prep.RISCOS revision 1.7 1 1.7 wiz $NetBSD: prep.RISCOS,v 1.7 2002/02/16 10:54:55 wiz Exp $
2 1.1 bjh21
3 1.1 bjh21 These instructions are specific to NetBSD/acorn32 on Acorn RISCOS platforms
4 1.2 reinoud (RiscPC/A7000/A7000+/NC's).
5 1.1 bjh21
6 1.5 reinoud Last updated for the BtNetBSD bootloader version 0.99 at 16 February 2002 by
7 1.7 wiz Reinoud Zandijk (reinoud (a] netbsd.org), portmaster of NetBSD/acorn32.
8 1.5 reinoud
9 1.7 wiz For a more detailed acknowledgement and list of contributers see Appendix B
10 1.7 wiz at the bottom.
11 1.5 reinoud
12 1.5 reinoud
13 1.5 reinoud
14 1.1 bjh21 0 Before you start
15 1.1 bjh21
16 1.5 reinoud Read this document and one of the INSTALL documents accompanying this
17 1.5 reinoud document completely before continuing. There might be some things mentioned
18 1.5 reinoud double but this document ought to help with the RISCOS installation
19 1.5 reinoud specifically.
20 1.5 reinoud
21 1.5 reinoud
22 1.1 bjh21
23 1.1 bjh21 1 Requirements
24 1.1 bjh21
25 1.5 reinoud
26 1.1 bjh21 1.1 Hardware
27 1.1 bjh21
28 1.7 wiz Refer to the NetBSD installation notes and/or the web site
29 1.5 reinoud http://www.netbsd.org/Ports/Acorn32/ for a list of supported hardware.
30 1.5 reinoud
31 1.1 bjh21
32 1.1 bjh21 1.2 Software
33 1.1 bjh21
34 1.1 bjh21 You will need the following RiscOS software:
35 1.1 bjh21
36 1.1 bjh21 A program that will unpack sparchives. We recommend that you
37 1.4 wiz get David Pilling's !SparkPlug. A self-extracting version of this
38 1.2 reinoud can be found at David Pilling's W3 site
39 1.2 reinoud (http://www.pilling.demon.co.uk/free.html).
40 1.1 bjh21
41 1.4 wiz A program that can uncompress gzip files, because the current bootloader
42 1.2 reinoud can't read gzip'ed kernels (yet!).
43 1.2 reinoud
44 1.3 reinoud The included command line gzip program
45 1.4 wiz installation/misc/gzip_ff8 (!) which is a mirror a version
46 1.3 reinoud that Laurent Domisse has patched to work on SA. This is
47 1.3 reinoud also available from:
48 1.2 reinoud http://www.users.dircon.co.uk/~arcangel/files/index.html
49 1.2 reinoud Just set the type of the file to `ff8'.
50 1.1 bjh21
51 1.1 bjh21 SparkFS from David Pilling (commercial) (v1.28 for
52 1.1 bjh21 SA-110).
53 1.1 bjh21
54 1.2 reinoud !Gzip from HENSA (micros.hensa.ac.uk); is it still alive
55 1.2 reinoud though?
56 1.1 bjh21
57 1.1 bjh21 A program to report your disk's geometry:
58 1.1 bjh21
59 1.4 wiz Not really needed, you can simply boot the installation
60 1.1 bjh21 kernel and look for the geometry in the boot messages.
61 1.1 bjh21
62 1.1 bjh21 Sergio Monesi's fsck suite (a good thing to have around
63 1.1 bjh21 anyway). Available from:
64 1.1 bjh21 http://cdc8g5.cdc.polimi.it/~pel0015/fsck.html
65 1.1 bjh21
66 1.1 bjh21 !Zap (The read disk facility). Available from HENSA.
