ad140b77ea
the needed endianism of the architecture. One step towards cross-building releases. Not touched are newfs calls in install scripts as they run on the desired machine and thus default correctly. |
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floppy-GENERIC | ||
instkernel | ||
rz25dist | ||
toolchain-install | ||
Makefile | ||
README.files |
Tape, CD, and Disk Images This release or snapshot contains two installation image types: installation/floppy/disk1of2 installation/floppy/disk2of2 and installation/diskimage/cdhdtape Both image sets load the same installation kernel into memory and then make no further use of the source media. The general idea is to load a kernel with a pre-initialized memory filesystem of utilities and an installation program. The use of the floppy disk set should be obvious. The cdhdtape image can be written to a CD, hard drive, or tape and then booted from the SRM console. To copy the boot images to a magnetic disk under unix, the dd(1) command can be used: Floppy: dd if=disk1of2 of=/dev/rfd0a bs=18k (change floppies) dd if=disk2of2 of=/dev/rfd0a bs=18k You can write the image to a hard drive too: dd bs=18k if=cdhdtape of=/dev/rsd1c dd bs=18k if=cdhdtape of=/dev/rsd1d (NetBSD/i386) For a tape, it is important to use a block size of 512, so: dd bs=512 if=cdhdtape of=/dev/erst0 (NetBSD) dd bs=512 if=cdhdtape of=/dev/rmt0h (Digital Unix) Note that the bits on the installation media are only used when initially loaded. They can be written to a hard drive, loaded, and then overwritten during the installation with no conflict, or alternatively, the boot CD or tape can be removed and replaced with one containing the installation sets. The install notes from this directory subtree are present on the installation file system.