README revision 1.3 1 1.3 fredette # $NetBSD: README,v 1.3 2001/06/13 21:38:30 fredette Exp $
2 1.2 fredette
3 1.3 fredette README for ndbootd-0.5
4 1.1 fredette
5 1.1 fredette Copyright (c) 2001 Matthew Fredette. All rights reserved.
6 1.1 fredette
7 1.1 fredette See the file COPYING for no-warranty and distribution terms.
8 1.1 fredette
9 1.1 fredette ndbootd is a daemon that serves Sun's old Network Disk (ND) protocol.
10 1.1 fredette This protocol was designed by Sun before they designed NFS. ND simply
11 1.1 fredette makes the raw blocks of a disk available to network clients. Contrast
12 1.1 fredette this with the true namespace and file abstractions that NFS provides.
13 1.1 fredette
14 1.1 fredette The only reason you're likely to encounter ND nowadays is if you have
15 1.1 fredette an old Sun-2 machine, like the 2/120 or 2/50. The Sun-2 PROMs can
16 1.1 fredette only use ND to boot over the network. (Later, the Sun-3 PROMs would
17 1.1 fredette use RARP and TFTP to boot over the network.)
18 1.1 fredette
19 1.1 fredette ndbootd is a very simple ND server that only supports client reads.
20 1.1 fredette
21 1.1 fredette usage: ndbootd [OPTIONS] BOOT1-BIN
22 1.1 fredette where OPTIONS are:
23 1.1 fredette -s, --boot2 { BOOT2-BIN | DIR }
24 1.1 fredette find a second-stage boot program in the file
25 1.1 fredette BOOT2-BIN or in the directory DIR
26 1.1 fredette -i, --interface NAME use interface NAME
27 1.1 fredette -w, --window-size COUNT
28 1.1 fredette send at most COUNT unacknowledged packets [default=6]
29 1.1 fredette -d, --debug set debug mode
30 1.1 fredette
31 1.1 fredette ndbootd exports a disk that the clients consider to be /dev/ndp0 (ND
32 1.1 fredette public unit zero). The disk is available to any client listed in
33 1.1 fredette /etc/ethers (Sun-2 PROMs don't do RARP, but they do learn their IP
34 1.1 fredette address from the first ND response they receive from the server.)
35 1.1 fredette
36 1.1 fredette BOOT1-BIN is a file containing the mandatory first-stage network boot
37 1.1 fredette program. The layout of the exported disk is:
38 1.1 fredette
39 1.1 fredette block 0: normally a Sun disklabel (but ignored by the PROM)
40 1.1 fredette blocks 1-15: the first-stage network boot program
41 1.1 fredette
42 1.1 fredette With the --boot2 option, ndbootd will also make a second-stage network
43 1.1 fredette boot program available to clients. When --boot2 is used with a
44 1.1 fredette filename BOOT2-BIN, that file is the second-stage network boot program
45 1.1 fredette to be served to all clients.
46 1.1 fredette
47 1.1 fredette When --boot2 is used with a directory name DIR, ndbootd finds a
48 1.1 fredette client's second-stage network boot program by turning its IP address
49 1.1 fredette into a filename in that directory, in the same manner later Sun-3
50 1.1 fredette PROMs do when TFTPing (i.e., if a client has IP address 192.168.1.10,
51 1.1 fredette ndbootd expects to find DIR/C0A8010A.SUN2). The expected use of
52 1.1 fredette --boot2 is with the /tftpboot directory, making ndbootd a functional
53 1.1 fredette replacement for tftp when used with an ND-aware first-stage boot
54 1.1 fredette program.
55 1.1 fredette
56 1.1 fredette Any second-stage network boot program always begins at block 16 of the
57 1.1 fredette exported disk, regardless of the length of the first-stage network
58 1.1 fredette boot program.
59 1.1 fredette
60 1.1 fredette Whether or not there is a second-stage network boot program, the
61 1.1 fredette exported disk appears to have infinite length. The content of all
62 1.1 fredette blocks not used by the first- or second-stage network boot programs is
63 1.1 fredette undefined.
64 1.1 fredette
65 1.1 fredette All first- and second-stage network boot programs must have had their
66 1.1 fredette exec headers stripped off.
67 1.1 fredette
68 1.1 fredette Normally, ndbootd listens on the first up and running IP interface it
69 1.1 fredette finds. Use the --interface option to give a specific interface.
70 1.1 fredette
71 1.1 fredette One parameter of the ND protocol is a sort of window size. This is
72 1.1 fredette the number of 1-kilobyte packets that can be transmitted before
73 1.1 fredette waiting for an acknowledgement. To change this from the default 6,
74 1.1 fredette use the --window-size option.
75 1.1 fredette
76 1.1 fredette When debug support is compiled in (it is by default), the --debug
77 1.1 fredette option turns on debugging.
78 1.1 fredette
79 1.1 fredette ndbootd has only been compiled and tested under NetBSD with BPF
80 1.1 fredette support, although there is a fair autoconf framework, and the raw
81 1.1 fredette interface support is broken out, which should allow for reasonable
82 1.1 fredette porting.
83 1.1 fredette
84 1.1 fredette Note that ndbootd was developed specifically to help me to boot my
85 1.1 fredette experimental NetBSD port on my Sun-2/120. In this scenario, the
86 1.1 fredette first-stage network boot (bootyy) continues to use ND to load in the
87 1.1 fredette second-stage boot program (netboot), which can do a full
88 1.1 fredette RARP/bootparams/NFS boot. (If the program netboot ever fit in 16
89 1.1 fredette blocks, we could eliminate bootyy, but this is unlikely.)
90 1.1 fredette
91 1.1 fredette (Aside: it is unusual for a network boot to have two stages of boot
92 1.1 fredette programs before the kernel; this is normally only done on real disks.
93 1.1 fredette But to the Sun-2 PROMs, /dev/ndp0 is just like a real disk in that it
94 1.1 fredette provides no EOF condition (like a tape boot gets, or like the Sun-3
95 1.1 fredette TFTP method gets), so it only loads a fixed number of blocks.)
96 1.1 fredette
97 1.1 fredette Whether ndbootd can be used to netboot SunOS on a Sun-2 is unknown, but
98 1.1 fredette the hope is that you can use the SunOS-provided sun2.bb file as the
99 1.1 fredette first-stage boot program, not use any --boot2 option, and ndbootd will
100 1.1 fredette perform as the SunOS ndbootd did.
101 1.1 fredette
102 1.1 fredette To configure ndbootd for compiling, run the 'configure' script,
103 1.1 fredette followed by make. To report bugs in compiling or using ndbootd, email
104 1.1 fredette fredette (a] alum.mit.edu, and please include as much information as you
105 1.1 fredette can about what you're trying to do and what goes wrong. I don't have
106 1.1 fredette much time to do support, but I'll try.
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