kernel-install — Add and remove kernel and initrd images to and from /boot
kernel-install  [OPTIONS...]  add   KERNEL-VERSION   KERNEL-IMAGE  [INITRD-FILE...]
kernel-install  [OPTIONS...]  remove   KERNEL-VERSION 
kernel-install  [OPTIONS...]  inspect  [KERNEL-IMAGE]
kernel-install is used to install and remove kernel and initrd images
    [1]
    to and from the boot loader partition, referred to as $BOOT here. It will usually be
    one of /boot/, /efi/, or /boot/efi/, see
    below.
kernel-install will run the executable files ("plugins") located in the
    directory /usr/lib/kernel/install.d/ and the local administration directory
    /etc/kernel/install.d/.  All files are collectively sorted and executed in lexical
    order, regardless of the directory in which they live. However, files with identical filenames replace
    each other.  Files in /etc/kernel/install.d/ take precedence over files with the
    same name in /usr/lib/kernel/install.d/. This can be used to override a
    system-supplied executables with a local file if needed; a symbolic link in
    /etc/kernel/install.d/ with the same name as an executable in
    /usr/lib/kernel/install.d/, pointing to /dev/null, disables the
    executable entirely. Executables must have the extension ".install"; other extensions
    are ignored.
An executable placed in these directories should return 0 on success. It may
    also return 77 to cause the whole operation to terminate (executables later in
    lexical order will be skipped).
The following commands are understood:
KERNEL-VERSION KERNEL-IMAGE [INITRD-FILE ...]¶This command expects a kernel version string and a path to a kernel image file as arguments.
          Optionally, one or more initrd images may be specified as well (note that plugins might generate
          additional ones). kernel-install calls the executable files from
          /usr/lib/kernel/install.d/*.install and
          /etc/kernel/install.d/*.install (i.e. the plugins) with the following
          arguments:
addKERNEL-VERSION$BOOT/ENTRY-TOKEN/KERNEL-VERSION/KERNEL-IMAGE[INITRD-FILE...]
The third argument directly refers to the path where to place kernel images, initrd
          images and other resources for Boot
          Loader Specification Type #1 entries (the "entry directory"). If other boot loader schemes
          are used the parameter may be ignored. The ENTRY-TOKEN string is
          typically the machine ID and is supposed to identify the local installation on the system. For
          details see below.
Two default plugins execute the following operations in this case:
kernel-install creates
            $BOOT/,
            if enabled (see ENTRY-TOKEN/KERNEL-VERSION$KERNEL_INSTALL_LAYOUT).
50-depmod.install runs
            depmod(8) for the
            KERNEL-VERSION.
90-loaderentry.install copies
            KERNEL-IMAGE to
            $BOOT/.
            If ENTRY-TOKEN/KERNEL-VERSION/linuxINITRD-FILEs are provided, it also copies them to
            $BOOT/.
            This can also be used to prepend microcode before the actual initrd. It also creates a boot loader entry according to the Boot Loader Specification (Type #1) in
            ENTRY-TOKEN/KERNEL_VERSION/INITRD-FILE$BOOT/loader/entries/.
            The title of the entry is the ENTRY-TOKEN-KERNEL-VERSION.confPRETTY_NAME parameter specified in
            /etc/os-release or /usr/lib/os-release (if the former
            is missing), or "Linux KERNEL-VERSION", if unset.
If $KERNEL_INSTALL_LAYOUT is not "bls", this plugin does nothing.
90-uki-copy.install copies a file
            uki.efi from $KERNEL_INSTALL_STAGING_AREA or if it does
            not exist the KERNEL-IMAGE argument, only if it has a
            ".efi" extension, to
            $BOOT/EFI/Linux/.ENTRY-TOKEN-KERNEL-VERSION.efi
If $KERNEL_INSTALL_LAYOUT is not "uki", this plugin does nothing.
