FS#9902 - afterboot manpage feature
Attached to Project:
Release Engineering
Opened by Jules (Misfit138) - Saturday, 22 March 2008, 02:54 GMT
Last edited by Dave Reisner (falconindy) - Saturday, 30 July 2011, 20:42 GMT
Opened by Jules (Misfit138) - Saturday, 22 March 2008, 02:54 GMT
Last edited by Dave Reisner (falconindy) - Saturday, 30 July 2011, 20:42 GMT
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Details
Description: After first system boot following an install,
an 'afterboot' or perhaps 'firstboot' man page containing
either the beginner's guide would be a great advantage, as a
checklist and information resource, especially to a system
with a non-functional network. This is reminiscent of the
OpenBSD 'afterboot' man page. Being a text file, it would be
quite small, in line with the slim base system.
Additional info: I am willing to provide an edited version of the beginner's guide in a more readable format if need be. I recommend an edited version of the beginner's guide rather than the official install guide, as I have kept it maintained for the past year or so and will happily continue to maintain it. It contains quite exhaustive resources to assist in gaining a running system. |
This task depends upon
Closed by Dave Reisner (falconindy)
Saturday, 30 July 2011, 20:42 GMT
Reason for closing: None
Additional comments about closing: Old task with no activity. See the wiki.
Saturday, 30 July 2011, 20:42 GMT
Reason for closing: None
Additional comments about closing: Old task with no activity. See the wiki.
I still think scripting this conversion would be the way to go, so we could really easily update it off the wiki. I tried html2text on the page but the output needed some prettying up. Ideas?
Expanded fstab explanation
Expanded boot scripts explanation
Cut down wordy preamble
If you strongly prefer another method, please advise. :)
Jules
If there is interest in the script I'll have to clean up the handling of nested lists and some other stuff. Btw usage of ====== (subsubsubsection ?) is plain evil! And caused me to strip one =, which puts About DAEMONS on the same level as the other sections, which does look a bit wrong.
Depends: texinfo
yes, it would be easy to convert it to do pdf output as well ;)
Things that might break:
wiki2texi is not handling all wiki syntax, espacially it does not handle:
; desc: item
<small>
<strike>
<center>
<!--comments-->
and probably some others I didn't think of.
If these were used, conversion could break or the document could look strange.
The textpart stripping is a bit "unclean" at best, it strips everything between the first line containing "Obtain the latest Installation media" and the first line containing "Start the Installation".
wiki2texi.py (6.3 KiB)
Use it well!
Jules
Actually, beginners read it. (Hence the name.)
"I'm against these kinds of things because the installation guide covers pratically everything to get off the ground. If anything we should advertise the installation guide more."
Actually, the installation guide is still included on the installer media as well. It is under /arch/install-guide
The excellent installation guide is adequate for more experienced nix users.
Finally, I would not be against removing the Beginners' Guide, if that is the general consensus among the devs. If that is the case, I can try to tweak the existing install-guide to create a more console-friendly version.
You guys just tell me what you need; I'm willing to do it.
Also some info is out of date, like mentioning of 2007.something installer and lack of ext4 (since that is why most ppl want this release).
I don't think this has anything to do with release engineering though, other then that one of the documents would be a beginners guide which happens to be useful after an installation?
Btw imo the package should only contain info/man/txt files, no programs.