diff options
-rw-r--r-- | distrib/notes/amiga/contents | 28 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | distrib/notes/amiga/hardware | 10 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | distrib/notes/amiga/install | 12 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | distrib/notes/amiga/prep | 8 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | distrib/notes/amiga/upgrade | 50 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | distrib/notes/amiga/whatis | 2 |
6 files changed, 44 insertions, 66 deletions
diff --git a/distrib/notes/amiga/contents b/distrib/notes/amiga/contents index ec3f13fac2f..436563cebb6 100644 --- a/distrib/notes/amiga/contents +++ b/distrib/notes/amiga/contents @@ -1,8 +1,8 @@ -The amiga-specific portion of the OpenBSD 2.0 release is found in the +The amiga-specific portion of the OpenBSD 2.1 release is found in the "amiga" subdirectory of the distribution. That subdirectory is layed out as follows: -.../2.0/amiga/ +.../2.1/amiga/ INSTALL.amiga This file. kernels/ A generic OpenBSD kernel is found here. @@ -21,7 +21,7 @@ out as follows: installation section, below. There are two amiga file system images to be found in the "amiga/miniroots" -subdirectory of the OpenBSD 2.0 distribution. One of them is a upgrade +subdirectory of the OpenBSD 2.1 distribution. One of them is a upgrade image and one is an installation image. They are described in more detail below. There are gzipped versions of each available, for easier downloading. (The gzipped version have the ".gz" extension added to @@ -38,7 +38,7 @@ Installation file system: NFS file system or ftp. You can also load distribution sets from a SCSI tape or from one of your existing AmigaDOS partitions. - This file is named "inst-20.fs". + This file is named "inst-21.fs". Upgrade file system: @@ -54,16 +54,16 @@ Upgrade file system: one of your existing AmigaDOS partitions, or from an existing OpenBSD partition. - This file is named "upgr-20.fs". + This file is named "upgr-21.fs". The OpenBSD/amiga binary distribution sets contain the binaries which -comprise the OpenBSD 2.0 release for the amiga. There are seven binary +comprise the OpenBSD 2.1 release for the amiga. There are seven binary distribution sets. The binary distribution sets can be found in -subdirectories of the "amiga/tars" subdirectory of the OpenBSD 2.0 +subdirectories of the "amiga/tars" subdirectory of the OpenBSD 2.1 distribution tree, and are as follows (all have ".tar.gz" appended to the name given in the table below): - base20 The OpenBSD/amiga 2.0 base binary distribution. You + base21 The OpenBSD/amiga 2.1 base binary distribution. You MUST install this distribution set. It contains the base OpenBSD utilities that are necessary for the system to run and be minimally functional. It @@ -71,7 +71,7 @@ the name given in the table below): everything described below. [ 11M gzipped, 35M uncompressed ] - comp20 The OpenBSD/amiga Compiler tools. All of the tools + comp21 The OpenBSD/amiga Compiler tools. All of the tools relating to C, C++, and FORTRAN (yes, there are two!). This set includes the system include files (/usr/include), the linker, the compiler tool chain, @@ -82,7 +82,7 @@ the name given in the table below): call and library manual pages. [ 7M gzipped, 23M uncompressed ] - etc20 This distribution set contains the system + etc21 This distribution set contains the system configuration files that reside in /etc and in several other places. This set MUST be installed if you are installing the system from scratch, but should NOT be @@ -91,22 +91,22 @@ the name given in the table below): CAREFULLY upgrade your configuration files by hand.) [ 70K gzipped, 380K uncompressed ] - game20 This set includes the games and their manual pages. + game21 This set includes the games and their manual pages. [ 3M gzipped, 7M uncompressed ] - man20 This set includes all of the manual pages for the + man21 This set includes all of the manual pages for the binaries and other software contained in the base set. Note that it does not include any of the manual pages that are included in the other sets. [ 2M gzipped, 8M uncompressed ] - misc20 This set includes the system dictionaries (which are + misc21 This set includes the system dictionaries (which are rather large), the typesettable document set, and man pages for other architectures which happen to be installed from the source tree by default. [ 2M gzipped, 6M uncompressed ] - text20 This set includes OpenBSD's text processing tools, + text21 This set includes OpenBSD's text processing tools, including groff, all related programs, and their manual pages. [ 1M gzipped, 4M uncompressed ] diff --git a/distrib/notes/amiga/hardware b/distrib/notes/amiga/hardware index a51e046dd7d..994227e3a83 100644 --- a/distrib/notes/amiga/hardware +++ b/distrib/notes/amiga/hardware @@ -1,7 +1,7 @@ -OpenBSD/amiga 2.0 runs on