dnl $OpenBSD: install,v 1.3 2021/04/17 21:21:41 sthen Exp $ OpenBSDInstallPrelude OpenBSDInstallPart2 OpenBSDInstallPart3(,"sd0") OpenBSDInstallPart4 OpenBSDInstallMBRPart1 dnl OpenBSDInstallMBRPart2(indeed) The fdisk(8) utility will be invoked to let you edit your MBR partitioning. The current MBR partitions defined will be displayed and you will be allowed to modify them, and add new partitions. The setup will need two partitions, one 'OpenBSD' for the OpenBSD/MACHINE installation, and one 'MSDOS' for the U-Boot scripts/bootloader. If you use the whole disk option, the install script will create a small 'MSDOS' partition and use the rest of the disk for the OpenBSD installation. After your OpenBSD MBR partition has been set up, the real partition setup can follow. OpenBSDInstallPart5 OpenBSDInstallPart6({:-CD-ROM, -:}) OpenBSDURLInstall OpenBSDCDROMInstall OpenBSDDISKInstall(,,{:-, Linux (ext2) or MS-DOS-:}) OpenBSDCommonInstall OpenBSDInstallWrapup OpenBSDCongratulations As you may have seen during installation, on some systems OpenBSD/MACHINE will configure the system console (displaying kernel messages, panics, and so on) to use the serial interface even though it has video hardware. To use video output on the framebuffer instead, you may add "set tty fb0" to /etc/boot.conf and set the entry in /etc/ttys named "console" to off (otherwise you may experience a conflict with ttyC0 resulting in erratic keyboard input). In these cases the installer question about running X11 is not displayed; to start an X11 display manager at boot, use "rcctl enable xenodm". OpenBSDUnattendedInstallation