install revision 1.3.2.1 1 Installing NetBSD is a relatively complex process, but, if you have
2 this document in hand and are careful to read and remember the
3 information which is presented to you by the install program, it
4 shouldn't be too much trouble.
5
6 Before you begin, you must have already prepared your hard disk as
7 detailed in the section on preparing your system for install.
8
9 The following is a walk-through of the steps necessary to get NetBSD
10 installed on your hard disk. If you wish to stop the installation,
11 you may hit Control-C at any prompt, but if you do, you'll have to
12 begin again from scratch.
13
14 Transfer the install miniroot filesystem onto the hard disk
15 partition used by NetBSD for swapping, as described in the
16 "Preparing your System for NetBSD Installation" section above.
17
18 >>> Getting loadbsd, ixemul.library, and netbsd onto AmigaDOS
19 >>> partition.
20 Next you need to get yourself into NetBSD by loading the
21 kernel from AmigaDOS with loadbsd like so:
22
23 loadbsd -b netbsd
24
25 You should see the screen clear and some information about
26 your system as the kernel configures the hardware. Note which
27 hard disk device(s) are configured (sd0, sd1, etc). Then
28 you will be prompted for a root device. At this time type
29 'sd0*', where '0' is the device which contains the swap
30 partition you created during the hard disk preparation.
31
32 The system should continue to boot. For now ignore WARNING:
33 messages about bad dates in clocks. Eventually you will be
34 asked to enter the pathname of the shell, just hit return.
35 After a short while you should see a welcome message and a
36 prompt, asking if you wish to proceed with the installation.
37
38 If you wish to proceed, enter "y" and then return.
39
40 If you have configured your hard drive[s] correctly it
41 should find the drive and partition that you selected to
42 use as your root. You will be prompted for which device
43 you want to use for your root. If you have multiple disks
44 present with root partitions defined, you will need to be
45 sure you enter the device name of the correct partition you
46 want to install NetBSD on.
47
48 YOU ARE NOW AT THE POINT OF NO RETURN. If you confirm that
49 you want to install NetBSD, your hard drive will be modified,
50 and perhaps its contents scrambled at the whim of the install
51 program.
52
53 If you are sure you want to proceed, enter "yes" at the
54 prompt.
55
56 The install program will now make the root filesystem you
57 specified. There should be only one error in this section
58 of the installation. It will look like so:
59
60 newfs: ioctl (WDINFO): Invalid argument
61 newfs: /dev/rsd0a: can't rewrite disk label
62
63 If there are any others, restart from the the beginning of
64 the installation process. This error is ok as the Amiga
65 does not write disklabels currently. You should expect
66 this error whenever using newfs.
67
68 Next the install program will ask you which drive and
69 partition you wish to use as /usr. First it will list the
70 available drives. Choose one. Next it will give you a
71 list of the partitions on that disk along with their sizes,
72 types, etc.. Choose the letter that corresponds to the
73 partition you wish to use for /usr. If you are doing a
74 full install this should be at the very least 45M-50M large.
75 If everything is ok the install program will then format
76 and mount your /usr. If not then it will ask again for a
77 drive and partition.
78
79 When this completes your root partition will be mounted on
80 /mnt and your /usr partition on /mnt/usr. An fstab will
81 have been created and initialized to correctly mount these
82 two file systems. This fstab will be in /mnt/etc.
83
84 What you do from this point on depends on which media you're
85 using to install NetBSD. Follow the appropriate instructions,
86 given below.
87
88 To install from an AmigaDOS partition:
89
90 You first need to mount the AmigaDOS partition
91 using the mount_ados command. If e.g. your AmigaDOS
92 partition is the first partition on sd0 you could
93 type:
94
95 mkdir /mnt/ados
96 mount_ados /dev/sd0d /mnt/ados
97
98 You can use `disklabel sd0' to find out what types
99 of partitions are on the disk `sd0'.
100
101 Next goto the directory in which you stored the
102 distribution sets. If e.g. you stored them in the
103 root directory of the partition:
104
105 cd /mnt/ados
106
107 When there, run "Set_tmp_dir" and choose the default
108 temporary directory, by hitting return at the
109 prompt.
110
111 Run the "Extract" command, giving it as its sole
112 argument the name of the distribution set you wish
113 to extract. For example, to extract the base
114 distribution, use the command:
115
116 Extract base11
117
118 and to extract the games distribution:
119
120 Extract game11
121
122 If the distribution sets are in different directories,
123 you will need to cd to each directory in turn, runing
124 "Set_tmp_dir" and the appropriate "Extract" command(s).
125
126 Continue this process until you've finished installing
127 all of the sets which you desire to have on your
128 hard disk. Once you have extracted all sets and
129 are at the "#" prompt again, proceed to the section
130 "Configuring Your System," below.
131
132 To install from tape:
133
134 The first thing you should do is pick a temporary
135 directory where the distribution files can be stored.
136 To do this, use the command "Set_tmp_dir" and enter
137 your choice. The default is /mnt/usr/distrib.
138
139 After you have picked a temporary directory,
140 you should issue the load command:
141
142 Load_tape
143
144 Next, you will be told to insert the media into
145 the appropriate drive, and hit return. Continue
146 to follow instructions until you are returned to
147 the "#" prompt.