any amiga that has a 68020, 68030 or 68040 CPU -with some form of FPU and MMU. The minimal configuration requires -4M of RAM and about 75M of disk space. To install the entire system -requires much more disk space, and to run X or compile the system, +OpenBSD/amiga 2.1 runs on any amiga that has a 68020, 68030, 68040 or +68060 CPU with some form of FPU and MMU. The minimal configuration +requires 4M of RAM and about 75M of disk space. To install the entire +system requires much more disk space, and to run X or compile the system, more RAM is recommended. (4M of RAM will actually allow you to compile, however it won't be speedy. X really isn't usable on a 4M system.) @@ -24,7 +24,7 @@ larger, as your system will be doing much more swapping. Supported devices include: A4000/A1200 IDE controller. - ISA IDE & ATAPI (but with limitations) with a supported ISA bridge. + ISA IDE & ATAPI with a supported ISA bridge. SCSI host adapters: 33c93 based boards: A2091, A3000 and GVP series II. 53c80 based boards: 12 Gauge, IVS and Wordsync/Bytesync. diff --git a/distrib/notes/amiga/install b/distrib/notes/amiga/install index d8de5ecac5a..1ff44d1c69d 100644 --- a/distrib/notes/amiga/install +++ b/distrib/notes/amiga/install @@ -129,11 +129,11 @@ begin again from scratch. to extract. For example, to extract the base distribution, use the command: - Extract base20 + Extract base21 and to extract the games distribution: - Extract game20 + Extract game21 If the distribution sets are in different directories, you will need to cd to each directory in turn, runing @@ -176,11 +176,11 @@ begin again from scratch. wish to extract. For example, to extract the base distribution, use the command: - Extract base20 + Extract base21 and to extract the games distribution: - Extract game20 + Extract game21 After the extraction is complete, go to the location of the next set you want to extract, "Set_tmp_dir" @@ -196,10 +196,10 @@ begin again from scratch. rm set_name.?? For example, if you wish to remove the distribution - files for the game09 set, after the "Extract game09" + files for the game21 set, after the "Extract game21" command has completed, issue the command: - rm game20.?? + rm game21.?? Once you have extracted all sets and are at the "#" prompt again, proceed to the section "Configuring Your System," diff --git a/distrib/notes/amiga/prep b/distrib/notes/amiga/prep index 101ef5bb08a..23fbdc81ec4 100644 --- a/distrib/notes/amiga/prep +++ b/distrib/notes/amiga/prep @@ -90,7 +90,7 @@ Transferring the miniroot filesystem: disk. Once the hard disk has been prepared for OpenBSD, the appropriate - miniroot filesystem (inst-20.fs for a new install or upgr-20.fs + miniroot filesystem (inst-21.fs for a new install or upgr-21.fs for an upgrade) is transferred to the swap partition configured during the hard disk prep (or the existing swap parition in the case of an upgrade). The xstreamtodev utility provided in @@ -103,9 +103,9 @@ Transferring the miniroot filesystem: single-user state processes are not using the swap partition. On AmigaDOS, the command: - xstreamtodev --input=inst-20.fs --rdb-name=<swap partition> + xstreamtodev --input=inst-21.fs --rdb-name=<swap partition> where <swap partition> is the name you gave to the OpenBSD - partition to be used for swapping. Use upgr-20.fs if you + partition to be used for swapping. Use upgr-21.fs if you are going to do an upgrade of an existing OpenBSD system. If xstreamtodev is unable to determine the SCSI driver device name or the unit number of the specified partition, you may @@ -116,7 +116,7 @@ Transferring the miniroot filesystem: in single user state on the current OpenBSD system, or use the "shutdown now" command to shutdown to single-uyser state. Then copy the miniroot using dd: - dd if=upgr-20.fs of=/dev/rsd0b + dd if=upgr-21.fs of=/dev/rsd0b where /dev/rsd0b should be the device path of the swap partition your system is configured to use. Once the file is copied, reboot back to AmigaDOS to boot the upgrade kernel. NOTE: the diff --git a/distrib/notes/amiga/upgrade b/distrib/notes/amiga/upgrade index 85f3eef42d4..17841e376d8 100644 --- a/distrib/notes/amiga/upgrade +++ b/distrib/notes/amiga/upgrade @@ -1,15 +1,13 @@ -The upgrade to OpenBSD 2.0 is a binary upgrade; it would be prohibitive -to make users upgrade by compiling and installing the 2.0 sources, and +The upgrade to OpenBSD 2.1 is a binary upgrade; it would be prohibitive +to make users upgrade by compiling and installing the 2.1 sources, and it would be very difficult to even compile a set of instructions that -allowed them to do so. Because of the various changes to the system, -the largest being the 64-bit file size support and shared libraries, -it is impractical to upgrade by recompiling from the sources and +allowed them to do so. installing. To do the upgrade, you must have the OpenBSD kernel on AmigaDOS and -you must transfer