dnl $OpenBSD: install,v 1.29 2004/12/03 20:42:05 miod Exp $ OpenBSDInstallShortPrelude OpenBSDInstallPart2 Double-click on the BSD/Mac68k Booter icon on the desktop to start the application. Go to the "Booting..." entry in the "Options" menu, and make it point to the bsd.rd kernel on your Mac OS filesystem. Then boot the kernel. OpenBSDBootMsgs You will next be asked for your terminal type. You should choose the terminal type from amongst those listed. (If your terminal type is xterm, just use vt100). OpenBSDInstallPart3 dnl XXX describe pdisk too OpenBSDInstallPart4 dnl XXX same here. OpenBSDInstallPart5(sd0) OpenBSDInstallNet({:­CD-ROM, NFS, -:}) OpenBSDFTPInstall OpenBSDHTTPInstall OpenBSDTAPEInstall OpenBSDCDROMInstall OpenBSDNFSInstall dnl Not supported dnl OpenBSDDISKInstall(,{:-only -:}) OpenBSDCommonFS(NFS) OpenBSDCommonURL Once the installation is complete, reboot into Mac OS, and start the BSD/Mac68k Booter again. This time, point to the OpenBSD kernel location on its own partition. You will have to change the kernel name to "bsd" or "bsdsbc", depending which one you have installed. Be sure to check that the SCSI ID is correct as well. If you wish to save your preferences, choose the "Save Preferences" option in the "File" menu, then quit the application and restart. Due to a long-standing bug, the preferences will not be saved unless you quit. Note that by setting the BSD/Mac68k Booter to boot automatically after starting, and by placing an alias to the booter in the "Startup Items" folder, one can make the Mac68k autoload OpenBSD upon startup. Before attempting to boot a kernel on machines based on the Apple's IOP technology (i.e. Quadra 900, 950), make sure that the serial switch option in the Control Panel is set to "off". This allows OpenBSD to use the serial lines on these machines. OpenBSDCongratulations