KERNEL-VERSION¶This command expects a kernel version string as single argument. This calls executables from
          /usr/lib/kernel/install.d/*.install and
          /etc/kernel/install.d/*.install with the following arguments:
          
removeKERNEL-VERSION$BOOT/ENTRY-TOKEN/KERNEL-VERSION/
Afterwards, kernel-install removes the entry directory
          $BOOT/
          and its contents, if it exists.ENTRY-TOKEN/KERNEL-VERSION/
Two default plugins execute the following operations in this case:
50-depmod.install removes the files generated by depmod for this kernel again.
90-loaderentry.install removes the file
            $BOOT/loader/entries/.ENTRY-TOKEN-KERNEL-VERSION.conf
90-uki-copy.install removes the file
            $BOOT/EFI/Linux/.ENTRY-TOKEN-KERNEL-VERSION.efi
KERNEL-IMAGE]¶Shows the various paths and parameters configured or auto-detected. In particular shows the
          values of the various $KERNEL_INSTALL_* environment variables listed
          below.
installkernel  [OPTIONS...]  VERSION   VMLINUZ  [MAP] [INSTALLATION-DIR]
When invoked as installkernel, this program accepts arguments as specified by
    the kernel build system's make install command. The VERSION and
    VMLINUZ parameters specify the kernel version and the kernel binary. The other two
    parameters (MAP and INSTALLATION-DIR) are currently
    ignored.
    
$BOOT partition¶The partition where the kernels and Boot
    Loader Specification snippets are located is called $BOOT.
    kernel-install determines the location of this partition by checking
    /efi/, /boot/, and /boot/efi/ in turn. The
    first location where $BOOT/loader/entries/ or
    $BOOT/ exists is used.ENTRY-TOKEN/
The following options are understood:
--esp-path=¶Path to the EFI System Partition (ESP). If not specified, /efi/,
      /boot/, and /boot/efi/ are checked in turn. It is
      recommended to mount the ESP to /efi/, if possible.
--boot-path=¶Path to the Extended Boot Loader partition, as defined in the
      Boot Loader Specification.
      If not specified, /boot/ is checked. It is recommended to mount the Extended Boot
      Loader partition to /boot/, if possible.
--make-entry-directory=yes|no|auto¶Controls creation and deletion of the
          Boot Loader Specification
          Type #1 entry directory on the file system containing resources such as kernel and initrd images
          during add and remove, respectively. The directory is named after
          the entry token, and is placed immediately below the boot root directory. When
          "auto", the directory is created or removed only when the install layout is
          "bls". Defaults to "auto".
--entry-token=¶Controls how to name and identify boot loader entries for this kernel installation or
          deletion. Takes one of "auto", "machine-id",
          "os-id", "os-image-id", or an arbitrary string prefixed by
          "literal:" as argument.
If set to machine-id the entries are named after the machine ID of the
          running system (e.g. "b0e793a9baf14b5fa13ecbe84ff637ac"). See
          machine-id(5) for
          details about the machine ID concept and file.
If set to os-id the entries are named after the OS ID of the running system,
          i.e. the ID= field of
          os-release(5)
          (e.g. "fedora"). Similarly, if set to os-image-id the entries are
          named after the OS image ID of the running system, i.e. the IMAGE_ID= field of
          os-release (e.g. "vendorx-cashier-system").
If set to auto (the default), the
          /etc/kernel/entry-token (or
          $KERNEL_INSTALL_CONF_ROOT/entry-token) file will be read if it exists, and the
          stored value used. Otherwise if the local machine ID is initialized it is used. Otherwise
          IMAGE_ID= from os-release will be used, if set. Otherwise,
          ID= from os-release will be used, if set. Otherwise a
          randomly generated machine ID is used.
Using the machine ID for naming the entries is generally preferable, however there are cases
          where using the other identifiers is a good option. Specifically: if the identification data that
          the machine ID entails shall not be stored on the (unencrypted) $BOOT_ROOT
          partition, or if the ID shall be generated on first boot and is not known when the entries are
          prepared. Note that using the machine ID has the benefit that multiple parallel installations of
          the same OS can coexist on the same medium, and they can update their boot loader entries
          independently. When using another identifier (such as the OS ID or the OS image ID), parallel
          installations of the same OS would try to use the same entry name. To support parallel
          installations, the installer must use a different entry token when adding a second installation.
