# repository. - -# This makes partman automatically partition without confirmation. -d-i partman-md/confirm boolean true -d-i partman-partitioning/confirm_write_new_label boolean true -d-i partman/choose_partition select finish -d-i partman/confirm boolean true -d-i partman/confirm_nooverwrite boolean true - -## Controlling how partitions are mounted -# 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 - -### Base system installation -# Configure APT to not install recommended packages by default. Use of this -# option can result in an incomplete system and should only be used by very -# experienced users. -#d-i base-installer/install-recommends boolean false - -# The kernel image (meta) package to be installed; "none" can be used if no -# kernel is to be installed. -#d-i base-installer/kernel/image string linux-image-2.6-486 - -### Apt setup -# You can choose to install non-free and contrib software. -#d-i apt-setup/non-free boolean true -#d-i apt-setup/contrib boolean true -# Uncomment this if you don't want to use a network mirror. -#d-i apt-setup/use_mirror boolean false -# Select which update services to use; define the mirrors to be used. -# Values shown below are the normal defaults. -#d-i apt-setup/services-select multiselect security, volatile -#d-i apt-setup/security_host string security.debian.org -#d-i apt-setup/volatile_host string volatile.debian.org - -# Additional repositories, local[0-9] available -#d-i apt-setup/local0/repository string \ -# http://local.server/debian stable main -#d-i apt-setup/local0/comment string local server -# Enable deb-src lines -#d-i apt-setup/local0/source boolean true -# URL to the public key of the local repository; you must provide a key or -# apt will complain about the unauthenticated repository and so the -# sources.list line will be left commented out -#d-i apt-setup/local0/key string http://local.server/key - -# By default the installer requires that repositories be authenticated -# using a known gpg key. This setting can be used to disable that -# authentication. Warning: Insecure, not recommended. -#d-i debian-installer/allow_unauthenticated boolean true - -# Profile for debian-edu-install versions 1.519 - 1.528 -d-i debian-edu-install/profile-expert multiselect Workstation - -# Profile for debian-edu-install versions 0.1 - 1.518, 1.529 -> -d-i debian-edu-install/profile multiselect Workstation - -d-i debian-edu-install/confirm boolean true - -### Package selection -#tasksel tasksel/first multiselect standard, web-server -# If the desktop task is selected, install the kde and xfce desktops -# instead of the default gnome desktop. -#tasksel tasksel/desktop multiselect kde, xfce - -# Individual additional packages to install -#d-i pkgsel/include string openssh-server build-essential -# Whether to upgrade packages after debootstrap. -# Allowed values: none, safe-upgrade, full-upgrade -#d-i pkgsel/upgrade select none - -# 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 - -### Finishing up the installation -# During installations from serial console, the regular virtual consoles -# (VT1-VT6) are normally disabled in /etc/inittab. Uncomment the next -# line to prevent this. -#d-i finish-install/keep-consoles boolean true - -# Avoid that last message about the install being complete. -d-i finish-install/reboot_in_progress note - -# 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 - -### Preseeding other packages -# Depending on what software you choose to install, or if things go wrong -# during the installation process, it's possible that other questions may -# be asked. You can preseed those too, of course. To get a list of every -# possible question that could be asked during an install, do an -# installation, and then run these commands: -# debconf-get-selections --installer > file -# debconf-get-selections >> file - - -#### Advanced options -### Running custom commands during the installation -# d-i preseeding is inherently not secure. Nothing in the installer checks -# for attempts at buffer overflows or other exploits of the values of a -# preconfiguration file like this one. Only use preconfiguration files from -# trusted locations! To drive that home, and because it's generally useful, -# here's a way to run any shell command you'd like inside the installer, -# automatically. - -# This first command is run as early as possible, just after -# preseeding is read. -#d-i preseed/early_command string anna-install some-udeb -# This command is run immediately before the partitioner starts. It may be -# useful to apply dynamic partitioner preseeding that depends on the state -# of the disks (which may not be visible when preseed/early_command runs). -#d-i partman/early_command \ -# string debconf-set partman-auto/disk "$(list-devices disk | head -n1)" -# This command is run just before the install finishes, but when there is -# still a usable /target directory. You can chroot to /target and use it -# directly, or use the apt-install and in-target commands to easily install -# packages and run commands in the target system. -#d-i preseed/late_command string apt-install zsh; in-target chsh -s /bin/zsh - -# -# edu specific settings -# - -# the popcon question needs special preseeding as the template -# being shown is the one in debian-edu-install, which is copied from -# popularity-contest to ensure all questions show up before packages are -# downloaded. -d-i debian-edu-install/participate-popcon boolean false - -# Tell LTSP to not use the CDROM, but a HTTP mirror -d-i ltsp-client-builder/use_cdrom boolean false -d-i ltsp-client-builder/build-client-opts string --mirror http://ftp.skolelinux.org/debian --dist squeeze - -portmap portmap/loopback boolean false - -nslcd nslcd/ldap-base string dc=skole,dc=skolelinux,dc=no -nslcd nslcd/ldap-uris string DNS - diff --git a/userContent/lxde-wheezy-preseed.cfg b/userContent/lxde-wheezy-preseed.cfg deleted file mode 100644 index 1b97f968..00000000 --- a/userContent/lxde-wheezy-preseed.cfg +++ /dev/null @@ -1,373 +0,0 @@ -#### Contents of the preconfiguration file (for wheezy) -### Localization -# Preseeding only locale sets language, country and locale. -d-i debian-installer/locale string en_US - -# The values can also be preseeded individually for greater flexibility. -#d-i debian-installer/language string en -#d-i debian-installer/country string NL -#d-i debian-installer/locale string en_GB.UTF-8 -# Optionally specify additional locales to be generated. -#d-i localechooser/supported-locales multiselect en_US.UTF-8, nl_NL.UTF-8 - -# Keyboard selection. -# keymap is an alias for keyboard-configuration/xkb-keymap -d-i keymap select us -# d-i keyboard-configuration/toggle select No toggling - -### Network configuration -# Disable network configuration entirely. This is useful for cdrom -# installations on non-networked devices where the network questions, -# warning and long timeouts are