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Date:      Fri, 26 Jun 1998 11:37:25 -0700 (PDT)
From:      Brian Tiemann <btman@ugcs.caltech.edu>
To:        freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   A couple of intermediate-bie questions
Message-ID:  <Pine.BSF.3.96.980626112336.26539R-100000@lionking.org>

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	Well, I'd say I'm skiing the blue-square slopes of FreeBSD these
days, rather than the green-circles, but I've got a couple of things I'd
like to ask rather than just blindly throwing myself into it. (I know, I'm
a wimp. :)

	Question one: I've compiled my kernel with MAXMEM=130048 to
account for the fact that when I put the new server online, it'll have
128MB of physical RAM. However, the machine is a replacement for an older
one, and the RAM is in the old one (I'm borrowing 64MB at the moment to
set it up.) Will the kernel-configged ~128MB RAM limit cause a problem if
I boot it on a machine with only 64MB? The server is actually doing stuff
right now, so I'm not willing to reboot and just find out, unless I really
need to.

	Question two: The new machine is 2.2.6, and I'm used to 2.2.2. 
When I first booted 2.2.6, I was surprised to be given a "Boot: BSD (F1)" 
prompt (or something similar). I hit F1 and it booted, somewhat
differently-looking from how I expected, but without trouble. My old
machine would give a "boot:"  prompt and then boot the default kernel
(with the spinning hyphen-bar) in just a few seconds. I guess this might
be a result of my having installed the bootloader differently, or
something, but whatever. So my question is this: Will the default kernel
boot on its own if I don't hit F-anything? I didn't wait long enough last
time to find out, and the server won't have a console connected when it's
live, so it's important to me to know if rebooting requires console
interaction. :) 

	Thanks!

Brian




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