One File Linux

Live linux distro combined in one ~20MB file. Runs on any UEFI computer (PC or Mac) without installation. Just copy one file to EFI system partition and boot.

One File Linux

Download: https://github.com/zhovner/OneFileLinux/releases

About in russian: https://habrahabr.ru/post/349758/

Main advantages

For simple system rescue

  • No installation required — no need to create additional paritions. Just copy one file to EFI system partition and add new boot entry to NVRAM.

  • No USB flash needed — once copied to EFI partition, OneFileLinux can boot any time from system disk.

  • No Boot Manager required (GRUB, rEFInd) — boots directly by UEFI firmware, no additional software needed.

  • Doesn't change the boot sequence — can boot only once, next reboot will return default settings.

  • Compatible with disk encryption — works with macOS FileVault and dm-crypt. Because EFI system parition is not encrypted.

Why?

This can be useful when you need Linux on bare metal and can't use USB flash. In comparison with Live USB flash, one file Linux setups permanently in EFI partition and can boot any time later.
My personal goal is to use laptop's internal PCIe WiFi card for cracking WiFi with aircrack-ng and reaver software, since PCIe devices can't be forwarded into virtual machine.

Run on Macbook

1. Download OneFileLinux.efi from link above.

2. Mount EFI System Partition

diskutil mount diskN

where diskN is your EFI disk number.
To find your EFI disk number use diskutil list command.

macOS diskutil list EFI partition

For me it will be: diskutil mount disk0s1

3. Copy OneFileLinux.efi to EFI partition

cp ~/Downloads/OneFileLinux.efi /Volumes/EFI/

4. Set boot option in NVRAM

On macOS since El Capitan enabled by default SIP (System Integrity Protection) prohibits to change boot options.
To check SIP state run csrutil status. In normal situation it should be enabled.

If SIP is enabled you can run bless only from Recovery console, otherwise it returns error.
To boot in Recovery mode press CMD+R while boot and go to Utilities —> Terminal from top menu.
In recovery console follow steps 2 and 4 every time you need to boot OneFileLinux.

bless --mount /Volumes/EFI --setBoot --nextonly --file /Volumes/EFI/OneFileLinux.efi

This command sets NVRAM option to boot OneFileLinux.efi only once. Next reboot will return default boot order.

5. Reboot

Reboot to run OneFileLinux. Once you've done, type reboot in Linux console and go back to macOS.
Every time when you need it again, follow steps 2 and 4 from recovery console.

Run on PC

There are few ways how to run OneFileLinux on PC motherboard. Some motherboards have builtin UEFI Shell that can run any efi binary from console.
I will describe setup process for my old ThinkPad X220 that doesn't have UEFI shell.

1. Copy OneFileLinux.efi to EFI partition

If you use Windows 10 installed in EFI mode, you have EFI system partition 100 MB in size.
You need to find out how to mount by itself. You can do this with OneFileLinux.efi run from USB flash or any other linux distro.

2. Add NVRAM boot option

I can't find out how to do this in Windows, so you probably need Linux for this.
Replace /dev/sda to you disk path and --part 2 to your EFI partition number.

efibootmgr --disk /dev/sda --part 2 --create --label "One File Linux" --loader /OneFileLinux.efi

3. Choose One File Linux from boot menu

On my ThinkPad X220 I press F12 while power on to open boot menu. Hotkey depends on your motherboard.

ThinkPad X220 boot menu

Run from USB flash

The only benefit from running OneFileLinux from USB flash, is that no additional software is required to create bootable flash drive.
Just format flash drive as FAT32 in GPT scheme and copy OneFileLinux.efi to default path:

\EFI\BOOT\BOOTx64.EFI

Format in GPT scheme in Windows

Windows does not allow to format flash drive in GPT scheme from GUI, so you need to use command line tool.

  1. Open cmd.exe as administrtor
  2. Typediskpart
  3. list disk to see all disks
  4. select disk <disknumber>
  5. clean do delete parition table
  6. convert gpt to convert disk in GPT scheme
  7. exit

Then format drive from diskmgmt.msc in FAT32.

Build your own

You can build your own version of One File Linux.
It based on Alpine Linux and vanilla kernel.

  1. Clone repositry
    git clone https://github.com/zhovner/OneFileLinux

  2. Make changes in root filesystem and kernel
    chroot alpine-minirootfs /bin/ash

  3. Build
    ./build.sh

Virtual Machine ready to go build environment

You can download vm image with completely configured environment.
Torrent file: kali64.vmwarevm.7z.torrent
VMware Player/Workstation or VMware Fusion recommended.
Username: root
Password: toor

Just login and run:

cd /root/onefilelinux/
./build.sh