a nuisance. -#d-i netcfg/enable boolean false - -# 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 - -# To pick a particular interface instead: -#d-i netcfg/choose_interface select eth1 - -# To set a different link detection timeout (default is 3 seconds). -# Values are interpreted as seconds. -#di netcfg/link_detection_timeout string 10 - -# 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 - -# If you prefer to configure the network manually, uncomment this line and -# the static network configuration below. -#d-i netcfg/disable_dhcp 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 - -# Static network configuration. -#d-i netcfg/get_nameservers string 192.168.1.1 -#d-i netcfg/get_ipaddress string 192.168.1.42 -#d-i netcfg/get_netmask string 255.255.255.0 -#d-i netcfg/get_gateway string 192.168.1.1 -#d-i netcfg/confirm_static boolean true - -# 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 - -# Disable that annoying WEP key dialog. -d-i netcfg/wireless_wep string -# The wacky dhcp hostname that some ISPs use as a password of sorts. -#d-i netcfg/dhcp_hostname string radish - -# 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 - -### Network console -# 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 - -### Mirror settings -# 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 ftp.de.debian.org -d-i mirror/http/directory string /debian -d-i mirror/http/proxy string http://10.0.2.2:3128/ - -# Suite to install. -#d-i mirror/suite string testing -# Suite to use for loading installer components (optional). -#d-i mirror/udeb/suite string testing - -### Account setup -# Skip creation of a root account (normal user account will be able to -# use sudo). -#d-i passwd/root-login boolean false -# Alternatively, to skip creation of a normal user account. -#d-i passwd/make-user boolean false - -# Root password, either in clear text -d-i passwd/root-password password r00tme -d-i passwd/root-password-again password r00tme -# or encrypted using an MD5 hash. -#d-i passwd/root-password-crypted password [MD5 hash] - -# To create a normal user account. -d-i passwd/user-fullname string Debian User -d-i passwd/username string debian -# Normal user's password, either in clear text -d-i passwd/user-password password insecure -d-i passwd/user-password-again password insecure -# or encrypted using an MD5 hash. -#d-i passwd/user-password-crypted password [MD5 hash] -# Create the first user with the specified UID instead of the default. -#d-i passwd/user-uid string 1010 - -# The user account will be added to some standard initial groups. To -# override that, use this. -#d-i passwd/user-default-groups string audio cdrom video - -### Clock and time zone setup -# Controls whether or not the hardware clock is set to UTC. -d-i clock-setup/utc boolean true - -# 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 - -### Partitioning -## Partitioning example -# 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. -#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/hda or -# /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 -# In addition, you'll need to specify the method to use. -# The presently available methods are: -# - regular: use the usual partition types for your architecture -# - lvm: use LVM to partition the disk -# - crypto: use LVM within an encrypted partition -d-i partman-auto/method string lvm - -# If one of the disks that are going to be automatically partitioned -# contains an old LVM configuration, the user will normally receive a -# warning. This can be preseeded away... -d-i partman-lvm/device_remove_lvm boolean true -# The same applies to pre-existing software RAID array: -d-i partman-md/device_remove_md boolean true -# And the same goes for the confirmation to write the lvm partitions. -d-i partman-lvm/confirm boolean true -d-i partman-lvm/confirm_nooverwrite boolean true - -# You can choose one of the three predefined partitioning recipes: -# - atomic: all files in one partition -# - home: separate /home partition -# - multi: separate /home, /usr, /var, and /tmp partitions -d-i partman-auto/choose_recipe select atomic - -# Or provide a recipe of your own... -# If you have a way to get a recipe file into the d-i environment, you can -# just point at it. -#d-i partman-auto/expert_recipe_file string /hd-media/recipe - -# 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{ } \ -# . - -# The full recipe format is documented in the file partman-auto-recipe.txt -# included in the 'debian-installer' package or available from D-I source -# repository. This also documents how to specify settings such as file -# system labels, volume group names and which physical devices to include -# in a volume group. - -# This makes partman automatically partition without confirmation, provided -# that you told it what to do using one of the methods above. -d-i partman-partitioning/confirm_write_new_label boolean true -d-i partman/choose_partition select finish -d-i partman/confirm boolean true -d-i partman/confirm_nooverwrite boolean true - -## Partitioning using RAID -# The method should be set to "raid". -#d-i partman-auto/method string raid -# Specify the disks to be partitioned. They will all get the same layout, -# so this will only work if the disks are the same size. -#d-i partman-auto/disk string /dev/sda /dev/sdb - -# 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: -# \ -# - -#d-i partman-auto-raid/recipe string \ -# 1 2 0 ext3 / \ -# /dev/sda1#/dev/sdb1 \ -# . \ -# 1 2 0 swap - \ -# /dev/sda5#/dev/sdb5 \ -# . \ -# 0 2 0 ext3 /home \ -# /dev/sda6#/dev/sdb6 \ -# . - -# For additional information see the file partman-auto-raid-recipe.txt -# included in the 'debian-installer' package or available from D-I source -# repository. - -# This makes partman automatically partition without confirmation. -d-i partman-md/confirm boolean true -d-i partman-partitioning/confirm_write_new_label boolean true -d-i partman/choose_partition select finish -d-i partman/confirm boolean true -d-i partman/confirm_nooverwrite boolean true - -## Controlling how partitions are mounted -# 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 - -### Base system installation -# Configure APT to not install recommended packages by default. Use of this -# option can result in an incomplete system and should only be used by very -# experienced users. -#d-i base-installer/install-recommends boolean false - -# The kernel image (meta) package to be installed; "none" can be used if no -# kernel is to be installed. -#d-i base-installer/kernel/image string linux-image-2.6-486 - -### Apt setup -# You can choose to install non-free and contrib software. -#d-i apt-setup/non-free boolean true -#d-i apt-setup/contrib boolean true -# Uncomment this if you don't want to use a network mirror. -#d-i apt-setup/use_mirror boolean false -# Select which update services to use; define the mirrors to be