title: Custom RancherOS ISO layout: os-default redirect_from:
It's easy to build your own RancherOS ISO.
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, or custom Docker.
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)
$ make
$ cd dist/artifacts
$ ls
initrd rancheros.iso
iso-checksums.txt vmlinuz
The rancheros.iso
is ready to be used to boot RancherOS from ISO or launch RancherOS using Docker Machine.
You can build the GCE image archive using Packer. You will need Packer, QEMU and GNU tar installed.
First, create gce-qemu.json
:
{
"builders":
[
{
"type": "qemu",
"name": "qemu-googlecompute",
"iso_url": "https://github.com/rancherio/os/releases/download/<RancherOS-Version>/rancheros.iso",
"iso_checksum": "<rancheros.iso-MD5-hash>",
"iso_checksum_type": "md5",
"ssh_wait_timeout": "360s",
"disk_size": 10000,
"format": "raw",
"headless": true,
"accelerator": "none",
"ssh_host_port_min": 2225,
"ssh_host_port_max": 2229,
"ssh_username": "rancher",
"ssh_password": "rancher",
"ssh_port": 22,
"net_device": "virtio-net",
"disk_interface": "scsi",
"qemuargs": [
["-m", "1024M"], ["-nographic"], ["-display", "none"]
]
}
],
"provisioners": [
{
"type":"shell",
"script": "../scripts/install2disk"
}
]
}
NOTE: For faster builds You can use "kvm"
as the accelerator
field value if you have KVM, but that's optional.
Run:
$ packer build gce-qemu.json
Packer places its output into output-qemu-googlecompute/packer-qemu-googlecompute
- it's a raw VM disk image. Now you just need to name it disk.raw
and package it as sparse .tar.gz:
$ mv output-qemu-googlecompute/packer-qemu-googlecompute disk.raw
$ tar -czSf rancheros-<RancherOS-Version>.tar.gz disk.raw
NOTE: the last command should be using GNU tar. It might be named gtar
on your system.