install revision 1.2
1Installing NetBSD is a relatively complex process, but if you have 2this document in hand and are careful to read and remember the 3information which is presented to you by the install program, it 4shouldn't be too much trouble. 5 6Before you begin, you should know the geometry of your hard disk, i.e. 7the sector size (note that sector sizes other than 512 bytes are not 8currently supported), the number of sectors per track, the number of 9tracks per cylinder (also known as the number of heads), and the 10number of cylinders on the disk. The NetBSD kernel will try to 11discover these parameters on its own, and if it can it will print them 12at boot time. If possible, you should use the parameters it prints. 13(You might not be able to because you're sharing your disk with 14another operating system, or because your disk is old enough that the 15kernel can't figure out its geometry.) 16 17If NetBSD will be sharing the disk with DOS or another operating 18system, you should have already completed the section of these notes 19that instructed you on how to prepare your hard disk. You should know 20the size of the NetBSD area of the disk and its offset from the 21beginning of the disk. You will need this information when setting up 22your NetBSD partitions. 23 24You should now be ready to install NetBSD. It might be handy for you 25to have a pencil, some paper, and a calculator handy. 26 27The following is a walk-through of the steps you will take while 28getting NetBSD installed on your hard disk. If any question has a 29default answer, it will be displayed in brackets ("[]") after the 30question. If you wish to stop the installation, you may hit Control-C 31at any time, but if you do, you'll have to begin the installation 32process again from scratch. 33 34 Boot your machine using of the appropriate kernel-copy floppy. 35 When presented with the boot prompt (the prompt begins with 36 "Boot" and ends with ":-"), hit return. If the boot prompt 37 does not appear in a reasonable amount of time, you either 38 have a bad boot floppy or a hardware problem. Try writing the 39 kernel-copy floppy image to a different disk, and using that. 40 If that doesn't work, try booting after disabling your CPU's 41 internal and external caches (if any). If it still doesn't 42 work, NetBSD probably can't be run on your hardware. This can 43 probably be considered a bug, so you might want to report it. 44 If you do, please include as many details about your system 45 configuration as you can. 46 47 It will take a while to load the kernel from the floppy, 48 probably around a minute or so. After its loaded, you will be 49 presented with the message: 50 "Insert file system floppy" 51 If you do not see that message after a reasonable time has 52 elapsed, or the spinning cursor has stopped and nothing 53 further has happened, either your boot floppy is bad or you 54 are having hardware problems, and should proceed as outlined 55 above. 56 57 Once you have reached that prompt, remove the kernel-copy 58 floppy from the floppy drive. Make sure that the installation 59 disk (the "inst-10" floppy) is writable, insert it into the 60 floppy drive, and hit any key. 61 62 You will then be presented with the NetBSD kernel boot 63 messages. You will want to read them, to determine your 64 disk's name and geometry. Its name will be something like 65 "sd0" or "wd0" and the geometry will be printed on a line that 66 begins with its name. As mentioned above, you will need your 67 disk's geometry when creating NetBSD's partitions. You will 68 also need to know the name, to tell the install tools what 69 disk to install on. 70 71 While booting, you will probably see several warnings. You 72 should be warned that no swap space is present, and that 73 init(8) cannot find /etc/rc. Do not be alarmed, these are 74 completely normal. When you reach the prompt asking you for a 75 shell name, just hit return. 76 77 You will be presented with a welcome message and a prompt, 78 asking if you wish to proceed with the installation process. 79 If you wish to proceed, enter "y" and hit return. 80 81 You will be asked what type of disk driver you have. The 82 valid options are listed by the install program, to make sure 83 you get it right. If you're installing on an ST-506 or ESDI 84 drive, you'll be asked if your disk supports automatic sector 85 forwarding. If you are SURE that it does, reply 86 affirmatively. Otherwise, the install program will 87 automatically reserve space for bad144 tables. 88 89 The install program will then tell you which disks of that 90 type it can install on, and ask you which it should use. 91 Reply with the name of your disk. (The first disk of the type 92 you selected, either "wd0" for ST-506/ESDI/IDE disks, or "sd0" 93 for SCSI disks, is the default.) 