install revision 1.14 1 The actual installation
2 =======================
3
4 0. Introduction
5
6 Using "sysinst", installing NetBSD is a relatively easy process. You
7 still should read this document and have it in hand when doing the
8 installation process. This document tries to be a good guideline
9 for the installation and as such covers many details to be complete.
10 Do not let this discourage you, the install program is not hard
11 to use.
12
13 0.1 Possible PCMCIA issues
14
15 There is a serious bug that may make installation of NetBSD on PCMCIA
16 machines difficult. This bug does not make USE of PCMCIA difficult
17 once a machine is installed. If you do not have PCMCIA on your
18 machine (PCMCIA is only really used on laptop machines), you
19 can skip this section, and ignore the "[PCMCIA]" notes.
20
21 This will explains how to work around the installation problem.
22 It is anticipated that this bug will be fixed by NetBSD 1.4
23
24 What is the bug: The kernel keeps careful track of what interrupts
25 and i/o ports are in use during autoconfiguration. It then allows
26 the PCMCIA devices to pick unused interrupts and ports.
27 Unfortunately, not all devices are included in the INSTALL
28 kernels in order to save space. Let's say your laptop has a
29 soundblaster device built in. The INSTALL kernel has no sound
30 support. The PCMCIA code might allocate your soundblaster's IRQ
31 and i/o ports to PCMCIA devices, causing them not to work. This
32 is especially bad if one of the devices in question is your
33 ethernet card.
34
35 This problem will impact some, but not all, users of PCMCIA. If
36 this bug is hurting you, watch the "[PCMCIA]" notes that will
37 appear in this document.
38
39 1. General
40
41 The following is a walk-through of the steps you will take while
42 getting NetBSD installed on your hard disk. sysinst is a menu driven
43 installation system that allows for some freedom in doing the
44 installation. Sometimes, questions will be asked and in many cases
45 the default answer will be displayed in brackets ("[]") after the
46 question. If you wish to stop the installation, you may hit Control-C
47 at any time, but if you do, you'll have to begin the installation
48 process again from scratch.
49
50 2. Booting NetBSD
51
52 [PCMCIA]: unplug your PCMCIA devices, so that they won't be
53 found by NetBSD.
54
55 Boot your machine using the boot floppy. The boot loader will
56 start, and will print a countdown and begin booting. You will
57 likely see one "file not found" warning from the boot loader
58 -- ignore this as it is normal, and indicates the boot loader
59 failed to find a normal kernel to boot before trying to boot a
60 compressed kernel.
61
62 If the boot loader messages do not appear in a reasonable
63 amount of time, you either have a bad boot floppy or a
64 hardware problem. Try writing the install floppy image to
65 a different disk, and using that.
66
67 If that doesn't work, try booting after disabling your CPU's
68 internal and external caches (if any). If it still doesn't
69 work, NetBSD probably can't be run on your hardware. This can
70 probably be considered a bug, so you might want to report it.
71 If you do, please include as many details about your system
72 configuration as you can.
73
74 It will take a while to load the kernel from the floppy,
75 probably around a minute or so.
76
77 You will then be presented with the NetBSD kernel boot
78 messages. This may take a little while, as NetBSD will
79 be probing for a lot of types of hardware, You may want to read the
80 boot messages, to notice your disk's name and geometry. Its name
81 will be something like "sd0" or "wd0" and the geometry will be
82 printed on a line that begins with its name. As mentioned above,
83 you may need your disk's geometry when creating NetBSD's partitions.
84 You will also need to know the name, to tell sysinst on which disk
85 to install. The most important thing to know is that
86 'wd0 is NetBSD's name for your first IDE disk, wd1 the second,
87 etc. 'sd0' is your first SCSI disk, sd1 the second, etc.
88
89 Note that, once the system has finished booting, you need no
90 longer leave the floppy in the disk drive. Earlier version of
91 the NetBSD install floppies mounted the floppy as the system's
92 root partition, but the new installation floppies use a
93 ramdisk file system and are no longer dependent on the floppy
94 once it has booted.
