History log of /gem5/util/gem5img.py
Revision Date Author Comments
# 13776:ed8701a0d4e1 16-Mar-2019 Ryan Gambord <gambordr@oregonstate.edu>

util: changed shebang on gem5img.py to python2.7

Change-Id: Id1a2112ce940bf6721609e2637d925d35e5ded8a
Signed-off-by: Ryan Gambord <gambordr@oregonstate.edu>
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/c/public/gem5/+/17408
Reviewed-by: Jason Lowe-Power <jason@lowepower.com>
Maintainer: Jason Lowe-Power <jason@lowepower.com>


# 8265:7939dd0c4ff2 29-Apr-2011 Gabe Black <gblack@eecs.umich.edu>

Util: Replace mkblankimage.sh with the new gem5img.py.

This change replaces the mkblankimage.sh script, used for creating new disk
images, with a new gem5img.py script. The new version is written in python
instead of bash, takes its parameters from command line arguments instead of
prompting for them, and finds a free loopback device dynamically instead of
hardcoding /dev/loop1. The file system used is now optionally configurable,
and the blank image is filled by a "hole" left by lseek and write instead of
literally filling it with zeroes.

The functionality of the new script is broken into subcommands "init",
"mount", "umount", "new", "partition", and "format". "init" creates a new file
of the appropriate size, partitions it, and then formats the first (and only)
new parition. "mount" attaches a new loopback device to the first parition of
the image file and mounts it to the specified mount point. "umount" unmounts
the specified mount point and identifies and cleans up the underlying loopback
device. "new", "partition", and "format" are the individual stages of "init"
but broken out so they can be run individually. That's so an image can be
reinitialized in place if needed.

Two features of the original script are being dropped. The first is the
ability to specify a source directory to copy into the new file system. The
second is the ability to specify a list of commands to run which are expected
to (but not required to) update the permissions of the files in the new fs.
Both of these seem easy enough to do manually, especially given the "mount"
and "umount" commands, that removing them would meaningfully simplify the
script without making it less useful.