calamares/modules: update fstab.conf to fix btrfs flags; also refresh bootloader.conf and displaymanager.conf

This commit is contained in:
Silvan Calarco 2023-03-22 10:52:42 +01:00
parent e7fb431500
commit 5e55ac623a
3 changed files with 174 additions and 17 deletions

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@ -1,6 +1,16 @@
# SPDX-FileCopyrightText: no
# SPDX-License-Identifier: CC0-1.0
#
# Bootloader configuration. The bootloader is installed to allow
# the system to start (and pick one of the installed operating
# systems to run).
#
# Take note that Debian-derivatives that use unmodified GRUB EFI packages
# should specifically set *efiBootloaderId* to "debian" because that is
# hard-coded in `grubx64.efi`.
---
# Define which bootloader you want to use for EFI installations
# Possible options are 'grub' and 'systemd-boot'.
# Possible options are 'grub', 'sh-shim' and 'systemd-boot'.
efiBootLoader: "grub"
# systemd-boot configuration files settings, set kernel and initramfs file names
@ -9,19 +19,57 @@ kernel: "/vmlinuz"
img: "/initramfs.img"
fallback: "/initramfs-failsafe.img"
timeout: "10"
# Optionally set the menu entry name and kernel name to use in systemd-boot.
# If not specified here, these settings will be taken from branding.desc.
#
# bootloaderEntryName: "Generic GNU/Linux"
# kernelLine: ", with Stable-Kernel"
# fallbackKernelLine: ", with Stable-Kernel (fallback initramfs)"
# GRUB 2 binary names and boot directory
# Some distributions (e.g. Fedora) use grub2-* (resp. /boot/grub2/) names.
# These names are also used when using sb-shim, since that needs some
# GRUB functionality (notably grub-probe) to work. As needed, you may use
# complete paths like `/usr/bin/efibootmgr` for the executables.
#
grubInstall: "grub-install"
grubMkconfig: "grub-mkconfig"
grubCfg: "/boot/grub/grub.cfg"
# Optionally set the --bootloader-id to use for EFI. If not set, this defaults
# to the bootloaderEntryName from branding.desc with problematic characters
# replaced. If an efiBootloaderId is specified here, it is taken to already be a
# valid directory name, so no such postprocessing is done in this case.
grubProbe: "grub-probe"
efiBootMgr: "efibootmgr"
# Optionally set the bootloader ID to use for EFI. This is passed to
# grub-install --bootloader-id.
#
# If not set here, the value from bootloaderEntryName from branding.desc
# is used, with problematic characters (space and slash) replaced.
#
# The ID is also used as a directory name within the EFI environment,
# and the bootloader is copied from /boot/efi/EFI/<dirname>/ . When
# setting the option here, keep in mind that the name is sanitized
# (problematic characters, see above, are replaced).
#
# There are some special words possible at the end of *efiBootloaderId*:
# @@SERIAL@@ can be used to obtain a uniquely-numbered suffix
# that is added to the Id (yielding, e.g., `dirname1` or `dirname72`)
# @@RANDOM@@ can be used to obtain a unique 4-digit hex suffix
# @@PHRASE@@ can be used to obtain a unique 1-to-3-word suffix
# from a dictionary of space-themed words
# These words must be at the **end** of the *efiBootloaderId* value.
# There must also be at most one of them. If there is none, no suffix-
# processing is done and the *efiBootloaderId* is used unchanged.
#
# NOTE: Debian derivatives that use the unmodified Debian GRUB EFI
# packages may need to set this to "debian" because that is
# hard-coded in `grubx64.efi`.
#
# efiBootloaderId: "dirname"
# Optionally install a copy of the GRUB EFI bootloader as the EFI
# fallback loader (either bootia32.efi or bootx64.efi depending on
# the system). This may be needed on certain systems (Intel DH87MC
# seems to be the only one). If you set this to false, take care
# to add another module to optionally install the fallback on those
# boards that need it.
installEFIFallback: true

