;;; GNU Guix --- Functional package management for GNU ;;; Copyright © 2013 Ludovic Courtès ;;; Copyright © 2015, 2016 Efraim Flashner ;;; ;;; This file is part of GNU Guix. ;;; ;;; GNU Guix is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it ;;; under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by ;;; the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at ;;; your option) any later version. ;;; ;;; GNU Guix is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but ;;; WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of ;;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the ;;; GNU General Public License for more details. ;;; ;;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License ;;; along with GNU Guix. If not, see . (define-module (gnu packages freeipmi) #:use-module (guix packages) #:use-module (guix licenses) #:use-module (guix download) #:use-module (guix build-system gnu) #:use-module (gnu packages readline) #:use-module (gnu packages gnupg)) (define-public freeipmi (package (name "freeipmi") (version "1.5.5") (source (origin (method url-fetch) (uri (string-append "mirror://gnu/freeipmi/freeipmi-" version ".tar.gz")) (sha256 (base32 "0lzzvhzbdl1cxin4xz3lirqxsjwmjr5ac0qr4g21cqsv2j6vj85f")))) (build-system gnu-build-system) (inputs `(("readline" ,readline) ("libgcrypt" ,libgcrypt))) (home-page "https://www.gnu.org/software/freeipmi/") (synopsis "Platform management, including sensor and power monitoring") (description "GNU FreeIPMI is a collection of in-band and out-of-band IPMI software in accordance with the IPMI v1.5/2.0 specification. These programs provide a set of interfaces for platform management. Common functionality includes sensor monitoring, system event monitoring, power control and serial-over-LAN.") (license gpl3+))) >root/gnu/image.scm
AgeCommit message (Expand)Author
2020-06-24image: Move hurd image definition to a dedicated file....This moves hurd-disk-image to a dedicated file. It also defines a default operating-system so that the image can be built standalone. * gnu/system/images/hurd.scm: New file, * gnu/local.mk (GNU_SYSTEM_MODULES): add it, * gnu/system/image.scm (root-offset, root-label): Export it, (hurd-disk-image): remove it as this is now defined in the new, Hurd dedicated file above, (find-image): adapt to avoid loop dependency. Mathieu Othacehe
2020-06-13image: Add 'target' support....* gnu/image.scm (<image>)[target]: New field, (image-target): new public method. * gnu/system/image.scm (hurd-disk-image): Set "i586-pc-gnu" as image 'target' field, (maybe-with-target): new procedure, (system-image): honor image 'target' field using the above procedure. Mathieu Othacehe
2020-05-26image: Add partition file-system options support....* gnu/image.scm (<partition>)[file-system-options]: New field, (partition-file-system-options): new exported procedure. * gnu/system/image.scm (partition->gexp): Adapt accordingly. * gnu/build/image.scm (sexp->partition): Also adapt accordingly, (make-ext-image): and pass file-system options to mke2fs. Mathieu Othacehe
2020-05-26image: Set offset default to zero....* gnu/image.scm (<partition>)[offset]: Set to zero by default. * gnu/system/image.scm (system-disk-image): Adapt accordingly. Mathieu Othacehe
2020-05-26image: Add partition offset support....* gnu/image.scm (partition-offset): New procedure, (<partition>)[offset]: new field. * gnu/system/image.scm (system-disk-image): Apply the partition offset. Mathieu Othacehe
2020-05-05image: Add a new API....Raw disk-images and ISO9660 images are created in a Qemu virtual machine. This is quite fragile, very slow, and almost unusable without KVM. For all these reasons, add support for host image generation. This implies the use new image generation mechanisms. - Raw disk images: images of partitions are created using tools such as mke2fs and mkdosfs depending on the partition file-system type. The partition images are then assembled into a final image using genimage. - ISO9660 images: the ISO root directory is populated within the store. GNU xorriso is then called on that directory, in the exact same way as this is done in (gnu build vm) module. Those mechanisms are built upon the new (gnu image) module. * gnu/image.scm: New file. * gnu/system/image.scm: New file. * gnu/build/image: New file. * gnu/local.mk: Add them. * gnu/system/vm.scm (system-disk-image): Rename to system-disk-image-in-vm. * gnu/ci.scm (qemu-jobs): Adapt to new API. * gnu/tests/install.scm (run-install): Ditto. * guix/scripts/system.scm (system-derivation-for-action): Ditto. Mathieu Othacehe