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It’s easy to build your own RancherOS ISO.
Create a clone of the main RancherOS repository to your local machine with a git clone.
git clone
$ git clone https://github.com/rancher/os.git
In the root of the repository, the “General Configuration” section of Dockerfile.dapper can be updated to use custom kernels. After you’ve saved your edits, run make in the root directory. After the build has completed, a ./dist/artifacts directory will be created with the custom built RancherOS release files. Build Requirements: bash, make, docker (Docker version >= 1.10.3)
Dockerfile.dapper
make
./dist/artifacts
bash
docker
$ make $ cd dist/artifacts $ ls initrd rancheros.iso iso-checksums.txt vmlinuz
If you need a compressed ISO, you can run this command:
$ make release
The rancheros.iso is ready to be used to boot RancherOS from ISO or launch RancherOS using Docker Machine.
rancheros.iso
$ git clone https://github.com/rancher/os-packer.git
GCE supports KVM virtualization, and we use packer to build KVM images. Before building, you need to verify that the host can support KVM. If you want to build GCE image based on RancherOS v1.4.0, you can run this command:
packer
RANCHEROS_VERSION=v1.4.0 make build-gce
With changes to the kernel and built Docker, RancherOS booting requires more memory. For details, please refer to the memory requirements.
By customizing the ISO, you can reduce the memory usage on boot. The easiest way is to downgrade the built-in Docker version, because Docker takes up a lot of space. This can effectively reduce the memory required to decompress the initrd on boot. Using docker 17.03 is a good choice:
initrd
# run make $ USER_DOCKER_VERSION=17.03.2 make release
Available as of v1.5.0
When building RancherOS, you have the ability to automatically start in a supported console instead of booting into the default console and switching to your desired one.
Here is an example of building RancherOS and having the alpine console enabled:
alpine
$ OS_CONSOLE=alpine make release
If you want to use a custom ISO file to address an offline scenario, you can use predefined images for system-docker and user-docker.
system-docker
user-docker
RancherOS supports APPEND_SYSTEM_IMAGES. It can save images to the initrd file, and is loaded with system-docker when booting.
APPEND_SYSTEM_IMAGES
You can build the ISO like this:
APPEND_SYSTEM_IMAGES="rancher/os-openvmtools:10.3.10-1" make release
RancherOS also supports APPEND_USER_IMAGES. It can save images to the initrd file, and is loaded with user-docker when booting.
APPEND_USER_IMAGES
APPEND_USER_IMAGES="alpine:3.9 ubuntu:bionic" make release
Please note that these will be packaged into the initrd, and the predefined images will affect the resource footprint at startup.