          
-v, --verbose¶Output additional information about operations being performed.
-h, --help¶--version¶If --verbose is used, $KERNEL_INSTALL_VERBOSE=1 will be
      exported for plugins. They may output additional logs in this case.
$KERNEL_INSTALL_IMAGE_TYPE=uki|pe|unknown is set for the plugins to specify the
      type of the kernel image.
$KERNEL_INSTALL_MACHINE_ID is set for the plugins to the desired machine-id to
      use. It's always a 128-bit ID. Normally it's read from /etc/machine-id, but it can
      also be overridden via $MACHINE_ID (see below). If not specified via these methods,
      a fallback value will generated by kernel-install and used only for a single
      invocation.
$KERNEL_INSTALL_ENTRY_TOKEN is set for the plugins to the desired entry
      "token" to use. It's an identifier that shall be used to identify the local installation, and is often
      the machine ID, i.e. same as $KERNEL_INSTALL_MACHINE_ID, but might also be a
      different type of identifier, for example a fixed string or the ID=,
      IMAGE_ID= values from /etc/os-release. The string passed here
      will be used to name Boot Loader Specification entries, or the directories the kernel image and initial
      RAM disk images are placed into.
Note that while $KERNEL_INSTALL_ENTRY_TOKEN and
      $KERNEL_INSTALL_MACHINE_ID are often set to the same value, the latter is guaranteed
      to be a valid 32 character ID in lowercase hexadecimals while the former can be any short string. The
      entry token to use is read from /etc/kernel/entry-token, if it exists. Otherwise a
      few possible candidates below $BOOT are checked for Boot Loader Specification Type 1
      entry directories, and if found the entry token is derived from that. If that is not successful,
      $KERNEL_INSTALL_MACHINE_ID is used as fallback.
$KERNEL_INSTALL_BOOT_ROOT is set for the plugins to the absolute path of the
      root directory (mount point, usually) of the hierarchy where boot loader entries, kernel images, and
      associated resources should be placed. This usually is the path where the XBOOTLDR partition or the ESP
      (EFI System Partition) are mounted, and also conceptually referred to as $BOOT. Can
      be overridden by setting $BOOT_ROOT (see below).
$KERNEL_INSTALL_LAYOUT=auto|bls|uki|other|... is set for the plugins to specify the
      installation layout. Additional layout names may be defined by convention. If a plugin uses a special layout,
      it's encouraged to declare its own layout name and configure layout= in
      install.conf upon initial installation. The following values are currently
      understood:
Standard Boot Loader
            Specification Type #1 layout, compatible with
            systemd-boot(7):
            entries in
            $BOOT/loader/entries/,
            kernel and initrds under
            ENTRY-TOKEN-KERNEL-VERSION[+TRIES].conf$BOOT/ENTRY-TOKEN/KERNEL-VERSION/
Implemented by 90-loaderentry.install.
Standard Boot Loader
            Specification Type #2 layout, compatible with
            systemd-boot(7):
            unified kernel images under $BOOT/EFI/Linux as
            $BOOT/EFI/Linux/.ENTRY-TOKEN-KERNEL-VERSION[+TRIES].efi
Implemented by 90-uki-copy.install.
Some other layout not understood natively by kernel-install.
Pick the layout automatically. If the kernel is a UKI set layout to
            uki. If not default to bls if
            $BOOT/loader/entries.srel with content "type1" or
            $BOOT/ exists, or
            ENTRY-TOKENother otherwise.
Leaving layout blank has the same effect. This is the default.
$KERNEL_INSTALL_INITRD_GENERATOR and $KERNEL_INSTALL_UKI_GENERATOR
      are set for plugins to select the initrd and/or UKI generator. This may be configured as
      initrd_generator= and uki_generator= in install.conf, see below.
$KERNEL_INSTALL_STAGING_AREA is set for plugins to a path to a directory.
