install revision 1.9
1 $NetBSD: install,v 1.9 1998/10/28 04:13:35 simonb Exp $ 2 3Reminder: 4 Always back up files before installing or upgrading. 5 If installing from source, always install and boot a new kernel 6 before installing a new userland! 7 8 9If at all possible, you should consult the ``Installation Guide'' 10document on the NetBSD/pmax web page, at http://www.netbsd.org/Ports/pmax. 11It has not been possible to reproduce the pmax installation Web page 12in fixed-font hardcopy format for the _VER release. You must either visit 13the URL above, or request a rendered version (e.g., PostScript). 14 15Please check the NetBSD/pmax _VER installation instructions at 16 17 http://www.netbsd.org/Ports/pmax/pmax-install.html 18 19now, and return to this document when you used those instructions to 20install a diskimage, and used sysinst to label a disk and extract the 21NetBSD/pmax _VER installation tar sets. 22 23 24Install via diskless boot. 25-------------------------- 26 27The preferred path is to upgrade or install by diskless-booting a 28minimal system via NFS, and using that to upgrade or install. The 29file 30 installation/netboot/diskimage.tar.gz 31 32contains a suitable set of files. (it is a tar copy of the contents of 33a root filesystem diskimage) . You will need to find an NFS server, 34unpack the tarfile, and setup BOOTP/dhcp service for your pmax. 35Complete instructions are in the installation notes or the pmax web 36page. 37 38Since the system install utility, sysinst, requires a read/write root, 39netbooting is only feasible if your NFS server exports the diskless 40root read-write. If this is not possible, you should install via 41diskimage. 42 43 44 45Install via diskimage. 46---------------------- 47 48If netbooting with a _writable_ NFS root is not possible, the 49recommended installation is to unpack and copy a diskimage onto the 50raw partition of a disk. The diskimage file is in 51 52installation/diskimage/diskimage.gz 53 54is shipped compressed and is around 8020 kBytes; it uncompresses to 55exactly 32Mbytes. 56 57To install the diskimage onto disk rzX on a NetBSD/pmax system, do: 58 disklabel -W /dev/rrzXc 59 gunzip -c diskimage.gz | dd of=/dev/rrzXc bs=10240 60 61Most other NetBSD ports are similar, but use rsdXc instead of rrzXc. 62 63On NetBSD/i386, the `raw disk partition' is the 'd' parttion, so do: 64 disklabel -W /dev/rsdXd 65 gunzip -c diskimage.gz | dd of=/dev/rsdXd bs=10240 66 67On NetBSD, be sure to use disklabel -W to enable writing to the label 68area of the disk. If you forget this and/or use the `block' device, 69the dd command will silently fail. 70 71On MS-DOS, use an unzip utlility, then use rawrite. 72 73Then boot using, e.g, 74 >> boot -f rz(0,X,0)netbsd # 3100 75 >> boot 5/rzX/netbsd # 5000/200 76 >> boot 3/rzX/netbsd # other machines 77 78 (NOTE: replace the X with the unit number of your disk: 79 boot 3/rz2/netbsd to boot drive 2 on a 5000/xxx.) 80 81then continue from ``Once you've booted the diskimage''. 82 83 84 85Installing from Ultrix 86---------------------- 87 88The Ultrix bootloader can boot ECOFF-format NetBSD kernels. 89So the technique of dd'ing a disk image into swap, copying 90a kernel to the root, and then booting via the "n" argument 91should work with Ultrix too. Since Ultrix cannot mount 924.4BSD format FFS filesystems, just dd the diskimage into 93your swap partition, copy a netbsd.ecoff kernel from the FTP site, 94and proceed from step #5 of the `Upgrade via diskimage' above. 95 96Again, be sure to specify the partition where you dd'ed the NetBSD 97diskimage as your root device in step #7! 98 99 100 101Once you've booted the diskimage 102--------------------------- 103 104Once you'e booted a diskimage and pointed the kernel at the approriate 105devices to use for root, and dump, NetBSD kernel will prompt you for 106a single-user shell; 107 108 Enter pathname of shell or RETURN for sh: 109 110 111At this point, press the RETURN key. 112then when you get a standalone root prompt, set your terminal type 113 114 TERM=pmax; export TERM; 115 116 117Next, you need to ensure that the root filesystem is writable so that 118sysinst can create temporary files, temporary disklabels, etc. 119If you booted via NFS, the diskless root should already be writable. 120If you booted from disk, type 121 122 mount /dev/rzXY / 123 124where X is the disk unit you booted from, and Y is either a or b, 125(e.g., use /dev/rz2a for drive 2 with diskimage in the 'a' partition, 126and rz2b for diskimage in swap.) 127 128 129 130Then, start sysinst. For the ALPHA release, you should start sysinst 131with an empty release-version string: 132 133 sysinst -r "" 134 135(to stop sysinst automatically inserting the release into set names). 136For the BETA or the final relase, just use 137 138 sysinst 139 140Then, choose 'install' or 'upgrade'. 141 142When you've finished the install/upgrade, be sure to edit /etc/rc.conf 143and set "rc_configured" to YES when you are done. If you're doing an 144upgrade, merge your old etc from /etc.old into /etc. 145 146You're then ready to reboot! 147