I'm trying to get the dell bmc +sol serial thing working, kin dof
getting there, but noticed this inconsistency in the handbook:
Is it boot.conf or boot.config?
Create boot.config in the root directory of the a partition on the boot
drive.
http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books
-Original Message-
From: owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org [mailto:owner-freebsd-
questi...@freebsd.org] On Behalf Of Paul Macdonald
Sent: Tuesday, February 01, 2011 7:24 AM
To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject: serial config handbook: /boot.conf or /boot.config
I'm
in the handbook:
Is it boot.conf or boot.config?
Create boot.config in the root directory of the a partition on the boot
drive.
http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/serialconsole-setup.html#SERIALCONSOLE-HOWTO
7.2 Create the /boot.conf file
http://www.freebsd.org/doc
opinion of Adara Networks.
-Original Message-
From: Dan Nelson [mailto:dnel...@allantgroup.com]
Sent: Tuesday, February 01, 2011 11:52 AM
To: Patrick Mahan
Cc: Paul Macdonald; freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject: Re: serial config handbook: /boot.conf or /boot.config
In the last
On Tue, 1 Feb 2011, Patrick Mahan wrote:
It's at the root -
# echo /boot.conf
-P
Line 78 of sys/boot/i386/boot2/boot2.c says:
#define PATH_CONFIG /boot.config
Also, there's boot.config(5). If boot.conf also works, maybe it's only
looking for a match on the first 8 or 9 characters
On Tue, 1 Feb 2011, Warren Block wrote:
On Tue, 1 Feb 2011, Patrick Mahan wrote:
It's at the root -
# echo /boot.conf
-P
Line 78 of sys/boot/i386/boot2/boot2.c says:
#define PATH_CONFIG /boot.config
Also, there's boot.config(5). If boot.conf also works, maybe it's only
looking
usb stick.
Here is the problem, the bios have no option to boot from USB device. So
thinking let the bios point to first drive to start the boot process and
have a /boot.config file to redirect to booting from the USB stick. I am
assuming the '0' zero will mean the first USB device
to continue from usb stick.
Here is the problem, the bios have no option to boot from USB device. So
thinking let the bios point to first drive to start the boot process and
have a /boot.config file to redirect to booting from the USB stick. I am
assuming the '0' zero will mean the first USB device
to start the boot process
and have a /boot.config file to redirect to booting from the USB stick.
I am assuming the '0' zero will mean the first USB device.
Is there any command i can use to verify the single USB stick is the 0
device?
Is this concept valid
. So
thinking let the bios point to first drive to start the boot process and
have a /boot.config file to redirect to booting from the USB stick. I am
assuming the '0' zero will mean the first USB device.
Is there any command i can use to verify the single USB stick is the 0
device?
If you
from USB device. So
thinking let the bios point to first drive to start the boot process and
have a /boot.config file to redirect to booting from the USB stick. I am
assuming the '0' zero will mean the first USB device.
Is there any command i can use to verify the single USB stick is the 0
I've used the syntax
1:ad(1,a)/boot/loader
in boot.config to specify the boot device. This doesn't work with GPT
partitions. What's the correct syntax in boot.config for GPT partitions?
I looked at the source code to boot.c and there doesn't seem to be anything
specifically related to GPT
I've used the syntax
1:ad(1,a)/boot/loader
in boot.config to specify the boot device. This doesn't work with GPT
partitions. What's the correct syntax in boot.config for GPT partitions?
___
freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list
http
option into /boot.config, so I make a /boot.config file with the number 2 in it
(for the second boot option which has ACPI enabled) and reboot.
Now during boot it stops in (apparently) boot2 with:
Free BSD/i386 boot
Default: 0:ad(0,a)2
boot:
If I type ? to see what commands may be allowed I get
J oberweith schrieb:
[...]
Now during boot it stops in (apparently) boot2 with:
Free BSD/i386 boot
Default: 0:ad(0,a)2
boot:
[...]
Any ideas on how to use the boot2 system to find/edit/remove the /boot.config
file?
You can't.
Or maybe to just tell the boot2 process to ignore
I wonder if someone can help me.
I want to run my 5.4-RELEASE system with a serial
console and muted cons. My /boot.config is:
-h -m
The system loads the kernel but during startup the PC
resets. No messages, just a reset.
If I use -h by itself it is fine.
If I use -m by itself it similarly
Hi,
I was doing some work on my gateway and decided to tighten up the
security a bit...
In essence, I had -h in /boot.config, but I commented it out (because
I thought that somehow comments would be understood). So, now I have
#-h in /boot.config, which by the way I set the immutable flag
On Sun, Feb 01, 2004 at 01:06:04PM +0200, Mike Jackson wrote:
I was doing some work on my gateway and decided to tighten up the
security a bit...
In essence, I had -h in /boot.config, but I commented it out (because
I thought that somehow comments would be understood). So, now I have
#-h
Hi,
if you have a bootebel CD-Rom installed you can get a live CD from
http://www.freesbie.org/ and boot with it. then you can mount your
root-FS and edit the boot.config file.
Sebastian
On Sun, 1 Feb 2004 13:06:04 +0200
Mike Jackson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
I was doing some work
ext Sebastian Kutsch ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
Hi,
if you have a bootebel CD-Rom installed you can get a live CD from
http://www.freesbie.org/ and boot with it. then you can mount your
root-FS and edit the boot.config file.
Hey, I looked at that page and that sounds cool. Sort of like
the boot.config file.
Hey, I looked at that page and that sounds cool. Sort of like the
Knoppix linux project. Anyhow, the download site for the iso is not
visible in DNS, at least from my perspective:
$ host www.willystudios.com
Host www.willystudios.com not found: 3(NXDOMAIN)
I got
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