defining a Grml system. Important parts of the buildprocess are specified in
this class as well, so unless you have a really good reason you should always
use this class. Please be aware that using *just* the GRMLBASE class won't be
-enough, because the kernel packages (e.g. linux-image-i386-grml +
-linux-image-amd64-grml) are chosen in further GRML_* classes (to provide maximum
-flexibility with kernel selection). If you don't want to use the existing
-GRML_FULL or GRML_SMALL classes, define your own CLASS file choosing the kernel
-package you want to use (and don't forget to include your CLASS in the arguments
-of grml-live's -c... command line option).
+enough, because the kernel packages (e.g. linux-image-*) are chosen in further
+GRML_* classes (to provide maximum flexibility with kernel selection). If you
+don't want to use the existing GRML_FULL or GRML_SMALL classes, define your own
+CLASS file choosing the kernel package you want to use (and don't forget to
+include your CLASS in the arguments of grml-live's -c... command line option).
* GRML_FULL: full featured Grml, also known as the "normal", full grml as
introduced in December 2011 (~600MB ISO size).
# export GRML_FAI_CONFIG=$(pwd)/etc/grml/fai
# export SCRIPTS_DIRECTORY=$(pwd)/scripts
+ # export TEMPLATE_DIRECTORY=$(pwd)/templates
# ./grml-live -s sid -a amd64 -c GRMLBASE,GRML_FULL,AMD64
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