67 1.1 bjh21
68 1.1 bjh21 The partition software/formatter for your desired installation
69 1.1 bjh21 target:
70 1.1 bjh21
71 1.1 bjh21 IDE disks on motherboard interface: !HForm
72 1.1 bjh21 IDE disks on Simtec interface: UNKNOWN
73 1.1 bjh21 IDE disks on ICS interface: UNKNOWN
74 1.1 bjh21 IDE disks on RapIDE interface: UNKNOWN
75 1.1 bjh21 Acorn SCSI cards: ScsiDM
76 1.1 bjh21 Power-tec SCSI cards: !PowerMgr
77 1.1 bjh21 Cumana SCSI-2: !SCSIMgr
78 1.1 bjh21 oak SCSI-1 card: UNKNOWN
79 1.1 bjh21 MCS Connect32 SCSI: UNKNOWN
80 1.1 bjh21 Morley SCSI: UNKNOWN
81 1.1 bjh21
82 1.2 reinoud Additionally you will require the following :
83 1.1 bjh21
84 1.1 bjh21 An installation kernel for your platform:
85 1.1 bjh21
86 1.2 reinoud RiscPC/A7000(+)/NC's : INSTALL kernel
87 1.1 bjh21
88 1.2 reinoud The Bootloader and RiscOS tools: BtNetBSD.tar.gz or BtNetBSD.zip
89 1.2 reinoud as found in the installation/misc directory. (This should be
90 1.2 reinoud pre-extracted if you're installing from CD-ROM).
91 1.1 bjh21
92 1.2 reinoud The NetBSD/acorn32 distribution sets (Will be on the CD-ROM, or
93 1.1 bjh21 available from your nearest NetBSD ftp site).
94 1.1 bjh21
95 1.1 bjh21 A hardcopy of this document, along with a hardcopy of the
96 1.1 bjh21 NetBSD installation instructions "INSTALL").
97 1.1 bjh21
98 1.5 reinoud
99 1.5 reinoud
100 1.1 bjh21 2 Preparing your hard disk
101 1.1 bjh21
102 1.1 bjh21 Terms:
103 1.1 bjh21
104 1.1 bjh21 Device: The actual physical hard disk
105 1.1 bjh21 Partition: A section of a device.
106 1.1 bjh21 File system: A structured partition that is able to hold files.
107 1.1 bjh21 Disc: A RiscOS file system in a partition. There can be
108 1.1 bjh21 more than one Disc per Device.
109 1.1 bjh21
110 1.1 bjh21 You will have to decide which device you wish to install NetBSD on.
111 1.1 bjh21 You will also have to decide whether you want to split the device
112 1.1 bjh21 between one or more RiscOS discs and NetBSD or dedicate a whole
113 1.1 bjh21 device for NetBSD.
114 1.1 bjh21
115 1.1 bjh21 In making this decision you should consider the possibility that if
116 1.1 bjh21 NetBSD is incorrectly configured on a shared device then your shared
117 1.1 bjh21 data is at risk.
118 1.1 bjh21
119 1.1 bjh21 It is still recommended that if you decide to dedicate a device to
120 1.1 bjh21 NetBSD that you set aside a small RISC OS partition at the beginning
121 1.1 bjh21 of the device. This is a useful place to store the RiscOS side of
122 1.1 bjh21 NetBSD, and will make the use of UnixFS easier to configure. If you
123 1.1 bjh21 do decide to create a minimal RiscOS partition at the beginning of
124 1.1 bjh21 the device, a size of 10-20 MB is recommended (some partitioning
125 1.1 bjh21 software has problems with partitions smaller than this).
126 1.1 bjh21
127 1.1 bjh21 The point is that you will have to repartition your device to make
128 1.1 bjh21 room for a separate partition after the RISC OS one for NetBSD. This
129 1.1 bjh21 means backing up your device, re-partitioning it and then copying all
130 1.1 bjh21 the data back afterwards. We recommend that you only copy the needed
131 1.1 bjh21 data back and put off installing the rest until you have NetBSD up
132 1.1 bjh21 and running. This way you will save yourself a lot of work if
133 1.1 bjh21 something goes wrong and you have to start all over again.
134 1.1 bjh21
135 1.5 reinoud
136 1.1 bjh21 2.1 Sharing your device
137 1.1 bjh21
138 1.5 reinoud
139 1.1 bjh21 2.1.1 Acorn IDE
140 1.1 bjh21
141 1.1 bjh21 Use !HForm for this interface. This is a program that is delivered
142 1.1 bjh21 with your computer and is located in the Utilities directory on your
143 1.4 wiz hard disk.
144 1.1 bjh21
145 1.1 bjh21 With this software you only have the possibility of using one
146 1.1 bjh21 partition for RISC OS, so you have to set the rest aside for NetBSD.
147 1.1 bjh21
148 1.1 bjh21 Use this procedure to set up your device:
149 1.1 bjh21
150 1.4 wiz Start !HForm by double-clicking on its icon.
151 1.1 bjh21
152 1.1 bjh21 Choose the "custom" or "other" option when prompted (usually
153 1.1 bjh21 the last).
