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Revision 1.57, Mon May 27 22:55:19 2019 UTC (5 years ago) by bentley
Substantially clean up and modernize HTML markup across openbsd.org. This was done with three purposes in mind: - to reduce the massive amount of inline HTML, to be easier on developers adding actual content - to allow running the HTML validator across the source (doing this found many unintentional mistakes in the present code, including at least a dozen cases of half- or fully-invisible text) - to separate content from presentation, so appearance can be controlled through stylesheets Great care was taken to keep all pages, even very old ones, looking the same, give or take a few pixels of whitespace. Much review, critique, and improvement from tj@ |
<!doctype html> <html lang=en id=platform> <meta charset=utf-8> <title>OpenBSD/armish</title> <meta name="description" content="the OpenBSD/armish page"> <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1"> <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="openbsd.css"> <link rel="canonical" href="https://www.openbsd.org/armish.html"> <h2 id=OpenBSD> <a href="index.html"> <i>Open</i><b>BSD</b></a> armish </h2> <hr> <table><tr><td> <p> OpenBSD/armish runs on various ARM-based appliances, using the Redboot bootloader (and which boot Linux by default). <p> <b>The OpenBSD/armish port was discontinued after the 6.0 release.</b> </table> <hr> <h3 id="history"><strong>History:</strong></h3> <p> OpenBSD/armish is the 3rd OpenBSD port to ARM based machines, after <a href="cats.html">cats</a> and <a href="zaurus.html">zaurus</a>. It is intended to support a variety of rather similar ARM-based machines: <ul> <li><a href="http://www.quantum.com/ServiceandSupport/SoftwareandDocumentationDownloads/DPA/Index.aspx"> Certance CP3100</a> <li><a href="http://www.thecus.com/product.php?PROD_ID=1"> Thecus N2100</a> (plus rebadged versions: Allnet ALL6500, Evesham SilverSTOR M-Box) <li><a href="http://www.thecus.com/product.php?PROD_ID=2"> Thecus N4100</a> (plus rebadged versions: Allnet ALL6400, Evesham SilverSTOR XS) <li>IO-DATA HDL-Gxxx, HDL-GWxxx, and HDL-GZxxx series <ul> <li>These models are a subset of the "Giga-landisk" product line, but the HDL-GXxxx models are not compatible (use Marvell CPUs). <li>The standard "landisk" (100mbit) machines are instead supported by the <a href="landisk.html">landisk</a> architecture. </ul> </ul> <hr> <h3 id="status"><strong>Current status:</strong></h3> <ul> <li>The Thecus N2100 runs multiuser and boots from disk using its own bootloader, or from the network using built-in Redboot. <li>The IO-DATA HDL-G series is multiuser and will soon be able to boot from disk as well. </ul> <hr> <h3 id="install"> <strong>Getting and installing OpenBSD/armish</strong> </h3> <p> The last supported OpenBSD/armish release was <a href="59.html">OpenBSD 5.9</a>. Here are the <a href="https://ftp.OpenBSD.org/pub/OpenBSD/5.9/armish/INSTALL.armish"> OpenBSD/armish 5.9 installation instructions</a>.