Well, it might be that there was a syntax error somewhere. Try help set | more
at the SRM prompt. set auto_action to BOOT or boot, whatever. then type boot dka0 -fl 0 like Richard Fillion suggested. This will also set boot_dev, boot_osflags & Co. On Wed, Jun 04, 2003 at 07:45:07PM -0400, Keith Grider wrote: > I tried the first suggestion and was unsuccessful. > > KeithG > > Ionut Georgescu wrote: > >either type: > > > >set auto_action boot > > > >at the SRM console, > > > >or load the srm_env module: > > > >modprobe srm_env > > > >and set the variable from linux: > > > >echo BOOT > /proc/srm_environment/named_variables/auto_action > > > >Never tried the last one, I hope it works :) > > > >Ionut > > > > > >On Wed, Jun 04, 2003 at 03:32:55PM -0400, Keith Grider wrote: > > > >>That is great, thanks. I am not yet familiar with initrd. > >> > >>How do I set it to immediately boot to this, though. Is there a way, in > >>SRM, to force a direct boot instead of doing it interactively by typing > >>'0' at the aboot prompt? > >> > >>KeithG > >> > >>Jens Kruse wrote: > >> > >>>Hi Keith, > >>> > >>>Keith Grider wrote: > >>> > >>> > >>>>my /etc/aboot.conf is one line: > >>>>0:1/vmlinuz ro root=/dev/sda1 > >>> > >>> > >>>Try this: > >>> > >>>0:1/vmlinuz ro root=/dev/sda1 initrd=initrd.img > >>> > >>>Regards, Jens > >>> > >>> > >>> > >> > >> > >> > >>-- > >>To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] > >>with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact > >>[EMAIL PROTECTED] > >> > > > > > > > > -- > To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] > with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > -- *************** * Ionut Georgescu * http://www.physik.tu-cottbus.de/~george/ * Registered Linux User #244479 * * "In Windows you can do everything Microsoft wants you to do; in Unix you * can do anything the computer is able to do."