i.e. DEFAULT_UFS2 as src/distrib/utils/sysinst/bsddisklabel.c does
since post-NetBSD5. This avoids rendering an i386 or amd64 system
unbootable if the given example is thoughtlessly cut-and-pasted on
a NetBSD6.x system (been there, done that ;-) Qualify the descriptions
of /usr/mdec/bootxx_ffsv{1,2} along those lines.
Fixed a small typo in comment of distrib/utils/sysinst/arch/amd64/md.h.
Ok by releng@
NetBSD/emips port runs on Xilinx and Beecube FPGA systems and the
Giano system simulator.
eMIPS is a platform developed at Microsoft Research for researching
reconfigurable computing. eMIPS allows dynamic loading and scheduling
of application-specific circuits for the purpose of accelerating
computations based on the current workload.
NetBSD eMIPS support for NetBSD 4.x was written at Microsoft Research
by Alessandro Forin and Neil Pittman. Microsoft Corporation has
donated full copyright to The NetBSD Foundation.
Platform support for eMIPS is the first part of Microsoft's
contribution. The second part includes the hardware accelerator
framework and will be proposed on tech-kern soon.
LOADMODULES->NOMODULES and READBOOTCONF->NOBOOTCONF.
This way, the default value (0) wired into old bootxx_* and installed
to file systems remains valid and we avoid problems on partial updates.
whether modules are loaded and whether boot.cfg is evaluated, and
set both to "off" per default in the PXE bootloader.
Extend "installboot" to toggle the bits.
This way, pxeboot works with existing dhcp server setups (and as
described in the manpage) out of the box. Also, boot.cfg reading
involves a stat() call which is horribly inefficient with the
TFTP pseudo file system.
where sector size (disk block size) is required, instead of
DEV_BSIZE constant which means device I/O block size.
"Looks reasonable" from dholland@, and fixes tools installboot(8)
on Cygwin where DEV_BSIZE != 512 as mentioned in PR toolchain/42555.
specified using a file name on the running system, while the secondary
bootstrap is specified using a file name relative to the root of the
file systrem in which the installation is being performed.
Inspired by PR 39728 by der Mouse