1Using the initial RAM disk (initrd) 2=================================== 3 4Written 1996,2000 by Werner Almesberger <werner.almesberger@epfl.ch> and 5 Hans Lermen <lermen@fgan.de> 6 7 8initrd provides the capability to load a RAM disk by the boot loader. 9This RAM disk can then be mounted as the root file system and programs 10can be run from it. Afterwards, a new root file system can be mounted 11from a different device. The previous root (from initrd) is then moved 12to a directory and can be subsequently unmounted. 13 14initrd is mainly designed to allow system startup to occur in two phases, 15where the kernel comes up with a minimum set of compiled-in drivers, and 16where additional modules are loaded from initrd. 17 18This document gives a brief overview of the use of initrd. A more detailed 19discussion of the boot process can be found in [1]. 20 21 22Operation 23--------- 24 25When using initrd, the system typically boots as follows: 26 27 1) the boot loader loads the kernel and the initial RAM disk 28 2) the kernel converts initrd into a "normal" RAM disk and 29 frees the memory used by initrd 30 3) initrd is mounted read-write as root 31 4) /linuxrc is executed (this can be any valid executable, including 32 shell scripts; it is run with uid 0 and can do basically everything 33 init can do) 34 5) linuxrc mounts the "real" root file system 35 6) linuxrc places the root file system at the root directory using the 36 pivot_root system call 37 7) the usual boot sequence (e.g. invocation of /sbin/init) is performed 38 on the root file system 39 8) the initrd file system is removed 40 41Note that changing the root directory does not involve unmounting it. 42It is therefore possible to leave processes running on initrd during that 43procedure. Also note that file systems mounted under initrd continue to 44be accessible. 45 46 47Boot command-line options 48------------------------- 49 50initrd adds the following new options: 51 52 initrd=<path> (e.g. LOADLIN) 53 54 Loads the specified file as the initial RAM disk. When using LILO, you 55 have to specify the RAM disk image file in /etc/lilo.conf, using the 56 INITRD configuration variable. 57 58 noinitrd 59 60 initrd data is preserved but it is not converted to a RAM disk and 61 the "normal" root file system is mounted. initrd data can be read 62 from /dev/initrd. Note that the data in initrd can have any structure 63 in this case and doesn't necessarily have to be a file system image. 64 This option is used mainly for debugging. 65 66 Note: /dev/initrd is read-only and it can only be used once. As soon 67 as the last process has closed it, all data is freed and /dev/initrd 68 can't be opened anymore. 69 70 root=/dev/ram0 (without devfs) 71 root=/dev/rd/0 (with devfs) 72 73 initrd is mounted as root, and the normal boot procedure is followed, 74 with the RAM disk still mounted as root. 75 76 77Installation 78------------ 79 80First, a directory for the initrd file system has to be created on the 81"normal" root file system, e.g. 82 83# mkdir /initrd 84 85The name is not relevant. More details can be found on the pivot_root(2) 86man page. 87 88If the root file system is created during the boot procedure (i.e. if 89you're building an install floppy), the root file system creation 90procedure should create the /initrd directory. 91 92If initrd will not be mounted in some cases, its content is still 93accessible if the following device has been created (note that this 94does not work if using devfs): 95 96# mknod /dev/initrd b 1 250 97# chmod 400 /dev/initrd 98 99Second, the kernel has to be compiled with RAM disk support and with 100support for the initial RAM disk enabled. Also, at least all components 101needed to execute programs from initrd (e.g. executable format and file 102system) must be compiled into the kernel. 103 104Third, you have to create the RAM disk image. This is done by creating a 105file system on a block device, copying files to it as needed, and then 106copying the content of the block device to the initrd file. With recent 107kernels, at least three types of devices are suitable for that: 108 109 - a floppy disk (works everywhere but it's painfully slow) 110 - a RAM disk (fast, but allocates physical memory) 111 - a loopback device (the most elegant solution) 112 113We'll describe the loopback device method: 114 115 1) make sure loopback block devices are configured into the kernel 116 2) create an empty file system of the appropriate size, e.g. 117 # dd if=/dev/zero of=initrd bs=300k count=1 118 # mke2fs -F -m0 -b 1024 initrd 119 (if space is critical, you may want to use the Minix FS instead of Ext2) 120 (Note that due to a problem elsewhere in the kernel, you _must_ use a 121 1024-byte blocksize when creating your file system. If any other 122 value is used, the kernel will be unable to mount the initrd at boot 123 time, causing a kernel panic.) 