Subject: Re: Install 1.4.1 on a Compaq Contura Aero 4/33 C
To: Richard PLOIX <richard.ploix@fr.adp.com>
From: Bill Studenmund <wrstuden@nas.nasa.gov>
List: port-i386
Date: 10/27/1999 13:32:07
Nicely detailed! Unfortunatly you ran into some problems with sysinst.
You said the kern.tgz, etc files are on your msdos partition? I'm going to
assume so, and suggest a way to fix things up from this point.
Unfortunatly you have to repeat the parts of the install you did. I'll
show you where you need to make different answers.
On Wed, 27 Oct 1999, Richard PLOIX wrote:
> > -> partition table in sec.
> > No start(meg) Size(meg) End(meg) Kind
^^^ ^^^ ^^^
Did it really do that? Oops!
> > 0 6552 65520 72072 Primary DOS 16-bit FAT > 32 MB
> > 1 72072 615888 687960 NetBSD
> > 2 52 6500 6552 unknow
> > 3 unused
Remember the start & size of your msdos partition: 6552, 65520.
> >I say standard and return
> > -> BSD-disklabel partition as (size and offset in meg)
I'd suggest doing it in sectors. Megabyte mode had some strange rounding
issues. Just remember that a sector is 1/2 a K. So 2048 sectors = a
megabyte. 36 MB = 73728 and 33 MB = 67584 sectors.
> > id size offset end fstype bsize fsize mountpoint
> > a 36 35 71 4.2BSD 8192 1024 /
> > b 33 72 104 swap
> > c 300 35 335 unused
> > d 336 0 335 unused
> > e 230 105 335 4.2BSD 8192 1024 /usr
> > Partitons are ok?
> >I say yes and return
Say no. Add an "f" partition, start 6552, size 65520 and type MS-DOS.
Then say yes when it asks about partitions being ok.
> > -> name for netbsd disk 5mywd0]: return
> > last chance. return
> > newfs /dev/rwd0a
> > ---------------e
> > the next step is to fetch and unpack the distribution sets.
> >I say yes and return
> >I select custom installation kern, base, etc
> > -> do you want to see the files during extracting? no
> >I select floppy medium
At this point you want to select the "unmounted fs" option.
You want to say "msdos" for Filesystem, and "wd0f" for device (it's the
one we added above). If the files aren't in the top level of the dos
drive, set the path to them in the Directory setting. Remember that UNIX
uses "/" to seperate file names while windos uses "\". So a windows path
of "Program Files\Downloads" would be "Program Files/Downloads" for UNIX.
I think it should just work now.
Take care,
Bill