install revision 1.16 1 1.16 perry $NetBSD: install,v 1.16 1998/01/09 18:46:40 perry Exp $
2 1.16 perry
3 1.1 briggs The installation can be broken down into three basic steps:
4 1.1 briggs * Run Mkfs to build a filesystem or filesystems.
5 1.8 ender * Run the Installer to load the files onto your filesystems.
6 1.8 ender * Run the Booter to boot the system.
7 1.1 briggs
8 1.1 briggs **** Preparing the filesystem(s)
9 1.1 briggs
10 1.10 ender Double-click on the Mkfs application icon to start it up. It will ask you
11 1.10 ender for the SCSI ID of the drive that you are installing upon. Once this is
12 1.10 ender selected, it will present a list of the partitions on that disk. You must
13 1.10 ender first convert the partitions to a type which NetBSD can understand. Select
14 1.10 ender each partition on which you wish to build a filesystem and click on the
15 1.10 ender "Change" button. If you are placing the entire installation on a single
16 1.10 ender partition, select the "NetBSD Root&Usr" radio button. If you are using
17 1.10 ender multiple partitions, select "NetBSD Root" for the root partition and
18 1.10 ender "NetBSD Usr" for all the other partitions. You should select "NetBSD Swap"
19 1.10 ender for the swap partition.
20 1.8 ender
21 1.10 ender When you have finished converting each partition, select each partition and
22 1.10 ender click on the "Format" button. You will now be asked for a bunch of
23 1.8 ender parameters for the hard drive and the filesystem. Usually, you can just
24 1.10 ender take the defaults. If you are installing onto removable media (e.g. a Zip,
25 1.10 ender Jaz, or Syquest), please see the FAQ. Note that although this dialog only
26 1.10 ender has the "OK" button, you are not committed, yet. Once you get the values
27 1.10 ender you want, press the "OK" button. A dialog will be presented at this point
28 1.10 ender with two options: "Format" and "Cancel." If you choose "Cancel," nothing
29 1.10 ender will be written to your drive. If you choose "Format," the program will
30 1.10 ender proceed to make a filesystem.
31 1.10 ender
32 1.10 ender Mkfs is not a well-behaved Macintosh application. It will not allow any
33 1.10 ender other tasks to run while it does (cooperative multitasking at its best).
34 1.10 ender When it's finished, the program will put up a dialog to ask if you have
35 1.10 ender scanned the output for any error messages. Usually there won't have been
36 1.10 ender any errors, but do scan the output to make sure. Simply click on the "I
37 1.10 ender Read It" button and the program will quit.
38 1.1 briggs
39 1.1 briggs Repeat as necessary for any extra partitions that you wish to make
40 1.1 briggs filesystems on. Note that you do _not_ need a filesystem on your swap
41 1.1 briggs partition.
42 1.1 briggs
43 1.8 ender When you are finished, click on the "Done" button and choose "Quit" from
44 1.8 ender the "File" menu to exit Mkfs.
45 1.8 ender
46 1.1 briggs **** Installing the files
47 1.1 briggs
48 1.8 ender Before using the Installer, it is probably a good idea to increase its
49 1.10 ender memory allocation. Select the Installer icon by clicking on it and choose
50 1.10 ender "Get Info" from the File menu. Increase both the Minimum and Preferred
51 1.10 ender sizes to as much as you can spare.
52 1.10 ender
53 1.10 ender Double-click on the Installer icon to start it up. The Installer will
54 1.10 ender present the same SCSI ID menu that Mkfs did. Select the same SCSI ID that
55 1.10 ender you did for Mkfs--i.e., the one you are installing onto.
56 1.1 briggs
57 1.1 briggs If you are installing onto a single root partition, proceed to the
58 1.1 briggs "Installation of base files" section, below.
59 1.1 briggs
60 1.1 briggs If you have not created filesystems for the root, usr, and
61 1.1 briggs any other filesystems, go back to "Preparing the filesystem(s),"
62 1.1 briggs above.