124 3) mount the file system, e.g. 125 # mount -t ext2 -o loop initrd /mnt 126 4) create the console device (not necessary if using devfs, but it can't 127 hurt to do it anyway): 128 # mkdir /mnt/dev 129 # mknod /mnt/dev/console c 5 1 130 5) copy all the files that are needed to properly use the initrd 131 environment. Don't forget the most important file, /linuxrc 132 Note that /linuxrc's permissions must include "x" (execute). 133 6) correct operation the initrd environment can frequently be tested 134 even without rebooting with the command 135 # chroot /mnt /linuxrc 136 This is of course limited to initrds that do not interfere with the 137 general system state (e.g. by reconfiguring network interfaces, 138 overwriting mounted devices, trying to start already running demons, 139 etc. Note however that it is usually possible to use pivot_root in 140 such a chroot'ed initrd environment.) 141 7) unmount the file system 142 # umount /mnt 143 8) the initrd is now in the file "initrd". Optionally, it can now be 144 compressed 145 # gzip -9 initrd 146 147For experimenting with initrd, you may want to take a rescue floppy and 148only add a symbolic link from /linuxrc to /bin/sh. Alternatively, you 149can try the experimental newlib environment [2] to create a small 150initrd. 151 152Finally, you have to boot the kernel and load initrd. Almost all Linux 153boot loaders support initrd. Since the boot process is still compatible 154with an older mechanism, the following boot command line parameters 155have to be given: 156 157 root=/dev/ram0 init=/linuxrc rw 158 159if not using devfs, or 160 161 root=/dev/rd/0 init=/linuxrc rw 162 163if using devfs. (rw is only necessary if writing to the initrd file 164system.) 165 166With LOADLIN, you simply execute 167 168 LOADLIN <kernel> initrd=<disk_image> 169e.g. LOADLIN C:\LINUX\BZIMAGE initrd=C:\LINUX\INITRD.GZ root=/dev/ram0 170 init=/linuxrc rw 171 172With LILO, you add the option INITRD=<path> to either the global section 173or to the section of the respective kernel in /etc/lilo.conf, and pass 174the options using APPEND, e.g. 175 176 image = /bzImage 177 initrd = /boot/initrd.gz 178 append = "root=/dev/ram0 init=/linuxrc rw" 179 180and run /sbin/lilo 181 182For other boot loaders, please refer to the respective documentation. 183 184Now you can boot and enjoy using initrd. 185 186 187Changing the root device 188------------------------ 189 190When finished with its duties, linuxrc typically changes the root device 191and proceeds with starting the Linux system on the "real" root device. 192 193The procedure involves the following steps: 194 - mounting the new root file system 195 - turning it into the root file system 196 - removing all accesses to the old (initrd) root file system 197 - unmounting the initrd file system and de-allocating the RAM disk 198 199Mounting the new root file system is easy: it just needs to be mounted on 200a directory under the current root. Example: 201 202# mkdir /new-root 203# mount -o ro /dev/hda1 /new-root 204 205The root change is accomplished with the pivot_root system call, which 206is also available via the pivot_root utility (see pivot_root(8) man 207page; pivot_root is distributed with util-linux version 2.10h or higher 208[3]). pivot_root moves the current root to a directory under the new 209root, and puts the new root at its place. The directory for the old root 210must exist before calling pivot_root. Example: 211 212# cd /new-root 213# mkdir initrd 214# pivot_root . initrd 215 216Now, the linuxrc process may still access the old root via its 217executable, shared libraries, standard input/output/error, and its 218current root directory. All these references are dropped by the 219following command: 220 221# exec chroot . what-follows <dev/console >dev/console 2>&1 222 223Where what-follows is a program under the new root, e.g. /sbin/init 224If the new root file system will be used with devfs and has no valid 225/dev directory, devfs must be mounted before invoking chroot in order to 226provide /dev/console. 227 228Note: implementation details of pivot_root may change with time. In order 229to ensure compatibility, the following points should be observed: 230 231 - before calling pivot_root, the current directory of the invoking 232 process should point to the new root directory 233 - use . as the first argument, and the _relative_ path of the directory 234 for the old root as the second argument 235 - a chroot program must be available under the old and the new root 236 - chroot to the new root afterwards 237 - use relative paths for dev/console in the exec command 238 239Now, the initrd can be unmounted and the memory allocated by the RAM 240disk can be freed: 241 242# umount /initrd 243# blockdev --flushbufs /dev/ram0 # /dev/rd/0 if using devfs 244 245It is also possible to use initrd with an NFS-mounted root, see the 246pivot_root(8) man page for details. 