1 DRAGONFLY CDROM README FILE
3 This CDROM boots DragonFly BSD. Basically what you get is a full base
4 system on CD with certain critical directories, such as /tmp, remounted
5 read-write using MFS. Your existing hard drive is not affected by
8 NOTE!!! DRAGONFLY IS UNDERGOING DEVELOPMENT AND IS CONSIDERED
9 EXPERIMENTAL! BSD RELATED EXPERIENCE IS RECOMMENDED WHEN USING
12 If you just want to play with DragonFly and not mess with your hard disk,
13 this CDROM boots into a fully operational console-based system, though
14 without swap it should be noted that you are limited by available memory.
15 It is a good idea to test your hardware for compatibility from a CD boot
16 before spending time installing the dist on your hard disk.
19 AUTOMATIC INSTALLATION
21 There are currently two installation tools available - the installer, and
24 The installer can be run with a text-based (curses) user interface
25 from the serial console or a VTY, and provides a straightforward method
26 for installing DragonFly on your HD. To start it, just login with the
29 The installer can also be run with a web-based (CGI) user interface.
30 To set this up manually is a bit of work, but much of it can be automated
31 by writing a couple of lines into a configuration file on a floppy disk
32 or USB pendrive, and inserting or attaching that to the computer before
33 booting the CDROM. See the file /etc/defaults/pfi.conf for more info.
35 rconfig is a client/server protocol which requires a server (typically on
36 the same network). An example server setup can be found in
37 /usr/share/examples/rconfig. If you have multiple machines you can setup
38 an installation script and run rconfig on a server and then install the
39 clients from CD boot with network connectivity (e.g. dhclient <blah>)
40 and then, typically, 'rconfig -a'.
42 You can also just boot from the CD, login as 'root' to get a shell
43 prompt, copy the sample script to /tmp, edit, and run it directly
44 (assuming that blowing away your existing disk is ok).
49 The second stage boot (boot2) and third stage boot (loader) default
50 to dual serial & video console I/O. The system will also throw a login
51 prompt up on ttyd0 by default. You can direct the boot output
52 to just the serial port by creating the file /boot.config with the
53 line '-h', or to just the screen using '-V'. If you wish to leave
54 boot2 in dual I/O mode but want the third stage to use just one or the
55 other, you can set the 'console' environment variable in /boot/loader.conf
56 to either 'console=vidconsole' or 'console=comconsole'.
58 The dual serial port operation might have to be disabled if you use
59 the serial port for things like UPSs. Also note that by default
60 the CD will run a login prompt on the serial port after booting is
61 complete. This can be disabled by editing the 'ttyd0' line in /etc/ttys
62 after installation is complete.
64 Note that the kernel itself currently only supports one console or the
65 other. If both are enabled, the kernel will use the video console or
66 the last one for which input was received.
71 Manual installation of DragonFly onto an HD involves the following sequence
72 of commands. You must be familiar with BSD style UNIX systems to do
73 installations manually. The primary IDE hard drive is typically 'ad0'
74 and DragonFly is typically installed onto the first free slice
75 (ad0s1 if disk is empty, ad0s2 if your first slice contains
76 another OS, etc). Be careful to substitute the correct partition name
79 # OPTIONAL STEP: If your disk is already partitioned and you
80 # have a spare primary partition on which you want to install
81 # Dragonfly, skip this step. However, sometimes old boot
82 # blocks or cruft in the boot area can interfere with the
83 # initialization process. A cure is to zero out the start of
84 # the disk before running fdisk.
86 # WARNING: This COMPLETELY WIPES and repartitions your hard drive.
88 dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/ad0 bs=32k count=16
92 # If you didn't zero the disk as above, but have a spare slice
93 # whose partition type you want to change to UFS, use fdisk(8).