the upgrade filesystem upgr-20.fs onto the swap +you must transfer the upgrade filesystem upgr-21.fs onto the swap partition of the OpenBSD hard disk. You must also have at least the -"base20" binary distribution set available, so that you can upgrade +"base21" binary distribution set available, so that you can upgrade with it, using one of the upgrade methods described above. Finally, you must have sufficient disk space available to install the new binaries. Since the old binaries are being overwritten in place, @@ -29,7 +27,7 @@ To upgrade your system, follow the following instructions: partition used by OpenBSD for swapping, as described in the "Preparing your System for OpenBSD Installation" section above. - Now boot up OpenBSD using the 2.0 kernel using the loadbsd + Now boot up OpenBSD using the 2.1 kernel using the loadbsd command: loadbsd -b bsd @@ -54,21 +52,6 @@ To upgrade your system, follow the following instructions: However, if you hit it at an inopportune moment, your system may be left in an inconsistent (and possibly unusable) state. - You will be asked if you wish to upgrade your file systems to - the new file system format. If you do, reply affirmatively. - If you don't have your file systems upgraded now, you should - probably do it manually after the install process is complete, - by using "fsck -c 2". Read the fsck(8) manual page for more - details. - - The upgrade program will then check your root file system, - and, if you approved, will upgrade it to the new file system - format. It will then mount your root file system on /mnt. - - If your file systems are being upgraded, the upgrade script - will copy the new fsck(8) program to your hard disk and - upgrade your remaining file systems. - The upgrade program will then mount all of your file systems under /mnt. (In other words, your root partition will be mounted on /mnt, your /usr partition on /mnt/usr, etc.) @@ -85,13 +68,13 @@ To upgrade your system, follow the following instructions: After the software has been transferred to the machine (or mounted, in the case of upgrading via NFS), change into the - directory containing the "base20" distribution set. Once you + directory containing the "base21" distribution set. Once you are there, run the "Set_tmp_dir" command, and hit return at the prompt to select the default answer for the temporary directory's path name. (It should be the path name of the directory that you're in.) - Run the command "Extract base20" to upgrade the base + Run the command "Extract base21" to upgrade the base distribution. Repeat the above two steps for all of the sets you wish to @@ -113,32 +96,27 @@ To upgrade your system, follow the following instructions: You will probably also want to copy the release "bsd" kernel image to your root at some point. -Your system has now been upgraded to OpenBSD 2.0. +Your system has now been upgraded to OpenBSD 2.1. -After a new kernel has been copied to your hard disk, your - machine is a complete OpenBSD 2.0 system. However, that + After a new kernel has been copied to your hard disk, your + machine is a complete OpenBSD 2.1 system. However, that doesn't mean that you're finished with the upgrade process. There are several things that you should do, or might have to do, to insure that the system works properly. - First, if you did not upgrade your file systems to the new - file system format during the upgrade process, you may want to - do so now, with "fsck -c 2". If you are unsure about the - process, it's suggested that you read the fsck(8) manual page. - - Second, you will probably want to get the etc20 distribution, + First, you will probably want to get the etc20 distribution, extract it, and compare its contents with those in your /etc/ directory. You will probably want to replace some of your system configuration files, or incorporate some of the changes in the new versions into yours. - Third, you will probably want to update the set of device + Second, you will probably want to update the set of device nodes you have in /dev. If you've changed the contents of /dev by hand, you will need to be careful about this, but if not, you can just cd into /dev, and run the command "sh MAKEDEV all". - Fourth, you must deal with certain changes in the formats of + Third, you must deal with certain changes in the formats of some of the configuration files. The most notable change is that the "options" given to many of the file systems in /etc/fstab or by hand have changed, and some of the file diff --git a/distrib/notes/amiga/whatis b/distrib/notes/amiga/whatis index 6175e2d33f9..d556a34ce7b 100644 --- a/distrib/notes/amiga/whatis +++ b/distrib/notes/amiga/whatis @@ -1,3 +1,3 @@ -This is the first public release of OpenBSD for the Amiga line of +This is the second public release of OpenBSD for the Amiga line of computers. Several graphics, SCSI and network boards are supported. |