154 1.1 bjh21
155 1.1 bjh21 Use the default values for the geometry but do not enter the
156 1.1 bjh21 full number of cylinders. Just enter the number you want to
157 1.1 bjh21 use for RISC OS. Make a note of this number.
158 1.1 bjh21
159 1.1 bjh21 Continue to accept the default answers until you're asked
160 1.4 wiz whether you want to format or initialize, choose initialize.
161 1.1 bjh21
162 1.1 bjh21 Go to the section about running bb_riscbsd.
163 1.1 bjh21
164 1.5 reinoud
165 1.1 bjh21 2.1.2 Cumana SCSI-2 card
166 1.1 bjh21
167 1.1 bjh21 It is recommended that you use a newer version of !SCSIMgr (newer
168 1.1 bjh21 than v1.55) since this will be easier to use when you want to leave
169 1.1 bjh21 part of the device unused by RISC OS. You should check for the latest
170 1.1 bjh21 version of this software at the following URL:
171 1.1 bjh21 http://www.cumana.demon.co.uk
172 1.1 bjh21
173 1.1 bjh21 You need to create one or more RISC OS partitions, and you do it in
174 1.1 bjh21 in the following way:
175 1.1 bjh21 Run !SCSIMgr by double-clicking on it.
176 1.1 bjh21
177 1.1 bjh21 Select the device you wish to repartition.
178 1.1 bjh21
179 1.1 bjh21 Click on the clear icon in the partitions subwindow.
180 1.1 bjh21
181 1.1 bjh21 This will give you a dialogue box where you can specify the
182 1.1 bjh21 size of the RISC OS partitions. Do not select all since you
183 1.1 bjh21 want to use part of it for NetBSD.
184 1.1 bjh21
185 1.1 bjh21 Enter the amount of the device you wish to reserve for
186 1.1 bjh21 RiscOS. This will be the whole device size less the amount
187 1.1 bjh21 you want to reserve for NetBSD. Make a note of this number.
188 1.1 bjh21
189 1.1 bjh21 If you like, split the RISC OS portion of the device into
190 1.1 bjh21 several partition (you should only "see" the RiscOS portion).
191 1.1 bjh21
192 1.4 wiz Click on Execute when you are happy with the partitions. This
193 1.4 wiz will create your partitions, and wipe your device.
194 1.1 bjh21
195 1.1 bjh21 Go to the section about running bb_riscbsd.
196 1.1 bjh21
197 1.5 reinoud
198 1.1 bjh21 2.1.3 Alsystems Power-tec SCSI-2 card
199 1.1 bjh21
200 1.1 bjh21 You must use the !PowerMgr program to partition the device.
201 1.1 bjh21
202 1.1 bjh21 The RISC OS partitions should be called RiscOs:, and the NetBSD one
203 1.1 bjh21 should be called Empty:.
204 1.1 bjh21
205 1.1 bjh21 Here is the procedure you should use:
206 1.1 bjh21 Start !PowerMgr by double-clicking on its icon.
207 1.1 bjh21
208 1.1 bjh21 Click on advanced in the main window
209 1.1 bjh21
210 1.1 bjh21 Click on Define/create partitions
211 1.4 wiz Click on the device you want to set up for NetBSD.
212 1.1 bjh21
213 1.6 reinoud Set up the RISC OS partitions as "RiscOs:" and the
214 1.6 reinoud remaining one as "Empty:".
215 1.1 bjh21
216 1.4 wiz Click on each figure and press RETURN.
217 1.1 bjh21
218 1.4 wiz Click on partition drive.
219 1.1 bjh21
220 1.1 bjh21 Click on yes to warning as you really want to wipe
221 1.4 wiz the device.
222 1.1 bjh21
223 1.1 bjh21 Click on yes to proceed, this will lead you to the
224 1.1 bjh21 partition init.
225 1.1 bjh21
226 1.1 bjh21 Partition init
227 1.1 bjh21 Set a tick on all RiscOs: partitions, give them a name
228 1.1 bjh21 and set LFAU to auto.
229 1.1 bjh21
230 1.1 bjh21 Unset the tick on your Empty: partition.
231 1.1 bjh21
232 1.1 bjh21 Click on Inititialize selected partitions.
233 1.1 bjh21
234 1.1 bjh21 Click on yes to proceed init as you want to wipe the
235 1.4 wiz selected partitions.
236 1.1 bjh21
237 1.4 wiz Click on yes to proceed to configure.