63 1.1 briggs
64 1.8 ender When you started the Installer, it mounted your root partition.
65 1.1 briggs Just before it printed, "Mounting partition 'A' as /," it printed
66 1.1 briggs lines like:
67 1.1 briggs sd1 at scsi ID 5.
68 1.1 briggs This means that the device for scsi ID 5 is sd1. The partitions
69 1.1 briggs are signified by a trailing letter. For instance, sd1a would be
70 1.1 briggs the root partition of the second scsi disk in the chain, and sd0g
71 1.10 ender would be the first Usr partition on the first scsi disk.
72 1.1 briggs
73 1.1 briggs You will need to know the proper device to mount the remaining
74 1.1 briggs partition(s) by hand:
75 1.1 briggs
76 1.1 briggs * Select "Build Devices" from the "File" menu.
77 1.1 briggs
78 1.1 briggs * Select "Mini Shell" from the "File" menu.
79 1.1 briggs
80 1.8 ender * You can use the 'disklabel' command to get a listing of
81 1.8 ender the available partitions and their types and sizes.
82 1.8 ender
83 1.1 briggs * Mount the filesystems you wish with the command:
84 1.1 briggs mount device path
85 1.1 briggs For example, if you wish to mount a usr partition from
86 1.1 briggs the first scsi disk, sd0, on /usr, you would type:
87 1.1 briggs mount /dev/sd0g /usr
88 1.1 briggs
89 1.8 ender * Type "fstab force" to create a proper /etc/fstab file
90 1.8 ender
91 1.1 briggs * Type "quit" after you have mounted all the filesystems.
92 1.1 briggs
93 1.1 briggs Installation of base files:
94 1.1 briggs
95 1.1 briggs Select the "Install" menu item from the "File" menu and install
96 1.10 ender base.tgz, etc.tgz, netbsd.tgz, and any other sets you wish to
97 1.10 ender install at this time (see the contents section for information
98 1.10 ender about what's in each set). The Installer will print out the
99 1.10 ender filename of each file as it is installed, and will take quite some
100 1.10 ender time to install everything (the base package alone can take over an
101 1.10 ender hour on a slow hard drive).
102 1.1 briggs
103 1.1 briggs As is the case with Mkfs, this is not a particularly well-behaved
104 1.1 briggs Macintosh application and the machine will be completely tied up
105 1.1 briggs while the installation takes place.
106 1.1 briggs
107 1.10 ender At some point after installing the base set, select the "Build
108 1.10 ender Devices" option from the "File" menu if you have not already done
109 1.10 ender so. This will create a bunch of device nodes for you and will
110 1.10 ender create your initial /etc/fstab. The Installer program also has an
111 1.10 ender option to give you a mini-shell. Do not use this unless you are
112 1.10 ender sure know what you are doing.
113 1.8 ender
114 1.10 ender When you are finished installing all of the sets you wish to
115 1.8 ender install, exit the Installer by choosing "Quit" from the "File" menu.
116 1.8 ender
117 1.1 briggs **** Booting the system
118 1.1 briggs
119 1.7 scottr Prior to attempting to boot NetBSD/mac68k, please verify that all of
120 1.7 scottr the following are true:
121 1.7 scottr
122 1.7 scottr 1) 32-bit addressing is enabled[*] in the Memory control panel;
123 1.7 scottr
124 1.7 scottr 2) All forms of virtual memory are disabled (the Memory control
125 1.7 scottr panel, RAM Doubler, or other software-based memory enhancement
126 1.7 scottr products); and
127 1.7 scottr
128 1.7 scottr 3) Your system is in B&W mode (1-bit color or grayscale) as shown
129 1.8 ender by the Monitors control panel. You may choose to have the
130 1.8 ender Booter do this for you automatically by selecting the appropriate
131 1.8 ender check box and radio button in the "Monitors" dialog on the
132 1.8 ender "Options" menu.
133 1.7 scottr
134 1.10 ender It is probably best to boot your machine with all extensions turned
135 1.10 ender off[*]. You can do this by booting into MacOS with the SHIFT key held
136 1.10 ender down. You may have to restart your Macintosh for changes to take effect
137 1.10 ender before proceeding.
