I lied about posting. Here is a highly technical question. I have an older Powerbook G3 that I'm working on and for reasons we won't get into here (like I dropped it and broke the hard drive and then we gave away the cdrom drive thinking the whole machine was broken) it is without a cdrom drive. I was wondering the other day if I could netboot the thing off of a tftp-based linux-kernel image. I know it can be done, but Apple's openfirmware is sufficiently different from Sun Microsystem's (Apple's is based on Sun's) that I can't figure out how and the docs on the internet are very few. I can set the boot device with setenv boot-device, but I can't seem to find out what the network device should. If any of you apple owners know, I would appreciate it. On a Sun I would type boot net, but that doesn't work on the Apple forth prompt.
The funny thing is, I bet most Apple users never know that their computer has a bios, and a powerful, forth-based one at that complete with a command prompt. Oh that Intel had been so wise when they created the crap for bioses that we have on pc's today. (Face it: PXE is a hack around such limitations). Michael -- Michael Torrie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ____________________ BYU Unix Users Group http://uug.byu.edu/ ___________________________________________________________________ List Info: http://uug.byu.edu/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/uug-list