238 1.1 bjh21
239 1.1 bjh21 Configure
240 1.1 bjh21 Here you should set up the RISC OS partitions as you
241 1.1 bjh21 like them. Normally the default will be ok.
242 1.1 bjh21
243 1.1 bjh21 Click on configure. This will configure your computer
244 1.1 bjh21 and give you access to the Discs.
245 1.1 bjh21
246 1.6 reinoud You *Must Not* run bb_riscbsd.
247 1.5 reinoud
248 1.5 reinoud
249 1.1 bjh21
250 1.1 bjh21 2.1.4 Acorn SCSI card
251 1.1 bjh21
252 1.1 bjh21 You can only have one RISC OS partition with this card. The rest has
253 1.1 bjh21 to be set aside for NetBSD.
254 1.1 bjh21
255 1.1 bjh21 This card does not have a friendly WIMP-based interface on the SCSI
256 1.1 bjh21 management program, but the command line version is very good. You
257 1.1 bjh21 should run this in a task window (press CTRL-F12):
258 1.1 bjh21 dir <location_of_scsidm>
259 1.1 bjh21
260 1.1 bjh21 scsidm
261 1.1 bjh21
262 1.1 bjh21 You will get the following prompt:
263 1.1 bjh21 scsidm>
264 1.1 bjh21
265 1.1 bjh21 Now you should enter the following commands:
266 1.1 bjh21 probe (to see which devices are available)
267 1.1 bjh21
268 1.1 bjh21 device <no> (replace <no> with the no of your device)
269 1.1 bjh21
270 1.1 bjh21 section (to divide the device between RISC OS and
271 1.1 bjh21 NetBSD)
272 1.1 bjh21 Answer yes to the question:
273 1.1 bjh21 Include RISCiX partitions?
274 1.1 bjh21
275 1.1 bjh21 Enter the size of the RISC OS area in blocks
276 1.1 bjh21 (sectors)
277 1.1 bjh21
278 1.1 bjh21 SCSIDM will round this up to the nearest cylinder
279 1.1 bjh21 boundary.
280 1.1 bjh21
281 1.1 bjh21 Answer yes to the question:
282 1.1 bjh21 Do you really want to section device <no>?
283 1.1 bjh21
284 1.1 bjh21 This will section the device into two partitions.
285 1.1 bjh21
286 1.1 bjh21 quit
287 1.1 bjh21
288 1.6 reinoud Go to the section on running bb_riscbsd.
289 1.5 reinoud
290 1.5 reinoud
291 1.1 bjh21
292 1.1 bjh21 2.1.5 Other interfaces
293 1.1 bjh21
294 1.1 bjh21 It may not be possible to partition devices on other interface. If
295 1.1 bjh21 you are using a different interface you have 2 options:
296 1.1 bjh21 Try to work out how to partition devices on it
297 1.1 bjh21
298 1.1 bjh21 Use the entire device for NetBSD
299 1.1 bjh21
300 1.5 reinoud
301 1.1 bjh21 2.2 Using a whole device for NetBSD
302 1.1 bjh21
303 1.2 reinoud As a safety precaution NetBSD/acorn32 looks for a filecore bootblock
304 1.1 bjh21 at the beginning of any device it labels. If it finds one and it
305 1.2 reinoud looks as though it is in use then NetBSD/acorn32 will not touch it.
306 1.1 bjh21
307 1.1 bjh21 Because of this, if you've ever used your device for RiscOS, you will
308 1.1 bjh21 need to invalidate this bootblock.
309 1.1 bjh21
310 1.1 bjh21 To do this you need to:
311 1.4 wiz Be absolutely sure you want to do this.
312 1.1 bjh21
313 1.4 wiz Run bb_trash and follow the instructions.
314 1.1 bjh21
315 1.1 bjh21 Ensure that this device is now not configured for RiscOS.
316 1.1 bjh21
317 1.1 bjh21 You are now ready to boot NetBSD and continue the installation.
318 1.1 bjh21
319 1.5 reinoud
320 1.5 reinoud
321 1.1 bjh21 3 Running bb_riscbsd
322 1.1 bjh21
323 1.1 bjh21 When you run this program, you will first be asked whether you are
324 1.1 bjh21 installing to an ADFS drive or a SCSI drive. You can just press A or
325 1.1 bjh21 S respectively. (The bb_riscbsd program assumes that you are using a
326 1.1 bjh21 non-Acorn SCSI card, so if you are using an Acorn card, then you may
327 1.1 bjh21 have to edit this program and replace CSI_DiscOp with SCSIFS_DiscOp.)
