• jauntywundrkind a day ago

    Does seem to support cross-architecture image building, which is a feature that's kept me on Debian's multistrap and now mmdebstrap.

    I should give this a go!

    The README's reference page has some good write-ups et cetera! There's a good "re-introduction" on Lennart (creator of systemd, mkosi) site, from the current maintainer.

    https://github.com/systemd/mkosi?tab=readme-ov-file#referenc... https://0pointer.net/blog/a-re-introduction-to-mkosi-a-tool-...

    • NewJazz a day ago

      I've been meaning to try this other tool

      https://github.com/osbuild/bootc-image-builder

      • jordemort a day ago

        I've been having great success with this one at my day job. Being able to apply all the container workflows to VM images has been a boon.

      • deanputney a day ago

        Does this work for Raspberry Pi? Say for example I wanted to make an image that would auto-connect to my Tailscale network, or pre-install some software, would this be able to achieve that?

        • written-beyond 13 hours ago

          Use RPIOS [pi-gen](https://github.com/RPi-Distro/pi-gen), it's pretty versatile and stupid simple, I could not wrap my head around Yocto and Buildroot. Even set it up in CI so GitHub would build the image and id just get the final tar.gz file as an artifact.

          It's all just bash scripts and you can basically strip the entire image down. I had no window manager and no display server I was using DRM to show my UI.

          • sl-1 a day ago

            I use [pi-oven](https://github.com/keichi/pi-oven) for my raspberry images. Not perfect, but kind of works and removes a lot of hassle for the provisioning.

            Could not quickly find out from the project page an example on how to bake rpi images with mkosi, but the descriptions do point towards somewhat similar use case :shrug:

            • klysm 21 hours ago

              I've checked on this several times over the years, and I think the answer will probably be no for a long time, or forever. The RPi boot process is a bit arcane and specific. Systemd's philosophy seems to want to target the 95% use case, but maybe the sheer size of the RPi sphere will provide enough pressure.

              • ChocolateGod 14 hours ago

                If you install a UEFI bootloader on the Pi, I don't see why it couldn't work.

            • miladyincontrol a day ago

              Yeah, systemd's particleOS relies on it. Pretty neat stuff

              • klysm 21 hours ago

                I really wish this worked for raspberry pi

                • mring33621 a day ago

                  What's the use-case for this?

                  • af78 a day ago

                    It is used by the systemd team to test systemd on a bunch of distros.

                    https://github.com/systemd/systemd/blob/main/.github/workflo...

                    • mhitza a day ago

                      Most likely context I'm going to try it is in a systemd-nspawn context. Lightweight process namespace ("containers") closer to the native modern linux server runtime (systemd all the way).

                      • its-summertime a day ago

                        one image to deploy mostly without additional tooling on any systemd-based OS (which mounts the image and integrates the units from it), on a VM (just use it), or on bare metal (probably needs to be built on a full image but still can just use it assuming that is the case).

                      • pmarreck a day ago

                        is this another case of "something that nix already definitively solves, but for the rest of us"?

                        • bsammon a day ago

                          Or "something that nix already solve, but with documentation"

                          • bketelsen a day ago

                            Normally I'd nod and smile at the nix documentation joke, but mkosi's documentation is the man pages, or the man pages.

                            • jraph a day ago

                              It seems quite well written and easy to follow.