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Builder

Treehouses Awesome ๐Ÿ‘“ Raspberry Pi Image Builder ๐Ÿ—

From treehousesยทUpdated May 21, 2026ยทView on GitHubยท

`builder` is based on [Raspbian](https://www.raspbian.org/) and allows the user to develop and tailor their own custom Raspberry Pi images. The script will modify the latest Raspbian image by installing packages, purging packages and executing custom commands, and then finally creates a bootable .img file that can be burned to the microSD card. The project is written primarily in Shell, distributed under the GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 license, first published in 2017. Key topics include: balena, chroot-environment, debian, docker, docker-compose.

Latest release: release-bookworm9
February 11, 2025View Changelog โ†’

Build Status Maintainability Gitter

builder

builder is based on Raspbian and
allows the user to develop and tailor their own custom Raspberry Pi images.
The script will modify the latest Raspbian image by installing packages,
purging packages and executing custom commands, and then finally
creates a bootable .img file that can be burned to the microSD card.

Instructions

These instructions will get you a copy of the project up and
running on your local machine for development and testing purposes.

Prerequisites

System requirements:

  • Operating System - Debian/Ubuntu
  • microSD card reader
  • class10 microSD card (minimum 8 Gb)
  • Packages - kpartx wget gpg parted qemu-arm-static

Note:

To install the required packages, run the following command in Debian/Ubuntu:

bash
sudo apt-get install kpartx wget gpg parted qemu-arm-static.

For other operating systems like MacOS or Windows, check out the Vagrantfile inside the repository.

Getting Started

git clone https://github.com/treehouses/builder.git
cd builder
./builder --chroot

You should be in a chrooted environment when it is completed.
You can access the RPi images' files and folders or carry on with any extra modifications.
To exit the chrooted environment just type exit and
then you should be back in your own shell again.
The image in this stage is now ready to write to the microSD card.

Add gpg key

bash
sudo bash -c 'wget -O - https://packagecloud.io/gpg.key | apt-key add -'

Customize

  • INSTALL_PACKAGES - Install packages found in the APT repositories.

    • To add a custom package not found in the default APT repositories:
      add the package name into INSTALL_PACKAGES,
      then add the custom repository to ADD_REPOS.
  • PURGE_PACKAGES - Remove packages already installed on the default Raspbian image.

  • CUSTOM_COMMANDS - Add extra commands to execute upon the completion of
    the builder, which is run under a chroot environment.

    • For instance, to enable ssh on boot for the RPi,
      the command sudo touch /boot/ssh is included in CUSTOM_COMMANDS.
      The semi-colon is there to separate the commands and
      will execute regardless whether or not the previous command is successful.

Retrieve builds

After exiting from the chroot environment, successful builds
are found in the builder/images directory.
There should be a few files in that directory.
The .zip file is the unmodified base image,
which is downloaded by the script when executed.
The .img file is the new customized image and
is now ready to be burned onto the microSD card.

To remove unwanted modifications otherwise

bash clean.sh

Write to microSD card and try out the image

We will need a few hardware and software:

  • Raspberry Pi 3/4 (or Zero W)
  • 5V 2.4A/3A (1.2A for Pi Zero) power supply with microUSB connector
  • A microSD card reader
  • A Class 10
    microSD card (minimal 8GB, but we strongly recommend 16GB or greater)
  • Software for burning OS image to microSD card. We recommend Etcher,
    but there are many from which to choose

Open Etcher, select the location of the .img file,
the destination drive of the microSD card,
then press the flash button to write the image onto the microSD card.
Remember that this process will wipe out everything on the selected drive,
so make sure to select the right one.

Release

This project uses Github Actions to automatically build and upload a new treehouse image
to http://dev.ole.org. The builder.yml configuration file
tells Github Actions to run the deployment if a tag is applied to the commit.

  • New image's name will be treehouse- followed by
    whatever is after release- in the tag
  • New image's SHA-1 checksum will be calculated and uploaded as <image_name>.img.gz.sha1
  • If the tag is formated like release- followed by only numbers,
    latest.img.gz and latest.img.gz.sha1 would be a symbolic link of
    the newly uploaded image and its SHA-1 checksum
  • At this time, both stable.img.gz and branch.img.gz on http://dev.ole.org
    are manually linked to their specific image

Contributors

Showing top 12 contributors by commit count.

View all contributors on GitHub โ†’

This article is auto-generated from treehouses/builder via the GitHub API.Last fetched: 6/29/2026