used. -# Values shown below are the normal defaults. -#d-i apt-setup/services-select multiselect security, volatile -#d-i apt-setup/security_host string security.debian.org -#d-i apt-setup/volatile_host string volatile.debian.org - -# Additional repositories, local[0-9] available -#d-i apt-setup/local0/repository string \ -# http://local.server/debian stable main -#d-i apt-setup/local0/comment string local server -# Enable deb-src lines -#d-i apt-setup/local0/source boolean true -# URL to the public key of the local repository; you must provide a key or -# apt will complain about the unauthenticated repository and so the -# sources.list line will be left commented out -#d-i apt-setup/local0/key string http://local.server/key - -# By default the installer requires that repositories be authenticated -# using a known gpg key. This setting can be used to disable that -# authentication. Warning: Insecure, not recommended. -#d-i debian-installer/allow_unauthenticated boolean true - -### Package selection -#tasksel tasksel/first multiselect standard, web-server -tasksel tasksel/first multiselect standard, desktop -# If the desktop task is selected, install the kde and xfce desktops -# instead of the default gnome desktop. -#tasksel tasksel/desktop multiselect kde, xfce -tasksel tasksel/desktop multiselect xfce - -# Individual additional packages to install -#d-i pkgsel/include string openssh-server build-essential -# Whether to upgrade packages after debootstrap. -# Allowed values: none, safe-upgrade, full-upgrade -#d-i pkgsel/upgrade select none - -# 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 - -### Finishing up the installation -# During installations from serial console, the regular virtual consoles -# (VT1-VT6) are normally disabled in /etc/inittab. Uncomment the next -# line to prevent this. -#d-i finish-install/keep-consoles boolean true - -# Avoid that last message about the install being complete. -d-i finish-install/reboot_in_progress note - -# 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 - -### Preseeding other packages -# Depending on what software you choose to install, or if things go wrong -# during the installation process, it's possible that other questions may -# be asked. You can preseed those too, of course. To get a list of every -# possible question that could be asked during an install, do an -# installation, and then run these commands: -# debconf-get-selections --installer > file -# debconf-get-selections >> file - - -#### Advanced options -### Running custom commands during the installation -# d-i preseeding is inherently not secure. Nothing in the installer checks -# for attempts at buffer overflows or other exploits of the values of a -# preconfiguration file like this one. Only use preconfiguration files from -# trusted locations! To drive that home, and because it's generally useful, -# here's a way to run any shell command you'd like inside the installer, -# automatically. - -# This first command is run as early as possible, just after -# preseeding is read. -#d-i preseed/early_command string anna-install some-udeb -# This command is run immediately before the partitioner starts. It may be -# useful to apply dynamic partitioner preseeding that depends on the state -# of the disks (which may not be visible when preseed/early_command runs). -#d-i partman/early_command \ -# string debconf-set partman-auto/disk "$(list-devices disk | head -n1)" -# This command is run just before the install finishes, but when there is -# still a usable /target directory. You can chroot to /target and use it -# directly, or use the apt-install and in-target commands to easily install -# packages and run commands in the target system. -#d-i preseed/late_command string apt-install zsh; in-target chsh -s /bin/zsh - diff --git a/userContent/squeeze-test-debian-edu-standalone-preseed.cfg b/userContent/squeeze-test-debian-edu-standalone-preseed.cfg new file mode 100644 index 00000000..3470c0f4 --- /dev/null +++ b/userContent/squeeze-test-debian-edu-standalone-preseed.cfg @@ -0,0 +1,401 @@ +#### Contents of the preconfiguration file (for squeeze) +### Localization +# Preseeding only locale sets language, country and locale. +d-i debian-installer/locale string en_US + +# The values can also be preseeded individually for greater flexibility. +#d-i debian-installer/language string en +#d-i debian-installer/country string NL +#d-i debian-installer/locale string en_GB.UTF-8 +# Optionally specify additional locales to be generated. +#d-i localechooser/supported-locales multiselect en_US.UTF-8, nl_NL.UTF-8 + +# Keyboard selection. +# keymap is an alias for keyboard-configuration/xkb-keymap +d-i keymap select us +# d-i keyboard-configuration/toggle select No toggling + +### Network configuration +# Disable network configuration entirely. This is useful for cdrom +# installations on non-networked devices where the network questions, +# warning and long timeouts are a nuisance. +#d-i netcfg/enable boolean false + +# 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 + +# To pick a particular interface instead: +#d-i netcfg/choose_interface select eth1 + +# To set a different link detection timeout (default is 3 seconds). +# Values are interpreted as seconds. +#di netcfg/link_detection_timeout string 10 + +# 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 + +# If you prefer to configure the network manually, uncomment this line and +# the static network configuration below. +#d-i netcfg/disable_dhcp 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 + +# Static network configuration. +#d-i netcfg/get_nameservers string 192.168.1.1 +#d-i netcfg/get_ipaddress string 192.168.1.42 +#d-i netcfg/get_netmask string 255.255.255.0 +#d-i netcfg/get_gateway string 192.168.1.1 +#d-i netcfg/confirm_static boolean true + +# 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 + +# Disable that annoying WEP key dialog. +d-i netcfg/wireless_wep string +# The wacky dhcp hostname that some ISPs use as a password of sorts. +#d-i netcfg/dhcp_hostname string radish + +# 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 + +### Network console +# 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 + +# Enable the Debian Edu installer overrides +d-i anna/choose_modules multiselect debian-edu-install-udeb: Execute Debian-Edu debian-installer profile + +#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 + +### Mirror settings +# 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 http.de.debian.org +d-i mirror/http/directory string /debian +d-i mirror/http/proxy string http://10.0.2.2:3128/ + +# Suite to install. +#d-i mirror/suite string testing +# Suite to use for loading installer components (optional). +#d-i mirror/udeb/suite string testing + +### Account setup +# Skip creation of a root account (normal user account will be able to +# use sudo). +#d-i passwd/root-login boolean false +# Alternatively, to skip creation of a normal user account. +#d-i passwd/make-user boolean false + +# Root password, either in clear text +d-i passwd/root-password password r00tme +d-i passwd/root-password-again password r00tme +# or encrypted using an MD5 hash. +#d-i passwd/root-password-crypted password [MD5 hash] + +# To create a normal user account. +d-i passwd/user-fullname string Jenkins Testuser +d-i passwd/username string jenkins +# Normal user's password, either in clear text +d-i passwd/user-password password insecure +d-i passwd/user-password-again password insecure +# or encrypted using an MD5 hash. +#d-i passwd/user-password-crypted password [MD5 hash] +# Create the first user with the specified UID instead of the default. +#d-i passwd/user-uid string 1010 + +# The user account will be added to some standard initial groups. To +# override that, use this. +#d-i passwd/user-default-groups string audio cdrom video + +### Clock and time zone setup +# Controls whether or not the hardware clock is set to UTC. +d-i clock-setup/utc boolean true + +# 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 + +### Partitioning +## Partitioning example +# 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. +#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/hda or +# /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 +# In addition, you'll need to specify the method to use. +# The presently available methods are: +# - regular: use the usual partition types for your architecture +# - lvm: use LVM to partition the disk +# - crypto: use LVM within an encrypted partition +d-i partman-auto/method string lvm + +# If one of the disks that are going to be automatically partitioned +# contains an old LVM configuration, the user will normally receive a +# warning. This can be preseeded away... +d-i partman-lvm/device_remove_lvm boolean true +# The same applies to pre-existing software RAID array: +d-i partman-md/device_remove_md boolean true +# And the same goes for the confirmation to write the lvm partitions. +d-i partman-lvm/confirm boolean true +d-i partman-lvm/confirm_nooverwrite boolean true + +# You can choose one of the three predefined partitioning recipes: +# - atomic: all files in one partition +# - home: separate /home partition +# - multi: separate /home, /usr, /var, and /tmp partitions +d-i partman-auto/choose_recipe select atomic + +# Or provide a recipe of your own... +# If you have a way to get a recipe file into the d-i environment, you can +# just point at it. +#d-i partman-auto/expert_recipe_file string /hd-media/recipe + +# 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{ } \ +# . + +# The full recipe format is documented in the file partman-auto-recipe.txt +# included in the 'debian-installer' package or available from D-I source +# repository. This also documents how to specify settings such as file +# system labels, volume group names and which physical devices to include +# in a volume group. + +# This makes partman automatically partition without confirmation, provided +# that you told it what to do using one of the methods above. +d-i partman-partitioning/confirm_write_new_label boolean true +d-i partman/choose_partition select finish +d-i partman/confirm boolean true +d-i partman/confirm_nooverwrite boolean true + +## Partitioning using RAID +# The method should be set to "raid". +#d-i partman-auto/method string raid +# Specify the disks to be partitioned. They will all get the same layout, +# so this will only work if the disks are the same size. +#d-i partman-auto/disk string /dev/sda /dev/sdb + +# 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: +# \ +# + +#d-i partman-auto-raid/recipe string \ +# 1 2 0 ext3 / \ +# /dev/sda1#/dev/sdb1 \ +# . \ +# 1 2 0 swap - \ +# /dev/sda5#/dev/sdb5 \ +# . \ +# 0 2 0 ext3 /home \ +# /dev/sda6#/dev/sdb6 \ +# . + +# For additional information see the file partman-auto-raid-recipe.txt +# included in the 'debian-installer' package or available from D-I source +# repository. + +# This makes partman automatically partition without confirmation. +d-i partman-md/confirm boolean true +d-i partman-partitioning/confirm_write_new_label boolean true +d-i partman/choose_partition select finish +d-i partman/confirm boolean true +d-i partman/confirm_nooverwrite boolean true + +## Controlling how partitions are mounted +# 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 + +### Base system installation +# Configure APT to not install recommended packages by default. Use of this +# option can result in an incomplete system and should only be used by very +# experienced users. +#d-i base-installer/install-recommends boolean false + +# The kernel image (meta) package to be installed; "none" can be used if no +# kernel is to be installed. +#d-i base-installer/kernel/image string linux-image-2.6-486 + +### Apt setup +# You can choose to install non-free and contrib software. +#d-i apt-setup/non-free boolean true +#d-i apt-setup/contrib boolean true +# Uncomment this if you don't want to use a network mirror. +#d-i apt-setup/use_mirror boolean false +# Select which update services to use; define the mirrors to be used. +# Values shown below are the normal defaults. +#d-i apt-setup/services-select multiselect security, volatile +#d-i apt-setup/security_host string security.debian.org +#d-i apt-setup/volatile_host string volatile.debian.org + +# Additional repositories, local[0-9] available +#d-i apt-setup/local0/repository string \ +# http://local.server/debian stable main +#d-i apt-setup/local0/comment string local server +# Enable deb-src lines +#d-i apt-setup/local0/source boolean true +# URL to the public key of the local repository; you must provide a key or +# apt will complain about the unauthenticated repository and so the +# sources.list line will be left commented out +#d-i apt-setup/local0/key string http://local.server/key + +# By default the installer requires that repositories be authenticated +# using a known gpg key. This setting can be used to disable that +# authentication. Warning: Insecure, not recommended. +#d-i debian-installer/allow_unauthenticated boolean true + +# Profile for debian-edu-install versions 1.519 - 1.528 +d-i debian-edu-install/profile-expert multiselect Standalone + +# Profile for debian-edu-install versions 0.1 - 1.518, 1.529 -> +d-i debian-edu-install/profile multiselect Standalone + +d-i debian-edu-install/confirm boolean true + +### Package selection +#tasksel tasksel/first multiselect standard, web-server +# If the desktop task is selected, install the kde and xfce desktops +# instead of the default gnome desktop. +#tasksel tasksel/desktop multiselect kde, xfce + +# Individual additional packages to install +#d-i pkgsel/include string openssh-server build-essential +# Whether to upgrade packages after debootstrap. +# Allowed values: none, safe-upgrade, full-upgrade +#d-i pkgsel/upgrade