by checking uname, or the BOOTMODEL environment var), and set
the kernel setname accordingly for some bootmodels (tiny and laptop),
to install GENERIC_TINY and GENERIC_LAPTOP respectively. There's
no sense in installing plain GENERIC, especially on "tiny" systems;
it may not even make it far enough to add swapspace on 4M machines.
* Make sure to always install bootcode into the MBR (unless the user
explicitly tells us not to). Should fix PR#8887, PR#9093, PR#9999
enabling and disabling swap. Enabling swap is currently only
done by the i386 port on systems with <= 8M of physical memory.
If a user re-enters the install procedure through the main menu,
and the target disk has an active swap partition, try to disable it,
warning the user that this might lead to 'out of swap' problems,
making a restart necessary. This should not happen very often.
Partly based on comments by Simon Burge.
rather over the top. Not doing this also means that test(1) can
be omitted from the ramdisks (for scripts it's not needed, because it
is built in to sh(1)).
that "your hard disk" is about to get nuked, and you are no longer sure
which of your ten disks you told sysinst to wipe?
Change this to tell you:
``Ok, we are now ready to install NetBSD on your hard disk (wd0). Nothing ...''
'rc_configured' is still changed via sed's s///, wscons=yes is appended
via "echo >>".
* make target-routines (target_expand(), and whatnot) work if no root
disk was selected. With this, sysinst can now be used on a "normal"
system to adjust the system's timezone. Use the entry in the "Utilities"
menu for that.
Both changes were tested by a full i386 installation.
before extracting sets, and move it back afterwards, to save the information
which X server to use.
Adresses PR 10935 by Dan McMahill <dmcmahill@netbsd.org>
* If etc/localtime can't be readlink(3)'d, assume the default time zone is
UTC
* if errors occur (malloc, fts_open, fts_read, menu generation fails),
skip timezone setting instead of terminating sysinst.
(/mnt)/usr/share/zoneinfo in a listbox, and setting (/mnt)/etc/localtime
accordingly.
* Adjust for the needed menuc change un run.c's log_flip() and script_flip()
functions.
Related PRs:
5777 sysinst does not offer to tweak /etc/localtime
8099 changing the default time zone is non-obvious
9910 sysinst doesn't ask about setting timezone
to prevent menuc(?) from putting all things in one line
(I don't know since when we got this "auto-wrapping" stuff,
and it may be nice for text paragraphs, but it's a PITA for
tables etc.)
do not save address/netmask/default router, if we got them from dhcp.
(we shouldn't do that). if we keep any of dhcp config into /etc, we shoul
update rc.conf to run dhcp again.
- on a IPv6/v4 dual stack network, it makes more sense to configure both.
- also, many of IPv4/v6 dual stack network requires us to contacd DNS
over IPv4 transport.
discussed with cyber@netbsd.org.
that can be specified with CHS, truncate it to the maximum values that
the BIOS provided, not 1023*255*63. Some BIOSs get awfully cranky when
you do that.
overwrite anything important. (The moving down hides some elements
of the selection box, but we can scroll).
Took some digging to find out that aparently all selection boxes default
to a upper row of 12 and some more digging on how to change it.
* Use endwin() strategically so that the child does not corrupt the display
when suspending or exiting.
* Handle backspace.
* Only do one refresh per buffer-full.
* Eliminate redundant code.
orts. Since port specific information is in appropriate arch/.../md.h
bsddisklabel.c is currently #included by arch/.../md.c.
I'm not totally happy about this, but my concience is somewhat salved by the
overall reduction in breakage.
Initially only pmax, sparc, vax and x68k are using bsddisklabel.c.
While I'm here adjust defs.h for more than eight partitions in a generic
fashion.
partitions under any circumstances, allow no swap, do not *overwrite* /usr
when listing additional partitions, and try to abstract at least most of the
magic numbers to #defines at the top.
Also sync up as much as possible to make this easier in future.
Still need to attack the other arch's md.c files.
Fixed PR#7741
If the default swap is smaller than the remaining disk, truncate to the
available space.