94 95 You will then be asked to name your disk's disklabel. The 96 default response is "mywd" or "mysd" depending on the type of 97 your disk, and for most purposes it will be OK. If you choose 98 to name it something different, make sure the name is a single 99 word and contains no special characters. You don't need to 100 remember this name. 101 102 You will be prompted for your disk's geometry information, 103 i.e. the number of bytes per sector, cylinders on the disk, 104 tracks per cylinder (heads), and sectors per track. Enter 105 them when they are requested. If you make a mistake, hit 106 Control-C and when you get to the shell prompt, restart the 107 install process by running the "install" command. Once you 108 have entered this data, the install program will tell you the 109 total size of your disk, in both sectors, and cylinders. 110 Remember this number; if you're installing on the whole disk, 111 you'll need it again soon. 112 113 When describing your partitions, you will have the option of 114 entering data about them in units of disk sectors or 115 cylinders. If you choose to enter the information in units of 116 sectors, remember that, for optimal performance, partitions 117 should begin and end on cylinder boundaries. You will be 118 asked about which units you wish to use, and you should reply 119 with "c" for cylinders, or "s" for sectors. 120 121 You will be asked for the size of the NetBSD portion of the 122 disk. If you're installing on the whole disk, reply with the 123 size of the disk, as printed earlier by the install program. 124 If you're using only part of the disk, reply with the size 125 that you specified in the partition editor. (Don't forget to 126 enter the size in the units you specified in the last step!) 127 128 If you are not installing on the whole disk, you will be asked 129 fro the offset of the NetBSD partition from the beginning of 130 the disk. Reply with the appropriate offset (again, in 131 whichever units you specified), as determined by how you 132 set up your disk using the partition editor. 133 134 You will be asked to enter the size of your NetBSD root 135 partition. It should be at least 13M, but if you are going to 136 be doing development, 14-16M is a more desirable size. This 137 size should be expressed in units of sectors or cylinders, 138 depending on which you said you wanted to use. 139 140 Next, you will be asked for the size of your swap partition. 141 You should probably allocate twice as much swap space as you 142 have real memory. Systems that will be heavily used should 143 have more swap space allocated, and systems that will be 144 lightly used can get by with less. If you want the system to 145 be able to save crash dumps when it panics, you will need at 146 least as much swap space as you have RAM. Again, this number 147 should be expressed in units of sectors or cylinders, as 148 appropriate. 149 150 The install program will then ask you for information about 151 the rest of the partitions you want on your disk. For most 152 purposes, you will want only one more partition, "/usr". 153 (Machines used as servers will probably also want /var as a 154 separate partition. That can be done with these installation 155 tools, but is not covered here.) The install program will 156 tell you how much space there is left to be allocated in the 157 NetBSD area of the disk, and, if you only want one more 158 partition ("/usr"), you should enter it at the prompt when the 159 installer asks you how large the next partition should be. 160 It will then ask you for the name of the mount point for that 161 partition. If you're doing a basic installation, that is 162 "/usr". 163 164 YOU ARE NOW AT THE POINT OF NO RETURN. Nothing has been 165 written to your disk yet, but if you confirm that you want to 166 install NetBSD, your hard drive will be modified, and its 167 contents may be scrambled at the whim of the install program. 168 This is especially likely if you have given the install 169 program incorrect information. If you are sure you want to 170 proceed, enter "yes" at the prompt. 171 172 The install program will now label your disk and make the file 173 systems you specified. It will also create an /etc/fstab for 174 your system, and mount all of the file systems under /mnt. 175 (In other words, your root partition will be mounted on /mnt, 176 your /usr partition on /mnt/usr, and so on.) There should be 177 no errors in this section of the installation. If there are, 178 restart from the beginning of the installation process. 179 180 You will be placed at a shell prompt ("#"), and from there you 181 have to load and install the distribution sets. How you do 182 this depends on which installation medium you've chosen; 183 instructions for the various types are below. 184 185 To install from floppy: 186 The first thing you should do is pick a temporary 187 directory where the distribution files can be stored. 188 To do this, enter the command "Set_tmp_dir", and enter 189 the name of the temporary directory. (Don't forget 190 that your disk is mounted under /mnt; you should 191 probably pick a directory under /mnt/usr.) The 192 default is /mnt/usr/distrib. 193 194 After you have picked a temporary directory, enter the 195 "Load_fd" command, to load the distribution sets from 196 your floppies. 197 198 You will be asked which floppy drive to use. Enter 199 "0" (zero) if you're using the first floppy drive 200 (i.e. what DOS would call "A:"), or enter "1" if 201 you're using the second. 