A program to simplify the use of 32-bit chroots on 64-bit non-multilib Linux systems.
Basically, this program is equivalent to running:
sudo linux32 chroot /path/to/my/chroot su -l "$USER" [args]
but because it's installed setuid you don't need to type a password and the command line is somewhat shorter because the location of the chroot is compiled in at build time.
Setup your configuration if you want to:
cat >config.mak <<\EOF prefix=/usr/local EOF
then build:
make && sudo make install
The configuration file /etc/chpersroot.conf
is read to determine how to
enter a chroot. This file is in INI format, although certain keys can be
multi-valued.
An example file might be:
[gentoo32] rootdir = /gentoo32 copyfile = /etc/resolv.conf personality = linux32
The configuration to use is chosen by the basename of argument zero, in other
words it is the filename by which the program is invoked. If you only have a
single configuration and don't want to worry about this, just call the
configuration chpersroot
, otherwise you should create a symbolic link
somewhere in your path that links from your configuration's name to the
chpersroot
executable.
The following configuration keys are available:
rootdir
- The path to the new root.
copyfile
- A file to be copied into the new root. This key may be specified multiple times if you want to copy multiple files.
personality
- The personality for the chroot. This is one of the
PER_
variables from/usr/include/linux/personality.h
with the prefix removed and underscores converted to hyphens; the comparison is case insensitive.