Subject: Re: Booting NetBSD above cyl. 1024
To: Ryan M. McConahy <rm@m-net.arbornet.org>
From: Manuel Bouyer <bouyer@antioche.lip6.fr>
List: port-i386
Date: 05/07/2002 11:29:11
On Mon, May 06, 2002 at 08:11:43PM +0000, Ryan M. McConahy wrote:
> Hello!
>
> I'm trying to get NetBSD working with a GNU/Linux system. I downloaded the binaries and install disks for NetBSD-1.5.2, and put them on my ext2 partition.
>
> With the install kernel, is it possible to mount the ext2 partition to get the sets?
Yes. Use 'mount -t ext2fs ...'
>
> If that works, can I put NetBSD above cyl. 1024? And if I do, how do I boot the kernel? Can it be booted above cyl. 1024, or do I have to put it on my boot partition?
>
> Here's my partition layout, if it can help:
>
> hda1 (boot) primary ext2 8mb
> hda5 main logical ext2 ~18500mb
> hda6 logical ext2 ~25
> hda7 logical OpenBSD 1500
>
> The OpenBSD partition is from when I tried to install OpenBSD. It never worked right, because it was above cyl. 1024. Can that, or the BSD disklabel that goes with it, be useful?
I gues it's not because it's over cyl 1024 but because it's not in a primary
partition.
NetBSD can boot from cyl > 1024, but it has be to a primary partition.
--
Manuel Bouyer, LIP6, Universite Paris VI. Manuel.Bouyer@lip6.fr
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