install revision 1.5 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 should know the geometry of your hard disk, i.e.
7 the sector size (note that sector sizes other than 512 bytes are not
8 currently supported), the number of sectors per track, the number of
9 tracks per cylinder (also known as the number of heads), and the
10 number of cylinders on the disk. The NetBSD kernel will try to
11 discover these parameters on its own, and if it can it will print them
12 at 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
14 another operating system, or because your disk is old enough that the
15 kernel can't figure out its geometry.)
16
17 If NetBSD will be sharing the disk with DOS or another operating
18 system, you should have already completed the section of these notes
19 that instructed you on how to prepare your hard disk. You should know
20 the size of the NetBSD area of the disk and its offset from the
21 beginning of the disk. You will need this information when setting up
22 your NetBSD partitions.
23
24 You should now be ready to install NetBSD. It might be handy for you
25 to have a pencil, some paper, and a calculator handy.
26
27 The following is a walk-through of the steps you will take while
28 getting NetBSD installed on your hard disk. If any question has a
29 default answer, it will be displayed in brackets ("[]") after the
30 question. If you wish to stop the installation, you may hit Control-C
31 at any time, but if you do, you'll have to begin the installation
32 process 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. The filesystems will be initialized to
174 contain NetBSD bootstrapping binaries and configuration files.
175 It will also create an /etc/fstab for your system, and mount
176 all of the file systems under /mnt. (In other words, your root
177 partition will be mounted on /mnt, your /usr partition on
178 /mnt/usr, and so on.) There should be no errors in this
179 section of the installation. If there are, restart from the
180 beginning of the installation process.
181
182 You will be placed at a shell prompt ("#"). The remaining
183 tasks are to copy the kernel from the kernel copy floppy to
184 the hard drive's root filesystem and install the distribution
185 sets. The flow of installation differs depending on your
186 hardware resources, and on what media the distribution sets
187 reside.
188
189 To install from floppy:
190 If you only have only one floppy drive, the order of
191 installation is different. Follow the directions in
192 the "Kernel installation" section which will help you
193 install a kernel on the hard drive and then boot off
194 the hard drive, then continue with the rest of the
195 process described here to install the distribution
196 sets from floppy:
197
198 The first thing you should do is pick a temporary
199 directory where the distribution files can be stored.
200 To do this, enter the command "Set_tmp_dir", and enter
201 the name of the temporary directory. (Don't forget
202 that if your disk is still mounted under /mnt; you
203 should probably pick a directory under /mnt/usr.)
204
205 After you have picked a temporary directory, enter the
206 "Load_fd" command, to load the distribution sets from
207 your floppies.
208
209 You will be asked which floppy drive to use. Enter
210 "0" (zero) if you're using the first floppy drive
211 (i.e. what DOS would call "A:"), or enter "1" if
212 you're using the second. (Remember that you CANNOT
213 use the floppy drive that you booted from. If you
214 booted from "A:", you must load from "B:".)
215
216 You will be prompted to insert a floppy into the drive,
217 to have its contents copied to your hard disk. Do so,
218 and hit return to begin copying. When that is done,
219 read the remainder of the floppies that contain the
220 distribution sets that you want to install, one by
221 one. When the last is read, and you are being
222 prompted for another, hit Control-C.
223
224 Run the "Extract" command once for each distribution
225 set you wish to install. For instance, if you wish to
226 install the "base10" distribution set, followed by the
227 "man10" distribution set, and finally the "etc10"
228 distribution set, use the commands:
229 Extract base10
230 Extract man10
231 Extract etc10
232
233 For each extraction, it will ask you if the extraction
234 should be verbose. If you reply affirmatively, it
235 will print out the name of each file that's being
236 extracted.
237
238 (Note: if you know that you will be running low on
239 disk space when installing NetBSD, you can load and
240 extract one distribution set at a time. To do this,
241 load only the floppies which contain the files for the
242 first distribution set, extract them, and then change
243 to the temporary directory and remove them with the
244 command "rm set_name.??".)
