configuration archives manually as well. save-config is just a frontend which
should make it easier to use.
-The grml-autoconfig code has been re-worked in August 2009. This document
-handles both the behavior of Grml releases up to 2009.05 (see
-<<up-to-200905,section 'Behavior up to grml 2009.05'>>) and the current behavior
-(see <<current-versions,section 'Behavior in current Grml versions'>>). Great
-care has been taken to provide maximum backwards compatibility during the
-rewrite.
-
[IMPORTANT]
-Starting with grml release 2009.05 its possible to use root persistency on grml.
+Starting with Grml release 2009.05 its possible to use root persistency on grml.
This means you can store your settings and reuse them on reboot, without having
to deal with this config framework. Visit
-link:http://wiki.grml.org/doku.php?id=persistency for further information.
+link:http://wiki.grml.org/doku.php?id=persistency[] for further information.
[[current-versions]]
include::grml-autoconfig.current.txt[]
-[[up-to-200905]]
-include::grml-autoconfig.200905.txt[]
-
Permanently adjust boot parameters
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
As you probably know you can adjust boot parameters on the bootprompt. You want
to set some boot parameters permanently? That's possible via adding a directory
named 'bootparams' to the Grml ISO which has to be located at the root-directory
-/bootparams/ (note: the directory is known as /live/image/bootparams/ on a
+/bootparams/ (note: the directory is known as /lib/live/mount/medium/bootparams/ on a
_running_ Grml system then). Place a textfile inside the directory containing
the boot parameters which should be appended to default ones (this corresponds
to booting without any special parameters).
mkdir debs/ && cp foobar.deb debs/
-Notice: This directory will be located in /live/image after burning the second
+Notice: This directory will be located in /lib/live/mount/medium after burning the second
session.
Now create the second session containing this directory:
Run your own commands on startup
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-You know that booting with 'grml service=foobar' executes /etc/init.d/foobar
+You know that booting with 'grml services=foobar' executes /etc/init.d/foobar
when booting Grml. But you want to setup a more complex network configuration,
adjust some other stuff and so on on your own? Just write a script named grml.sh
which does the job and use own of the mentioned bootparams. Let's say you have
Bugs
----
-If you find a bug please report it. See link:http://grml.org/bugs/ for details
+If you find a bug please report it. See link:http://grml.org/bugs/[] for details
about how to report bugs.
See also