95
96 Once NetBSD has booted and printed all the boot messages,
97 you will be presented with a welcome message and a main menu.
98 It will also include instructions for using the menus.
99
100 3. Network configuration
101
102 [PCMCIA] You can skip this section, as you will only get data
103 from floppy in the first part of the install.
104
105 If you will not use network operation during the installation,
106 but you do want your machine to be configured for networking once
107 it is installed, you should first go to the utilities menu, and select
108 the "Configure network option". If you only want to temporarily
109 use networking during the installation, you can specify these
110 parameters later. If you are not using Domain Name Service (DNS),
111 you can give an empty response in reply to answers relating to
112 this.
113
114 4. The harddisk to install on and its parameters.
115
116 To start the installation, select the menu option to install
117 NetBSD from the main menu.
118
119 The first thing is to identify the disk on which you want to
120 install NetBSD. sysinst will report a list of disks it finds
121 and ask you for your selection. Depending on how many disks
122 are found, you may get a different message. You should see
123 disk names like "wd0", "wd1", "sd0", or "sd1".
124
125 sysinst next tries to figure out the real and BIOS geometry
126 of your disk. It will present you with the values it found,
127 if any, and will give you a chance to change them.
128 Please note that if you change the values, sysinst WILL ALSO
129 REINITIALIZE YOUR MBR.
130
131 You will also be asked if you want to use the last cylinder of
132 the disk. Originally, the last cylinder of the disk was used for
133 diagnostic purposes, but this is usually not a concern anymore
134 these days. You will be able to specify whether you want to
135 skip the last cylinder anyway.
136
137 Next, depending on whether you are using a "wdX" or a "sdX" disk,
138 you will either be asked for the type of disk (wdX) you are
139 using or you will be asked if you want to specify a fake geometry
140 for your SCSI disk (sdX). The types of disk are be IDE, ST-506
141 or ESDI. If you're installing on an ST-506 or ESDI drive, you'll
142 be asked if your disk supports automatic sector forwarding. If you
143 are SURE that it does, reply affirmatively. Otherwise, the install
144 program will automatically reserve space for bad144 tables.
145
146 5. Partitioning the disk.
147
148 5.1 Which portion of the disk to use.
149
150 You will be asked if you want to use the entire disk or
151 only part of the disk. If you decide to use the entire disk
152 for NetBSD, it will be checked if there are already other
153 systems present on the disk, and you will be asked to confirm
154 whether you want to overwrite these.
155
156 If you want to use the entire disk for NetBSD, you can skip
157 the following section and go to section 5.3, "Editing the
158 NetBSD disklabel".
159
160 5.2 Editing the Master Boot Record.
161
162 First, you will be prompted to specify the units of size
163 that you want to express the sizes of the partitions in.
164 You can either pick megabytes, cylinders or sectors.
165
166 After this, you will be presented with the current values
167 stored in the MBR, and will be given the opportunity to
168 change, create or delete partitions. For each partition
169 you can set the type, the start and the size. Setting
170 the type to 'unused' will delete a partition. You can
171 also mark a partition as active, meaning that this is
172 the one that the BIOS will start from at boottime.
173
174 Be sure to mark the partition you want to boot from as active!
175
176 After you are done editing the MBR, a sanity check
177 will be done, checking for partitions that overlap.
178 If everything is ok, you can go on to the next step,
179 editing the NetBSD disklabel.
180
181 5.3 Editing the NetBSD disklabel.
182
183 The partition table of a NetBSD part of a disk is called
184 a 'disklabel'. There are 3 layouts for the NetBSD part
185 of the disk that you can pick from: Standard, Standard
186 with X and Custom. The first two use a set of default
187 values (that you can change) suitable for a normal
188 installation, possibly including X. The last option
189 lets you specify everything yourself.
190
191 You will be presented with the current layout of the
192 NetBSD disklabel, and given a chance to change it.
193 For each partition, you can set the type, offset and size,
194 block and fragment size, and the mountpoint. The type
195 that NetBSD uses for normal file storage is called
196 "4.2BSD". A swap partition has a special type called "swap".