245
246 Once you are finished extracting all of the sets that
247 you wish to install, you should proceed to the
248 instructions below (after the last install medium
249 type-specific instructions), that explain how you
250 should configure your system.
251
252 To install from tape:
253 The first thing you should do is pick a temporary
254 directory where the distribution files can be stored.
255 To do this, enter the command "Set_tmp_dir", and enter
256 the name of the temporary directory. (Don't forget
257 that your disk is mounted under /mnt; you should
258 probably pick a directory under /mnt/usr.) The
259 default is /mnt/usr/distrib.
260
261 After you have picked a temporary directory, enter the
262 "Load_tape" command, to load the distribution sets from
263 tape.
264
265 You will be asked which tape drive to use. The
266 default is "rst0", which is correct if you're using
267 the SCSI tape drive with the lowest SCSI ID number.
268 (For the SCSI tape drive with the next lowest SCSI ID
269 number, you should use "rst1", and so on.)
270
271 You will be prompted to hit return when you have
272 inserted the tape into the tape drive. When you do,
273 the contents of the tape will be extracted into the
274 temporary directory, and the names of the files being
275 extracted will be printed.
276
277 After the tape has been extracted, to go the directory
278 containing the first distribution set you wish to
279 install. (Depending on how you made the tape, it's
280 probably a subdirectory of the temporary directory you
281 specified above.) Once there, run the "Set_tmp_dir"
282 command again, and accept its default answer by
283 hitting return at the prompt.
284
285 Use the "Extract" command to extract the distribution
286 set. For instance, if you're extracting the "base10"
287 set, use the command:
288 Extract base10
289 You will be asked if you wish the extraction to be
290 verbose. If you reply affirmatively, the name of each
291 file being extracted will be printed.
292
293 Repeat the previous two steps for each distribution
294 set you wish to install. Change to the set's
295 directory, run "Set_tmp_dir", and then run
296 "Extract <set_name>" to extract the set.
297
298 Once you are finished extracting all of the sets that
299 you wish to install, you should proceed to the
300 instructions below (after the last install medium
301 type-specific instructions), that explain how you
302 should configure your system.
303
304 To install via FTP or NFS:
305 The first thing you should do is pick a temporary
306 directory where the distribution files can be stored.
307 To do this, enter the command "Set_tmp_dir", and enter
308 the name of the temporary directory. (Don't forget
309 that your disk is mounted under /mnt; you should
310 probably pick a directory under /mnt/usr.) The
311 default is /mnt/usr/distrib.
312
313 Configure the appropriate ethernet interface (e.g.
314 ed0, ep0, etc.) up, with a command like:
315
316 ifconfig <ifname> <ipaddr> [netmask <netmask>]
317
318 where "<ifname>" is the interface name, like those
319 listed above, and "<ipaddr>" is the numeric IP address
320 of the interface. If the interface has a special
321 netmask, supply the word "netmask" at and that netmask
322 at the end of the command line. (The brackets
323 indicate that those arguments are optional.) For
324 instance, to configure interface ed0 with IP address
325 129.133.10.10, use the command:
326
327 ifconfig ed0 129.133.10.10
328
329 and to configure interface ep0 with IP address
330 128.32.240.167 and a special netmask, 0xffffff00, use
331 the command:
332
333 ifconfig ep0 128.32.240.167 netmask 0xffffff00
334
335 If your board selects software selection of the
336 ethernet interface to use, you might have to add
337 special flags to the "ifconfig" command you use.
338 Consult the table below for the appropriate flags:
339
340 Interface Type Connector Flags
341 --------- ---- --------- -----
342 ed with WD/SMC* BNC [none necessary]
343 ed with WD/SMC* UTP [none necessary]
344 ed with WD/SMC* AUI link0
345 ed with 3c503 BNC [none necessary]
346 ed with 3c503 AUI link0
347 ep BNC [none necessary]
348 ep AUI link0
349 ep UTP link0 link1
350
351 * Older WD boards do not support software configuration,
352 and must be configured via jumpers. These flags
353 will have no effect on them.