148
149 Go to the directory which contains the first
150 distribution set you wish to install. This is
151 either the directory you specified above, or possibly
152 a subdirectory of that directory.
153
154 When there, run "Set_tmp_dir" again, and choose
155 the default temporary directory, by hitting
156 return at the prompt.
157
158 Run the "Extract" command, giving it as its sole
159 argument the name of the distribution set you
160 wish to extract. For example, to extract the base
161 distribution, use the command:
162
163 Extract base11
164
165 and to extract the games distribution:
166
167 Extract game11
168
169 After the extraction is complete, go to the location
170 of the next set you want to extract, "Set_tmp_dir"
171 again, and once again issue the appropriate
172 extract command. Continue this process until
173 you've finished installing all of the sets which you
174 desire to have on your hard disk.
175
176 After each set is finished, if you know that you
177 are running low on space you can remove the
178 distribution files for that set by saying:
179
180 rm set_name.??
181
182 For example, if you wish to remove the distribution
183 files for the game09 set, after the "Extract game09"
184 command has completed, issue the command:
185
186 rm game11.??
187
188 Once you have extracted all sets and are at the "#" prompt
189 again, proceed to the section "Configuring Your System,"
190 below.
191
192 To install via FTP or NFS:
193
194 First, use Set_tmp_dir to pick a temporary directory
195 for the installation files. /mnt/usr/distrib is
196 suggested.
197
198 >>> Document using ppp or slip?
199 Configure the appropriate ethernet interface i.e. le0
200 if you have a 2065 or ed0 if you have a AMIGNET from
201 Hydra Systems.
202
203 ifconfig <ifname> <ipaddr> [netmask <netmask>]
204
205 where <ifname> is the interface name (e.g. ed0, etc.),
206 and <ipaddr> is the numeric IP address of the interface.
207 If the interface has a special netmask, supply
208 the word "netmask" and that netmask at the end of the
209 command line. For instance, without a special netmask:
210
211 ifconfig ed0 129.133.10.10
212
213 or with a special netmask
214
215 ifconfig ed0 128.32.240.167 netmask 0xffffff00
216
217 If the NFS server or FTP server is not on a directly-
218 connected network, you should set up a route to it
219 with the command:
220
221 route add default <gate_ipaddr>
222
223 where <gate_ipaddr> is your gateway's numeric IP address.
224
225 If you are NFS-mounting the distribution sets,
226 mount them on the temporary directory with the command:
227
228 mount -t nfs <serv_ipaddr>:<dist_dir> <tmp_dir>
229
230 where <serv_ipaddr> is the server's numeric IP address,
231 <dist_dir> is the path to the distribution files on
232 the server, and <tmp_dir> is the name of the local
233 temporary directory.
234
235 Once this is done, proceed as if you had loaded the
236 files from tape, "cd"ing to the appropriate directories
237 and running "Set_tmp_dir" and "Extract" as appropriate.
238
239 If you are retrieving the distribution sets using ftp,
240 cd into the temp directory, and execute the command:
241
242 ftp <serv_ipaddr>
243
244 where <serv_ipaddr> is once again the server's
245 numeric IP address. Get the files with FTP,
246 taking care to use binary mode to transfer
247 all files.
248
249 Once you have all of the files for the distribution sets
250 you wish to install, you can proceed using the instructions
251 above as if you had installed the files from a tape.
252
253
254 Configuring Your System:
255 ----------- ---- ------
256
257 Once you have finished extracting all of the distribution sets that
258 you want on your hard drive and are back at the "#" prompt,
259 you are ready to configure your system.
260
261 The configuration utility expects that you have installed the base
262 system. If you have not, you will not be able to run it successfully
263 (nor will you have a functional system regardless of configuration).
264
265 To configure the newly installed operating system, run the
266 command "Configure".
267
268 Configure will ask for the machine's hostname, domain name, and other
269 network configuration information.
270
271 Once you have supplied `Configure' all that it requests, your machine
272 will be configured well enough that when you reboot it it will
273 almost be a completely functional NetBSD system. Note you should
274 ignore the errors from `chown' they will be corrected shortly.
275
276 Once you are done with `Configure', halt the system with the "halt"
277 command (wait for "halted" to be displayed) and reboot. Then again
278 boot NetBSD this time with the command:
279
280
281 loadbsd netbsd
282
283 You need to do your final tweeks now. First mount your file systems
284 like so:
285
286 mount -av
287
288 Next you need to re-make your devices to get the ownership correct:
289
290 cd /dev
291 MAKEDEV all
292 >>> Is this step still needed? - check on it!
293
294 Your system is now complete but not completely configured; you
295 should adjust the /etc/sendmail.cf file as necessary to suit your
296 site and/or disable sendmail and other network related programs.
297 These things can be found in /etc/netstart. Use vi, if you installed
298 the man pages you can type `man vi' or `man ed' for instructions
299 on how to use these somewhat non-intuitive editors.
300
301 Once you are done with the rest of configuration unmount your file
302 systems and halt your system, then reboot:
303
304 cd /
305 umount -av
306 halt
307 <reboot>
308
309 Finally you can now boot your system and it will be completely
310 functional:
311
312 loadbsd -a netbsd
313
314 When it boots off of the hard drive, you will have a complete
315 NetBSD system! CONGRATULATIONS! (You really deserve them!!!)
316
317 >>> Missing the step to transfer the netbsd kernel to /
318