1.4 KiB
Administering an rpm-ostree based system
At the moment, there are three primary commands to be familiar with on
an rpm-ostree based system. Remember that atomic
is an alias for
rpm-ostree
. The author tends to use the former on client systems,
and the latter on compose servers.
# atomic status
Will show you your deployments, in the order in which they will appear
in the bootloader. The *
shows the currently booted deployment.
# atomic upgrade
Will perform a system upgrade, creating a new chroot, and set it as
the default for the next boot. You should use systemctl reboot
shortly afterwards.
# atomic rollback
By default, the atomic upgrade
will keep at most two bootable
"deployments", though the underlying technology supports more.
Filesystem layout
The only writable directories are /etc
and /var
. In particular,
/usr
has a read-only bind mount at all times. Any data in /var
is
never touched, and is shared across upgrades.
At upgrade time, the process takes the new default /etc
, and adds
your changes on top. This means that upgrades will receive new
default files in /etc
, which is quite a critical feature.
Operating system changes
- The RPM database is stored in
/usr/share/rpm
, and is immutable. - A package nss-altfiles is required,
and the system password database is stored in
/usr/lib/passwd
. Similar for the group database.