deb4082f80
Support for AXPpci CPUs, Support for AlphaStation 600 CPUs, new boot block structure, which requires an 'installboot' program and works a lot like the NetBSD/sparc boot blocks.
136 lines
6.2 KiB
Plaintext
136 lines
6.2 KiB
Plaintext
$NetBSD: README,v 1.7 1995/11/23 02:33:17 cgd Exp $
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Obtaining NetBSD/Alpha sources and binaries:
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NetBSD/Alpha sources and binaries are available from:
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ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/arch/alpha
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See the README.files file there to figure out which of
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the following items corresponds to what file(s) in the FTP
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archive.
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There are two sets of system binaries available:
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(1) an rz25 disk image, for first-time installation
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(see below), and
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(2) two tar files of the binaries, for updates.
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(one of the tar files is the contents of /etc,
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one is everything else, except a kernel.
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There are no instructions on how to use these.
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Good luck! 8-)
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There are also two precompiled kernels available: one generic
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kernel which will prompt for a root device, and one which tries
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to boot diskless. The generic kernel is included in the rz25
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disk image.
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X11 client binaries are packaged seperately. (There is no
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server at this time.)
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There are several sets of sources available:
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(1) kernel source snapshot (complete kernel sources),
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(2) compiler toolchain source snapshot (complete
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toolchain sources),
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(3) diffs to the NetBSD-current sources as of the date
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of the release to make them match what's used on
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the alpha port. (You should be able to get the
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NetBSD-current sources, replace the kernel sources
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with the ones i'm distributing, add in these
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diffs and the toolchain sources, and compile up a
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complete system.)
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(4) diffs to the XFree86 3.1.2 sources to make them
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work with NetBSD/Alpha. (If you add these to
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the XFree86 3.1.2 sources, you should be able to
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compile up the X clients.)
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If you are interested in the NetBSD/Alpha port, I suggest that you
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subscribe to the NetBSD "port-alpha" mailing list by sending an
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email message to majordomo@netbsd.org with no subject and with a
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body of "subscribe port-alpha" (without the quotes). For help on
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using majordomo, send it mail with an empty subject and body.
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Installing the NetBSD/Alpha distribution:
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[ Note that these instructions are minimal; it's assumed that if
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you're going to be installing this, you're knowledgeable about
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booting Alphas and doing other sysadmin-ish stuff, are willing
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to look in your Alpha documentation, or are brave. If they're
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really not good enough to get you running, get in touch with me
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and I'll try to help you. ]
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To install the NetBSD/Alpha distribution, you'll need a disk at
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least the size of an RZ25 -- about 406Mb. Once you've gotten the
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binary distribution from me, gunzip it and dd it to the raw disk.
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The binary distribution includes a disklabel and boot block, so you
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don't need to do anything special to make it bootable. I created
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the binary distribution's file systems with an older version (4.3
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Reno) of the Berkeley Fast File System format, so that you can
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mount, read, and write them under OSF/1.
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Once you've dd'd the image to the disk, set your system to use a
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serial console. Boot the Alpha with the NetBSD disk, supplying the
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boot flag "-s". It should print something about "NetBSD/Alpha Boot
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program", load the kernel, print a copyright, and print various
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startup messages. Included among those startup messages will be
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SCSI bus/id to device name mappings for all of the SCSI devices
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that NetBSD recognizes. Eventually, it'll ask you for the name of
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the root device. It expects something like "sd0", "sd1", etc., and
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you should pick the name that corresponds to the NetBSD disk.
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After a short while, you should be asked for the name of a shell
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to use; just hit return. You're advised to fsck the disk at this
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point (the root partition is partition 'a' and the /usr partition
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is partition 'd'), remount the root partition read-write (use mount
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-u root-dev /), and create some necessary system information files:
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/etc/hosts
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/etc/resolv.conf (if you want to use DNS)
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/etc/myname (the hostname of the machine)
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/etc/mygate (the LAN's gateway's IP address, if your network
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setup requires that it be named explicitly)
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/etc/hostname.le0 (on TurboChannel machines, to describe
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the enet addr, etc., for the Alpha's ethernet. The
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format can be discerned by looking in /etc/netstart.
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As an example, for my development machine, it's:
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inet macallan.dssc.cs.cmu.edu 0xffff0000 128.2.255.255
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^hostname ^^^netmask ^^^broadcast)
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/etc/hostname.de0 (on PCI machines; same format as
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hostname.le0 would have.)
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/etc/fstab (a prototype is in /etc/fstab.sd)
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(You can also create the files mentioned above by mounting the
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disk's file systems under OSF/1 and filling in the appropriate
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information.)
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Once those files are created, you should be able to boot the system
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multi-user. To do so, halt the system and boot again from the
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NetBSD disk, this time supplying the boot flags "-a".
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Once the system has booted, you should be able to log in over the
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network. (Log in as root, at first, then use vipw to create user
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account(s) and re-log in as the appropriate user.) If you used a
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disk other than an RZ25, you may also want to edit the disk's
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disklabel, and create one or more partitions to use the extra space.
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Using NetBSD/Alpha:
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You'll probably want to NFS mount the sources from another machine;
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that's what I do, and it works just fine. If you'd like tips on
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good ways to keep the NetBSD sources under source control, just ask.
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A fair number of binaries don't work properly. For example, GDB
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won't properly run programs or debug core files; someone needs
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to write support for NetBSD/Alpha.
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As noted above, the SCSI code on TurboChannel machines is reliable
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only when being used with one SCSI bus at a time; this is obviously
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a bug. Additionally, the SCSI driver seems unhappy about dealing
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with certain types of disk drives (e.g. the IBM Lightning).
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Because I've been working on getting the system up and running, then
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out the door, I've not had much time to do performance analysis on
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the kernel, nor tried to improve performance in any way. Some of
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the code is awfully rough. That being said, on a lot of operations
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I'm seeing performance comparable to that of OSF/1 on the same
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hardware, so I've not gone too far wrong anywhere.
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Chris Demetriou
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cgd@cs.cmu.edu
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