upgrade revision 1.2 1 1.2 perry $NetBSD: upgrade,v 1.2 1998/01/09 18:48:07 perry Exp $
2 1.2 perry
3 1.1 oki The upgrade to NetBSD 1.2 is a binary upgrade; it would be prohibitive
4 1.1 oki to make users upgrade by compiling and installing the 1.2 sources, and
5 1.1 oki it would be very difficult to even compile a set of instructions that
6 1.1 oki allowed them to do so. Because of the many changes to the system, it
7 1.1 oki is difficult impractical to upgrade by recompiling from the sources
8 1.1 oki and installing.
9 1.1 oki
10 1.1 oki To do the upgrade, you must have the appropriate kernel-copy floppy
11 1.1 oki image on a disk, and the upgr12.fs floppy image on another. You must
12 1.1 oki also have at least the "base12" binary distribution set available,
13 1.1 oki so that you can upgrade with it, using one of the upgrade methods
14 1.1 oki described above. Finally, you must have sufficient disk space
15 1.1 oki available to install the new binaries. Since the old binaries are
16 1.1 oki being overwritten in place, you only need space for the new binaries,
17 1.1 oki which weren't previously on the system. If you have a few megabytes
18 1.1 oki free on each of your root and /usr partitions, you should have enough
19 1.1 oki space.
20 1.1 oki
21 1.1 oki Since upgrading involves replacing the boot blocks on your NetBSD
22 1.1 oki partition, the kernel, and most of the system binaries, it has the
23 1.1 oki potential to cause data loss. You are strongly advised to BACK UP ANY
24 1.1 oki IMPORTANT DATA ON YOUR DISK, whether on the NetBSD partition or on
25 1.1 oki another operating system's partition, before beginning the upgrade
26 1.1 oki process.
27 1.1 oki
28 1.1 oki To upgrade your system, follow the following instructions:
29 1.1 oki
30 1.1 oki Boot your machine using of the appropriate kernel-copy floppy.
31 1.1 oki
32 1.1 oki You will be prompted to insert a file system floppy. Remove
33 1.1 oki the kernel-copy floppy and insert the upgr12 floppy, then hit
34 1.1 oki any key to continue booting.
35 1.1 oki
36 1.1 oki While booting, you will probably see several warnings. You
37 1.1 oki should be warned that no swap space is present, and that
38 1.1 oki init(8) cannot find /etc/rc. Do not be alarmed, these are
39 1.1 oki completely normal. When you reach the prompt asking you for a
40 1.1 oki shell name, just hit return.
41 1.1 oki
42 1.1 oki You will be presented with some information about the upgrade
43 1.1 oki process and a warning message, and will be asked if you wish
44 1.1 oki to proceed with the upgrade process. If you answer
45 1.1 oki negatively, the upgrade process will stop, and your disk will
46 1.1 oki not be modified. If you answer affirmatively, the upgrade
47 1.1 oki process will begin, and your disk will be modified. You may
48 1.1 oki hit Control-C to stop the upgrade process at any time.
49 1.1 oki However, if you hit it at an inopportune moment, your system
50 1.1 oki may be left in an inconsistent (and possibly unusable) state.
51 1.1 oki
52 1.1 oki You will be asked if you wish to upgrade your file systems to
53 1.1 oki the new file system format. If you do, reply affirmatively.
54 1.1 oki If you don't have your file systems upgraded now, you should
55 1.1 oki probably do it manually after the install process is complete,
56 1.1 oki by using "fsck -c 2". Read the fsck(8) manual page for more
57 1.1 oki details. Note that this step is only important when upgrading
58 1.1 oki from a pre-NetBSD 1.0 release.
59 1.1 oki
60 1.1 oki The upgrade program will then check your root file system,
61 1.1 oki and, if you approved, will upgrade it to the new file system
62 1.1 oki format. It will then mount your root file system on /mnt.