328 1.1 bjh21
329 1.1 bjh21 Then you will be asked which disc you want to install NetBSD on. This
330 1.1 bjh21 *must* be the first disc on the device. bb_riscbsd will now
331 1.1 bjh21 scrutinize the device and see how it has been laid out.
332 1.1 bjh21
333 1.1 bjh21 It will then tell you how much of the device is occupied by RiscOS in
334 1.1 bjh21 cylinders, and you will then be asked for the NetBSD starting
335 1.1 bjh21 cylinder. Normally you should just enter the number given to you
336 1.1 bjh21 since the RISC OS starting cylinder is 0 and therefore the last
337 1.1 bjh21 cylinder in use is one less than the figure given. If no figure is
338 1.1 bjh21 displayed, then your partitioning software failed to fill in the
339 1.1 bjh21 bootblock completely (it doesn't have to do this for you but most do)
340 1.1 bjh21 or you selected the wrong device. If you are convinced that this is
341 1.4 wiz the correct device then you must calculate a cylinder offset using
342 1.1 bjh21 the numbers noted down during partitioning (if it is not a whole
343 1.1 bjh21 number *always* round up, you might waste a little of the device but
344 1.4 wiz it'll be safer).
345 1.1 bjh21
346 1.1 bjh21 Make a note of this number.
347 1.1 bjh21
348 1.1 bjh21 bb_riscbsd will make a backup of the original bootblock, but it
349 1.1 bjh21 can be non-trivial to put it back.
350 1.1 bjh21
351 1.5 reinoud
352 1.5 reinoud
353 1.1 bjh21 4 Booting
354 1.1 bjh21
355 1.1 bjh21 Now that your device is ready for the installation you need to
356 1.5 reinoud unpack the bootloader archive. Pick either BtNetBSD.tgz or BtNetBSD.zip
357 1.7 wiz depending on which type of archive you can extract easiest. (if you're
358 1.5 reinoud installing from CD-ROM then this should be unpacked already), copy the
359 1.7 wiz directory to your hard disk. In the archive you'll find the tools
360 1.5 reinoud mentioned in this document as well as the bootloader !BtNetBSD itself.
361 1.5 reinoud
362 1.5 reinoud
363 1.5 reinoud 4.1 Configuring the !BtNetBSD bootloader before installation
364 1.5 reinoud
365 1.5 reinoud Open the !BtNetBSD application and edit the `fastboot' file to specify
366 1.7 wiz the installation kernel location; an example is already given.
367 1.1 bjh21
368 1.1 bjh21
369 1.5 reinoud You can also set other details like tweaking with the amount of memory in
370 1.5 reinoud the WimpSlot of the bootloader when this is too much. Remember however that
371 1.5 reinoud this shouldn't be set too low for it can crash the bootloader.
372 1.1 bjh21
373 1.5 reinoud When you think you've filled in the proper details save the file again
374 1.7 wiz and proceed.
375 1.1 bjh21
376 1.1 bjh21
377 1.5 reinoud 4.2 Running !BtNetBSD
378 1.5 reinoud
379 1.5 reinoud Double click on the !BtNetBSD icon (or the !Run file in it) to start it
380 1.7 wiz up.
381 1.1 bjh21
382 1.1 bjh21 NetBSD should now start to boot, install NetBSD as per the NetBSD
383 1.1 bjh21 installation notes.
384 1.1 bjh21
385 1.5 reinoud When you finish the installation you can restarted the computer as
386 1.7 wiz instructed.
387 1.5 reinoud
388 1.1 bjh21
389 1.5 reinoud 4.3 Configuring !BtNetBSD after installation
390 1.1 bjh21
391 1.5 reinoud Open the !BtNetBSD application again and edit the `fastboot' file again
392 1.5 reinoud to fill in the normal kernel name.
393 1.1 bjh21
394 1.5 reinoud Specify the device NetBSD should be looking for its kernel in. This is
395 1.5 reinoud the `Run <BtNetBSD$Dir>.native.mountufs ADFS 4' line that is there
396 1.5 reinoud by default. See this document for other names.
397 1.1 bjh21
398 1.5 reinoud Set the kernel as UnixFS:$.netbsd.
399 1.1 bjh21
400 1.5 reinoud Save the file and run !BtNetBSD again (see above).
401 1.1 bjh21
402 1.1 bjh21
403 1.1 bjh21
404 1.1 bjh21 5 Advanced stuff
405 1.1 bjh21
406 1.5 reinoud
407 1.1 bjh21 5.1 Using UnixFS to copy the sets.
