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Re: Netbooting a blue and white G3
Nathan,
That's the answer I expected.
So, the procedure would be:
1. When partitioning the disk, create an 800kB partition with type
"Apple_HFS";
2. The installer uses dd to block copy the raw HFS "image file" (which
contains the bootloader) to this partition.
Then, on the next reboot, the user has to go into OF and set boot-
device and boot-file. Is there a way to change OF settings through
software?
If we make step 1 above mandatory (maybe "hardcoded" into the install
process), the offset would be easy to calculate.
Do I make sense?
Cheers,
Flavio
On 16/10/2009, at 16:47, Nathan Whitehorn wrote:
I'm not completely sure I understand the question, but I'll try.
This generates a raw HFS image (boot1.hfs) that you can dd to an
800K partition you make with pdisk, so there is no preparation
necessary with other operating systems or hfsutils or anything else.
In principle, the installer can just block copy it to a partition
like it would a boot block. The idea is that it can work like the
boot block does on x86 or sparc, installing some stub loader you
never really need to update that loads the real loader from UFS --
the boot block internally just happening to be a small HFS filesystem.
It also gets around a build dependency on hfsutils by making a
"template" HFS disk image with some magic strings where the relevant
files need to go using hfsutils. This is then saved and put in CVS
(hfs.tmpl.bz2.uu), and the block offsets of those two files (found
with grep) and saved in Makefile.hfs. The regular build system then
builds the loader, expands the template image, and dds the loading
binary into the file system at the appropriate offset. It's a dirty,
horrible hack, but it seems to work well. You can see the details in
the Makefile and generate-hfs.sh.
-Nathan
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