197 You can also specify a partition as type "msdos". This
198 is useful if you share the disk with MS-DOS or Windows95,
199 NetBSD is able to access the files on these partitions.
200 You can use the values from the MBR for the MS-DOS part
201 of the disk to specify the partition of type "msdos"
202 (you don't have to do this now, you can always re-edit
203 the disklabel to add this once you have installed NetBSD).
204
205 Some partitions in the disklabel have a fixed purpose.
206 Partition 'a' is always the root partition, 'b' is the
207 swap partition, 'c' is the entire NetBSD part of the disk,
208 and 'd' is the whole disk. Partitions 'e'-'h' are available
209 for other use. Traditionally, 'e' is the partition mounted
210 on the /usr directory, but this is historical practice,
211 not a fixed value.
212
213 You will then be asked to name your disk's disklabel. The
214 default response is "mydisk". For most purposes this will be OK.
215 If you choose to name it something different, make sure the name
216 is a single word and contains no special characters. You don't
217 need to remember this name.
218
219 6. Preparing your harddisk
220
221 YOU ARE NOW AT THE POINT OF NO RETURN. Nothing has been
222 written to your disk yet, but if you confirm that you want to
223 install NetBSD, your hard drive will be modified. If you are
224 sure you want to proceed, enter "yes" at the prompt.
225
226 The install program will now label your disk and make the file
227 systems you specified. The filesystems will be initialized to
228 contain NetBSD bootstrapping binaries and configuration files.
229 You will see messages on your screen from the various NetBSD
230 disk preparation tools that are running. There should be no
231 errors in this section of the installation. If there are,
232 restart from the beginning of the installation process.
233 Otherwise, you can continue the installation program
234 after pressing 'return'.
235
236 NOTE: In previous versions of NetBSD, the kernel from the
237 install floppy was copied onto the hard drive in a special
238 step. In the new install system, the kernel on the floppy is
239 unsuited to being copied onto the hard drive. Instead, a new
240 set, "kern", has been added which contains a generic kernel to
241 be unloaded onto the drive. So, you can not boot from your
242 hard drive yet at this point.
243
244 7. Getting the distribution sets.
245
246 [PCMCIA] Load a kernel tar file (i.e. the kern.tgz set file)
247 on to your harddisk, for example by mounting the
248 harddisk first, copying the kern.tgz file from
249 floppy and unpacking it. Example:
250
251 mount /dev/wd0a /mnt
252 cd /mnt
253
254 <repeat following 3 steps until all kern.* files are there>
255 mount -t msdos /dev/fd0a /mnt2
256 cp /mnt2/kern.* .
257 umount /mnt2
258
259 cat kern.* | tar vxzf -
260
261 Then halt the machine using the 'halt' command. Power
262 the machine down, and re-insert all the PCMCIA devices.
263 Remove any floppy from the floppy drive.
264 Start the machine up. After booting NetBSD, you will
265 be presented with the main sysinst menu. Choose the
266 option to re-install sets. Wait for the filesystem
267 checks that it will do to finish, and then proceed
268 as described below.
269
270
271 The NetBSD distribution consists of a number of 'sets', that
272 come in the form of gzipped tarfiles. A few sets must be
273 installed for a working system, others are optional. At this
274 point of the installation, you will be presented with a menu
275 which enables you to choose from one of the following methods
276 of installing the sets. Some of these methods will first
277 load the sets on your harddisk, others will extract the sets
278 directly.
279
280 For all these methods, the first step is making the sets
281 available for extraction, and then do the actual installation.
282 The sets can be made available in a few different ways. The
283 following sections describe each of those methods. After
284 reading the one about the method you will be using, you
285 can continue to section 8
286
287 7.1 Installation using ftp
288
289 To be able to install using ftp, you first need to configure
290 your network setup, if you haven't already at the start of
291 the install procedure. sysinst will do this for you, asking you
292 to provide some data, like IP number, hostname, etc. If you
293 do not have name service set up for the machine that you
294 are installing on, you can just press 'return' in answer
295 to these questions, and DNS will not be used.