408 1.1 bjh21
409 1.1 bjh21 Once the required sets are installed and you can boot from your
410 1.1 bjh21 newly installed NetBSD setup, you can use UnixFS to copy the
411 1.1 bjh21 remaining sets from RiscOS to NetBSD.
412 1.1 bjh21
413 1.1 bjh21 In order to be able to use unixfs to transfer the sets you must have
414 1.1 bjh21 a certain setup.
415 1.1 bjh21
416 1.1 bjh21 1) You must have the RiscOS disc that corresponds to the NetBSD
417 1.4 wiz device configured (e.g., *con. IDEdiscs 2) even if it has no RiscOS
418 1.1 bjh21 section.
419 1.1 bjh21 2) If you have RISC OS 3.5 without the new FileCore, then you must
420 1.1 bjh21 also have the NetBSD file system *completely* below the 511 MB
421 1.1 bjh21 boundary of the device.
422 1.1 bjh21 3) You must know the SWI base of the <filesys>_DiscOp SWI. Here
423 1.1 bjh21 <filesys> is SCSIFS, SCSI or ADFS depending upon which controller
424 1.1 bjh21 type you have you NetBSD device on.
425 1.1 bjh21 Some common ones:
426 1.1 bjh21 Power-tec SCSI-2 card: &40980
427 1.1 bjh21 RapIDE: &4BBC0
428 1.1 bjh21
429 1.1 bjh21 There are small obey files for some interfaces supplied with UnixFS.
430 1.1 bjh21 4) Have given the directory you want to write into write permission for
431 1.1 bjh21 everyone. This should have been done above. For example to make
432 1.1 bjh21 /usr/distrib world writable type (as root):
433 1.1 bjh21 chmod 1777 /usr/distrib
434 1.1 bjh21
435 1.1 bjh21 To mount a Unix partition:
436 1.1 bjh21
437 1.1 bjh21 1) Double-click on the unixfs_res module to load it.
438 1.1 bjh21 2) Run a unixfs_mount command to mount the partition.
439 1.1 bjh21 3) Open the root directory by double-clicking on the openroot file.
440 1.1 bjh21 4) Open the distrib directory and just copy the sets to this.
441 1.1 bjh21 5) Shut down unixfs by double-clicking on the kill_unixfs file.
442 1.1 bjh21 THIS STEP IS VERY IMPORTANT as it works like dismount on MS-DOS floppies.
443 1.1 bjh21
444 1.1 bjh21 The difficult step here is step number 2). If you are using an
445 1.1 bjh21 ADFS IDE disc, then you can just double-click on one of the
446 1.1 bjh21 following obey files (always choose the RiscOS disc number that
447 1.1 bjh21 corresponds to the *first* disc on the NetBSD device):
448 1.1 bjh21 - MountHD4a (ADFS::4 drive, not disc, root file system)
449 1.1 bjh21 - MountHD4e (ADFS::4 drive, not disc, /usr file system)
450 1.1 bjh21 - MountHD5a (ADFS::5 drive, not disc, root file system)
451 1.1 bjh21 - MountHD5e (ADFS::5 drive, not disc, /usr file system)
452 1.1 bjh21
453 1.1 bjh21 If you are not using an ADFS IDE device, you need to create such
454 1.1 bjh21 an obey file yourself. We recommend that you copy one of the
455 1.1 bjh21 above and change that. These files normally only contain a
456 1.1 bjh21 unixfs_mount command. If you go to the command line (or a task
457 1.1 bjh21 window), and you type *help unixfs_mount you will see that the
458 1.1 bjh21 unixfs_mount command has a very incomprehensible syntax.
459 1.1 bjh21
460 1.1 bjh21 The unixfs_mount command normally only takes one argument. That
461 1.1 bjh21 is composed of the following:
462 1.1 bjh21 (discop_swibase + (disc << 3) + partition)
463 1.1 bjh21
464 1.1 bjh21 To mount the root partition of third Power-tec SCSI-2 disc the
465 1.1 bjh21 following commands can be used in task window (press CTRL-F12) to
466 1.1 bjh21 find the argument to unixfs_mount:
467 1.1 bjh21 *basic
468 1.1 bjh21 PRINT ~(&40980 + (6 << 3) + 0)
469 1.1 bjh21 QUIT
470 1.1 bjh21
471 1.1 bjh21 The PRINT command calculates the value to use and will in this
472 1.1 bjh21 context give the value 409B0 which also is in hexadecimal. The
473 1.1 bjh21 interesting things above are:
474 1.1 bjh21 - &40980 The SWI base for SCSIFS_DiscOp.
