Over the past week or so as I've been finally recovering from a bad cold, I spent a few hours here and there putting together the beginnings of a nearly full system build (no toolchain of course, and none of src/gnu, though I added diff and diff3 from OpenBSD so that I'm not missing much) with crunchgen using the distrib/i386/ramdisk and distrib/i386/instkernel infrastructure. Right now the compressed image is just over 7 MB, expanding into a 12MB memory disk filesystem after boot. $ size ramdiskbin text data bss dec hex filename 9975285 325900 4231992 14533177 ddc239 ramdiskbin # ls -li /bin/sh 17 -r-xr-xr-x 288 root wheel 10304552 Mar 20 01:53 /bin/sh I'm having trouble though with integrating two rather major and essential groups of programs, primarily due to each of them having a private, and differing, variant of libisc: NTP and BIND (and perhaps something else with DHCP). I did manage to get them all to link and load with BIND's copy of libisc after munging a few minor things to provide some missing symbols and avoid a couple of symbol clashes. However as you might expect, this configuration doesn't actually work. The NTP tools fail spectacularly. Dhclient sends requests but never sees the offers arriving, though I think named might work. Removing BIND again and switching back to libisc.a from NTP gets everything working, I think. I get a weird error from ntpdate, but it seems to work. I'm wondering if it might be worthwhile even in a larger context to move libisc from these big subsystems into src/lib (and of course adapt them to build with this new common variant). -- Greg A. Woods Planix, Inc. <woods%planix.com@localhost> +1 416 218 0099 http://www.planix.com/
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