6.1 KiB
Introduction
This is my fork of easy-arch, a script made in order to boostrap a basic Arch Linux environment with snapshots and encryption by using a fully automated process.
This fork comes with various security improvements and fully working rollbacks with snapper. I do submit some of the changes here back to upstream as well.
How does it work?
- Download an Arch Linux ISO from here
- Flash the ISO onto an USB Flash Drive.
- Boot the live environment.
- Connect to the internet.
git clone https://github.com/tommytran732/Arch-Setup-Script/
cd Arch-Setup-Script
chmod u+x ./install.sh && ./install.sh
- do
arch-chroot /mnt
and create your wheel user once the script is done. Remember to give the wheel group priviledges invisudo
.
Snapper behavior
The partition layout I use rallows us to replicate the behavior found in openSUSE 🦎
- Snapper rollback works! You will no longer need to manually rollback from a live USB like you would with the @ and @home layout suggested in the Arch Wiki.f2fs-tools udftools
- You can boot into a readonly snapshot! GDM and other services will start normally so you can get in and verify that everything works before rolling back.
- Automatic snapshots on pacman install/update operations
- /boot and /boot/efi are 2 seperate subvolumes which will not be rolled back with snapper.
- For consistency with pacman's database, I deviate from SUSE's partition layout leave /usr/local/ and /opt as part of the snapshot. When you rollback, everything in those 2 directories rollback as well.
- GRUB will boot into the default BTRFS snapshot set by snapper. Like on SUSE, your running system will always be a read-write snapshot in @/.snapshots/X/snapshot.
Changes to the original project
- Encrypted /boot (This was previously present on EasyArch, but Tommaso changed his script to use LUKS2 and have unencrypted /boot. Personally I would not do this, since encrypting /boot is the only way to protect the initramfs from being tampered with. GRUB will only validate the kernel if Secure Boot is used, not the initramfs).
- SUSE - like partition layout
- Snapper snapshots & rollback
- Default umask to 077
- Firewalld is enabled by default
- Minimally setup GNOME 40 with pipewire
- Added more filesystem support (Since Disk Utility is a GNOME dependency and it supports exFAT, NTFS, F2FS and UDF, I added support for those out of the box to make the experience a bit better out of the box)
- Randomize Mac Address and disable Connectivity Check for privacy
- Blacklisted Firewire SBP2 (As recommended by https://www.ncsc.gov.uk/collection/end-user-device-security/platform-specific-guidance/ubuntu-18-04-lts)
Why so many @var_xxx subvolumes?
Most of these subvolumes come from SUSE's partition layout prior to 2018, before they simply made @var its own subvolume. We cannot blindly do this however, since pacman stores its database in /var/lib/pacman/local, which needs to be excluded and rolled back accordingly to the rest of the system.
Other than that, /var/lib/gdm and /var/lib/AccountsService must have their own read-write subvolume in order to boot GNOME from a read only snapshot.
Why GNOME?
I only use GNOME and I know that I have to explicitly create a seperate a subvolume for /var/lib/gdm, /var/cache, /var/tmp and so on for a full desktop to boot from a read-only snapshot. I don't know how other desktop environments behave and which directories we need to create a seperate subvolume for. We will also change the partitioning scheme according to the DE selection as well, since it doesn't make any sense to create @var_lib_gdm on a KDE system. Any help with adding more DE options would be appreciated.
Partitions layout
Partition/Subvolume | Label | Mountpoint | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1 | ESP | /boot/efi | Unencrypted FAT32 |
2 | @/.snapshots/X/snapshot | / | Encrypted BTRFS |
3 | @/boot | /boot/ | Encrypted BTRFS (nodatacow) |
4 | @/root | /root | Encrypted BTRFS |
5 | @/home | /home | Encrypted BTRFS |
6 | @/.snapshots | /.snapshots | Encrypted BTRFS |
7 | @/srv | /srv | Encrypted BTRFS (nodatacow) |
8 | @/tmp | /tmp | Encrypted BTRFS (nodatacow) |
9 | @/var_log | /var/log | Encrypted BTRFS (nodatacow) |
10 | @/var_crash | /var/crash | Encrypted BTRFS (nodatacow) |
11 | @/var_cache | /var/cache | Encrypted BTRFS (nodatacow) |
12 | @/var_tmp | /var/tmp | Encrypted BTRFS (nodatacow) |
13 | @/var_spool | /var/spool | Encrypted BTRFS (nodatacow) |
14 | @/var_lib_gdm | /var/lib/gdm | Encrypted BTRFS |
15 | @/var_lib_AccountService | /var/lib/AccountsService | Encrypted BTRFS |
16 | @/var_lib_libvirt_images | /var/lib/libvirt/images | Encrypted BTRFS (nodatacow) |
To do
- Automate wheel user setup
- Install yay and setup opensnitch
- Reduce the number of password prompts
- Automatic secure boot setup with your own keys (no, we are not using shim).
- Optional Nvidia driver installation
- Automatic zram setup