475 1.1 bjh21 - 6 The disc number in RISC OS.
476 1.1 bjh21 - 0 The RiscBSD partition no. with a=0, b=1 etc.
477 1.1 bjh21 - ~ Tell the PRINT command to show the result in hexadecimal.
478 1.1 bjh21 - << Shifts the first number with the second number
479 1.1 bjh21 places left.
480 1.1 bjh21 In this case, it shifts 6 with 3 places to the left.
481 1.1 bjh21 - & Denotes that the number is in hexadecimal.
482 1.1 bjh21 - ( and ) Used to group the sub-expressions.
483 1.1 bjh21
484 1.1 bjh21 When you have calculated the figure to give to unixfs_mount you
485 1.1 bjh21 just change it in the copy of the file you made above and run it by
486 1.1 bjh21 double-clicking on it.
487 1.1 bjh21
488 1.1 bjh21 When you have mounted the unixfs file system, you can open the
489 1.1 bjh21 directory and copy the sets to it.
490 1.1 bjh21 Don't forget to copy the file "checksums" too. As its name suggests, it
491 1.1 bjh21 contains checksums to check if the files are OK.
492 1.1 bjh21
493 1.1 bjh21 When you are finished with the transfer, run the file
494 1.1 bjh21 kill_unixfs to dismount the unixfs file system.
495 1.1 bjh21
496 1.5 reinoud
497 1.5 reinoud
498 1.1 bjh21 Appendix A - Device naming
499 1.1 bjh21
500 1.1 bjh21 The names of the devices in NetBSD are not at all like the ones
501 1.1 bjh21 in RISC OS. We will here try to explain the naming scheme used
502 1.1 bjh21 in NetBSD. This is pretty much the same in all UNIXes, but
503 1.1 bjh21 there will be some differences. NetBSD is derived from BSD and
504 1.1 bjh21 differs from the ones that are derived from System V. Most of
505 1.1 bjh21 the dominant operating systems in the UNIX market today are
506 1.1 bjh21 based on System V (Sun Solaris, SGI Irix, HP HP-UX 10.xx, Linux
507 1.1 bjh21 etc.). Some of them are actually hybrids of both.
508 1.1 bjh21
509 1.4 wiz The file systems in UNIX use the slash character (/) as the
510 1.1 bjh21 directory separator. The top (or bottom if you like) directory
511 1.4 wiz is called the root and is denoted by a single slash (/). All
512 1.4 wiz absolute filenames are addressed starting with the root, so the
513 1.1 bjh21 temporary directory is called /tmp.
514 1.1 bjh21
515 1.1 bjh21 The devices in UNIX are addressed as special files in the
516 1.1 bjh21 file system, and they all start with /dev, so e.g. the quadrature
517 1.1 bjh21 mouse is called /dev/quadmouse.
518 1.1 bjh21
519 1.4 wiz Also some devices can be addressed in two different ways; as a
520 1.1 bjh21 raw (character by character) or block device. This is especially
521 1.1 bjh21 true with discs, and they therefore have two different names.
522 1.1 bjh21 The raw device is called the same as the block device except
523 1.1 bjh21 that it has an 'r' in front of the name. E.g. the first internal
524 1.1 bjh21 hard drive is called /dev/wd0 as a block device, but /dev/rwd0
525 1.1 bjh21 as a raw device. See also later.
526 1.1 bjh21
527 1.1 bjh21 For now, the only needed devices are the storage devices, so we
528 1.1 bjh21 will hereby describe the naming convention used for these.
529 1.1 bjh21 Please note that when you have different partitions on a device,
530 1.1 bjh21 they will get the same number in NetBSD, but different letters,
531 1.1 bjh21 whereas in RISC OS they will get different numbers. See the
532 1.1 bjh21 examples at the end of this section.
533 1.1 bjh21
534 1.1 bjh21 The (block) device names are mostly composed of 4 characters:
535 1.1 bjh21 1. The type
536 1.1 bjh21 - w Winchester drives (i.e. standard ADFS drives)
537 1.1 bjh21 - s SCSI drives
538 1.1 bjh21 - c CD-ROM drives
539 1.1 bjh21 - r RAM drives (obsolete in newer kernels)
540 1.1 bjh21 - m Memory drives (only in newer kernels)
541 1.1 bjh21 - f Floppy drives
542 1.1 bjh21 2. A 'd' indicating a disc device
543 1.1 bjh21 3. The number of the device of that type starting with 0.