Set rc_configured to YES in md_cleanup_install()
XXX Only the callers that actually pass strings were fixed, the rest were
XXX left passing 'NULL'. Eventually they should be cleaned up to pass
XXX MSG_NONE, but I didn't want to do that yet because somebody else
XXX (jonathan) is hacking on the run_prog callers and I didn't want to
XXX cause him a Lot of conflicts. at least right now, MSG_NONE and NULL
XXX are as equivalent as they need to be.
>Removing leading slashes in the url_encode() function is bad, because
>they might be part of a password, but somebody else had apparently made
>url_encode() do that. Here's a patch that stops url_encode() from
>removing leading slashes, changes the encode_leading_slash code to
>fit in with that policy, adds some comments that should dissuade folk
>from removing leading slashes in the future, and fixes a bug where the
>encode_leading_slash code was not decrementing len.
install.sub:
- fix interface grovelling, ifmedia support, allow ifmedia and link
to have a "none" (-> "") answer (which lets you give nothing when
a default answer is given)
- allow installing more than one set at a time, including "all" as
a synonym for all remaining sets
- mount -o async when extracting sets
makeconf.awk:
- put default "libs" section at the end rather than the start, so
you can put other "libs" in before this list
- minor cleanup
mtree.conf:
- create /kern
sparc install.md:
- MDSETS are now "kern xbase xcomp xcontrib xfont xserver"
- use /kern & kernfs (replaces dmesg)
- replace grep & cut pipe lines with sed
- replace grep hackery with sed hackery
- grep and cut are no longer required! yay!
- deal with no /usr/bin/vi -- call disklabel -i
- in md_copy_kern() link the netbsd.GENERIC we got from the kern set,
rather than the miniroot kernel
sparc miniroot list:
- no more dmesg, cut or grep
sparc ramdisk changes:
Makefile:
- `ramdiskbin.conf' is now generated by makeconf.awk
- don't use libhack's opendir, it breaks
dot.profile:
- don't assume terminal is `sun'
- set EDITOR=ed
-
list:
- instbin -> ramdiskbin to make `makeconf.awk' work
- CRUNCHSPECIAL those special dirs
- add our LIBS as necessary
libhack changes:
- if NOLIBHACKOPENDIR is set, don't build opendir.o
Shouldn't bother doing DNS lookups or wait a really long time,
should display verbose output and quit after the host has been
successfully pinged even once. count bumped up to 5 to give boards
which take a while to do media autoselection time to do their thing.
makes some things harder, for instance... Deal correctly with the case
where the user-supplied hostname is already fully qualified with the
domain name they supplied. Addresses PR#6955.
installation would try to continue even if no networking interfaces found,
and, and, when that was fixed, instead of dropping back to the
pick-distribution-medium menu they'd drop all the way back to the opening
menu.
to the toplevel menu, as promised by the media selection menu, without
first going through an "installation is aborted" menu.
* when something causes the installation to fail (e.g. missing set or failure
to extract a set's contents), don't go through N menus
(missing/failed/aborted, sets didn't install/aborted,
sanity check failed/aborted) before getting back to the top level. The
user only needs to be told once that their life sucks.
screen as XXX. Where they were not followed by wclear(stdscr), add
wclear(stdscr). Somebody was let out without adult supervision. If i
were more adventurous, i'd remove the bits that output 'CL', but i'm not
gonna go there right now.
forward them on to subprocesses. nice when running a subprocess in
a display window to allow the user to kill the subprocess w/o nuking
sysinst itself. add handling for QUIT, which gets handled the same
as intr. add handling for HUP which just cleans up. More signals
should be handled.
paths relative to ${.CURDIR} instead. Using BSDSRCDIR here means that
it's impossible to compile these programs out of the source tree they're
a part of, unless that sort tree happens to be the one at BSDSRCDIR.
pseudo-devices. This is done by explicitly listing the driver names
(e.g. "lo") to ignore in an array in this file. Right now, "eon", "gre",
"ipip", "lo", "nsip", "ppp", "sl", "strip", and "tun" are ignored.