# $NetBSD: BURBCLAVE,v 1.2 1994/10/26 02:02:24 cgd Exp $ include "std.amiga" maxusers 8 options TIMEZONE=300, DST=1 options "M68040", "M68030", "M68020", FPSP, FPCOPROC options SWAPPAGER, VNODEPAGER, DEVPAGER options INET options FFS, MFS, FDESC, ADOSFS options "COMPAT_09", "COMPAT_43" options COMPAT_SUNOS, "TCP_COMPAT_42", "COMPAT_NOMID" options GENERIC, KTRACE, DIAGNOSTIC, "NKMEMCLUSTERS=256" options PANICWAIT, DEBUG, DDB options GRF_ECS, GRF_NTSC, GRF_PAL, "GRF_A2024" #options "CD9660", PORTAL, MSDOSFS, PROCFS, NULLFS, FIFO, KERNFS #options NFSSERVER, NFSCLIENT #options SYSVSHM, SYSVMSG, SYSVSEM #options SYSCALL_DEBUG, SCSIDEBUG, KGDB grfcc0 at mainbus0 # custom chips grf0 at grfcc0 grfrt0 at ztwobus0 # retina II grf1 at grfrt0 ite* at grf? # scsi stuff, all possible gvpbus0 at ztwobus0 gtsc0 at gvpbus0 scsibus0 at gtsc0 # # compat. # sd0 at scsibus? target 0 lun 0 sd1 at scsibus? target 1 lun 0 sd2 at scsibus? target 2 lun 0 sd3 at scsibus? target 3 lun 0 sd4 at scsibus? target 4 lun 0 sd5 at scsibus? target 5 lun 0 sd6 at scsibus? target 6 lun 0 # # This is nicer however many amiga setups expect sd units to refer to # scsi target numbers. If this is not the case, you can remove the # specific sdx lines above and each hard drive from low target to high # will configure to the next available sd unit number sd* at scsibus? target ? lun ? # scsi disks st* at scsibus? target ? lun ? # scsi tapes cd* at scsibus? target ? lun ? # scsi cd's pseudo-device sl # slip pseudo-device ppp # ppp pseudo-device view 2 # views pseudo-device pty 16 # pseudo terminals pseudo-device loop # network loopback config netbsd swap on generic