select none + +# 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 + +### Finishing up the installation +# During installations from serial console, the regular virtual consoles +# (VT1-VT6) are normally disabled in /etc/inittab. Uncomment the next +# line to prevent this. +#d-i finish-install/keep-consoles boolean true + +# Avoid that last message about the install being complete. +d-i finish-install/reboot_in_progress note + +# 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 + +### Preseeding other packages +# Depending on what software you choose to install, or if things go wrong +# during the installation process, it's possible that other questions may +# be asked. You can preseed those too, of course. To get a list of every +# possible question that could be asked during an install, do an +# installation, and then run these commands: +# debconf-get-selections --installer > file +# debconf-get-selections >> file + + +#### Advanced options +### Running custom commands during the installation +# d-i preseeding is inherently not secure. Nothing in the installer checks +# for attempts at buffer overflows or other exploits of the values of a +# preconfiguration file like this one. Only use preconfiguration files from +# trusted locations! To drive that home, and because it's generally useful, +# here's a way to run any shell command you'd like inside the installer, +# automatically. + +# This first command is run as early as possible, just after +# preseeding is read. +#d-i preseed/early_command string anna-install some-udeb +# This command is run immediately before the partitioner starts. It may be +# useful to apply dynamic partitioner preseeding that depends on the state +# of the disks (which may not be visible when preseed/early_command runs). +#d-i partman/early_command \ +# string debconf-set partman-auto/disk "$(list-devices disk | head -n1)" +# This command is run just before the install finishes, but when there is +# still a usable /target directory. You can chroot to /target and use it +# directly, or use the apt-install and in-target commands to easily install +# packages and run commands in the target system. +#d-i preseed/late_command string apt-install zsh; in-target chsh -s /bin/zsh + +# +# edu specific settings +# + +# the popcon question needs special preseeding as the template +# being shown is the one in debian-edu-install, which is copied from +# popularity-contest to ensure all questions show up before packages are +# downloaded. +d-i debian-edu-install/participate-popcon boolean false + +# Tell LTSP to not use the CDROM, but a HTTP mirror +d-i ltsp-client-builder/use_cdrom boolean false +d-i ltsp-client-builder/build-client-opts string --mirror http://ftp.skolelinux.org/debian --dist squeeze + +portmap portmap/loopback boolean false + +nslcd nslcd/ldap-base string dc=skole,dc=skolelinux,dc=no +nslcd nslcd/ldap-uris string DNS diff --git a/userContent/wheezy-debian-edu-workstation-preseed.cfg b/userContent/wheezy-debian-edu-workstation-preseed.cfg new file mode 100644 index 00000000..f20561ae --- /dev/null +++ b/userContent/wheezy-debian-edu-workstation-preseed.cfg @@ -0,0 +1,402 @@ +#### Contents of the preconfiguration file (for wheezy) +### Localization +# Preseeding only locale sets language, country and locale. +d-i debian-installer/locale string en_US + +# The values can also be preseeded individually for greater flexibility. +#d-i debian-installer/language string en +#d-i debian-installer/country string NL +#d-i debian-installer/locale string en_GB.UTF-8 +# Optionally specify additional locales to be generated. +#d-i localechooser/supported-locales multiselect en_US.UTF-8, nl_NL.UTF-8 + +# Keyboard selection. +# keymap is an alias for keyboard-configuration/xkb-keymap +d-i keymap select us +# d-i keyboard-configuration/toggle select No toggling + +### Network configuration +# Disable network configuration entirely. This is useful for cdrom +# installations on non-networked devices where the network questions, +# warning and long timeouts are a nuisance. +#d-i netcfg/enable boolean false + +# 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 + +# To pick a particular interface instead: +#d-i netcfg/choose_interface select eth1 + +# To set a different link detection timeout (default is 3 seconds). +# Values are interpreted as seconds. +#di netcfg/link_detection_timeout string 10 + +# 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 + +# If you prefer to configure the network manually, uncomment this line and +# the static network configuration below. +#d-i netcfg/disable_dhcp 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 + +# Static network configuration. +#d-i netcfg/get_nameservers string 192.168.1.1 +#d-i netcfg/get_ipaddress string 192.168.1.42 +#d-i netcfg/get_netmask string 255.255.255.0 +#d-i netcfg/get_gateway string 192.168.1.1 +#d-i netcfg/confirm_static boolean true + +# 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 + +# Disable that annoying WEP key dialog. +d-i netcfg/wireless_wep string +# The wacky dhcp hostname that some ISPs use as a password of sorts. +#d-i netcfg/dhcp_hostname string radish + +# 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 + +### Network console +# 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 + +# Enable the Debian Edu installer overrides +d-i anna/choose_modules multiselect debian-edu-install-udeb: Execute Debian-Edu debian-installer profile + +#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 + +### Mirror settings +# 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 http.de.debian.org +d-i mirror/http/directory string /debian +d-i mirror/http/proxy string http://10.0.2.2:3128/ + +# Suite to install. +#d-i mirror/suite string testing +# Suite to use for loading installer components (optional). +#d-i mirror/udeb/suite string testing + +### Account setup +# Skip creation of a root account (normal user account will be able to +# use sudo). +#d-i passwd/root-login boolean false +# Alternatively, to skip creation of a normal user account. +#d-i passwd/make-user boolean false + +# Root password, either in clear text +d-i passwd/root-password password r00tme +d-i passwd/root-password-again password r00tme +# or encrypted using an MD5 hash. +#d-i passwd/root-password-crypted password [MD5 hash] + +# To create a normal user account. +d-i passwd/user-fullname string Jenkins Testuser +d-i passwd/username string jenkins +# Normal user's password, either in clear text +d-i passwd/user-password password insecure +d-i passwd/user-password-again password insecure +# or encrypted using an MD5 hash. +#d-i passwd/user-password-crypted password [MD5 hash] +# Create the first user with the specified UID instead of the default. +#d-i passwd/user-uid string 1010 + +# The user account will be added to some standard initial groups. To +# override that, use this. +#d-i passwd/user-default-groups