Own Splashscreen and suppress all messages
As the headline says, I would like to have the possibility to have my own splash screen and suppress all messages in my self-created systems.
Similar to the boot procedures of SUSE or Xbian. I have searched a few addresses and forums, unfortunately there are so many possibilities and mostly only further links. These are own via debootstrap created Super Mini systems, e. g. with Kodi. I don't need a detailed message on the screen. What I would like to get is rather a basic explanation of how to implement something like that, no link á lá' this could also interest you'. Thank you in advance. greets |
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in the past, plymouth dit the splash screen. i think it still does. since you explicitly asked to not get a link, i won't be giving one. |
Basically, I can't understand why this is so difficult, maybe I don't research properly.
I imagine saying to the boot process, please don't be so chatty or say nothing. And in time show the following picture. Ready. But there are so many possibilities and solutions here, including patches for the kernel and so on. I'm still trying to find a uniform solution... I'll get back to here when I have a solution. greetings |
A bootsplash is a super waste of resources, think about it a little you have to start x to show the splash then restart X for the display manager == longer boot time.
Ok down to business, most people don't care, they want it looking pretty (I don't blame them). Plymouth is the only one I got to work so far. https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php...ory:bootsplash You'll also want to quiet down the kernel and init, give this a whirl. https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Silent_boot Hope this helps. |
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Hey Mill J ( btw. what is the first name here....)
Your answers were very helpful, thank you for that. The systems I was talking about are specially adapted USB stick versions I created via debootstrap. For optical reasons, there is no need for continuous text in the boot process, just a nice picture. :=) With my own system, of course, I don't want it that way. Here are the links that helped me..: https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Plymouth https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/silent_boot https://wiki.debian.org/plymouth Unfortunately, I can't really get Plymouth to work. I see something flickering in the boot process, but the screen just stays black. I'll keep working on that. But otherwise you only see... Start Live System..... But, absolutely perfect for the moment, I'll stick to it. |
Yes ondoho you are right..
Unfortunately, I can't really get Plymouth to work. I see something flickering in the boot process, but the screen just stays black. I'll keep working on that. |
So what happens when you run the preview from your terminal?
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plymouth-set-default-theme -l |
hmm..
the first two commands simply do nothing. ..set-default shows all the themes details fade-in glow.... . . And I installed it with plymouth-set-default-theme -R THEME but..eventually I made a mistake with this part in the documentation: https://wiki.debian.org/plymouth Part Configuration / Graphics Card... I installed them all, put them all in modules, 'cause I thought i could handle all grapics card then?...wrong? |
I'm assuming that your system is based on Debian?
The arch Plymouth link has: Quote:
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Yes, this is exactly what i have done.
plymouthd - shows nothing plymouth --show-splash -shows nothing plymouth --quit - does nothing Every time a theme is changed, the kernel image must be rebuilt: # plymouth-set-default-theme -R <theme> I changed it ( again for 5 minutes ) and did update-initramfs -u reboot - no effect. What do you think on the graphics card part. What exactly has to be there in modules All Graphic Cards or only one? Code:
# KMS |
As far as I know you'll only need to set the one for your graphics card. But if your planning on running it on other systems with different card you'll likely want to check into the others.
Have you noticed any errors when you run dmesg? |
is this for debian, ubuntu, or something else?
archwiki is very good, but one needs to be aware that there can be differences, when applying their howtos to other systems. i once managed to install & get plymouth working on a debian wheezy machine. the howto was on crunchbang forums (now largely defunct, but maybe you can find it with the wayback machine. it must have been in 2014) |
Im debootstraping for debian only from Deepin Linux.
And I read the INfos from Arch and from Debian Website. |
haha this is cool...look
https://www.linuxquestions.org/quest...rk-4175523267/ say..how often did you answer to this question? And only 600 Posts ago.. :=) |
^ cool, you found it.
unfortunately the crunchbang forum site is dying, i strongly suggest you find the same links on the web archive: https://archive.org/web/ and use a snapshot from around the time i posted that. and no, the question doesn't pop up too often, but i went through the manual process of installing plymouth after installing the system, remember how painful it was, and remember having had a good tutorial. |
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