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I added this as a squashfs module to the bonus/ subdirectory for now,
so people can copy it into the USB stick's optional/ or addons/ directory.
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This should allow usage of external storage devices like SD cards,
whose partition naming conventions are different from generic USB devices.
E.g. /dev/mmcblk0p1 is the first partition of /dev/mmcblk0 (note the 'p').
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This should allow usage of external storage devices like SD cards,
whose partition naming conventions are different from generic USB devices.
E.g. /dev/mmcblk0p1 is the first partition of /dev/mmcblk0 (note the 'p').
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The '-m' parameter of the 'make_slackware_live.sh' script allows you
to add more packages to the Live ISO without modifying any of the script's
"SEQ_*" package sequence variables.
However, the script would prepend "pkglist:" to the argument value, which
is redundant since 'pkglist' is the default anyway.
By removing this prepend string we can now allow a syntax like this:
"-m local:foo" to add a series of packages in the subdirectory 'foo'
of the 'local' (or 'local64') directory more easily.
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Several template vars were added to liveinit.tpl but I had forgotten
to also incorporate those in the upslak.sh script.
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The script will now only fail if you have zero modules in your tree.
I presume (!) that this corner case will never occur. In any case, I will
not support it.
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That will cause kdesu to ask for the 'live' password instead of the
'root' password.
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Minor version bump in order to release a new Plasma5 Live ISO.
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Main highlight is that PXE booting is working again.
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Note that UEFI PXE-boot is not yet working, I do not know why.
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The live init script creates a /etc/fastboot file to prevent any
file system check on boot. This is cleaner than hacking rc.S and failing.
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- virtuoso-ose is no longer part of Slackware.
- akonadi backend to be used is now called SQLITE instead of SQLITE3
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I added ed, bc, smartmontools because they are small and someone needed it.
The xf86-input-libinput was added to fix the TrackPoint with recent versions
of the X server.
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The fairly large version bump is warranted because this is the first
release to support zstd compression. The resulting ISO will boot to
a usable desktop environment almost twice as fast as previous releases
of liveslak. THe runtime behaviour will also be a lot snappier.
This should make a lot of people happy.
Note that I have to keep the XFCE ISO xz-compressed to keep its size
below 703 MB. The other ISOs will use zstd compression, adding roughly
10% to the ISO size but speeding up the Live OS with 60% or more.
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Added a new parameter to 'make_slackware_live.sh' script:
-l <localization>
For example, create a liveslak ISO with dutch as the default language
instead of US english:
# ./make_slackware_live.sh -l nl
Using this parameter you can onfigure a different default language
for the resulting ISO image. The default localization if you do not
supply this parameter remains "us" as before.
The boot menu offers a selection of other languages/localizations
to pick from (currently you can select any of 'be br da gb de de_ch es
fr fr_ch it ja nl pt ru se us') but now you can create your own brand
of liveslak ISO with your own language as the default.
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Variables defined on the boot commandline have preference over
any variable set in the .cfg file.
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With the goal to make the 'min' module smaller so that potentially
we can compress it with zstd instead of xz and thus minimize the size
increase of the resulting squashfs module (~10%).
Quick benchmark with just the 'min' module zstd-compressed and the rest
xz-compressed shows more than 10% reduction in the boot-up time of the
XFCE Live OS. Unfortunately, this will add 20 MB to the ISO size which
will have to come from somewhere in order to keep the ISO size below
703 MB.
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The new zstd compression support for squashfs modules allows for a much
snappier system because zstd decompression is 5 times faster than that of
xz (see https://sourceforge.net/p/squashfs/mailman/message/35989805/), but
at the expense of ISO sizes that are at least 10% bigger. The latter means
that we have to do some more pruning of the XFCE and PLASMA5 images to make
these fit in a CDROM and DVD image, respectively.
Here are some initial benchmarks with PLASMA5 Live ISO images,
booting in QEMU (times are in minutes:seconds):
Stage ZSTD XZ
---------------------------------------
Boot to runlevel 4 start 0:39 0:50
SDDM Login Manager visible 0:55 1:26
Plasma5 desktop ready 1:42 3:17
I also tested two of the bigger applications, measuring the time between
entering the command in a terminal and having a usable application window:
Stage ZSTD XZ
----------------------------------------
LO Writer window visible 0:17 0:34
Chromium window visible 0:09 0:14
It is obvious that a big Desktop Environment like Plasma5 where a lot of
binaries have to be loaded from their squashfs modules benefits a lot
from zstd, because after booting, the Plasma5 DE is available in
roughly 53% of the time it takes when using xz compression.
Zstd support in squashfs was added to Linux kernel 4.14. That means,
no customimzation of Slackware is required to make the Live OS work from
zstd-compressed squashfs modules.
In order to *create* these zstd-compressed squashfs modules, you will need
some custom packages at the moment, until they get added to Slackware-current:
zstd and a rebuild squashfs-tools to add the lacking zstd support to
mksqhashfs/unsquashfs.
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The old use of 'installpkg' prevented upgrading an already present package
while 'upgradepkg --install-new' allows for all options.
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Also, split 'x_base' into 'noxbase' and 'x_base' so that in future
we can create a 'rescue' option using just 'min' and 'noxbase'.
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These wallpapers don't really add value to the ISO and when using the
new supported compressor 'zstd' we need to trim the ISO size down to
the max size of a DVD.
The zstd compression creates ISOs that are ~10% larger than when using xz.
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This will provide compression ratios approaching those of xz,
while achieving decompression rations similar to lzo (5 times faster
than xz).
We will need to have a zstd package in Slackware first, and then
rebuild squashfs-tools to add zstd support.
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