      Plugins may drop files in that directory, and they will be installed as part of the loader entry, based
      on the file name and extension: Files named initrd* will be installed as INITRD-FILEs, 
      and files named microcode* will be prepended before INITRD-FILEs.
$KERNEL_INSTALL_CONF_ROOT can be set to override the location of the
      configuration files read by kernel-install. When set,
      install.conf, entry-token, and other files will be
      read from this directory.
$KERNEL_INSTALL_PLUGINS can be set to override the list of plugins executed by
      kernel-install. The argument is a whitespace-separated list of paths.
      "KERNEL_INSTALL_PLUGINS=:" may be used to prevent any plugins from running.
      
$MACHINE_ID can be set for kernel-install to override
      $KERNEL_INSTALL_MACHINE_ID, the machine ID.
$BOOT_ROOT can be set for kernel-install to override
      $KERNEL_INSTALL_BOOT_ROOT, the installation location for boot entries.
The last two variables may also be set in install.conf. Variables set in the
      environment take precedence over the values specified in the config file.
If every executable returns 0 or 77, 0 is returned, and a non-zero failure code otherwise.
/usr/lib/kernel/install.d/*.install
          /etc/kernel/install.d/*.install
        ¶Drop-in files which are executed by kernel-install.
/usr/lib/kernel/cmdline
          /etc/kernel/cmdline
          /proc/cmdline
        ¶Read by 90-loaderentry.install. The content of the file
            /etc/kernel/cmdline specifies the kernel command line to use. If that file
            does not exist, /usr/lib/kernel/cmdline is used. If that also does not
            exist, /proc/cmdline is used. $KERNEL_INSTALL_CONF_ROOT
            may be used to override the path.
/etc/kernel/tries
        ¶Read by 90-loaderentry.install and
            90-uki-copy.install. If this file exists a numeric value is read from it
            and the naming of the generated entry file or UKI is slightly altered to include it as
            $BOOT/loader/entries/
            or
            ENTRY-TOKEN-KERNEL-VERSION+TRIES.conf$BOOT/EFI/Linux/, respectively. This
            is useful for boot loaders such as
            systemd-boot(7)
            which implement boot attempt counting with a counter embedded in the entry file name.
            ENTRY-TOKEN-KERNEL-VERSION+TRIES.efi$KERNEL_INSTALL_CONF_ROOT may be used to override the path.
/etc/kernel/entry-token
        ¶If this file exists it is read and used as "entry token" for this system, i.e. is used for
            naming Boot Loader Specification entries, see $KERNEL_INSTALL_ENTRY_TOKEN
            above for details. $KERNEL_INSTALL_CONF_ROOT may be used to override the
            path.
/etc/machine-id
        ¶The content of this file specifies the machine identification
            MACHINE-ID.
/etc/os-release
          /usr/lib/os-release
        ¶Read by 90-loaderentry.install.
            If available, PRETTY_NAME= is read from these files and used as the title of the boot menu entry.
            Otherwise, "Linux " will be used.KERNEL-VERSION
/usr/lib/kernel/install.conf
          /etc/kernel/install.conf
        ¶Configuration options for kernel-install, as a series of
            KEY=VALUE assignments, compatible with shell
            syntax, following the same rules as described in
            os-release(5).
            /etc/kernel/install.conf will be read if present, and
            /usr/lib/kernel/install.conf otherwise. This file is optional.
            $KERNEL_INSTALL_CONF_ROOT may be used to override the path.
            
Currently, the following keys are supported:
            MACHINE_ID=,
            BOOT_ROOT=,
            layout=,
            initrd_generator=,
            uki_generator=.
            See the Environment variables section above for details.
/etc/kernel/uki.conf
        ¶Ini-style configuration file for ukify(1) which is only effective when $KERNEL_INSTALL_LAYOUT or layout= in install.conf is set to uki and $KERNEL_INSTALL_UKI_GENERATOR or uki_generator= in install.conf is set to ukify.
            $KERNEL_INSTALL_CONF_ROOT may be used to override the path.