202 203 You will be prompted to insert a floppy into the drive, 204 to have its contents copied to your hard disk. Do so, 205 and hit return to begin copying. When that is done, 206 read the remainder of the floppies that contain the 207 distribution sets that you want to install, one by 208 one. When the last is read, and you are being 209 prompted for another, hit Control-C. 210 211 Run the "Extract" command once for each distribution 212 set you wish to install. For instance, if you wish to 213 install the "base10" distribution set, followed by the 214 "man10" distribution set, and finally the "etc10" 215 distribution set, use the commands: 216 Extract base10 217 Extract man10 218 Extract etc10 219 220 For each extraction, it will ask you if the extraction 221 should be verbose. If you reply affirmatively, it 222 will print out the name of each file that's being 223 extracted. 224 225 (Note: if you know that you will be running low on 226 disk space when installing NetBSD, you can load and 227 extract one distribution set at a time. To do this, 228 load only the floppies which contain the files for the 229 first distribution set, extract them, and then change 230 to the temporary directory and remove them with the 231 command "rm set_name.??".) 232 233 Once you are finished extracting all of the sets that 234 you wish to install, you should proceed to the 235 instructions below (after the last install medium 236 type-specific instructions), that explain how you 237 should configure your system. 238 239 To install from tape: 240 The first thing you should do is pick a temporary 241 directory where the distribution files can be stored. 242 To do this, enter the command "Set_tmp_dir", and enter 243 the name of the temporary directory. (Don't forget 244 that your disk is mounted under /mnt; you should 245 probably pick a directory under /mnt/usr.) The 246 default is /mnt/usr/distrib. 247 248 After you have picked a temporary directory, enter the 249 "Load_tape" command, to load the distribution sets from 250 tape. 251 252 You will be asked which tape drive to use. The 253 default is "rst0", which is correct if you're using 254 the SCSI tape drive with the lowest SCSI ID number. 255 (For the SCSI tape drive with the next lowest SCSI ID 256 number, you should use "rst1", and so on.) 257 258 You will be prompted to hit return when you have 259 inserted the tape into the tape drive. When you do, 260 the contents of the tape will be extracted into the 261 temporary directory, and the names of the files being 262 extracted will be printed. 263 264 After the tape has been extracted, to go the directory 265 containing the first distribution set you wish to 266 install. (Depending on how you made the tape, it's 267 probably a subdirectory of the temporary directory you 268 specified above.) Once there, run the "Set_tmp_dir" 269 command again, and accept its default answer by 270 hitting return at the prompt. 271 272 Use the "Extract" command to extract the distribution 273 set. For instance, if you're extracting the "base10" 274 set, use the command: 275 Extract base10 276 You will be asked if you wish the extraction to be 277 verbose. If you reply affirmatively, the name of each 278 file being extracted will be printed. 279 280 Repeat the previous two steps for each distribution 281 set you wish to install. Change to the set's 282 directory, run "Set_tmp_dir", and then run 283 "Extract <set_name>" to extract the set. 284 285 Once you are finished extracting all of the sets that 286 you wish to install, you should proceed to the 287 instructions below (after the last install medium 288 type-specific instructions), that explain how you 289 should configure your system. 290 291 To install via FTP or NFS: 292 The first thing you should do is pick a temporary 293 directory where the distribution files can be stored. 294 To do this, enter the command "Set_tmp_dir", and enter 295 the name of the temporary directory. (Don't forget 296 that your disk is mounted under /mnt; you should 297 probably pick a directory under /mnt/usr.) The 298 default is /mnt/usr/distrib. 299 300 Configure the appropriate ethernet interface (e.g. 301 ed0, ep0, etc.) up, with a command like: 302 303 ifconfig <ifname> <ipaddr> [netmask <netmask>] 304 305 where "<ifname>" is the interface name, like those 306 listed above, and "<ipaddr>" is the numeric IP address 307 of the interface. If the interface has a special 308 netmask, supply the word "netmask" at and that netmask 309 at the end of the command line. (The brackets 310 indicate that those arguments are optional.) For 311 instance, to configure interface ed0 with IP address 312 129.133.10.10, use the command: 313 314 ifconfig ed0 129.133.10.10 315 316 and to configure interface ep0 with IP address 317 128.32.240.167 and a special netmask, 0xffffff00, use 318 the command: 319 320 ifconfig ep0 128.32.240.167 netmask 0xffffff00 321 322 If your board selects software selection of the 323 ethernet interface to use, you might have to add 324 special flags to the "ifconfig" command you use. 325 Consult the table below for the appropriate flags: 326 327 Interface Type Connector Flags 328 --------- ---- --------- ----- 329 ed with WD/SMC* BNC [none necessary] 330 ed with WD/SMC* UTP [none necessary] 331 ed with WD/SMC* AUI link0 332 ed with 3c503 BNC [none necessary] 333 ed with 3c503 AUI link0 334 ep BNC [none necessary] 335 ep AUI link0 336 ep UTP link0 link1 337 338 * Older WD boards do not support software configuration, 339 and must be configured via jumpers. These flags 340 will have no effect on them. 341 342 In other words, if, in the last example, the AUI port 343 of the board were being used, you would use the 344 command: 345 346 ifconfig ep0 128.32.240.167 netmask 0xffffff00 link0 347 348 If the NFS server or FTP server is not on a directly- 349 connected network, you need to set up a route to it 350 using a command like: 351 352 route add default <gate_ipaddr> 353 354 where <gate_ipaddr> is your gateway's numeric IP 355 address. 356 357 If you are NFS-mounting the distribution sets, mount 358 them on the temporary directory with a command like: 359 360 mount -t nfs <serv_ipaddr>:<dist_dir> <tmp_dir> 361 362 where <serv_ipaddr> is the server's numeric IP address, 363 <dist_dir> is the path to the distribution files on 364 the server, and <tmp_dir> is the name of the local 365 temporary directory. 366 367 Once this is done, proceed as if you had loaded the 368 files from tape, changing to the appropriate 369 directories, running "Set_tmp_dir", and running 370 "Extract" as appropriate. 371 372 If you are retrieving the distribution sets using ftp, 373 change into the temporary directory, and execute the 374 command: 375 376 ftp <serv_ipaddr> 377 378 where <serv_ipaddr> is once again the server's numeric 379 IP address. Get the files with FTP, taking care to 380 use binary mode when transferring the files. 381 382 Once you have all of the files for the distribution 383 sets that you wish to install, you can proceed using 384 the instructions above, as if you had installed from a 385 floppy. (Note that as with the floppy install, if 386 you're short on disk space, you can transfer only one 387 set at a time, extract it, then delete it, to save 388 space.) 389 390 Once you have finished extracting all of the distribution sets 391 that you wish to install, and are back at the "#" prompt, you 392 are ready to configure your system. The configuration utility 393 expects that you have installed the "base10" and "etc10" 394 distribution sets. If you have not, you will not be able to 395 run it successfully (nor will you have a functional system, in 396 any case). To configure your newly-installed NetBSD system, 397 run the command "Configure". It will ask you for the system's 398 host name, domain name, and other network configuration 399 information. It will set up your configuration files and make 400 the device nodes for the newly-installed system. 401 402 Once your system is configured, you must install a kernel on 403 your hard disk. Enter "halt" at the prompt to halt the 404 system. When the system is halted, remove the "inst-10" 405 floppy from the floppy drive, and replace it with the NetBSD 406 1.0 kernel-copy floppy that you previously booted from. Reboot 407 with that floppy. 408 409 Once again, you will be prompted to insert a file system 410 floppy. DO NOT replace the kernel-copy floppy, just hit any 411 key. 412 413 Again, While booting, you may see several warnings. You may 414 be warned that no swap space is present, that init(8) cannot 415 find /etc/rc, and that one or more databases with names like 416 "pwd.db" cannot be found. Do not be alarmed, as, again, these 417 are completely normal. Hit return at the prompt asking you 418 for a shell name. 419 420 You will be presented with a shell prompt, at which you should 421 enter the "copy_kernel" command. It will ask you what 422 partition to copy the kernel to, and you should reply with the 423 name of your root partition (e.g. sd0a or wd0a). 424 425 You will be asked if you are sure that you want to copy the 426 kernel. Reply affirmatively, and it will check the file 427 system on your root partition, mount it, and copy the kernel. 428 Once the kernel is copied, you should use "halt" to halt the 429 system. 430 431 Once the system is halted, remove the kernel-copy floppy from 432 the floppy disk drive, and hit any key to reboot. 433 434Congratulations, you have successfully installed NetBSD 1.0. When you 435reboot into NetBSD, you should log in as "root" at the login prompt. 436There is no initial password, but if you're using the machine in a 437networked environment, you should create yourself an account and 438protect it and the "root" account with good passwords. 439 440Some of the files in the NetBSD 1.0 distribution might need to be 441tailored for your site. In particular, the /etc/sendmail.cf file will 442almost definitely need to be adjusted, and other files in /etc will 443probably need to be modified, as well. If you are unfamiliar with 444UN*X-like system administration, it's recommended that you buy a book 445that discusses it. 446