296
297 You will also be asked to specify the host that you want
298 to transfer the sets from, the directory on that host,
299 and the accountname and password used to log into that
300 host using ftp. If you did not set up DNS when answering
301 the questions to configure networking, you will need to
302 specify an IP number instead of a hostname for the ftp
303 server.
304
305 sysinst will proceed to transfer all the default set files
306 from the remote site to your harddisk.
307
308 7.2 Installation using NFS
309
310 To be able to install using NFS, you first need to configure
311 your network setup, if you haven't already at the start of
312 the install procedure. sysinst will do this for you, asking you
313 to provide some data, like IP number, hostname, etc. If you
314 do not have name service set up for the machine that you
315 are installing on, you can just press 'return' in answer
316 to these questions, and DNS will not be used.
317
318 You will also be asked to specify the host that you want
319 to transfer the sets from, and the directory on that host
320 that the files are in. This directory should be mountable
321 by the machine you are installing on, i.e. correctly
322 exported to your machine.
323
324 If you did not set up DNS when answering the questions to
325 configure networking, you will need to specify an IP number
326 instead of a hostname for the NFS server.
327
328
329 7.3 Installation from CD-ROM
330
331 When installing from a CD-ROM, you will be asked to specify
332 the devicename for your CD-ROM player (usually 'cd0'), and
333 directoryname on the CD-ROM where the distribution files are.
334
335 sysinst will then check if the files are indeed available
336 in the specified location, and proceed to the actual
337 extraction of the sets.
338
339 7.4 Installation from floppy
340
341 Because the installation sets are too big to fit on one floppy,
342 the floppies are expected to be filled with the split set
343 files. The floppies are expected to be in MS-DOS
344 format. You will be asked for a directory where the sets
345 should be reassembled. Then you will be prompted to insert
346 the floppies containing the split sets. This process
347 will continue until all the sets have been loaded from floppy.
348
349
350 7.5 Installation from an unmounted filesystem
351
352 In order to install from a local filesystem, you will
353 need to specify the device that the filesystem resides
354 on (for example 'wd1e'), the type of the filesystem,
355 and the directory on the specified filesystem where the
356 sets are located. sysinst will then check if it
357 can indeed access the sets at that location.
358
359 7.6 Installation from a local directoy
360
361 This option assumes that you have already done some preparation
362 yourself. The sets should be located in a directory on a
363 filesystem that is already accessible. sysinst will ask you
364 for the name of this directory.
365
366 8. Extracting the distribution sets
367
368 After you the install sets containing the NetBSD distribution
369 have been made available, you can either extract all the
370 sets (a full installation), or only extract sets that
371 you have selected. In the latter case you will be shown the
372 currently selected sets, and given the opportunity to select
373 the sets you want. Some sets always need to be installed
374 ("kern", "base" and "etc"), they will not be shown in
375 this selection menu.
376
377 Before extraction begins, you can elect to watch the files
378 being extracted; the name of each file that is extracted will
379 be shown.
380
381 After all the files have been extracted, all the necessary
382 device node files will be created. If you have already
383 configured networking, you will be asked if you want to
384 use this configuration for normal operation. If so, these
385 values will be installed in the network configuration files.
386
387 9. Finalizing your installation.
388
389 Congratulations, you have successfully installed NetBSD _VER. When
390 you reboot into NetBSD, you should log in as "root" at the login
391 prompt. There is no initial password, but if you're using the
392 machine in a networked environment, you should create yourself
393 an account and protect it and the "root" account with good passwords.
394
395 Some of the files in the NetBSD _VER distribution might need to be
396 tailored for your site. In particular, the /etc/sendmail.cf file will
397 almost definitely need to be adjusted, and other files in /etc will
398 probably need to be modified, as well.
399
400 Some leftover files from the installation may be on your harddisk,
401 depending on the procedure you followed. If you find any of
402 the files, you should remove them:
403
404 /.profile
405 /.termcap
406 /sysinst
407
408 If you are unfamiliar with UN*X-like system administration, it's
409 recommended that you buy a book that discusses it.
410