furtka/iso
Daniel Maksymilian Syrnicki fec962e3d2
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chore: release 26.5-alpha
Rolls the HTTPS handshake fix (#10) and the README realignment into a
tagged release. Also closes the 26.4 follow-up that the wizard footer
version was hand-pinned: webinstaller/app.py now resolves the version
via a Flask context processor (reads /opt/furtka/VERSION on the live
ISO, written by iso/build.sh from pyproject.toml at build time; falls
back to pyproject.toml in dev runs, then to "dev"). pyproject.toml and
the website version strings bumped in the same commit so every surface
reports 26.5-alpha consistently.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-04-20 11:52:36 +02:00
..
overlay fix(iso): muzzle archinstall sync_log_to_install_medium on Py 3.14 2026-04-16 15:17:19 +02:00
build.sh chore: release 26.5-alpha 2026-04-20 11:52:36 +02:00
README.md docs: add apps/ authoring guide + realign READMEs with 26.4-alpha 2026-04-20 11:39:48 +02:00

Live ISO build

Builds a bootable Arch-based live ISO that auto-starts the Flask webinstaller from ../webinstaller/ on boot. User plugs in a USB, boots, and the installer wizard comes up on http://proksi.local:5000 (or the raw IP shown on the console).

Runnable locally (below) or through Forgejo Actions — .forgejo/workflows/build-iso.yml builds on every push to main and on manual workflow_dispatch. The ISO lands as an artifact named furtka-iso, retained for 14 days. Feature branches don't trigger the ISO build; see memory/project_ci_branching for why.

Run a build locally

Needs a host with Docker. Disk space required: ~15 GB scratch during the build, ~1.5 GB for the final ISO.

./iso/build.sh

Output ISO ends up in iso/out/furtka-<date>-x86_64.iso. Around 310 min on a 4-core VM. First run is slower because it pulls archlinux:latest and all packages from upstream.

The script re-execs itself inside a privileged archlinux:latest container. That's so mkarchiso has root + loop-mount access without polluting the host — Ubuntu hosts don't ship archiso natively anyway.

What gets baked in

The build starts from Arch's stock releng profile (the same one used to build the official Arch ISO), then overlays our customizations from overlay/:

Overlay file Effect
overlay/packages.extra Appended to the package list. Adds python, python-flask, avahi, nss-mdns
overlay/profiledef.sh Appended to profiledef.sh. Renames the ISO to furtka-* with a dated version
overlay/airootfs/opt/furtka/ Directory where webinstaller/ is copied at build time
overlay/airootfs/etc/hostname Live-ISO hostname (proksi) so mDNS advertises the installer as proksi.local
overlay/airootfs/etc/issue Welcome banner on the TTY pointing users at http://proksi.local:5000
overlay/airootfs/usr/local/bin/furtka-update-issue Rewrites /etc/issue at runtime so the banner also shows the DHCP-assigned IP as a fallback URL
overlay/airootfs/etc/systemd/system/ furtka-webinstaller.service (Flask on :5000) + furtka-issue.service (runs the banner-updater on network-online), each symlinked into multi-user.target.wants/ to auto-start on boot

The systemd service runs flask --app app run --host 0.0.0.0 --port 5000 under /opt/furtka. The 0.0.0.0 binding is important — the Flask default is localhost-only, which wouldn't be reachable from another machine on the LAN.

mDNS is wired: avahi-daemon + nss-mdns come from packages.extra, the live ISO's hostname is proksi, and as soon as systemd-networkd-wait-online fires the installer is reachable at http://proksi.local:5000. The raw IP still shows on the console for fallback — some Windows clients need the Bonjour service for .local to resolve at all.

Test flow

  1. Build: ./iso/build.sh
  2. Copy the ISO to your Proxmox host's ISO storage (typically /var/lib/vz/template/iso/). Browser uploads of 1.5 GB truncate silently — prefer scp over the Proxmox WebUI.
  3. Create a VM with:
    • 2 vCPU, 4 GB RAM, 20 GB disk (empty)
    • BIOS: OVMF (UEFI), add EFI Disk on local-lvm. SeaBIOS fails to load ldlinux.c32 from our ISO; only the UEFI path works reliably.
    • Secure Boot disabled. Our GRUB isn't signed, so Secure Boot rejects it with Access Denied. Either boot into OVMF setup (Esc during boot) → Device Manager → Secure Boot Configuration → Attempt Secure Boot [ ] → F10 → reboot. Or remove the EFI Disk and re-add it with "Pre-Enroll keys" unchecked.
    • CD-ROM attached with the Furtka ISO
    • Boot order: CD before disk
    • Network: same bridge as your LAN, DHCP
  4. Start the VM. Wait ~30 s for boot.
  5. Find its IP in Proxmox's VM summary (or your router's DHCP table)
  6. Open http://<vm-ip>:5000 — the existing 3-screen wizard should be there

What you see after install + reboot

Once archinstall finishes and you click Reboot now, the VM comes up into the installed system. No more port :5000 — the wizard ISO is gone. Instead:

  • Console: agetty shows Furtka is ready. Open http://<hostname>.local … with the IP fallback underneath.
  • Browser at http://<hostname>.local (default http://furtka.local — the form's default hostname is furtka; only the live-installer ISO uses proksi): Caddy-served landing page with three live status tiles (uptime, Docker version, free disk) refreshed every 30 s by furtka-status.timer. Since 26.4-alpha, https://<hostname>.local is also served via Caddy's tls internal — trust rootCA.crt from /settings to clear browser warnings.
  • SSH: ssh <user>@<hostname>.local works; docker ps works without sudo because the user is in the docker group.

This is a demo shell — no Authentik, no app store yet. The landing page lives at /srv/furtka/www/, served by Caddy on :80 per /etc/caddy/Caddyfile. All of this is written into the target by webinstaller/app.py's _post_install_commands via archinstall's custom_commands.

Known rough edges

  • Disk space: the first time you build on a fresh host, the squashfs/xorriso steps need ~15 GB free. If the host's LVM-root is smaller, xorriso silently dies at the very end with "Image size exceeds free space on media".
  • Live-installer wizard is still HTTP-only. http://proksi.local:5000 during install has no TLS; the installed box gets Caddy + tls internal on :443 once it reboots (26.4-alpha), but bringing the same story to the wizard itself is a later milestone.
  • Boot USB could appear as an install target on bare metal. On a VM the ISO is a CD-ROM (filtered) and SATA is the only disk, so the picker only shows the install target. On bare metal with a USB stick, the USB is TYPE=disk and shows up alongside the real install drive; a user could in theory pick the USB they just booted from. Mitigating this needs detecting the boot media (via findmnt /run/archiso/bootmnt or similar) and filtering it out in webinstaller/drives.py.