63 1.1 oki
64 1.1 oki If your file systems are being upgraded, the upgrade script
65 1.1 oki will copy the new fsck(8) program to your hard disk and
66 1.1 oki upgrade your remaining file systems.
67 1.1 oki
68 1.1 oki The upgrade program will then automatically replace the boot
69 1.1 oki blocks on your disk with newer versions, and mount all of your
70 1.1 oki file systems under /mnt. (In other words, your root partition
71 1.1 oki will be mounted on /mnt, your /usr partition on /mnt/usr, etc.)
72 1.1 oki
73 1.1 oki If you don't already have the NetBSD distribution sets on your
74 1.1 oki disk, look in the installation section for information on how
75 1.1 oki to transfer them to your disk.
76 1.1 oki
77 1.1 oki If you have only one floppy drive, and don't have the disk
78 1.1 oki space to copy all of the distribution onto the hard drive, you
79 1.1 oki can do the following:
80 1.1 oki
81 1.1 oki Install a kernel on the hard drive as detailed a few
82 1.1 oki paragraphs below, then boot off the hard drive. Now
83 1.1 oki you can copy and install distribution sets
84 1.1 oki incrementally from your lone floppy drive.
85 1.1 oki
86 1.1 oki Once the distribution sets are transferred to your disk,
87 1.1 oki continue here. (Obviously, if the NetBSD distribution sets
88 1.1 oki are already on your disk, because you've transferred them
89 1.1 oki before starting the upgrade process, you don't need to
90 1.1 oki transfer them again now!)
91 1.1 oki
92 1.1 oki After the software has been transferred to the machine (or
93 1.1 oki mounted, in the case of upgrading via NFS), change into the
94 1.1 oki directory containing the "base12" distribution set. Once you
95 1.1 oki are there, run the "Set_tmp_dir" command, and hit return at
96 1.1 oki the prompt to select the default answer for the temporary
97 1.1 oki directory's path name. (It should be the path name of the
98 1.1 oki directory that you're in.)
99 1.1 oki
100 1.1 oki Run the command "Extract base12" to upgrade the base
101 1.1 oki distribution.
102 1.1 oki
103 1.1 oki Repeat the above two steps for all of the sets you wish to
104 1.1 oki upgrade. (For each, change into the directory containing the
105 1.1 oki set, run "Set_tmp_dir" and accept the default path name, then
106 1.1 oki run the "Extract <setname>" command.)
107 1.1 oki
108 1.1 oki If you were previously using the security distribution set,
109 1.1 oki you MUST upgrade to the new version, or you will not be able
110 1.1 oki to log in when the upgrade process is complete. Similarly, if
111 1.1 oki you were not previously using the security set, you must NOT
112 1.1 oki upgrade to the new version.
113 1.1 oki
114 1.1 oki When you are done upgrading all of the distribution sets you
115 1.1 oki wish to upgrade, issue the command "Cleanup". It will clean
116 1.1 oki up the installation, by remaking some system databases. When
117 1.1 oki it is complete, you should use "halt" to halt the system.
118 1.1 oki
119 1.1 oki When the system is halted, remove the "upgr12" floppy from
120 1.1 oki the floppy drive, and replace it with the NetBSD 1.2
121 1.1 oki kernel-copy floppy that you previously booted from. Reboot
122 1.1 oki with that floppy.
123 1.1 oki
124 1.1 oki Once again, you will be prompted to insert a file system
125 1.1 oki floppy. DO NOT replace the kernel-copy floppy, just hit any
126 1.1 oki key.
127 1.1 oki
128 1.1 oki Again, While booting, you may see several warnings. You may
129 1.1 oki be warned that no swap space is present, that init(8) cannot
130 1.1 oki find /etc/rc, and that one or more databases with names like
131 1.1 oki "pwd.db" cannot be found. Do not be alarmed, as, again, these
132 1.1 oki are completely normal. Hit return at the prompt asking you
133 1.1 oki for a shell name.
