From cb427d1e00e3dc3a5a93c7bd9e605063676c10ff Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: "Kevin Veen-Birkenbach [aka. Frantz]" Date: Fri, 15 May 2020 11:21:32 +0200 Subject: [PATCH] Removed unneccessary comments --- scripts/image/chroot.sh | 36 ------------------------------------ 1 file changed, 36 deletions(-) diff --git a/scripts/image/chroot.sh b/scripts/image/chroot.sh index ae08744..bc83a5f 100644 --- a/scripts/image/chroot.sh +++ b/scripts/image/chroot.sh @@ -1,40 +1,4 @@ #!/bin/bash - -# This script allows you to chroot ("work on") -# the raspbian sd card as if it's the raspberry pi -# on your Ubuntu desktop/laptop -# just much faster and more convenient - -# credits: https://gist.github.com/jkullick/9b02c2061fbdf4a6c4e8a78f1312a689 - -# make sure you have issued -# (sudo) apt install qemu qemu-user-static binfmt-support - -# Write the raspbian image onto the sd card, -# boot the pi with the card once -# so it expands the fs automatically -# then plug back to your laptop/desktop -# and chroot to it with this script. - -# Invoke: -# (sudo) ./chroot-to-pi.sh /dev/sdb -# assuming /dev/sdb is your sd-card -# if you don't know, when you plug the card in, type: -# dmesg | tail -n30 - - -# Note: If you have an image file instead of the sd card, -# you will need to issue -# (sudo) apt install kpartx -# (sudo) kpartx -v -a 2017-11-29-raspbian-stretch-lite.img -# then -# (sudo) ./chroot-to-pi.sh /dev/mapper/loop0p -# With the vanilla image, you have very little space to work on -# I have not figured out a reliable way to resize it -# Something like this should work, but it didn't in my experience -# https://gist.github.com/htruong/0271d84ae81ee1d301293d126a5ad716 -# so it's better just to let the pi resize the partitions - # shellcheck source=/dev/null # Deactivate SC1090 # shellcheck disable=SC2015 # Deactivating bool hint source "$(dirname "$(readlink -f "${0}")")/../base.sh" || (echo "Loading base.sh failed." && exit 1)