=================================================================== RCS file: /cvsrepo/anoncvs/cvs/www/32.html,v retrieving revision 1.20 retrieving revision 1.21 diff -u -r1.20 -r1.21 --- www/32.html 2002/11/14 13:01:09 1.20 +++ www/32.html 2002/11/14 13:18:39 1.21 @@ -4,6 +4,7 @@
+hspace="24" src="images/MrPond.gif" alt="MrPond.gif">
@@ -114,7 +115,7 @@
@@ -200,7 +201,6 @@
Play with your BIOS options to enable booting from a CD. The OpenBSD/i386 release is on CD1. If your BIOS does not support booting from CD, you will need to create a boot floppy to install from. To create a boot floppy write @@ -215,7 +215,7 @@
To make a boot floppy under MS-DOS, use the "rawrite" utility located -at CD:/3.2/tools/rawrite.exe. To make the boot floppy under a Unix OS, use the dd(1) utility. The following is an example usage of dd(1), where the device could be "floppy", "rfd0c", or "rfd0a". +at CD:/3.2/tools/rawrite.exe. To make the boot floppy under a Unix OS, use the dd(1) utility. The following is an example usage of dd(1), where the device could be "floppy", "rfd0c", or "rfd0a".
# dd if=<file> of=/dev/<device> bs=32k @@ -228,7 +228,6 @@
OpenBSD/alpha:
At the SRM prompt, enter boot -fi 3.2/alpha/bsd.rd dka6 where dka6 is the short name for the CDROM drive (you can check with show dev). @@ -244,7 +243,6 @@
Put the CD2 in your CDROM drive and poweron your machine while holding down the C key until the display turns on and shows OpenBSD/macppc boot. @@ -256,7 +254,6 @@
Put the CD4 in your CDROM drive and press the spacebar during the poweron self-test. Enter the boot choice that corresponds to SYS_CDBOOT. @@ -268,7 +265,6 @@
Create BSD partitions according to INSTALL.amiga's preparation section. Mount the CD4 under AmigaOS as device CD0: Next, execute the following CLI command: "CD0:3.2/amiga/utils/loadbsd CD0:3.2/amiga/bsd.rd". @@ -277,7 +273,6 @@
Boot MacOS as normal and partition your disk with the appropriate A/UX configurations. Then, extract the Macside utilities from CD4:3.2/mac68k/utils onto your hard disk. Run Mkfs to create your @@ -290,7 +285,6 @@
You can create a bootable installation tape or boot over the network.
The network boot requires a MVME68K BUG version that supports the NIOT
and NBO debugger commands. Follow the instructions in INSTALL.mvme68k
@@ -300,14 +294,12 @@
Boot over the network via mopbooting as described in INSTALL.vax.
The 3.2 release of OpenBSD/sparc is located on CD3. To boot off of this CD you can use one of the two commands listed below, depending on the version of your ROM.
@@ -338,7 +330,6 @@
OpenBSD/sparc64:
Put the CD3 in your CDROM drive and type boot cdrom.
@@ -358,7 +349,6 @@
src.tar.gz contains a source archive starting at /usr/src. This file contains everything you need except for the kernel sources, which are in a separate archive. To extract: @@ -413,7 +403,7 @@ on most architectures (over 2000 packages build on i386, for instance).
The ports/ directory represents a CVS (see the manpage for
-
+
cvs(1) if
you aren't familiar with CVS) checkout of our ports. As with our complete
source tree, our ports tree is available via anoncvs. So, in
@@ -442,7 +432,7 @@
alt="OpenBSD">
www@openbsd.org
-$OpenBSD: 32.html,v 1.20 2002/11/14 13:01:09 jufi Exp $
+$OpenBSD: 32.html,v 1.21 2002/11/14 13:18:39 jufi Exp $