134 1.1 oki
135 1.1 oki You will be presented with a shell prompt, at which you should
136 1.1 oki enter the "copy_kernel" command. It will ask you what
137 1.1 oki partition to copy the kernel to, and you should reply with the
138 1.1 oki name of your root partition (e.g. sd0a or wd0a).
139 1.1 oki
140 1.1 oki You will be asked if you are sure that you want to copy the
141 1.1 oki kernel. Reply affirmatively, and it will check the file
142 1.1 oki system on your root partition, mount it, and copy the kernel.
143 1.1 oki Once the kernel is copied, you should use "halt" to halt the
144 1.1 oki system.
145 1.1 oki
146 1.1 oki Once the system is halted, remove the kernel-copy floppy from
147 1.1 oki the floppy disk drive, and hit any key to reboot.
148 1.1 oki
149 1.1 oki Your system has now been upgraded to NetBSD 1.2.
150 1.1 oki
151 1.1 oki After a new kernel has been copied to your hard disk, your
152 1.1 oki machine is a complete NetBSD 1.2 system. However, that
153 1.1 oki doesn't mean that you're finished with the upgrade process.
154 1.1 oki There are several things that you should do, or might have to
155 1.1 oki do, to insure that the system works properly.
156 1.1 oki
157 1.1 oki First, if you did not upgrade your file systems to the new
158 1.1 oki file system format during the upgrade process, and you are
159 1.1 oki upgrading from a pre-1.0 NetBSD, you may want to do so now,
160 1.1 oki with "fsck -c 2". If you are unsure about the process, it's
161 1.1 oki suggested that you read the fsck(8) manual page.
162 1.1 oki
163 1.1 oki Second, you will probably want to get the etc12 distribution,
164 1.1 oki extract it, and compare its contents with those in your /etc/
165 1.1 oki directory. You will probably want to replace some of your
166 1.1 oki system configuration files, or incorporate some of the changes
167 1.1 oki in the new versions into yours.
168 1.1 oki
169 1.1 oki Third, you will probably want to update the set of device
170 1.1 oki nodes you have in /dev. If you've changed the contents of
171 1.1 oki /dev by hand, you will need to be careful about this, but if
172 1.1 oki not, you can just cd into /dev, and run the command "sh
173 1.1 oki MAKEDEV all".
174 1.1 oki
175 1.1 oki Fourth, you must deal with certain changes in the formats of
176 1.1 oki some of the configuration files. The most notable change is
177 1.1 oki that the "options" given to many of the file systems in
178 1.1 oki /etc/fstab or by hand have changed, and some of the file
179 1.1 oki systems have changed names. *IMPORTANT*: ANY INSTANCES OF "ufs"
180 1.1 oki IN /etc/fstab MUST BE CHANGED TO "ffs". To find out what the
181 1.1 oki new options are, it's suggested that you read the manual page
182 1.1 oki for the file systems' mount commands, for example mount_nfs(8)
183 1.1 oki for NFS. (Note that the information for mounts of type "ffs",
184 1.1 oki i.e. Fast File Systems, are contained in the mount(8) man
185 1.1 oki page.)
186 1.1 oki
187 1.1 oki Finally, you will want to delete old binaries that were part
188 1.1 oki of the version of NetBSD that you upgraded from and have since
189 1.1 oki been removed from the NetBSD distribution. If you are
190 1.1 oki upgrading from a pre-1.0 NetBSD, you might also
191 1.1 oki want to recompile any locally-built binaries, to take
192 1.1 oki advantage of the shared libraries. (Note that any new
193 1.1 oki binaries that you build will be dynamically linked, and
194 1.1 oki therefore take advantage of the shared libraries, by default.
195 1.1 oki For information on how to make statically linked binaries,
196 1.1 oki see the cc(1) and ld(1) manual pages.)
197