I have ported this Gist to a handbook. I'll not maintain this Gist anymore, but will keep it here for future references. You can access the respective chapter in the handbook here.
In this guide you will find:
- btrfs with Zstandard compression
- LUKS-encrypted root and swapfile
- GRUB with UEFI
You will not find:
- Instructions for file systems other than btrfs
- Full disk encryption (there's an official guide here)
- Explanation for all choices I've made (sometimes I don't know the true reason behind my choices)
There are two available users, root (superuser) and anon. The password of both is voidlinux. I like to log in using the superuser so I don't have to type sudo at all. I highly suggest you run exec bash so you don't have to deal with dash's limitations.
If you need a different layout other than en-US, you can do the following:
# loadkeys $(ls /usr/share/kbd/keymaps/i386/**/*.map.gz | grep <your-layout>)# cp /etc/wpa_supplicant/wpa_supplicant.conf /etc/wpa_supplicant/wpa_supplicant-<wlan-interface>.conf
# wpa_passphrase <ssid> <passphrase> >> /etc/wpa_supplicant/wpa_supplicant-<wlan-interface>.conf
# sv restart dhcpcd
# ip link set up <interface>The minimum number of partitions is three:
- The EFI partition (
/efi) - The boot partition, where kernels are stored (
/boot) - The LUKS-encrypted btrfs root partition
So, first we need to generate the partition tables. Check which device is the one you want to install Void into. For this guide I'll simply use /dev/sda, but it can change depending on your setup, so watch out! Back to the partition tables:
# fdisk /dev/sdaAfter running fdisk, it will prompt you with a menu, so follow these steps:
- Select
gto generate a GTP table - Select
nto create the EFI partition with size of +200M - After creating the partition, change its type by selecting
tand then selecting the option that represents EFI Partition (generally 1) - Select
nto create the boot partition with size of +500M (more space means more kernels, I like using +800M) - Select
nto create the btrfs partition with the remaining size
# mkfs.vfat -nBOOT -F32 /dev/sda1# mkfs.ext2 -L grub /dev/sda2# cryptsetup luksFormat --type=luks -s=512 /dev/sda3
# cryptsetup open /dev/sda3 cryptroot
# mkfs.btrfs -L void /dev/mapper/cryptrootFirst, let's mount the main btrfs partition:
# BTRFS_OPTS="rw,noatime,ssd,compress=zstd,space_cache,commit=120"
# mount -o $BTRFS_OPTS /dev/mapper/cryptroot /mnt
# btrfs subvolume create /mnt/@
# btrfs subvolume create /mnt/@home
# btrfs subvolume create /mnt/@snapshots
# umount /mntThen, let's mount the top-level partitions:
# mount -o $BTRFS_OPTS,subvol=@ /dev/mapper/cryptroot /mnt# mkdir -p /mnt/home
# mount -o $BTRFS_OPTS,subvol=@home /dev/mapper/cryptroot /mnt/home# mkdir -p /mnt/.snapshots
# mount -o $BTRFS_OPTS,subvol=@snapshots /dev/mapper/cryptroot /mnt/.snapshotsNOTE: Configure mount options according to your needs.
After that, let's mount some nested partitions, which won't have a snapshot taken, since snapshots don't work resursively:
# mkdir -p /mnt/var/cache
# btrfs subvolume create /mnt/var/cache/xbps
# btrfs subvolume create /mnt/var/tmp
# btrfs subvolume create /mnt/srvYou also need to create a nested subvolume for the swapfile:
# btrfs subvolume create /mnt/var/swapOnce the root partition is mounted, it is time to mount the remaining ones:
# mkdir /mnt/efi
# mount -o rw,noatime /dev/sda1 /mnt/efi# mkdir /mnt/boot
# mount -o rw,noatime /dev/sda2 /mnt/bootSet the appropriate variables (this may vary depending on your needs):
# REPO=https://alpha.us.repo.voidlinux.org/current
# ARCH=x86_64If using musl, the values might be something like:
# REPO=https://alpha.us.repo.voidlinux.org/current/musl
# ARCH=x86_64-muslNOTE: Here is a handful of mirrors.
Then run:
XBPS_ARCH=$ARCH xbps-install -S -R "$REPO" -r /mnt base-system btrfs-progs cryptsetupThe command above installs the base system along with btrfs utilites, GRUB and dm-crypt utility, which are core parts of this setup.