string audio cdrom video + +### Clock and time zone setup +# Controls whether or not the hardware clock is set to UTC. +d-i clock-setup/utc boolean true + +# 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 + +### Partitioning +## Partitioning example +# 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. +#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/hda or +# /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 +# In addition, you'll need to specify the method to use. +# The presently available methods are: +# - regular: use the usual partition types for your architecture +# - lvm: use LVM to partition the disk +# - crypto: use LVM within an encrypted partition +d-i partman-auto/method string lvm + +# If one of the disks that are going to be automatically partitioned +# contains an old LVM configuration, the user will normally receive a +# warning. This can be preseeded away... +d-i partman-lvm/device_remove_lvm boolean true +# The same applies to pre-existing software RAID array: +d-i partman-md/device_remove_md boolean true +# And the same goes for the confirmation to write the lvm partitions. +d-i partman-lvm/confirm boolean true +d-i partman-lvm/confirm_nooverwrite boolean true + +# You can choose one of the three predefined partitioning recipes: +# - atomic: all files in one partition +# - home: separate /home partition +# - multi: separate /home, /usr, /var, and /tmp partitions +d-i partman-auto/choose_recipe select atomic + +# Or provide a recipe of your own... +# If you have a way to get a recipe file into the d-i environment, you can +# just point at it. +#d-i partman-auto/expert_recipe_file string /hd-media/recipe + +# 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{ } \ +# . + +# The full recipe format is documented in the file partman-auto-recipe.txt +# included in the 'debian-installer' package or available from D-I source +# repository. This also documents how to specify settings such as file +# system labels, volume group names and which physical devices to include +# in a volume group. + +# This makes partman automatically partition without confirmation, provided +# that you told it what to do using one of the methods above. +d-i partman-partitioning/confirm_write_new_label boolean true +d-i partman/choose_partition select finish +d-i partman/confirm boolean true +d-i partman/confirm_nooverwrite boolean true + +## Partitioning using RAID +# The method should be set to "raid". +#d-i partman-auto/method string raid +# Specify the disks to be partitioned. They will all get the same layout, +# so this will only work if the disks are the same size. +#d-i partman-auto/disk string /dev/sda /dev/sdb + +# 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: +# \ +# + +#d-i partman-auto-raid/recipe string \ +# 1 2 0 ext3 / \ +# /dev/sda1#/dev/sdb1 \ +# . \ +# 1 2 0 swap - \ +# /dev/sda5#/dev/sdb5 \ +# . \ +# 0 2 0 ext3 /home \ +# /dev/sda6#/dev/sdb6 \ +# . + +# For additional information see the file partman-auto-raid-recipe.txt +# included in the 'debian-installer' package or available from D-I source +# repository. + +# This makes partman automatically partition without confirmation. +d-i partman-md/confirm boolean true +d-i partman-partitioning/confirm_write_new_label boolean true +d-i partman/choose_partition select finish +d-i partman/confirm boolean true +d-i partman/confirm_nooverwrite boolean true + +## Controlling how partitions are mounted +# 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 + +### Base system installation +# Configure APT to not install recommended packages by default. Use of this +# option can result in an incomplete system and should only be used by very +# experienced users. +#d-i base-installer/install-recommends boolean false + +# The kernel image (meta) package to be installed; "none" can be used if no +# kernel is to be installed. +#d-i base-installer/kernel/image string linux-image-2.6-486 + +### Apt setup +# You can choose to install non-free and contrib software. +#d-i apt-setup/non-free boolean true +#d-i apt-setup/contrib boolean true +# Uncomment this if you don't want to use a network mirror. +#d-i apt-setup/use_mirror boolean false +# Select which update services to use; define the mirrors to be used. +# Values shown below are the normal defaults. +#d-i apt-setup/services-select multiselect security, volatile +#d-i apt-setup/security_host string security.debian.org +#d-i apt-setup/volatile_host string volatile.debian.org + +# Additional repositories, local[0-9] available +#d-i apt-setup/local0/repository string \ +# http://local.server/debian stable main +#d-i apt-setup/local0/comment string local server +# Enable deb-src lines +#d-i apt-setup/local0/source boolean true +# URL to the public key of the local repository; you must provide a key or +# apt will complain about the unauthenticated repository and so the +# sources.list line will be left commented out +#d-i apt-setup/local0/key string http://local.server/key + +# By default the installer requires that repositories be authenticated +# using a known gpg key. This setting can be used to disable that +# authentication. Warning: Insecure, not recommended. +#d-i debian-installer/allow_unauthenticated boolean true + +# Profile for debian-edu-install versions 1.519 - 1.528 +d-i debian-edu-install/profile-expert multiselect Workstation + +# Profile for debian-edu-install versions 0.1 - 1.518, 1.529 -> +d-i debian-edu-install/profile multiselect Workstation + +d-i debian-edu-install/confirm boolean true + +### Package selection +#tasksel tasksel/first multiselect standard, web-server +# If the desktop task is selected, install the kde and xfce desktops +# instead of the default gnome desktop. +#tasksel tasksel/desktop multiselect kde, xfce + +# Individual additional packages to install +#d-i pkgsel/include string openssh-server build-essential +# Whether to upgrade packages after debootstrap. +# Allowed values: none, safe-upgrade, full-upgrade +#d-i pkgsel/upgrade select none + +# 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 + +### Finishing up the installation +# During installations from serial console, the regular virtual consoles +# (VT1-VT6) are normally disabled in /etc/inittab. Uncomment the next +# line to prevent this. +#d-i finish-install/keep-consoles boolean true + +# Avoid that last message about the install being complete. +d-i finish-install/reboot_in_progress note + +# 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 + +### Preseeding other packages +# Depending on what software you choose to install, or if things go wrong +# during the installation process, it's possible that other questions may +# be asked. You can preseed those too, of course. To get a list of every +# possible question that could be asked during an install, do an +# installation, and then run these commands: +# debconf-get-selections --installer > file +# debconf-get-selections >> file + + +#### Advanced options +### Running custom commands during the installation +# d-i preseeding is inherently not secure. Nothing in the installer checks +# for attempts at buffer overflows or other exploits of the values of a +# preconfiguration file like this one. Only use preconfiguration files from +# trusted locations! To drive that home, and because it's generally useful, +# here's a way to run any shell command you'd like inside the installer, +# automatically. + +# This first command is run as early as possible, just after +# preseeding is read. +#d-i preseed/early_command string anna-install some-udeb +# This command is run immediately before the partitioner starts. It may be +# useful to apply dynamic partitioner preseeding that depends on the state +# of the disks (which may not be visible when preseed/early_command runs). +#d-i partman/early_command \ +# string debconf-set partman-auto/disk "$(list-devices disk | head -n1)" +# This command is run just before the install finishes, but when there is +# still a usable /target directory. You can chroot to /target and use it +# directly, or use the apt-install and in-target commands to easily install +# packages and run commands in the target system. +#d-i preseed/late_command string apt-install zsh; in-target chsh -s /bin/zsh + +# +# edu specific settings +# + +# the popcon question needs special preseeding as the template +# being shown is the one in debian-edu-install, which is copied from +# popularity-contest to ensure all questions show up before packages are +# downloaded. +d-i debian-edu-install/participate-popcon boolean false + +# Tell LTSP to not use the CDROM, but a HTTP mirror +d-i ltsp-client-builder/use_cdrom boolean false +d-i ltsp-client-builder/build-client-opts string --mirror http://ftp.skolelinux.org/debian --dist squeeze + +portmap portmap/loopback boolean false + +nslcd nslcd/ldap-base string dc=skole,dc=skolelinux,dc=no +nslcd nslcd/ldap-uris string DNS + diff --git a/userContent/wheezy-lxde-preseed.cfg b/userContent/wheezy-lxde-preseed.cfg new file mode 100644 index 00000000..1b97f968 --- /dev/null +++ b/userContent/wheezy-lxde-preseed.cfg @@ -0,0 +1,373 @@ +#### Contents of the preconfiguration file (for wheezy) +### Localization +# Preseeding only locale sets language, country and locale. +d-i debian-installer/locale string en_US + +# The values can also be preseeded individually for greater flexibility. +#d-i debian-installer/language string en +#d-i debian-installer/country string NL +#d-i debian-installer/locale string en_GB.UTF-8 +# Optionally specify additional locales to be generated. +#d-i localechooser/supported-locales multiselect en_US.UTF-8, nl_NL.UTF-8 + +# Keyboard selection. +# keymap is an alias for keyboard-configuration/xkb-keymap +d-i keymap select us +# d-i keyboard-configuration/toggle select No toggling + +### Network configuration +# Disable network configuration entirely. This is useful for cdrom +# installations on non-networked devices where the network questions, +# warning and long timeouts are a nuisance. +#d-i netcfg/enable boolean false + +# 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 + +# To pick a particular interface instead: +#d-i netcfg/choose_interface select eth1 + +# To set a different link detection timeout (default is 3 seconds). +# Values are interpreted as seconds. +#di netcfg/link_detection_timeout string 10 + +# 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 + +# If you prefer to configure the network manually, uncomment this line and +# the static network configuration below. +#d-i netcfg/disable_dhcp 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 + +# Static network configuration. +#d-i netcfg/get_nameservers string 192.168.1.1 +#d-i netcfg/get_ipaddress string 192.168.1.42 +#d-i netcfg/get_netmask string 255.255.255.0 +#d-i netcfg/get_gateway string 192.168.1.1 +#d-i netcfg/confirm_static boolean true + +# 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 + +# Disable that annoying WEP key dialog. +d-i netcfg/wireless_wep string +# The wacky dhcp hostname that some ISPs use as a password of sorts. +#d-i netcfg/dhcp_hostname string radish + +# 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 + +### Network console +# 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 + +### Mirror settings +# 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 ftp.de.debian.org +d-i mirror/http/directory string /debian +d-i mirror/http/proxy string http://10.0.2.2:3128/ + +# Suite to install. +#d-i mirror/suite string testing +# Suite to use for loading installer components (optional). +#d-i mirror/udeb/suite string testing + +### Account setup +# Skip creation of a root account (normal user account will be able to +# use sudo). +#d-i passwd/root-login boolean false +# Alternatively, to skip creation of a normal user account. +#d-i passwd/make-user boolean false + +# Root password, either in clear text +d-i passwd/root-password password r00tme +d-i passwd/root-password-again password r00tme +# or encrypted using an MD5 hash. +#d-i passwd/root-password-crypted password [MD5 hash] + +# To create a normal user account. +d-i passwd/user-fullname string Debian User +d-i passwd/username string debian +# Normal user's password, either in clear text +d-i passwd/user-password password insecure +d-i passwd/user-password-again password insecure +# or encrypted using an MD5 hash. +#d-i passwd/user-password-crypted password [MD5 hash] +# Create the first user with the specified UID instead of the default. +#d-i passwd/user-uid string 1010 + +# The user account will be added to some standard initial groups. To +# override that, use this. +#d-i passwd/user-default-groups string audio cdrom video + +### Clock and time zone setup +# Controls whether or not the hardware clock is set to UTC. +d-i clock-setup/utc boolean true + +# 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 + +### Partitioning +## Partitioning example +# 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. +#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/hda or +# /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 +# In addition, you'll need to specify the method to use. +# The presently available methods are: +# - regular: use the usual partition types for your architecture +# - lvm: use LVM to partition the disk +# - crypto: use LVM within an encrypted partition +d-i partman-auto/method string lvm + +# If one of the disks that are going to be automatically partitioned +# contains an old LVM configuration, the user will normally receive a +# warning. This can be preseeded away... +d-i partman-lvm/device_remove_lvm boolean true +# The same applies to pre-existing software RAID array: +d-i partman-md/device_remove_md boolean true +# And the same goes for the confirmation to write the lvm partitions. +d-i partman-lvm/confirm boolean