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prep revision 1.5
      1     First and foremost, before beginning the installation process, MAKE
      2     SURE YOU HAVE A RELIABLE BACKUP of any data on your hard disk that you
      3     wish to keep. Mistakes in partitioning your hard disk may lead
      4     to data loss.
      5     
      6     Before you begin, you should be aware of the geometry issues that may
      7     arise in relation to your hard disk.  First of all, you should know
      8     about sector size. You can count on this to be 512 bytes; other sizes
      9     are rare (and currently not supported). Of particular interest are
     10     the number of sectors per track, the number of tracks per cylinder
     11     (also known as the number of heads), and the number of cylinders.
     12     Together they describe the disk geometry.
     13     
     14     The BIOS has a limit of 1024 cylinders and 63 sectors per track for
     15     doing BIOS I/O. This is because of the old programming interface
     16     to the BIOS that restricts these values. Most of the big disks
     17     currently being used have more than 1024 real cylinders. Some have
     18     more than 63 sectors per track. Therefore, the BIOS can be instructed
     19     to use a fake geometry that accesses most of the disk and the fake
     20     geometry has less than or equal to 1024 cylinders and less than or
     21     equal to 63 sectors. This is possible because the disks can be
     22     addressed in a way that is not restricted to these values, and the
     23     BIOS can internally perform a translation. This can be activated
     24     in most modern BIOSes by using 'Large' or 'LBA' mode for the disk.
     25     
     26     NetBSD does not have the mentioned limitations with regard to the
     27     geometry. However, since the BIOS has to be used during startup,
     28     it is important to know about the geometry the BIOS uses. The
     29     NetBSD kernel should be on a part of the disk where it can be
     30     loaded using the BIOS, within the limitations of the BIOS
     31     geometry. The install program will check this for you, and
     32     will give you a chance to correct this if this is not the case.
     33     
     34     If you have not yet installed any other systems on the hard disk
     35     that you plan to install NetBSD on, or if you plan to use the
     36     disk entirely for NetBSD, you may wish to check your BIOS
     37     settings for the 'Large' or 'LBA' modes, and activate
     38     them for the hard disk in question. While they are not needed
     39     by NetBSD as such, doing so will remove the limitations mentioned
     40     above, and will avoid hassle should you wish to share the disk with
     41     other systems. Do NOT change these settings if you already have
     42     data on the disk that you want to preserve!
     43     
     44     In any case, it is wise to check your the BIOS settings for the
     45     hard disk geometry before beginning the installation, and write
     46     them down. While this should usually not be needed, it enables
     47     you to verify that the install program determines these values
     48     correctly.
     49     
     50     The geometry that the BIOS uses will be referred to as the "BIOS
     51     geometry", the geometry that NetBSD uses is the "real geometry".
     52     
     53     Sysinst will try to discover both the real geometry and BIOS
     54     geometry. If a Master Boot Record (MBR) has been written to
     55     your disk by DOS, Windows 95, NT, or another system, sysinst should
     56     have no trouble find the BIOS geometry. If the disk has not had a MBR
     57     written to it, it may be much more difficult to get the BIOS geometry.
     58     
     59     It is *important* that sysinst know the proper BIOS geometry to be able
     60     to get NetBSD to boot, regardless of where on your disk you put it.
     61     It is less of a concern if the disk is going to be used entirely for
     62     NetBSD.  If you intend to have several OSes on your disk, this becomes
     63     a much larger issue.
     64     
     65     Another issue with geometry is with SCSI disks.  The geometry reported
     66     by the disk often does not address all addressable sectors on the disk.
     67     sysinst will assist you if you want to choose a fake geometry for
     68     NetBSD to use so it can get access to more sectors.  This is not
     69     the same as the BIOS fake geometry.
     70