was the init system used by Grml until and including stable release 2014.11,
starting with beginning of 2016 Grml switched to systemd instead. If you want to
build a live system in the old style using file-rc instead of systemd then enable
-this class. Please notice that support for file-rc is no longer being actively
-maintained (the Grml team happily accepts patches though) and file-rc (upstream
-wise) might disappear too.
+this class. Please notice that the Grml team no longer provides support for it
+though.
* FRESHCLAM: execute freshclam (if it's present) to update clamav definitions
(increases resulting ISO size ~70MB). By default it's skipped to avoid bigger
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-*) 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-pass:[*]) are chosen in
+further GRML_pass:[*] 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).
+introduced in December 2011 (~750 ISO size).
-* GRML_SMALL: minimum sized Grml version, known as grml-small (~300MB ISO
+* GRML_SMALL: minimum sized Grml version, known as grml-small (~360MB ISO
size).
* LATEX: LaTeX(-related) packages like auctex, texlive,...
grml-live on a plain Debian installation>> for details how to set up grml-live
on a plain, original Debian system.
-* enough free disk space; at least 1.5GB are required for a minimal grml-live
-run (\~850MB for the chroot [$CHROOT_OUTPUT], \~300MB for the build target
-[$BUILD_OUTPUT], \~30MB for the netboot files and \~300MB for the resulting ISO
+* enough free disk space; at least ~2GB are required for a minimal grml-live
+run (\~1GB for the chroot [$CHROOT_OUTPUT], \~400MB for the build target
+[$BUILD_OUTPUT], \~35MB for the netboot files and \~350MB for the resulting ISO
[$ISO_OUTPUT] plus some temporary files), if you plan to use GRML_FULL you
should have at least 4GB of total free disk space
How do I revert the manifold feature from an ISO?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-The so called manifold feature Grml ISOs use by default allows one to use the same
-ISO for CD boot and USB boot. If you notice any problems when booting just
-revert the manifold feature running:
+The so-called manifold feature Grml ISOs can, but by default do not, use allows
+one to use the same ISO for CD boot and USB boot. If you notice any problems
+when booting manifold-crafted media, just revert the manifold feature running:
% dd if=/dev/zero of=grml.iso bs=512 count=1 conv=notrunc
To switch from manifold to isohybrid mode (an alternative approach provided by
-syslinux) then just execute:
+syslinux, used by default for official Grml images) then just execute:
% isohybrid grml.iso