From 9f1bf556b554acff666fa39d6b4047669bf5ffcb Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: freesource Date: Thu, 30 Nov 2000 04:46:41 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] This is the stock Yard Template. Making it current will be fun. --- Sample.yard | 284 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 284 insertions(+) create mode 100644 Sample.yard diff --git a/Sample.yard b/Sample.yard new file mode 100644 index 0000000..dae5323 --- /dev/null +++ b/Sample.yard @@ -0,0 +1,284 @@ +# -*- Mode: Fundamental -*- +# +# $Id: Bootdisk_Contents.in,v 1.3 1998/11/16 03:32:28 fawcett Exp $ +# This is Bootdisk_Contents, for use with Yard. +# This script created automatically from Bootdisk_Contents.in +# +# Tom Fawcett +# May 1996 +############################################################################# +# +# Format rules:x +# - Lines beginning with # or % are comments. +# +# - Blank lines and whitespace may be used freely. +# +# - Filenames may be either relative or absolute. +# Any filename not beginning with a slash is relative and +# will be resolved relative to the current directory. +# +# - Lines of the form "filename1 -> filename2" will create symbolic (soft) +# links on the root fs. Eg, if you want sh linked to bash +# in the root fs you specify: "/bin/sh -> /bin/bash" +# (There is no way to specify hardlinks, though hard linked files +# that exist on the hard disk will be hard linked on the floppy.) +# +# - Lines of the form "filename1 <= filename2" +# will cause filename2 to be copied to filename1 on the boot disk. +# This is useful for specifying trimmed-down replacements for +# /etc/passwd, /etc/inittab, etc. filename2 will be found first by +# searching PATH, then by searching relative to the current directory. +# +# - Glob designations (?, * and []) are generally allowed, eg /dev/hd[ab]* +# Wildcards are not allowed in link specs or replacement specs. +# +# - You may refer to environment variables in these specs by using +# a dollar sign. $RELEASE will be set to the release string of +# $kernel. +# +# You generally don't need to specify shared libraries or loaders. +# make_root_fs will detect necessary libraries with ldd and include +# them automatically. (But see the comment below regarding RedHat's +# libnss libraries, whose dependencies cannot be automatically detected). +# +# You don't need to explicitly specify intermediate directories +# unless you just want to make sure they exist. +# +############################################################################## + +# Specify these binaries absolutely because boot scripts need them to be here. +/bin/cat +/bin/false +/bin/hostname +/bin/ln +/bin/login +/bin/ls +/bin/more +/bin/mount +/bin/mv +/bin/su +/bin/true +/bin/umount +/bin/loadkeys + +##### THE DEFAULT SHELL +# (I use bash, but it's huge and requires libncurses.so. +# Most people grab a smaller lightweight shell, like ash or kiss, +# and use that instead.) +#/bin/sh -> bash +#/bin/csh -> tcsh +/bin/sh -> ash + +#/sbin/halt +/sbin/init +/sbin/reboot +/sbin/shutdown +#/sbin/swapoff +/sbin/swapon +/sbin/telinit +/sbin/update + +##### FILES IN /etc, TAKEN FROM YOUR SETUP +# +# The advantage of using your existing /etc/passwd file is that is has +# all the correct UIDs and GIDs, which may be useful when restoring +# files from tape. On the other hand, using a trimmed-down passwd +# allows you to use a trimmed-down shell, and avoids lots of errors +# from check_root_fs about home directories and shells not existing. +# +/etc/group +/etc/issue +/etc/profile +/etc/shells + +# These get replaced with their pared-down versions +# in the Replacements subdirectory. +/etc/passwd <= ./Replacements/etc/passwd +/etc/fstab <= ./Replacements/etc/fstab +/etc/motd <= ./Replacements/etc/bootdisk_motd +/etc/rc <= ./Replacements/etc/rc +/etc/ttytype <= ./Replacements/etc/ttytype +/etc/gettydefs <= ./Replacements/etc/gettydefs +/etc/termcap <= ./Replacements/etc/termcap + +# PROVISIONS FOR PAM: +/etc/pam.conf <= ./Replacements/etc/pam.conf +/lib/security/pam_permit.so + +# PROVISIONS FOR GLIBC'S (LIBC6) NSS. +# If you use libc5, comment these out. +# +/etc/nsswitch.conf <= ./Replacements/etc/nsswitch.conf +/lib/libnss_files.so.2 + + +##### INITTAB and GETTY +# Use one of these pairs, based on your distribution: +# +#==== REDHAT (5.x, 6.0) uses getty +#/etc/inittab <= Replacements/etc/inittab +#/sbin/getty +# +# +#===== MANDRAKE (7) uses mingetty +/etc/inittab <= Replacements/etc/inittab.mingetty +/sbin/mingetty +# +# +#==== SLACKWARE uses agetty: +#/etc/inittab <= Replacements/etc/inittab.agetty +#/sbin/agetty +# +# +#==== DEBIAN (1.1) uses a program called "getty" which is actually +# agetty in disguise: +#/etc/inittab <= Replacements/etc/inittab.debian +#/sbin/getty +# +# +#==== SUSE uses mingetty: +#/etc/inittab <= Replacements/etc/inittab.mingetty +#/sbin/mingetty +# +# +# If in doubt, check your /etc/inittab. +# +# In any case, check to make sure the *getty* calls in the inittab match +# the executable you're using. Yard can't check this and *getty* will +# hang if the arguments are wrong. + + +##### DEVICES +# Remove/prune these if you're sure you won't need them +#/dev/*tape* # Tape device links +#/dev/*rft0 # Floppy tape devices +#/dev/st? # SCSI tape drives +/dev/mem /dev/kmem +/dev/null /dev/zero +/dev/ram* +/dev/console +/dev/tty[0-9] +/dev/ttyS[0-9] # Serial ports (new style) +/dev/cua[0-9] # Callout devices corresponding to ttyS +/dev/hd[abcd]* # Hard disks +/dev/sd* # SCSI disks +/dev/fd0* # Floppy disk drives +/dev/cdrom /dev/modem # Links to real devices, which will be copied +/dev/mouse # In case you want to use a mouse + +##### utmp and wtmp. +# Set up links for any old-style programs that expect them in /etc. +/etc/utmp -> /var/run/utmp +/var/run/utmp <= /dev/null # This clears utmp on the floppy +/etc/wtmp -> /var/log/wtmp +/var/log/wtmp <= /dev/null + +/usr/share/terminfo/v/vt100 +/usr/share/terminfo/v/vt100-am +/usr/share/terminfo/l/linux +/usr/share/terminfo/l/linux-m +/usr/share/terminfo/l/linux-nic + +# If you want to load a special keytable, add the filename here: +#/usr/lib/kbd/keytables/defkeymap.map + +##### Empty directories +/mnt/* # all mount points +/proc +/tmp +/var/tmp +/usr/spool/uucp + +##### MODULES and support programs for them. +insmod +rmmod +lsmod +depmod +modprobe +/sbin/kerneld +/etc/conf.modules + +# /lib/modules/$RELEASE/*/*.o # All modules +/lib/modules/$RELEASE/fs/{isofs,romfs,vfat}.o +/lib/modules/$RELEASE/net/{ppp*,sl*,tulip}.o + + +##### ESSENTIAL SYSTEM UTILITIES +# (your rescue disk may not boot if these are not present.) +chmod +chown +chroot +cp +date +df +id +mkdir +pwd +rm +shutdown +stty +sync +uname + +##### NON-ESSENTIAL BUT USEFUL UTILITIES +cut +diff +dd +du +egrep fgrep grep +find +free +fuser +gunzip gzip +head tail +mkswap +mknod +ps +passwd +reboot +tar +touch +tr +whoami +wc +zcat + +#### Networking +ifconfig +ping +route +rsh + +##### DISK AND FILE SYSTEM UTILITIES +fdisk +e2fsck fsck fsck.ext2 +mke2fs mkfs mkfs.ext2 +tune2fs +mklost+found + + +##### FILES FOR RESTORING BACKUPS +# I use the tob package for backups, so I include everything to do +# restorations. You might want to include man pages or help files. +#tob +#afio # Needed by tob +#/usr/etc/tob.rc +#/usr/etc/tob/* +#/usr/etc/tob/lists/ +#/usr/etc/tob/volumes/* + + +##### A basic text editor. I use jove, a light-weight emacs clone +##### which is small and requires only libc and libtermcap. +#jove +#/usr/lib/jove/jove.rc + +##### For user "root". +#/root/.profile +# A generic .profile: +/root/.profile <= ./Replacements/root/.profile +/root/.*shrc + + +##### End of Bootdisk_Contents +