Hello
all,
I am attempting to install NetBSD on an old 486 to bring it back to life (for fun). Because the default installation media created a kernel which was too big, I needed to create my own custom boot media (two floppies modified from the commented-out INSTALL_TINY kernel). One particular snag I encountered is that my boot media always want to download a kernel named “kern-generic.tgz” from the i386/binary/sets directory of my chosen mirror. This includes the source tree that I compiled available on my home network. For similar
reasons, I needed to compile a custom kernel (based off of GENERIC_TINY) so my
486 is usable. I have figured out from browsing the NetBSD source tree that
extra kernels can be included into the final release directory on a server by
modifying makefiles under ${NETBSD_SRC}/etc (/usr/src/etc), which I found out
purely by accident by Googling “$RELEASEDIR/binary/kernel”. I want my
custom kernel to be available both i386/binary/kernel and
i386/binary/sets- the default seems to be to place all kernels in
i386/binary/kernel, and only a subset in i386/binary/sets) . Therefore, I can
create a release directory on my home network and point my boot media to that
computer. However, I can’t seem to get sysinst to try to download any kernel
besides the seemingly-hardcoded kern-GENERIC.tgz. Is it possible to set an
option in the NetBSD source tree- in either the Makefiles or ./build.sh- to
create installation media that can choose from a list of possible kernels in a
release directory?
Currently,
what I have to do is boot my installation media, open ftp, download the kernel
from my home network mirror under i386/binary/kernel, to the root of my drive,
reboot the installation media and run the install program, telling the program
to skip grabbing the kernel sources. This is error-prone and I have already had
to restart the 20-minute installation no less than 5 times .
Thanks for
any help any of you can give me!
Sincerely,
-- William D. Jones Rowan University | ECE | 2012 Member IEEE Member Tau Beta Pi thor0505%comcast.net@localhost Message sent using 'Windows Live Mail' client. |