544 1.1 bjh21 - For IDE drives, the master will be 0, and the slave 1.
545 1.1 bjh21 - For SCSI drives, the target ID will be used to
546 1.1 bjh21 determine the number. They start on 0 and increase with
547 1.1 bjh21 each device found. The drive with the lowest target ID will get
548 1.1 bjh21 0, the second lowest target ID will get 1 etc.
549 1.1 bjh21 Also, if you have different controllers, all devices on controller
550 1.1 bjh21 0 (lowest expansion slot) will be added first.
551 1.1 bjh21 - The CD-ROM drives act the same way as SCSI drives.
552 1.1 bjh21 - The floppy drive is numbered as in RISC OS.
553 1.1 bjh21 - At present you can only have one RAM drive, so it is 0.
554 1.1 bjh21 4. The name of the partition. There are eight of these (along with
555 1.1 bjh21 common allocations):
556 1.1 bjh21 - a The root partition
557 1.1 bjh21 - b The swap partition
558 1.5 reinoud - c The complete and whole disc ; all OS's and partitions
559 1.5 reinoud - d Part of the disc that is not used by NetBSD; normally RiscOS
560 1.6 reinoud - e The first additional partition.
561 1.1 bjh21 i.e. if you have only /usr, then this will be /usr
562 1.1 bjh21 if you have both /var and /usr this will be /var
563 1.5 reinoud - f The second additional partition.
564 1.1 bjh21 i.e. if you have /var and /usr, this will be /usr
565 1.7 wiz - g The third ...
566 1.7 wiz - h The fourth ...
567 1.1 bjh21
568 1.1 bjh21 If you only have one partition on the drive this can normally be
569 1.1 bjh21 accessed with either partition a (root partition) or c (whole
570 1.1 bjh21 disc). This has not been verified to work.
571 1.1 bjh21
572 1.1 bjh21 A couple of examples of how to map RISC OS names to NetBSD ones
573 1.1 bjh21 (the partition names have been left out):
574 1.1 bjh21 ADFS::0 fd0
575 1.1 bjh21 ADFS::1 fd1
576 1.1 bjh21 ADFS::4 wd0
577 1.1 bjh21 ADFS::5 (same drive as :4) wd0
578 1.1 bjh21 ADFS::5 (other drive than :4) wd1
579 1.1 bjh21 SCSI::4 sd0
580 1.1 bjh21 SCSI::5 (same drive as :4) sd0
581 1.1 bjh21 SCSI::5 (other drive than :4) sd1
582 1.1 bjh21
583 1.1 bjh21 So, if you have one ADFS IDE drive, and want to install NetBSD
584 1.1 bjh21 at the after ADFS::5, you should still use wd0. If on the other
585 1.1 bjh21 hand, ADFS::5 is a second drive, then you will have to use wd1.
586 1.1 bjh21
587 1.5 reinoud
588 1.4 wiz Appendix B - Acknowledgments
589 1.1 bjh21
590 1.1 bjh21 This document was based upon the document
591 1.1 bjh21 "Installing RiscBSD 1.2-Release"
592 1.1 bjh21 (C) 1996 The RiscBSD Documentation Project
593 1.1 bjh21
594 1.1 bjh21 That has the following acknowledgement:
595 1.1 bjh21
596 1.1 bjh21 This manual has been written from scratch based on version 1.2
597 1.1 bjh21 of the installation manual that Mark Brinicombe wrote.
598 1.1 bjh21
599 1.1 bjh21 It was mainly written by Kjetil B. Thomassen
600 1.6 reinoud (kjetil (a] thomassen.priv.no) with contributions from:
601 1.6 reinoud Neil Hoggarth (neil.hoggarth (a] physiol.ox.ac.uk)
602 1.6 reinoud Markus Baeurle (emw4maba (a] gp.fht-esslingen.de)
603 1.6 reinoud Jasper Wallace (jasper (a] ivision.co.uk)
604 1.6 reinoud Mark Brinicombe (amb (a] physig.ph.kcl.ac.uk)
605 1.6 reinoud Scott Stevens (s.k.stevens (a] ic.ac.uk)
606 1.7 wiz and a lot more people posting to the original RiscBSD mailing list.
607 1.5 reinoud
608