Subject: Re: Installing NetBSD on a low-memory 486
To: Andrew Gillham <gillham@vaultron.com>
From: Andrei Petrov <and@genesyslab.com>
List: port-i386
Date: 10/03/2000 13:35:04
On Tue, 3 Oct 2000, Andrew Gillham wrote:
> Andrei Petrov writes:
> > Seems to me that the real win would be to use floppy based
> > root file system. You'll get your MINIROOTSIZE back as memory.
> > That will be slow though.
>
> How about a fdisk/disklabel floppy + a kernel/sysinst/root tarball
> floppy?
>
>
> Stage 0 floppy:
> INSTALL_BLAH kernel with minimum device support.
> sysinst with only fdisk/disklabel/mount/pax/etc
> (no networking on INSTALL_TINY)
>
> Stage 1 tarball: (aka package?)
> INSTALL_BLAH or GENERIC_BLAH kernel, no ramdisk
> turns swap on immediately.
> full sysinst and "boot strapping binaries"
> full networking support.
>
>
> The goal of stage 0 would be to fdisk, label, and make a disk bootable.
> Then the root filesystem would be untarred, and the system should reboot
> from the drive.
>
> At this point stage 1 completes the installation via CD/nfs/ftp/http while
> using swap and having no active ramdisk.
>
> It would be easy enough to have a 4MB stage 0, a laptop stage 0, etc.
> Then similar stage 1. It would be possible to have a stage 0 that works
> on most machines if it doesn't include cardbus and other less stable items.
> Then a more machine specific stage 1 could be used.
>
> -Andrew
>
Uh, cool, I didn't think that far:-). That guy asked to boot.
--
Andrey