If you look at the script itself, you'll get an idea of what it installs. I used a variant of this script to build the system I run on my Soekris net4501 which runs FreeBSD and is under 20 megs.
There are lots of "make a small freebsd system" scripts, but most of the ones I've found rely heavily on 'buildworld' and what not. This takes a live system and copies the binaries you need, then uses ldd(1) to track down required libraries.
Example usage:
kenya(~/t) % rm -rf ./soekris/ kenya(~/t) % time sudo ./minibsd.sh sudo ./minibsd.sh 0.16s user 0.65s system 61% cpu 1.326 total kenya(~/t) % sudo chroot ./soekris /bin/sh # pwd / # exitSimple jail config (rc.conf):
jail_enable="YES" jail_list="test" jail_test_rootdir="/home/jls/t/soekris" jail_test_hostname="test" jail_test_ip="10.1.1.1" jail_test_interface="tl1"Put something simple in this jail's rc.conf (/home/jls/t/soekris/etc/rc.conf):
sshd_enable="YES" sendmail_enable="NONE"Let's test the jail now:
kenya(~/t) % sudo /etc/rc.d/jail start Configuring jails:. Starting jails:At this point, it's probably hung (assuming you enabled sshd). If you hit CTRL+T you'll see what command has the foreground and what it's doing.* This is because it's prompting you (output is directed to JAILROOT/var/log/console.log) for entropy for the ssh-keygen. Smash a few keys then hit enter. It'll finish eventually.
kenya(~/t) % sockstat -4 | grep 10.1.1.1:22 root sshd 2258 3 tcp4 10.1.1.1:22 *:*Our sshd is running happily inside that jail we made. This whole process took about 5 minutes.
* FreeBSD's CTRL+T terminal handler feature has to be the best thing ever invented. I wish Linux had something like this. Here's what hitting CTRL+T when running cat looks like:
kenya(~) % cat load: 0.45 cmd: cat 2324 [ttyin] 0.00u 0.00s 0% 600k load: 0.42 cmd: cat 2324 [ttyin] 0.00u 0.00s 0% 600kIt clearly shows you the command name, the pid, and the syscall-type-thing it's doing. Clearly cat is waiting for input from the tty. <3 FreeBSD.