diff --git a/release/sysinstall/help/en_US.ISO8859-1/partition.hlp b/release/sysinstall/help/en_US.ISO8859-1/partition.hlp new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..f04e2eacc313 --- /dev/null +++ b/release/sysinstall/help/en_US.ISO8859-1/partition.hlp @@ -0,0 +1,77 @@ +This is the FreeBSD DiskLabel Editor. + +If you're new to this installation, then you should first understand +how FreeBSD 2.0.5's new "slices" paradigm for looking at disk storage +works. It's not very hard to understand. A "fully qualified slice name", +that is the name of the file we open in /dev to talk to the slice, +is optionally broken into 3 parts: + + First you have the disk name. Assume we have two SCSI + drives in our system, which gives us `sd0' and `sd1'. + + Next you have the "Slice" (or "Master Partition") number, + as seen in the Partition Editor. Assume that our sd0 contains + two slices, a FreeBSD slice and a DOS slice. This gives us + sd0s1 and sd0s2. Let's also say that sd1 is completely devoted + to FreeBSD, so we have only one slice there: sd1s1. + + Next, if a slice is a FreeBSD slice, you have a number of + (confusingly named) "partitions" you can put inside of it. + These FreeBSD partitions are where various filesystems or swap + areas live, and using our hypothetical two-SCSI-disk machine + again, we might have something like the following layout on sd0: + + Name Mountpoint + ---- ---------- + sd0s1a / + sd0s1b + sd0s1e /usr + + Because of historical convention, there is also a short-cut, + or "compatibility slice", that is maintained for easy access + to the first FreeBSD slice on a disk for those programs which + still don't know how to deal with the new slice scheme. + The compatibility slice names for our filesystem above would + look like: + + Name Mountpoint + ---- ---------- + sd0a / + sd0b + sd0e /usr + + FreeBSD automatically maps the compatibility slice to the first + FreeBSD slice it finds (in this case, sd0s1). You may have multiple + FreeBSD slices on a drive, but only the first one may be the + compatibility slice! + + The compatibility slice will eventually be phased out, but + it is still important right now for several reasons: + + 1. Some programs, as mentioned before, still don't work + with the slice paradigm and need time to catch up. + + 2. The FreeBSD boot blocks are unable to look for + a root file system in anything but a compatibility + slice right now. This means that our root will always + show up on "sd0a" in the above scenario, even though + it really lives over on sd0s1a and would otherwise be + referred to by its full slice name. + +Once you understand all this, then the label editor becomes fairly +simple. You're either carving up the FreeBSD slices displayed at the +top of the screen into smaller pieces (displayed in the middle of the +screen) and then putting FreeBSD file systems on them, Or you're just +mounting existing partitions/slices into your filesystem hierarchy; +this editor lets you do both. Since a DOS partition is also just +another slice as far as FreeBSD is concerned, you can mount one into +in your filesystem hierarchy just as easily with this editor. For +FreeBSD partitions you can also toggle the "newfs" state so that +the partitions are either (re)created from scratch or simply checked +and mounted (the contents are preserved). + +When you're done, type `Q' to exit. + +No actual changes will be made to the disk until you (C)ommit from the +Install menu! You're working with what is essentially a copy of +the disk label(s), both here and in the Master Partition Editor. diff --git a/release/sysinstall/help/en_US.ISO8859-1/slice.hlp b/release/sysinstall/help/en_US.ISO8859-1/slice.hlp new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..0a7234a0edd3 --- /dev/null +++ b/release/sysinstall/help/en_US.ISO8859-1/slice.hlp @@ -0,0 +1,28 @@ +This is the Main Partition (or ``Slice'') Editor. + +Possible commands are printed at the bottom, the Master Boot Record +contents at the top. You can move up and down with the arrow keys +and can (C)reate a new partition whenever the "bar" is over a partition +who's type is set to "unused". + +The flags field has the following legend: + + '=' -- Partition is properly aligned. + '>' -- The partition doesn't end before cylinder 1024 + 'R' -- Has been marked as containing the root (/) filesystem + 'B' -- Partition employs BAD144 bad-spot handling + 'C' -- This is the FreeBSD 2.0-compatibility partition (default) + 'A' -- This partition is marked active. + +If you select a partition for Bad144 handling, it will be scanned +for bad blocks before any new filesystems are made on it. + +If no partition is marked Active, you will need to either install +a Boot Manager (the option for which will be presented later in the +installation) or set one Active before leaving this screen. + +To leave this screen, type `Q'. + +No actual changes will be made to the disk until you (C)ommit from the +Install menu! You're working with what is essentially a copy of +the disk label(s), both here and in the Label Editor. diff --git a/release/sysinstall/help/en_US.ISO_8859-1/partition.hlp b/release/sysinstall/help/en_US.ISO_8859-1/partition.hlp new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..f04e2eacc313 --- /dev/null +++ b/release/sysinstall/help/en_US.ISO_8859-1/partition.hlp @@ -0,0 +1,77 @@ +This is the FreeBSD DiskLabel Editor. + +If you're new to this installation, then you should first understand +how FreeBSD 2.0.5's new "slices" paradigm for looking at disk storage +works. It's not very hard to understand. A "fully qualified slice name", +that is the name of the file we open in /dev to talk to the slice, +is optionally broken into 3 parts: + + First you have the disk name. Assume we have two SCSI + drives in our system, which gives us `sd0' and `sd1'. + + Next you have the "Slice" (or "Master Partition") number, + as seen in the Partition Editor. Assume that our sd0 contains + two slices, a FreeBSD slice and a DOS slice. This gives us + sd0s1 and sd0s2. Let's also say that sd1 is completely devoted + to FreeBSD, so we have only one slice there: sd1s1. + + Next, if a slice is a FreeBSD slice, you have a number of + (confusingly named) "partitions" you can put inside of it. + These FreeBSD partitions are where various filesystems or swap + areas live, and using our hypothetical two-SCSI-disk machine + again, we might have something like the following layout on sd0: + + Name Mountpoint + ---- ---------- + sd0s1a / + sd0s1b + sd0s1e /usr + + Because of historical convention, there is also a short-cut, + or "compatibility slice", that is maintained for easy access + to the first FreeBSD slice on a disk for those programs which + still don't know how to deal with the new slice scheme. + The compatibility slice names for our filesystem above would + look like: + + Name Mountpoint + ---- ---------- + sd0a / + sd0b + sd0e /usr + + FreeBSD automatically maps the compatibility slice to the first + FreeBSD slice it finds (in this case, sd0s1). You may have multiple + FreeBSD slices on a drive, but only the first one may be the + compatibility slice! + + The compatibility slice will eventually be phased out, but + it is still important right now for several reasons: + + 1. Some programs, as mentioned before, still don't work + with the slice paradigm and need time to catch up. + + 2. The FreeBSD boot blocks are unable to look for + a root file system in anything but a compatibility + slice right now. This means that our root will always + show up on "sd0a" in the above scenario, even though + it really lives over on sd0s1a and would otherwise be + referred to by its full slice name. + +Once you understand all this, then the label editor becomes fairly +simple. You're either carving up the FreeBSD slices displayed at the +top of the screen into smaller pieces (displayed in the middle of the +screen) and then putting FreeBSD file systems on them, Or you're just +mounting existing partitions/slices into your filesystem hierarchy; +this editor lets you do both. Since a DOS partition is also just +another slice as far as FreeBSD is concerned, you can mount one into +in your filesystem hierarchy just as easily with this editor. For +FreeBSD partitions you can also toggle the "newfs" state so that +the partitions are either (re)created from scratch or simply checked +and mounted (the contents are preserved). + +When you're done, type `Q' to exit. + +No actual changes will be made to the disk until you (C)ommit from the +Install menu! You're working with what is essentially a copy of +the disk label(s), both here and in the Master Partition Editor. diff --git a/release/sysinstall/help/en_US.ISO_8859-1/slice.hlp b/release/sysinstall/help/en_US.ISO_8859-1/slice.hlp new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..0a7234a0edd3 --- /dev/null +++ b/release/sysinstall/help/en_US.ISO_8859-1/slice.hlp @@ -0,0 +1,28 @@ +This is the Main Partition (or ``Slice'') Editor. + +Possible commands are printed at the bottom, the Master Boot Record +contents at the top. You can move up and down with the arrow keys +and can (C)reate a new partition whenever the "bar" is over a partition +who's type is set to "unused". + +The flags field has the following legend: + + '=' -- Partition is properly aligned. + '>' -- The partition doesn't end before cylinder 1024 + 'R' -- Has been marked as containing the root (/) filesystem + 'B' -- Partition employs BAD144 bad-spot handling + 'C' -- This is the FreeBSD 2.0-compatibility partition (default) + 'A' -- This partition is marked active. + +If you select a partition for Bad144 handling, it will be scanned +for bad blocks before any new filesystems are made on it. + +If no partition is marked Active, you will need to either install +a Boot Manager (the option for which will be presented later in the +installation) or set one Active before leaving this screen. + +To leave this screen, type `Q'. + +No actual changes will be made to the disk until you (C)ommit from the +Install menu! You're working with what is essentially a copy of +the disk label(s), both here and in the Label Editor.