KIWI is an application for making a wide variety of image sets for Linux supported hardware platforms as well as virtualization systems including QEMU, Xen and VMware.

KIWI
Developer(s)openSUSE Project
Stable release
9.20.9
Repository
Written inPython
Operating systemLinux
PlatformUnix
LicenseGPL-3.0 license
Websiteosinside.github.io/kiwi/

It is developed by the openSUSE Project and used to create openSUSE Linux distribution, but can also be employed to build a variety of other Linux distributions.

Usage and documentation

edit

KIWI has a large amount of documentation available, organized in 'cook books' which guide new users through the process of creating increasingly complicated KIWI images.

Basic usage requires the installation of a number of tools besides KIWI, most notably for virtualization.[1] KIWI is a command line tool and has no graphical user interface.

KIWI in use

edit

KIWI is used by a variety of organizations in a variety of places. Besides SUSE Linux and the openSUSE Project, IBM has a product using KIWI[2] and Dell employs it as well.[3]

SUSE Studio

edit

SUSE Studio is a web interface (Ruby on Rails) to KIWI and the Open Build Service. It allows users to graphically put together a custom Linux OS and generate output including a large variety of virtual machine and disk images.

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "Getting started with KIWI".
  2. ^ "IBM system using KIWI". Archived from the original on 2012-02-18. Retrieved 2012-04-24.
  3. ^ "Dell using KIWI".
edit