43 lines
4.3 KiB
Plaintext
43 lines
4.3 KiB
Plaintext
== Important Concepts
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If this is your first foray into building live distros, there are some terms and concepts we need to understand first. This will simplify the process later on.
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=== Terms
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An *operating system*, or OS, is what your programs (email client, web browser, etc.) run on.
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There are two basic types of booting systems that communicate between the *hardware* (the physical computer itself and its components) and the operating system: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BIOS[*BIOS*^] (Basic Input/Output System) which has been around for quite some time and the newer https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unified_Extensible_Firmware_Interface[*UEFI*^] (Unified Extensible Firmware Interface). Don't worry, you don't need to memorize what they're acronyms for and there won't be an exam -- just remember that BIOS is an older technology and UEFI is the newer one (and that they operate differently).
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*GNU/Linux*, sometimes just referred to as _Linux_ (And there is a difference between the terminologies, but it's nuanced. You are welcome to https://www.gnu.org/gnu/linux-and-gnu.en.html[read up on it^] though!), is an example of an operating system. Other examples include _Windows_, _macOS_ (previously _OS X_), _iOS_, _Android_, and a whole slew of others. There are many types of GNU/Linux offerings, called _distributions_, _flavors_, or _distros_.
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A *live distro*, *live CD*, *live DVD*, *live USB*, and the like are a way of booting an operating system without installing it on the hard drive- this means the computer doesn't even need a hard drive installed, or it doesn't matter if the installed operating system is broken. Typically they are Linux-based, but there are several Windows-based live releases out there (usually they're focused on rescuing broken Windows systems, so they're not very flexible).
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*Hybrid ISOs* are ISO files that can be burned to optical media (CDs, DVDs, etc.) and also be _dd_'d directly to a USB thumbdrive (for computers that support booting from USB). That means one file, multiple media types.
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*Architectures* are different hardware platforms. This mostly refers to the CPU. Common implementations are *64-bit* (also known as *x86_64* or *AMD64* for ones that support running both 64-bit and 32-bit software, or *IA64* or *Itanium* for processors that only support 64-bit) and *32-bit* (or *i686* and the older *i386* and *i486* implementations). Most consumer PCs on the market today are x86_64.
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*Chroots*, *chrooting*, and the like are variants on the word *chroot*. A *chroot* is a way of running a GNU/Linux install "inside" another GNU/Linux distro. It's sort of like a virtual machine, or VM, except that it's a lot more lightweight and it doesn't do any actual virtualization- and uses the host's kernel, memory mapping, etc. It's very useful for development of operating systems.
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=== Why live media is necessary/Why you might want BDisk
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"But Brent," I hear you ask in a voice which most likely is nothing close to what you actually sound like and entirely in my head, "Why would I need a live CD/USB/etc.? And why BDisk?"
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Elementary, my dear imaginary reader! I touch on some reasons why one might want live media in the beginning of the <<USER.adoc#_user_manual,User Manual>>, but here's why you might want BDisk specifically as opposed to another live distro (or <<FAQ.adoc#_i_don_t_like_bdisk_are_there_any_other_alternatives,live distro creator>>).
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* Fully customizable
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* Works with a multitude of GNU/Linux distros -- both for the host build system and as the guest. (Still under development!)
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* It performs optimizations and compression to help you get the smallest ISO possible.
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* In addition to building hybrid ISOs, it supports building iPXE hybrid ISOs (meaning you only need a very small file; the rest of the operating system boots over the Internet).
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* It supports both BIOS and UEFI systems- both the full image and the iPXE images.
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* It supports multiple architectures (x86_64, i686, possibly IA64 -- untested).
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* It supports automatically syncing to a web mirror, PXE boot server, etc. via rsync upon successful build.
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* It supports SecureBoot.
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=== Who might want to use BDisk?
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* System builders/hardware testers
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* System Administrators/Engineers/Architects
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* Information Security professionals
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* Computer repair shops
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* Technology Consultants
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* Hobbyists
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* Home GNU/Linux users
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* Technology enthusiasts
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