Difference between revisions of "JIGDO - create SME Server ISOs"

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If you have read this far, you may be confused now, asking yourself what jigdo does and doesn't do. :-) It seems that the jigdo concept is a bit difficult to grasp at first. If you're still interested, have a look at the respective section of the HOWTO and at the Examples section of the jigdo-file manual.
 
If you have read this far, you may be confused now, asking yourself what jigdo does and doesn't do. :-) It seems that the jigdo concept is a bit difficult to grasp at first. If you're still interested, have a look at the respective section of the HOWTO and at the Examples section of the jigdo-file manual.
 
====Installing jigdo on CentOS and RHEL====
 
 
You need to download and install the correct RPM file from http://dag.wieers.com/rpm/packages/jigdo/ . The choices currently available are for RHEL/CentOS 1 through 5 (they're the ones labelled eg jigdo-0.7.3-1.el5.rf.i386.rpm where the text in bold indicates Enterprise Linux 5), Red Hat 9, and Fedora 1 through 3. There are also source RPMs available.
 
 
Download the file first, and then use yum from the command line so install it running either as the root user, or using the sudo command:
 
 
Downloading files for CentOs 5 workstation:
 
wget http://dag.wieers.com/rpm/packages/jigdo/jigdo-0.7.3-1.el5.rf.i386.rpm
 
yum install jigdo-0.7.3-1.el5.rf.i386.rpm
 
[Note: download the el4 files for CentOs 4 (SME7) if you do the job on this platform...]
 
ok
 
 
===GET SME 8===
 
 
Create JIGDO directory and move latest ISO there as root:
 
 
[root@canopus JIGDO]# pwd
 
/home/chris/JIGDO
 
[root@canopus JIGDO]# ls
 
smeserver-8.0beta7-i386.iso
 
 
SME latest jigdo files are here:
 
http://distro.ibiblio.org/pub/linux/distributions/smeserver/releases/testing/8.0rc1/iso/i386/smeserver-8.0rc1-i386.jigdo
 
 
Lets create a mount point:
 
 
[root@canopus /]# cd mnt/
 
[root@canopus mnt]# ls
 
[root@canopus mnt]# mkdir iso
 
 
and mount
 
 
[chris@canopus JIGDO]$ mount -o loop smeserver-8.0beta7-i386.iso /mnt/iso
 
 
[root@canopus JIGDO]# jigdo-lite
 
Jigsaw Download "lite"
 
Copyright (C) 2001-2005  |  jigdo@
 
Richard Atterer          |  atterer.net
 
-----------------------------------------------------------------
 
 
To resume a half-finished download, enter name of .jigdo file. To start a new download, enter URL of .jigdo file. You can also enter several URLs/filenames, separated with spaces, or enumerate in {}, e.g. `http://server/cd-{1_NONUS,2,3}.jigdo'
 
 
Provide URL when requested:
 
http://distro.ibiblio.org/pub/linux/distributions/smeserver/releases/testing/8.0rc1/iso/i386/smeserver-8.0rc1-i386.jigdo
 
 
You can also enter a single digit from the list below to
 
select the respective entry for scanning:
 
 
1: /home/chris/JIGDO/smeserver-8.0beta7-i386.template
 
2: /home/chris/JIGDO/smeserver-8.0beta6-i386.template
 
3: mnt/iso
 
4: /mnt/iso
 
 
Files to scan:
 
 
Note working because jidgo file points to 8, not 8rc1.  Editing this file allows completion of ISO.
 
Should work for final release....
 

Revision as of 04:42, 22 January 2013

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This article is incomplete and is currently being added to, edited and verified, do not use


jigdo

Introduction

jigdo is a method of downloading CD and DVD images over the Internet (and other large files) and is used by Debian and Ubuntu when new releases are created. jigdo files contain a list of the files that need to be included in the new CD or DVD ISO image and you can get the files from local sources and over the Internet. This means when you want to create ISO images for updated versions of Debian, you only need to download the changed files. This saves both bandwidth and and time.

jigdo's approach is unique due to the way it identifies the small pieces that the large file consists of: For instance, if the file is a CD image, the individual files on the CD are contained somewhere within the image file. jigdo-file is capable of finding these files, so if copies of the individual files on the CD are stored separately on the server, jigdo-lite can be made to download these files one by one, and assemble the CD image on the fly on the user's computer. This scheme has several advantages:

  • The large image does not need to be stored on the server, instead only the many small files contained in the image. This works with CD images, DVD images (both ISO9660 and UDF format), uncompressed zip files, tar archives... jigdo-file is format independent.
  • In spite of the above, jigdo creates a bit-exact copy of the original image on the user's machine. (To achieve this, the directory data, boot block etc. of the image is stored in a special .template file which is distributed alongside the .jigdo file.)
  • There is full control over where jigdo-lite will download the individual parts. It is possible to define mirrors so users can choose their nearest mirror.
  • jigdo relies on standard HTTP/FTP, no support for special protocols like rsync, and no installation of special software is required on the mirrors.
  • jigdo-lite supports resuming aborted downloads, or continuing the download with another mirror if the current one proves slow.
  • It is possible to "upgrade" a CD image: If a new version of an image is released, jigdo-lite can download only the data that has changed, the remaining data is read from the outdated version.
  • It is possible to release modified versions: If someone distributes a CD image and you have made a few small modifications, e.g. added some files, then you only need to upload the data for your modifications to your webspace. All the data from the original CD image is still fetched from the original site.

If you have read this far, you may be confused now, asking yourself what jigdo does and doesn't do. :-) It seems that the jigdo concept is a bit difficult to grasp at first. If you're still interested, have a look at the respective section of the HOWTO and at the Examples section of the jigdo-file manual.