-<div class="paragraph"><p>And finally place the generated tarball in /etc/grml/fai/config/basefiles/ (note\r
-that it needs to be uppercase letters matching the class names, so: AMD64.tar.gz\r
-for amd64 and I386.tar.gz for i386).</p></div>\r
+<div class="paragraph"><p>Make sure the local directory is served via HTTP on the according IP address and\r
+port. For the <code>http://127.0.0.1:8000/</code> example from above it should be enough to\r
+just invoke:</p></div>\r
+<div class="literalblock">\r
+<div class="content">\r
+<pre><code>% cd /home/foobar/packages\r
+% dpkg-scanpackages . /dev/null | gzip > Packages.gz\r
+% python -m SimpleHTTPServer 8000</code></pre>\r
+</div></div>\r
+<div class="admonitionblock">\r
+<table><tr>\r
+<td class="icon">\r
+<img src="./images/icons/tip.png" alt="Tip" />\r
+</td>\r
+<td class="content">Of course you can also use a real Debian repository setup using tools like\r
+reprepro(1) and/or using a real web server, though for quick debugging sessions\r
+python’s SimpleHTTPServer in combination with dpkg-scanpackages from package\r
+dpkg-dev is a simple and easy approach.</td>\r
+</tr></table>\r
+</div>\r
+<div class="paragraph"><p>Finally invoke grml-live with your class name (<code>CUSTOM</code> in this example) added\r
+to the list of classes on the command line (see grml-live option <code>-c</code>).</p></div>\r
+</div>\r