[CentOS-devel] source code of Centos

Rock Lee rocklee_104 at sina.com
Sun Jan 25 06:49:14 UTC 2015


>On Sat, Jan 24, 2015 at 11:01 PM, Rock Lee <rocklee_104 at sina.com> wrote:
>>
>>>On Wed, Jan 21, 2015 at 9:01 PM, Rock Lee <rocklee_104 at sina.com> wrote:
>>>> Hi:
>>>>
>>>>      I want to make a linux OS based on Centos recently. I searched on
>>>> Google several days, but still can't find the whole source code of Centos.
>>>> Is there any way to get the whole source code of Centos, like android, just
>>>> do a few command and then get the image files
>>>
>>>The short answer is "no". CentOS is mostly a clean rebuild of RHEL,
>>>and for their latest release, RHEL has decided to publish the publicly
>>>available source code at https://git.centos.org/. Setting up the build
>>>tree to build the whole thing from source, including the build
>>>environments, is a lot of time and resources that I suspect you do
>>>*not* want to invest months in, and it takes  hundreds if not
>>>thousands of hours on a modest system to build that while thing from
>>>scratch. Basically, you can do it, but you'll always be chasing
>>>updates and errata and minor copyright or trademark or license issues
>>>to keep it maintained.
>>>
>>>
>>>There are several free, quite usable rebuilds of RHEL, including
>>>CentOS and Scientific Linux (which have different policies about
>>>add-on tools). So I urge you not to go there: if you need a few
>>>packages modified, it should be straightforward to use "mock" to build
>>>packages, add a yum repository at OS installation time, and pull the
>>>relevant packages from your personal repository. This approach is very
>>>common and can work very well. I use it to publish samba 4.1.x with
>>>full domain controller features activated for RHEL 6 based operating
>>>systems.
>>>_______________________________________________
>>>CentOS-devel mailing list
>>>CentOS-devel at centos.org
>>>http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos-devel
>>>
>>>
>> Hi, Nico & Stephen:
>> Thanks for your reply. It is really a daunting work to build the whole thing.
>> Actually, what I need to modify are linux kernel and several tools,  like e2fsprogs,
>> for example. After build my personal packages, how to add a yum repository
>> at OS installation time? BTW, when installing the OS, how can I format  disk with
>> my personal tools?
>
>I think this should  be in the "users" discussion list, as it's not so
>much for developing CentOS as it is sys-admin configuration
>information. But that's just me.
>
>The easy way to do this is to use kickstart and use '%pre' statements
>to download as needed and apply your personal tools. That way, you
>don't need to burn a new DVD image. You can just pre-set the
>partitioning. I've done this with great success since...... Red Hat
>5.2. Not RHEL or CentOS 5.2, but Red Hat 5.2 in. Oh, Oh, my, Back in
>1999, when I used it to redeploy operating systems on hardware with 2
>disks, by freeing up he second disk, installing the new OS there,
>rebooting with it, and pushing the OS back to the first disk.
>
>You can do a *lot* of non-anaconda supported work with %pre, %post,
>and %post --nochroot operations in kickstart. This not only includes
>activating an additional yum repository, but even installing third
>party software that is not available via yum, or running tools like
>"chef" or "cfengine" to complete local configurations. As long as your
>packages don't conflict with the CentOS base installation, you can do
>the yum setup and your own  package deployments after the base install
>is done.
>
>If you need a different kernel for hardware support, that takes more
>work. Will you need that?

Hi, Nico:
Thanks for your advice. I've implemented a filesystem based on ext3 fs. 
In order to test the performance of this fs as root fs, I have to install a 
particular kernel and mkfs tools to serveral PC. Your advice is extremely helpful, 
thanks again.

--------------
Rock Lee


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