AIF is the Arch Linux Installation Framework. --- Alpha software. Use at own risk!! --- License: GPL3. See COPYING. Author: Dieter Plaetinck Homepage: http://github.com/Dieterbe/aif ** Intro / Current state of things ** AIF is included on the 2008-12 Arch install CD's as an experimental alternative for the old installer (/arch/setup). The code of the old installer has been madly refactored, reorganized and cleaned up. AIF comes by default with these procedures: - interactive: A port of /arch/setup. Should work okay if you don't try too hard to break it ;-) - quickinst: A port of /arch/quickinst. Work in progress. Don't use this yet. - automatic: An automated, deploy-tool-alike procedure. Work in progress. Don't use this yet. AIF may or may not bring much additional value for you when compared with the previous installer, it depends on what you want to do: - End users: On the frontend, the interactive profile is very similar to /arch/setup. The features are more or less the same, with two notable exceptions: * Different partition/filesystem editor with support for LVM and dm_crypt * Rollback functionality if you change your mind after having formatted filesystems - Hackers: The code base that AIF runs on is very usable for hacking. The code is modular, reusable and quite complete. If you want to build your own installation procedures, or want to modify specific aspects of the out-of-the-box installation procedures, definitely check out how AIF works. It is built for hacking, reusing code and making writing custom installers as easy as possible. Keep in mind that AIF is still in ALPHA phase. There are some known issues (see the TODO file and various TODO's in the source code) AIF is expected to become the new official installer in the not too distant future, so go ahead and try it ! ** Goals ** The goal of this project is 1) to make the code of the Arch Linux installer more clean, DRY, modular and maintainable. 2) providing complete, easily-reusable libraries for disk partitioning, UI, package management, etc 3) provide some sensible default installation methods (eg interative, quickinst, automatic (prescripted), ..) 4) allowing power users to easily override certain aspects of the installation procedures or creating customized procedures, leveraging the available code. The goal of AIF is not (yet): 1) providing an installer who detects your stuff and tries to be smart and configures all your stuff. If you're interested in this, feel free to build it and I may incorporate it someday. ** File locations (on the install CD): ** Basically aif.sh is put in /arch (together with the default installer scripts), while all other aif-related files belong in /home/arch/aif * aif.sh -> /arch/aif * docs -> /home/arch/aif/docs/ * core module -> /home/arch/aif/core * user modules -> /home/arch/aif/user/ (put your own modules here) * runtime files -> /home/arch/aif/runtime (package list etc go here) A module can have 2 directories: libs, and procedures. ** Workflow ** There is a very basic but powerful workflow defined by variables, phases and workers. Depending on the procedure you choose (or write yourself), these will differ In the code, they are very recognizable and are named like this: - variable -> var_ - phase -> phase_ (an array in which each element is a worker to be executed, with optionally arguments for that worker) There are 4 phases: preparation, basics, system, finish. (executed in that order) - worker -> worker_ ( a worker function, called by a phase. implements some specific logic. eg runtime_packages, prepare_disks, package_list etc) You can depend on whatever procedure you like (like core/base), to save yourself some work (you only need to override a few things) Notes: - The phases are started by the start_process function. You can also override this function to take flow control in your own hands (eg iterative, menu-based installer) - you _can_ override _all_ variables and functions in your modules, but you should be able to achieve your goals by overriding only the 3 basic things and the start_process function, and only in procedures. - you _must_ specify a procedure, to avoid errors. take 'interactive' if unsure - don't edit the base procedure (or any other core item), rather make your own. It's easy! - you're not supposed to define new phases. just override them. logic goes in workers/libariers Modules are the building blocks in aif. They can contain libraries (for user interfaces, backend logic, etc) and procedures (how an installation process should go). The core module comes by default and contains everything 99% of the users will need. You can easily make your own modules with in it your own procedures (and your own libraries, if you need that). If you build your own libraries, it's generally a good idea to keep their names in line with what core has (lib-ui.sh, lib-network.sh etc). Do not put stuff in the core module yourself! If it's good stuff, it might be merged into core someday... Also, don't name your custom module 'core' (it will be ignored anyway). Don't call it http either, because you can specify 'http://some/path/to/a/procedure', aif will download that procedure and execute it (and the module will be 'http') Note that if you load a module and a library has the same function names as the core module, it will override the functions from core. This means you can 'inject' new backend code into core procedures, but you can also write your own procedures that use your own, or the core libraries. If you load a module, you actually load it's libraries, not it's procedures! Procedures are only loaded when needed (because you request them because of dependencies) If you need a library from another user contributed module, execute 'depend_module ' for each module. This way you load all the libs of that module (not the procedures, use depend_procedure for that. keep in mind that the position of the depend_procedure statement defines where your variables/functions might be overridden...) (very basic dependencies, no version checking etc) You can specify a core procedure on the command line by specifying '', to specify a user contriubuted procedure, specify '/' Commandline arguments are parsed by aif.sh but you can extend/override it's behaviour by overriding $var_OPTS_STRING and the process_vars variable. Also, you do not _have_ to use the variables they set (eg arg_ui_type). You usually will set defaults in the configure worker and override with arguments passed by the user (eg to use cli mode unless user wants dia) ** Procedures ** core/base: basic, little-interactivity installation with some common defaults. You probably don't want to run this one, although it's useful for other procedures to inherit from. core/interactive: interactive, reasonably flexible/featured installer (port of /arch/setup) core/quickinst: mostly DIY. port of /arch/quickinst core/automatic: automatic installer/deployment tool, can use config files ** Partial Procedures ** These procedures allow you to run a select few functions, in order to reach a specific goal, usually not installing a system partial-configure-network.sh Configure network on the runtime system partial-disks.sh Process disk subsystem or do a rollback ** Contributing ** Install a VM (I use virtualbox-ose, works fine), make a vm, boot the install cd (only i686 works in vbox) and just follow the HOWTO. It's probably easiest if you set up your own git clone that you can easily acces from the VM (You can open a github account and for my code). You can edit on the cd itself, but given the low resolution of the VM and the limited choice of editors, you'll probably edit on your pc, commit, push to github and pull from the clone on the cd. If you want to do debugging, just call the debug function and export DEBUG=1 before calling the scripts. Keep in mind there are 3 kinds of variables. Those that affect/belong to the runtime (install cd live environment), target (affects/belongs to the target installation) and TMP (everything in between or extra). Variablenames should have _TARGET or _TMP suffixes or none for runtime. (Honestly though, it isn't always the case like that now, I need to do more refactoring) Much of the code in the core module is taken (and modified) from the 'real' arch linux install scripts code. (/arch/setup and /arch/quickinst). the modifications are mostly done to make the code more (re)useable and to separate backend code, user interface and flow control. (into libraries and procedures). (which was tightly coupled in the original scripts) I couldn't find what license the code is under, but I assume this is okay.. if not let me know. The original code is at http://projects.archlinux.org/?p=installer.git;a=summary