true +d-i partman-lvm/confirm_nooverwrite boolean true + +# You can choose one of the three predefined partitioning recipes: +# - atomic: all files in one partition +# - home: separate /home partition +# - multi: separate /home, /usr, /var, and /tmp partitions +d-i partman-auto/choose_recipe select atomic + +# Or provide a recipe of your own... +# If you have a way to get a recipe file into the d-i environment, you can +# just point at it. +#d-i partman-auto/expert_recipe_file string /hd-media/recipe + +# 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{ } \ +# . + +# The full recipe format is documented in the file partman-auto-recipe.txt +# included in the 'debian-installer' package or available from D-I source +# repository. This also documents how to specify settings such as file +# system labels, volume group names and which physical devices to include +# in a volume group. + +# This makes partman automatically partition without confirmation, provided +# that you told it what to do using one of the methods above. +d-i partman-partitioning/confirm_write_new_label boolean true +d-i partman/choose_partition select finish +d-i partman/confirm boolean true +d-i partman/confirm_nooverwrite boolean true + +## Partitioning using RAID +# The method should be set to "raid". +#d-i partman-auto/method string raid +# Specify the disks to be partitioned. They will all get the same layout, +# so this will only work if the disks are the same size. +#d-i partman-auto/disk string /dev/sda /dev/sdb + +# 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: +# \ +# + +#d-i partman-auto-raid/recipe string \ +# 1 2 0 ext3 / \ +# /dev/sda1#/dev/sdb1 \ +# . \ +# 1 2 0 swap - \ +# /dev/sda5#/dev/sdb5 \ +# . \ +# 0 2 0 ext3 /home \ +# /dev/sda6#/dev/sdb6 \ +# . + +# For additional information see the file partman-auto-raid-recipe.txt +# included in the 'debian-installer' package or available from D-I source +# repository. + +# This makes partman automatically partition without confirmation. +d-i partman-md/confirm boolean true +d-i partman-partitioning/confirm_write_new_label boolean true +d-i partman/choose_partition select finish +d-i partman/confirm boolean true +d-i partman/confirm_nooverwrite boolean true + +## Controlling how partitions are mounted +# 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 + +### Base system installation +# Configure APT to not install recommended packages by default. Use of this +# option can result in an incomplete system and should only be used by very +# experienced users. +#d-i base-installer/install-recommends boolean false + +# The kernel image (meta) package to be installed; "none" can be used if no +# kernel is to be installed. +#d-i base-installer/kernel/image string linux-image-2.6-486 + +### Apt setup +# You can choose to install non-free and contrib software. +#d-i apt-setup/non-free boolean true +#d-i apt-setup/contrib boolean true +# Uncomment this if you don't want to use a network mirror. +#d-i apt-setup/use_mirror boolean false +# Select which update services to use; define the mirrors to be used. +# Values shown below are the normal defaults. +#d-i apt-setup/services-select multiselect security, volatile +#d-i apt-setup/security_host string security.debian.org +#d-i apt-setup/volatile_host string volatile.debian.org + +# Additional repositories, local[0-9] available +#d-i apt-setup/local0/repository string \ +# http://local.server/debian stable main +#d-i apt-setup/local0/comment string local server +# Enable deb-src lines +#d-i apt-setup/local0/source boolean true +# URL to the public key of the local repository; you must provide a key or +# apt will complain about the unauthenticated repository and so the +# sources.list line will be left commented out +#d-i apt-setup/local0/key string http://local.server/key + +# By default the installer requires that repositories be authenticated +# using a known gpg key. This setting can be used to disable that +# authentication. Warning: Insecure, not recommended. +#d-i debian-installer/allow_unauthenticated boolean true + +### Package selection +#tasksel tasksel/first multiselect standard, web-server +tasksel tasksel/first multiselect standard, desktop +# If the desktop task is selected, install the kde and xfce desktops +# instead of the default gnome desktop. +#tasksel tasksel/desktop multiselect kde, xfce +tasksel tasksel/desktop multiselect xfce + +# Individual additional packages to install +#d-i pkgsel/include string openssh-server build-essential +# Whether to upgrade packages after debootstrap. +# Allowed values: none, safe-upgrade, full-upgrade +#d-i pkgsel/upgrade select none + +# 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 + +### Finishing up the installation +# During installations from serial console, the regular virtual consoles +# (VT1-VT6) are normally disabled in /etc/inittab. Uncomment the next +# line to prevent this. +#d-i finish-install/keep-consoles boolean true + +# Avoid that last message about the install being complete. +d-i finish-install/reboot_in_progress note + +# 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 + +### Preseeding other packages +# Depending on what software you choose to install, or if things go wrong +# during the installation process, it's possible that other questions may +# be asked. You can preseed those too, of course. To get a list of every +# possible question that could be asked during an install, do an +# installation, and then run these commands: +# debconf-get-selections --installer > file +# debconf-get-selections >> file + + +#### Advanced options +### Running custom commands during the installation +# d-i preseeding is inherently not secure. Nothing in the installer checks +# for attempts at buffer overflows or other exploits of the values of a +# preconfiguration file like this one. Only use preconfiguration files from +# trusted locations! To drive that home, and because it's generally useful, +# here's a way to run any shell command you'd like inside the installer, +# automatically. + +# This first command is run as early as possible, just after +# preseeding is read. +#d-i preseed/early_command string anna-install some-udeb +# This command is run immediately before the partitioner starts. It may be +# useful to apply dynamic partitioner preseeding that depends on the state +# of the disks (which may not be visible when preseed/early_command runs). +#d-i partman/early_command \ +# string debconf-set partman-auto/disk "$(list-devices disk | head -n1)" +# This command is run just before the install finishes, but when there is +# still a usable /target directory. You can chroot to /target and use it +# directly, or use the apt-install and in-target commands to easily install +# packages and run commands in the target system. +#d-i preseed/late_command string apt-install zsh; in-target chsh -s /bin/zsh + -- cgit v1.2.3-70-g09d2