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Date:      Wed, 31 May 95 16:32:30 CDT
From:      laufen@sol.med.ge.com (Derek Laufenberg  x7-4534)
To:        f445510@fsd.com
Cc:        questions@FreeBSD.org
Subject:   Re: freebsd installation
Message-ID:  <9505312132.AA29894@merak.med.ge.com>

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>Hi Derek!
>I read your e-mail about large IDE hard drive.
>I have 1.2 G Maxtor. I tried to install FreeBSD (cd-rom from Walnut creek)
>few months ago but could not succeed. So I retured it. How and Where do I get
>4/12 SNAP? How difficult it is to install?
>Thanks,
>vinit patel
>vpatel@fsd.com

Vinit,

The installation is not bad, but you need the complete bindist 
set on a system somewhere.  The install procedure allows the use of
NFS, UFS, CDROM, or DOS partition.   

The distribution can be gotten from ftp.cdrom.com.  At this point in time
you could grab 2.0.5A release which is better.  I haven't yet.

In a nut shell:

1) Get the bindist, boot.flp  cpio.flop, rawrite code from  cdrom.com.
   Make sure the bindist is is on the dos partition or on a NFS 
   mountable disk somewhere on your network.

2) Make the floppies with the rawrite.exe program.  You will
   make 2 floppies. One for booting, and the other for getting the 
   basics on the disk.      USE NEW/KNOWN GOOD DISKS.
   More problems booting have been caused by bad media. :)

3) Boot the machine with boot floppy.  Select install from menu.

4) FDISK the 1.2 G drive. I assume it will be drive 0 aka /dev/wd0 aka
    DOS C:   I would put 2 partitions.  100M or so for DOS and the
    rest for FreeBSD.  Put the dos one first. Don't use any logical
    block addressing in you BIOS.  I've had problems there.

5) DISKLABEL the disk.  Follow the readme files for sizes for each slice.
   When I'm done editing and asigning my screen looks something like this:

	a     20 M   newfs      /
        b     64 M   swap  
	c                       freebsd size
	d                       whole disk
	e     20 M    newfs     /var
	f     100M    newfs     /home
        g    1000M    newfs     /usr      (or what ever is left)
        h     ???     mount     /dos_c    (imported from dos partition)

This is all from my failing :) memory so some details may be off but you 
will see what I mean.  

6) At this point select proceed.It will format and copy the minimal info to the
   BSD partition on the disk.   Follow the directions on the screen
   to install the cpio disk.  The system will install the minimal set and
   reboot off the harddisk.  Remember to pull the cpio floppy when it
   tells you.

7) Next time when the system comes up it will ask where to find the rest
   of the install set.  Here you need to select the form of media you
   downloaded the bindist set to.  I generally download it to a UFS from
   a previous BSD install.  My guess is you will have it on a DOS file 
   system.  I've never done it that way but I would be surprised if
   it didn't work.  I have installed bindist off a NFS and UFS setup.  Both
   worked like a charm.  The 2.0 CD-ROM didn't go as smoothly. 

I've CC a copy of this back to the questions@freebsd.org group in
case I've missed anything.  I'm still a fairly new user to this 
software.  In general I've been very impressed with it.

Derek Laufenberg
laufen@sol.med.ge.com



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