A script to completely take over a running Linux system remotely, allowing you to log into an in-memory rescue environment, unmount the original root filesystem, and do anything you want, all without rebooting. Replace one distro with another without touching a physical console.
This is experimental. Do not use this script if you don't understand exactly how it works. Do not use this script on any system you care about. Do not use this script on any system you expect to be up. Do not run this script unless you can afford to get physical access to fix a botched takeover. If anything goes wrong, your system will most likely panic.
That said, this script will not (itself) make any permanent changes to your existing root filesystem (assuming you run it from a tmpfs), so as long as you can remotely reboot your box using an out-of-band mechanism, you should be OK. But don't blame me if it eats your dog.
This script does not have any provisions for exiting out of the new environment back into something sane. You will have to reboot when you're done. If you get anything wrong, your machine won't boot. Tough luck.
This is not a guide for newbies. I'm deliberately not giving you commands you can copy and paste. If you can't figure out what to do exactly without handholding, this script is not for you.
This script is designed for systems using sysvinit that support the telinit u
command to reload /sbin/init
. If your system uses something else, you will
have to adapt it, or this might not work at all. You're on your own here.
You should always test this in a VM first. You can grab a tarball of your live
root filesystem, extract it into a VM image, get your VM up and running (boot
loader setup is left as an exercise for the reader), then try the process there
and see if it works. Hint: mount --bind / /mnt
will get you a view of your
root filesystem on /mnt
without any other filesystems that are mounted on top.
You need to decide on what rescue environment you want. I recommend
SystemRescueCD, which comes with many
useful tools (you have to loopmount the ISO and then use unsquashfs
).
Obviously, whatever you pick has to fit into free RAM, with room to spare. If
your chosen rescue environment has /lib/modules
, you may want to get rid of
it to save space, as its kernel modules won't be useful on the host kernel
anyway.
- Create a directory
/takeover
on your target system and mount a tmpfs on it - Extract your rescue environment there. Make sure it works by chrooting into it and running a few commands. Make sure you do not bork filesystem permissions. Exit the chroot.
- Grab a recent copy of
busybox
(statically linked) and put it in/takeover/busybox
. You can find binaries here. Make sure it works by trying something like/takeover/busybox sh
. - Copy the contents of this repository into
/takeover
. - Compile
fakeinit.c
. It must be compiled such that it works inside the takeover environment. If your rescue environment hasgcc
, you can just compile it inside the chroot:chroot /takeover gcc /fakeinit.c -o /fakeinit
. Otherwise, you might want to statically link it. - Shut down as many services as you can on your host.
takeover.sh
will by default set up an SSHd listening on port 80, though you may edit this in the script. - Run
sh /takeover/takeover.sh
and follow the prompts.
If everything worked, congratulations! You may now use your new SSH session
to kill any remaining old daemons (kill -9
is recommended to make sure they
don't try to do anything silly during shutdown), and then unmount all
filesystems under /old_root
, including /old_root
itself. You may want to
first copy /old_root/lib/modules
into your new tmpfs in case you need any old
kernel modules.
You are now running entirely from RAM and should be able to do as you please.
Note that you may still have to clean up LVM volumes (dmsetup
is your friend)
and similar before you can safely repartition your disk and install Gentoo
Linux, which is of course the whole reason you're doing this crazy thing to
begin with.
When you're done, unmount all filesystems, then reboot -f
or echo b > /proc/sysrq-trigger
and cross your fingers.