Check the first partition type in devopen(), and if it is of type
FS_RAID, add 64 to blkdev_part_offset.
NOTE: This brings the size of the alpha first-stage bootblocks up to
close to the maximum. RAID1 support is controlled by the
BOOTXX_RAID1_SUPPORT define, and is easy to disable if size
becomes an issue.
move the vers.c depend/build goo to Makefile.bootprogs and remove
explicit rules in other Makefiles
sync the message in */version files with other ports using newvers_stand.sh
XXX the new depend rules were tested to limited extend (also with obj dirs)
XXX on i386 and should be ok; the changes should not otherwise influence build
are all the same, so eliminate the redundancy. also, use mrg's
"Version:" trick to find the version rather than using the RCS ID.
(I must have been having a ... bad day.) Also, bump boot and netboot
versions for all the changes that have been happening lately.
guts were actually functionally equivalent to the current guts, but were
much larger, filled with bugs, and indeed poked around at the disklabel
when some of those bugs prevented them from ever using the disklabel!
had a few bugs fixed that let the problem slip in, and since bootxx's
Makefile now goes out of its way to satisfy installboot's undocumented
and totally unreasonable assumptions about the bootxx file it's operating
on. No point in fixing the assumptions, because sooner rather than later
this incarnation of installboot is going to die.
Clean up the "Region 1" related definitions, and define load addresses,
max load size, and max total size for as many boot block types as we can.
(types = unified, primary, secondary). We can't always define all
values for all boot blocks, though.
Make CPP flags selection less gross.
Use objcopy rather than headersize (yay, evil gets a stake to the heart!).
Use a little shell script to verify that the sizes of the boot blocks are OK.
Do not compile too much more of libsa than we actually have to.
but if not then try to boot "netbsd", "netbsd.bak", "netbsd.old", and
"onetbsd" (in that order) until one is found or until the list of names
is exhausted.
boot block, since it will be shared with the network boot block.
(2) Kill a.out support, since it never worked was never used, and will
never be.
(3) Add support for booting of ELF kernels, from Matt Thomas. (Currently
untested, but it compiles.)