Customizing the Kernel
The installer image contains ONBUILD
instructions that handle the following:
- the decompression, and unpacking of the
initramfs.xz
- the unsquashing of the rootfs
- the copying of new rootfs files
- the squashing of the new rootfs
- and the packing, and compression of the new
initramfs.xz
When used as a base image, the installer will perform the above steps automatically with the requirement that a customization
stage be defined in the Dockerfile
.
Build and push your own kernel:
git clone https://github.com/talos-systems/pkgs.git
cd pkgs
make kernel-menuconfig USERNAME=_your_github_user_name_
docker login ghcr.io --username _your_github_user_name_
make kernel USERNAME=_your_github_user_name_ PUSH=true
Using a multi-stage Dockerfile
we can define the customization
stage and build FROM
the installer image:
FROM scratch AS customization
COPY --from=<custom kernel image> /lib/modules /lib/modules
FROM ghcr.io/siderolabs/installer:latest
COPY --from=<custom kernel image> /boot/vmlinuz /usr/install/${TARGETARCH}/vmlinuz
When building the image, the customization
stage will automatically be copied into the rootfs.
The customization
stage is not limited to a single COPY
instruction.
In fact, you can do whatever you would like in this stage, but keep in mind that everything in /
will be copied into the rootfs.
To build the image, run:
DOCKER_BUILDKIT=0 docker build --build-arg RM="/lib/modules" -t installer:kernel .
Note: buildkit has a bug #816, to disable it use
DOCKER_BUILDKIT=0
Now that we have a custom installer we can build Talos for the specific platform we wish to deploy to.