138 1.7 scottr
139 1.8 ender [* NOTE: If you have an older II-class system (including the II, IIx, IIcx,
140 1.8 ender and SE/30), it is necessary to install Connectix's MODE32 to work around
141 1.7 scottr ROM issues which prevent you from enabling 32-bit addressing. Please see
142 1.8 ender <http://www.netbsd.org/Ports/mac68k/faq/> for more information.]
143 1.7 scottr
144 1.5 scottr Double-click on the NetBSD/mac68k Booter icon to start the application.
145 1.8 ender Select "Booting" from the "Options" menu. Check that all of the items in
146 1.8 ender the resulting dialog look sane--especially the SCSI ID. If not, correct
147 1.8 ender them to your preference (the SCSI ID should be the only thing you need to
148 1.8 ender change). When you are satisfied with your choices, try booting NetBSD by
149 1.8 ender selecting "Boot Now" from the "Options" menu.
150 1.8 ender
151 1.8 ender If you wish to save your preferences, choose "Save Options" from the
152 1.10 ender "File" menu before Booting (your preferences will not be saved if you
153 1.10 ender forget to do this).
154 1.8 ender
155 1.8 ender If the system does not come up, send mail to scottr (a] netbsd.org describing
156 1.8 ender your software, your hardware, and as complete a description of the
157 1.8 ender problem as you can.
158 1.1 briggs
159 1.8 ender If the system does come up, congratulations, you have successfully
160 1.10 ender installed NetBSD _VER. When you first boot into NetBSD, it will
161 1.10 ender automatically drop you into single-user mode with the root filesystem
162 1.10 ender mounted read-write. The system will ask you to choose a shell. Simply hit
163 1.10 ender return to get to a prompt. If you are asked for a terminal type, respond
164 1.10 ender with 'vt220' and hit return. At this point, you need to configure at least
165 1.10 ender one file in the /etc directory. Change to the /etc directory and take a
166 1.10 ender look at the /etc/rc.conf file. Modify it to your tastes, making sure that
167 1.10 ender you set "rc_configured=YES" so that your changes will be enabled and a
168 1.10 ender multi-user boot can proceed. If your /usr directory is on a separate
169 1.10 ender partition and you do not know how to use 'ed' or 'ex', you will have to
170 1.10 ender mount your /usr partition to gain access to 'vi'. Do the following:
171 1.10 ender
172 1.10 ender mount /usr
173 1.10 ender export TERM=vt220
174 1.10 ender
175 1.10 ender You can then edit /etc/rc.conf with 'vi'. When you have finished, type
176 1.10 ender 'exit' at the prompt to leave the single-user shell and continue with the
177 1.10 ender multi-user boot. You should log in as "root" at the login prompt. There
178 1.10 ender is no initial password, but if you're using the machine in a networked
179 1.10 ender environment, you should create yourself an account and protect it and the
180 1.10 ender "root" account with good passwords. Please see the adduser(8) man page for
181 1.10 ender more information on how to add a new user.
182 1.1 briggs
183 1.8 ender Some of the files in the NetBSD _VER distribution might need to be
184 1.13 ender tailored for your site. In particular, if you have installed the X11
185 1.13 ender distribution sets, you will need to edit the /etc/ld.so.conf file to
186 1.13 ender look something like:
187 1.13 ender
188 1.13 ender # add the X shared libraries to the runtime linker search path
189 1.13 ender /usr/X11R6/lib
190 1.13 ender
191 1.13 ender Also, don't forget to add /usr/X11R6/bin to your path in your shell's dot
192 1.13 ender file so that you have access to the X binaries. Many other files in /etc
193 1.14 ender will probably need to be modified, as well. Most of these files are
194 1.15 ender described in section 5 of the manual pages. If you are unfamiliar with
195 1.15 ender UN*X-like operating systems or system administration, it's recommended that
196 1.15 ender you buy a book that discusses it.
197