247 248Note: if linuxrc or any program exec'ed from it terminates for some 249reason, the old change_root mechanism is invoked (see section "Obsolete 250root change mechanism"). 251 252 253Usage scenarios 254--------------- 255 256The main motivation for implementing initrd was to allow for modular 257kernel configuration at system installation. The procedure would work 258as follows: 259 260 1) system boots from floppy or other media with a minimal kernel 261 (e.g. support for RAM disks, initrd, a.out, and the Ext2 FS) and 262 loads initrd 263 2) /linuxrc determines what is needed to (1) mount the "real" root FS 264 (i.e. device type, device drivers, file system) and (2) the 265 distribution media (e.g. CD-ROM, network, tape, ...). This can be 266 done by asking the user, by auto-probing, or by using a hybrid 267 approach. 268 3) /linuxrc loads the necessary kernel modules 269 4) /linuxrc creates and populates the root file system (this doesn't 270 have to be a very usable system yet) 271 5) /linuxrc invokes pivot_root to change the root file system and 272 execs - via chroot - a program that continues the installation 273 6) the boot loader is installed 274 7) the boot loader is configured to load an initrd with the set of 275 modules that was used to bring up the system (e.g. /initrd can be 276 modified, then unmounted, and finally, the image is written from 277 /dev/ram0 or /dev/rd/0 to a file) 278 8) now the system is bootable and additional installation tasks can be 279 performed 280 281The key role of initrd here is to re-use the configuration data during 282normal system operation without requiring the use of a bloated "generic" 283kernel or re-compiling or re-linking the kernel. 284 285A second scenario is for installations where Linux runs on systems with 286different hardware configurations in a single administrative domain. In 287such cases, it is desirable to generate only a small set of kernels 288(ideally only one) and to keep the system-specific part of configuration 289information as small as possible. In this case, a common initrd could be 290generated with all the necessary modules. Then, only /linuxrc or a file 291read by it would have to be different. 292 293A third scenario are more convenient recovery disks, because information 294like the location of the root FS partition doesn't have to be provided at 295boot time, but the system loaded from initrd can invoke a user-friendly 296dialog and it can also perform some sanity checks (or even some form of 297auto-detection). 298 299Last not least, CD-ROM distributors may use it for better installation 300from CD, e.g. by using a boot floppy and bootstrapping a bigger RAM disk 301via initrd from CD; or by booting via a loader like LOADLIN or directly 302from the CD-ROM, and loading the RAM disk from CD without need of 303floppies. 304 305 306Obsolete root change mechanism 307------------------------------ 308 309The following mechanism was used before the introduction of pivot_root. 310Current kernels still support it, but you should _not_ rely on its 311continued availability. 312 313It works by mounting the "real" root device (i.e. the one set with rdev 314in the kernel image or with root=... at the boot command line) as the 315root file system when linuxrc exits. The initrd file system is then 316unmounted, or, if it is still busy, moved to a directory /initrd, if 317such a directory exists on the new root file system. 318 319In order to use this mechanism, you do not have to specify the boot 320command options root, init, or rw. (If specified, they will affect 321the real root file system, not the initrd environment.) 322 323If /proc is mounted, the "real" root device can be changed from within 324linuxrc by writing the number of the new root FS device to the special 325file /proc/sys/kernel/real-root-dev, e.g. 326 327 # echo 0x301 >/proc/sys/kernel/real-root-dev 328 329Note that the mechanism is incompatible with NFS and similar file 330systems. 331 332This old, deprecated mechanism is commonly called "change_root", while 333the new, supported mechanism is called "pivot_root". 334 335 336Resources 337--------- 338 339[1] Almesberger, Werner; "Booting Linux: The History and the Future" 340 ftp://icaftp.epfl.ch/pub/people/almesber/booting/bootinglinux-current.ps.gz 341[2] newlib package (experimental), with initrd example 342 ftp://icaftp.epfl.ch/pub/people/almesber/misc/newlib-linux/ 343[3] Brouwer, Andries; "util-linux: Miscellaneous utilities for Linux" 344 ftp://ftp.win.tue.nl/pub/linux-local/utils/util-linux/ 345