95 # This installs boot blocks onto the HD and verifies their
96 # installation. See note just above the 'reboot' below for
97 # things to try if it does not boot from your HD. If you
98 # already have a multi-OS bootloader installed you can skip
104 # This creates an initial label on the chosen slice of the HD. If
105 # you have problems booting you could try wiping the first 32 blocks
106 # of the slice with dd and then reinstalling the label. Replace
107 # 'ad0s1' with the chosen slice.
109 # dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/ad0s1 bs=32k count=16
110 disklabel -B -r -w ad0s1 auto
112 # Edit the label. Create various standard partitions. The typical
115 # ad0s1a 256m This will be your /
116 # ad0s1b 1024m This will be your swap
117 # ad0s1c (leave alone)
118 # ad0s1d 256m This will be your /var
119 # ad0s1e 256m This will be your /tmp
120 # ad0s1f 8192m This will be your /usr (min 4096m)
121 # ad0s1g * All remaining space to your /home
123 # An example disklabel can be found in /etc/disklabel.ad0s1.
127 # Newfs (format) the various filesystems. Softupdates is not
128 # normally enabled on the root filesystem because large kernel or
129 # world installs/upgrades can run it out of space due to softupdate's
130 # delayed bitmap freeing code.
138 # Mount the filesystems.
140 mount /dev/ad0s1a /mnt
145 mount /dev/ad0s1d /mnt/var
146 mount /dev/ad0s1e /mnt/tmp
147 mount /dev/ad0s1f /mnt/usr
148 mount /dev/ad0s1g /mnt/home
150 # Copy the CDRom onto the target. cpdup won't cross mount boundaries
151 # on the source (e.g. the MFS remounts) so it takes a few commands.
153 # Note that /etc contains the config files used for booting from the
154 # CDROM itself, and /etc.hdd contains those for booting off a
155 # hard disk. So it's the latter that you want to copy to /mnt/etc.
159 cpdup /etc.hdd /mnt/etc
162 # Cleanup. Also, with /tmp a partition it is usually reasonable
163 # to make /var/tmp a softlink to /tmp.
167 ln -s /tmp /mnt/var/tmp
169 # Edit /mnt/etc/fstab to reflect the new mounts. An example fstab
170 # file based on the above parameters exists as /mnt/etc/fstab.example
171 # which you can rename to /mnt/etc/fstab.
173 mv /mnt/etc/fstab.example /mnt/etc/fstab
176 # Save out your disklabel just in case. It's a good idea to save
177 # it to /etc so you can get at it from your backups. You do intend
178 # to backup your system, yah? :-) (This isn't critical but it's a
181 disklabel ad0s1 > /mnt/etc/disklabel.ad0s1
184 MISC CLEANUPS BEFORE REBOOTING
186 Once you've duplicated the CD onto your HD you have to make some edits
187 so the system boots properly from your HD. Primarily you must remove
188 or edit /mnt/boot/loader.conf, which exists on the CD to tell the kernel
189 to mount the CD's root partition.
191 # Remove or edit /mnt/boot/loader.conf so the kernel does not try
192 # to obtain the root filesystem from the CD, and remove the other
193 # cruft that was sitting on the CD that you don't need on the HD.
195 rm /mnt/boot/loader.conf
196 rm /mnt/README* /mnt/autorun* /mnt/index.html /mnt/dflybsd.ico
200 At this point it should be possible to reboot. The CD may be locked
201 since it is currently mounted. To remove the CD, type 'halt' instead
202 of 'reboot', wait for the machine to halt, then the CD door should be
203 unlocked. Remove the CD and hit any key to reboot.
205 Be careful of the CD drawer closing on you if you try to remove the CD
206 while the machine is undergoing a reboot or reset.
208 WARNING: Do not just hit reset; the kernel may not have written out
209 all the pending data to your HD. Either unmount the HD partitions
210 or type halt or reboot.
213 (let the machine halt)
214 (remove CD when convenient, be careful of the CD drawer closing on you)
215 (hit any key to reboot)
220 You will notice in the boot menu that you can choose to boot with or
221 without ACPI. ACPI is an infrastructure designed to allow an operating
222 system to configure hardware devices associated with the system.