354
355 In other words, if, in the last example, the AUI port
356 of the board were being used, you would use the
357 command:
358
359 ifconfig ep0 128.32.240.167 netmask 0xffffff00 link0
360
361 If the NFS server or FTP server is not on a directly-
362 connected network, you need to set up a route to it
363 using a command like:
364
365 route add default <gate_ipaddr>
366
367 where <gate_ipaddr> is your gateway's numeric IP
368 address.
369
370 If you are NFS-mounting the distribution sets, mount
371 them on the temporary directory with a command like:
372
373 mount -t nfs <serv_ipaddr>:<dist_dir> <tmp_dir>
374
375 where <serv_ipaddr> is the server's numeric IP address,
376 <dist_dir> is the path to the distribution files on
377 the server, and <tmp_dir> is the name of the local
378 temporary directory.
379
380 Once this is done, proceed as if you had loaded the
381 files from tape, changing to the appropriate
382 directories, running "Set_tmp_dir", and running
383 "Extract" as appropriate.
384
385 If you are retrieving the distribution sets using ftp,
386 change into the temporary directory, and execute the
387 command:
388
389 ftp <serv_ipaddr>
390
391 where <serv_ipaddr> is once again the server's numeric
392 IP address. Get the files with FTP, taking care to
393 use binary mode when transferring the files.
394
395 Once you have all of the files for the distribution
396 sets that you wish to install, you can proceed using
397 the instructions above, as if you had installed from a
398 floppy. (Note that as with the floppy install, if
399 you're short on disk space, you can transfer only one
400 set at a time, extract it, then delete it, to save
401 space.)
402
403 Once you have finished extracting all of the distribution sets
404 that you wish to install, and are back at the "#" prompt, you
405 are ready to configure your system. The configuration utility
406 expects that you have installed the "base10" and "etc10"
407 distribution sets. If you have not, you will not be able to
408 run it successfully (nor will you have a functional system, in
409 any case). To configure your newly-installed NetBSD system,
410 run the command "Configure". It will ask you for the system's
411 host name, domain name, and other network configuration
412 information. It will set up your configuration files and make
413 the device nodes for the newly-installed system.
414
415 Kernel Installation:
416
417 Enter "halt" at the prompt to halt the system. When the
418 system is halted, remove the "inst-10" floppy from the floppy
419 drive, and replace it with the NetBSD 1.0 kernel-copy floppy
420 that you previously booted from. Reboot with that floppy.
421 with that floppy.
422
423 Once again, you will be prompted to insert a file system
424 floppy. DO NOT replace the kernel-copy floppy, just hit any
425 key.
426
427 Again, While booting, you may see several warnings. You may
428 be warned that no swap space is present, that init(8) cannot
429 find /etc/rc, and that one or more databases with names like
430 "pwd.db" cannot be found. Do not be alarmed, as, again, these
431 are completely normal. Hit return at the prompt asking you
432 for a shell name.
433
434 You will be presented with a shell prompt, at which you should
435 enter the "copy_kernel" command. It will ask you what
436 partition to copy the kernel to, and you should reply with the
437 name of your root partition (e.g. sd0a or wd0a).
438
439 You will be asked if you are sure that you want to copy the
440 kernel. Reply affirmatively, and it will check the file
441 system on your root partition, mount it, and copy the kernel.
442 Once the kernel is copied, you should use "halt" to halt the
443 system.
444
445 Once the system is halted, remove the kernel-copy floppy from
446 the floppy disk drive, and hit any key to reboot.
447
448 Congratulations, you have successfully installed NetBSD 1.0. When you
449 reboot into NetBSD, you should log in as "root" at the login prompt.
450 There is no initial password, but if you're using the machine in a
451 networked environment, you should create yourself an account and
452 protect it and the "root" account with good passwords.
453
454 Some of the files in the NetBSD 1.0 distribution might need to be
455 tailored for your site. In particular, the /etc/sendmail.cf file will
456 almost definitely need to be adjusted, and other files in /etc will
457 probably need to be modified, as well. If you are unfamiliar with
458 UN*X-like system administration, it's recommended that you buy a book
459 that discusses it.
460