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@ -1,7 +1,20 @@
# SPDX-FileCopyrightText: no
# SPDX-License-Identifier: CC0-1.0
#
# Configure one or more display managers (e.g. SDDM)
# with a "best effort" approach.
#
# This module also sets up autologin, if the feature is enabled in
# globalstorage (where it would come from the users page).
---
#The DM module attempts to set up all the DMs found in this list, in that precise order.
#It also sets up autologin, if the feature is enabled in globalstorage.
#The displaymanagers list can also be set in globalstorage, and in that case it overrides anything set up here.
# The DM module attempts to set up all the DMs found in this list, in the
# precise order listed. The displaymanagers list can also be set in
# globalstorage, and in that case it overrides the setting here.
#
# If *sysconfigSetup* is set to *true* (see below, only relevant for
# openSUSE derivatives) then this list is ignored and only sysconfig
# is attempted. You can also list "sysconfig" in this list instead.
#
displaymanagers:
- slim
- sddm
@ -10,8 +23,27 @@ displaymanagers:
- mdm
- lxdm
- kdm
- greetd
# Enable the following settings to force a desktop environment
# in your displaymanager configuration file. This will attempt
# to configure the given DE (without checking if it is installed).
# The DM configuration for each potential DM may **or may not**
# support configuring a default DE, so the keys are mandatory
# but their interpretation is up to the DM configuration.
#
# Subkeys of *defaultDesktopEnvironment* are (all mandatory):
# - *executable* a full path to an executable
# - *desktopFile* a .desktop filename
#
# If this is **not** set, then Calamares will look for installed
# DE's and pick the first one it finds that is actually installed.
#
# If this **is** set, and the *executable* key doesn't point to
# an installed file, then the .desktop file's TryExec key is
# used instead.
#
#Enable the following settings to force a desktop environment in your displaymanager configuration file:
#defaultDesktopEnvironment:
# executable: "startkde"
# desktopFile: "plasma"
@ -21,6 +53,10 @@ displaymanagers:
#packages, and best left to them. Therefore, it is disabled by default.
basicSetup: false
#If true, setup autologin for openSUSE. This only makes sense on openSUSE
#derivatives or other systems where /etc/sysconfig/displaymanager exists.
# If true, setup autologin for openSUSE. This only makes sense on openSUSE
# derivatives or other systems where /etc/sysconfig/displaymanager exists.
#
# The preferred way to pick sysconfig is to just list it in the
# *displaymanagers* list (as the only one).
#
sysconfigSetup: false

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@ -1,13 +1,86 @@
# SPDX-FileCopyrightText: no
# SPDX-License-Identifier: CC0-1.0
#
# Creates /etc/fstab and /etc/crypttab in the target system.
# Also creates mount points for all the filesystems.
#
# When creating fstab entries for a filesystem, this module
# uses the options for the filesystem type to write to the
# options field of the file.
---
# Mount options to use for all filesystems. If a specific filesystem
# is listed here, use those options, otherwise use the *default*
# options from this mapping.
#
# With kernels 5.15 and newer be cautious of adding the option space_cache
# to the btrfs mount options. The default in 5.15 changed to space_cache=v2.
# If space_cache or space_cache=v1 are specified, it may fail to remount.
#
# btrfs_swap options are used when a swapfile is chosen with a btrfs root
# the options are applied to the subvolume which holds the swap partition
#
# The settings shown here apply only the btrfs defaults; these
# are generally the right ones. Commented-out lines show other
# options wich **might** be applicable for specific situations.
mountOptions:
default: defaults,noatime
btrfs: defaults,noatime,space_cache,autodefrag
# btrfs: defaults,noatime,autodefrag,compress=zstd
btrfs: defaults
# btrfs_swap: defaults,noatime
btrfs_swap: defaults
# Mount options to use for the EFI System Partition. If not defined, the
# *mountOptions* for *vfat* are used, or if that is not set either,
# *default* from *mountOptions*.
efiMountOptions: umask=0077
# If a filesystem is on an SSD, add the following options. If a specific
# filesystem is listed here, use those options, otherwise no additional
# options are set (i.e. there is no *default* like in *mountOptions*).
#
# This example configuration applies the *discard* option to most
# common filesystems on an SSD. This may not be the right option
# for your distribution. If you use a systemd timer to trim the
# SSD, it may interfere with the *discard* option. Opinions vary
# as to whether *discard* is worth the effort -- it depends on
# the usage pattern of the disk as well.
#
# ssdExtraMountOptions:
# ext4: discard
# jfs: discard
# xfs: discard
# swap: discard
# btrfs: discard,compress=lzo
#
# The standard configuration applies asynchronous discard support and ssd optimizations to btrfs
# and does nothing for other filesystems.
ssdExtraMountOptions:
ext4: discard
jfs: discard
xfs: discard
swap: discard
btrfs: discard,compress=lzo
btrfs: discard=async,ssd
# Additional options added to each line in /etc/crypttab
crypttabOptions: luks
# For Debian and Debian-based distributions, change the above line to:
# crypttabOptions: luks,keyscript=/bin/cat
# Options for handling /tmp in /etc/fstab
# Currently default (required) and ssd are supported
# The corresponding string can contain the following variables:
# tmpfs: true or tmpfs: false to either mount /tmp as tmpfs or not
# options: "<mount options>"
#
# Example:
#tmpOptions:
# default:
# tmpfs: false
# options: ""
# ssd:
# tmpfs: true
# options: "defaults,noatime,mode=1777"
#
tmpOptions:
default:
tmpfs: false
options: ""
ssd:
tmpfs: true
options: "defaults,noatime,mode=1777"