223 Unfortunately, as usual, PC BIOS makers have royally screwed up the
224 standard and ACPI is as likely to hurt as it is to help. Worse, some
225 PCs cannot be booted without it, so there is no good 'default' choice.
227 The system will use ACPI by default. You can disable it in the default
228 boot by adding the line 'hint.acpi.0.disabled=1' in /boot/loader.conf.
229 If you boot without hitting any menu options the system will boot without
230 ACPI. To boot without ACPI no matter what, place 'unset acpi_load' in
231 our /boot/loader.conf instead. This is not recommended.
234 IF YOU HAVE PROBLEMS BOOTING FROM HD
236 There are a couple of things to try. Try booting from the CD again and
237 use boot0cfg to turn off packet mode (boot0cfg -o nopacket ad0). If you
238 can select CHS or LBA mode in your BIOS, try changing the mode to LBA.
239 Also try booting with and without ACPI (option 1 or 2 in the boot menu).
241 Once you have a working HD based system you can clean up /etc/rc.conf
242 to enable things like cron, sendmail, setup your networking, and so
243 forth. If 'ifconfig' does not show your networking device you could
244 try to kldload it from /modules. With a recognized network device
245 you can ifconfig its IP address or, if you have a DHCP server on your
246 network, use 'dhclient <interfacename>' to obtain an IP address from
250 USING GIT TO OBTAIN A SOURCE TREE AND DOING BUILDWORLDS
252 Instructions on how to obtain and maintain DragonFly source code using
253 git are in the development(7) manual page.
255 To upgrade a DragonFly system from sources you run the following
260 make buildkernel KERNCONF=<KERNELNAME>
261 make installkernel KERNCONF=<KERNELNAME>
264 You will also want to run the 'upgrade' target to upgrade your /etc
265 and the rest of your system. The upgrade target is aware of stale
266 files created by older DragonFly installations and should delete them
271 See the build(7) manual page for further information.
273 Once you've done a full build of the world and kernel you can do
274 incremental upgrades of either by using the 'quickworld' and
275 'quickkernel' targets instead of 'buildworld' and 'buildkernel'. If
276 you have any problems with the quick targets, try updating your repo
277 first, and then a full buildworld and buildkernel as shown above, before
281 OBTAINING A PKGSRC TREE TO BUILD/INSTALL PACKAGES
283 In order to obtain a reasonably current snapshot of the pkgsrc tree, use
284 the tarball from NetBSD:
286 fetch -o /tmp/pkgsrc.tar.gz ftp://ftp.NetBSD.org/pub/NetBSD/packages/pkgsrc.tar.gz
287 cd /usr; tar -xzf /tmp/pkgsrc.tar.gz; chown -R root:wheel pkgsrc
289 This tree can then be kept up to date with cvs update:
291 cd /usr/pkgsrc; cvs up
294 EMERGENCY RECOVERY FROM THE CD
296 Lets say you blew up your kernel or something else in / and you need to
297 boot the CD to fix it. Remember that you have a fully operational
298 system when booting the CD, but that you have to fsck and mount your
299 hard drive (typically onto /mnt) to get at the contents of your HD.
301 Your HD is typically an IDE hard drive, so the device is typically
302 /dev/ad0. DragonFly is typically on the first slice, which is
303 /dev/ad0s1, and the root partition is always in partition 'a',
304 which is /dev/ad0s1a.
306 # fsck root before trying to mount it.
308 # mount root read-write onto /mnt
309 mount /dev/ad0s1a /mnt
310 # copy files from the CD as appropriate to make it possible to boot
311 # from your HD again. Note that /mnt/kernel may be flags-protected.
312 chflags noschg /mnt/kernel
313 cp /kernel /mnt/kernel
314 cp /modules/* /mnt/modules/
316 If you want to mount other partitions from your HD but have forgotten
317 what they are, simply cat /mnt/etc/fstab after mounting the root