freebsd-src/release
1998-10-07 22:58:22 +00:00
..
alpha Try #2 with minigzip. Now that John Hay has made it behave more properly 1998-09-29 04:58:17 +00:00
amd64 Try #2 with minigzip. Now that John Hay has made it behave more properly 1998-09-29 04:58:17 +00:00
floppies
i386 Try #2 with minigzip. Now that John Hay has made it behave more properly 1998-09-29 04:58:17 +00:00
pc98 Try #2 with minigzip. Now that John Hay has made it behave more properly 1998-09-29 04:58:17 +00:00
picobsd Small update: you need to unpack the stand-alone picobsd tarball into 1998-09-29 12:23:58 +00:00
scripts Whoops, correct brain-o. 1998-10-03 14:16:06 +00:00
sysinstall Fix typos. 1998-10-07 22:15:24 +00:00
ABOUT.TXT
boot_crunch.conf Try #2 with minigzip. Now that John Hay has made it behave more properly 1998-09-29 04:58:17 +00:00
doFS.sh Whoops, correct brain-o. 1998-10-03 14:16:06 +00:00
dumpnlist.c Add isa_devtab_cam 1998-10-07 19:40:51 +00:00
ERRATA.TXT
fixit_crunch.conf
fixit.profile
fixit.services
info.sh
LAYOUT.TXT
Makefile Unreverse a conditional and gzip the mfs image by default. 1998-10-07 22:58:22 +00:00
README.TXT
tar.sh
write_mfs_in_kernel.c

For a normal CDROM or network installation, all you need to copy onto an
actual floppy from this directory is the boot.flp image (for 1.44MB floppies).

NOTE: These images are NOT DOS files!  You cannot simply copy them to
a DOS floppy as regular files, you need to *image* copy them to the
floppy with fdimage.exe under DOS or `dd' under UNIX.

For example:

To create the boot floppy image from DOS, you'd do something like
this:

C> fdimage boot.flp a:

Assuming that you'd copied fdimage.exe and boot.flp into a directory
somewhere.  If you were doing this from the base of a CD distribution,
then the *exact* command would be:

E> tools\fdimage floppies\boot.flp a:


If you're creating the boot floppy from a UNIX machine, you may find
that:

        dd if=floppies/boot.flp of=/dev/rfd0

or

        dd if=floppies/boot.flp of=/dev/floppy

work well, depending on your hardware and operating system environment
(different versions of UNIX have totally different names for the
floppy drive - neat, huh? :-).