Mount the pseudo file systems needed for a chroot:
# for dir in dev proc sys run; do mount --rbind /$dir /mnt/$dir; mount --make-rslave /mnt/$dir; doneCopy the DNS configuration into the new root so that XBPS can still download new packages inside the chroot:
# cp /etc/resolv.conf /mnt/etc/Then chroot into the new installation:
# BTRFS_OPTS=$BTRFS_OPTS PS1='(chroot) # ' chroot /mnt/ /bin/bashWrite the desired hostname to /etc/hostname.
Refer to this documentation in order to configure your rc.conf file.
For glibc installations, edit /etc/default/libc-locales, then run:
(chroot) # xbps-reconfigure -f glibc-locales(chroot) # passwd(chroot) # UEFI_UUID=$(blkid -s UUID -o value /dev/sda1)
(chroot) # GRUB_UUID=$(blkid -s UUID -o value /dev/sda2)
(chroot) # ROOT_UUID=$(blkid -s UUID -o value /dev/mapper/cryptroot)
(chroot) # cat <<EOF > /etc/fstab
UUID=$ROOT_UUID / btrfs $BTRFS_OPTS,subvol=@ 0 1
UUID=$UEFI_UUID /efi vfat defaults,noatime 0 2
UUID=$GRUB_UUID /boot ext2 defaults,noatime 0 2
UUID=$ROOT_UUID /home btrfs $BTRFS_OPTS,subvol=@home 0 2
UUID=$ROOT_UUID /.snapshots btrfs $BTRFS_OPTS,subvol=@snapshots 0 2
tmpfs /tmp tmpfs defaults,nosuid,nodev 0 0
EOFI advise doing a "hostonly" install, that is, Dracut will generate a lean initramfs with everything you might need, including i915 drivers if you have an Intel CPU with integrated graphics:
(chroot) # echo hostonly=yes >> /etc/dracut.conf(chroot) # xbps-install -Su void-repo-nonfree intel-ucode(chroot) # xbps-install grub-x86_64-efi
(chroot) # grub-install --target=x86_64-efi --efi-directory=/efi --bootloader-id="Void Linux"In order to have an encrypted swap, let's use a more modern approach by using a swapfile as our swap partition. For this example, I'll create a swapfile of 16 GiB, but you can choose the best size for your installation:
(chroot) # btrfs subvolume create /var/swap
(chroot) # truncate -s 0 /var/swap/swapfile
(chroot) # chattr +C /var/swap/swapfile
(chroot) # btrfs property set /var/swap/swapfile compression none
(chroot) # chmod 600 /var/swap/swapfile
(chroot) # dd if=/dev/zero of=/var/swap/swapfile bs=1G count=16 status=progress
(chroot) # mkswap /var/swap/swapfile
(chroot) # swapon /var/swap/swapfileAfter that, follow this Arch's guide on calculating the resume_offset kernel parameter for btrfs.
HINT: You can use XBPS to compile the
btrfs_map_physicalfor you by using my own template. Just clone the branch and usexbps-srcas usual topkgthebtrfs_map_physicalpackage.
After calculating it, append the following line to GRUB's config:
(chroot) # RESUME_OFFSET=<calculated-offset-from-tutorial-above>
(chroot) # cat <<EOF >> /etc/default/grub
GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX="resume=UUID=$ROOT_UUID resume_offset=$RESUME_OFFSET"
EOFNOTE: You need Linux 5.0+ in order to use a swapfile with btrfs.
(chroot) # xbps-reconfigure -fa
(chroot) # exit
# shutdown -r nowLog in as root and then run:
# xbps-install -S zsh
# useradd -m -G wheel,input,video -s /bin/zsh <username>
# passwd <username>
# visudoAfter running visudo, uncomment the line that contains %wheel. Log out and then log in with the newly created user.
NOTE: If you want to lock down the root account, you can run
sudo passwd -dl root. Be careful though, since you won't be able to log in using the root account anymore.
Please refer to this official guide from the handbook.

@djorborn - I appreciate it's been a while, but deleting /var/cache/xbps fixes issues after timeshift.