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Date:      Tue, 2 Apr 2002 13:32:08 +0200
From:      Thomas Pornin <pornin@bolet.org>
To:        Rob B <rbyrnes@ozemail.com.au>
Cc:        freebsd-alpha@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: Source of "processor correctable error"?
Message-ID:  <20020402133207.A6601@gnah.bolet.org>
In-Reply-To: <00d801c1da37$50e313c0$0b64a8c0@becca>; from rbyrnes@ozemail.com.au on Tue, Apr 02, 2002 at 09:12:44PM %2B1000
References:  <a89rrl$2vek$1@kemoauc.mips.inka.de> <3CA8EADE.C11C8DF7@mindspring.com> <20020402002303.GH41357@cicely8.cicely.de> <20020402112528.A6188@gnah.bolet.org> <20020402110420.GI41357@cicely8.cicely.de> <00d801c1da37$50e313c0$0b64a8c0@becca>

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On Tue, Apr 02, 2002 at 09:12:44PM +1000, Rob B wrote:
> When I get my Multia nettbooting and running root-over-nfs, I'll give this a
> whirl!
> 
> Speaking of which, has anyone had a setup like this?

I have never done root-over-nfs, but I netbooted several times two
Multia boxes. It was when 4.0 was actually -CURRENT in early stages.
The floppy drive was dead. At that time, I could *not* netboot neither
FreeBSD, NetBSD nor OpenBSD. The usual FAQs said that the SRM was too
old.

However, I could netboot Linux on the same boxes. This way, I could have
a minimal OS and dump the contents of the boot disk on the internal
hard drive (a raw byte by byte write, no partition table nor disklabel
stuff). Then I could boot on the disk as if I had booted a floppy. The
NetBSD and FreeBSD install programs were smart enough not to believe the
floppy disklabel that was on the hard disk, and detected the right disk
geometry. OpenBSD fumbled, however, and I had to enter that geometry by
hand.

It is quite possible that the netbooting code has been reviewed since.
Or maybe my SRM was indeed too old, and a new version would have set
things aright.


> I'll give that a whirl ... or maybe OpenBSD

Back to when I did my testing, OpenBSD was not a real option, due to
lack of shared libraries. It seems that the newest release has shared
libraries, though.

You might try NetBSD as well. It has the longest history of Alpha
support, among the "free unices".


	--Thomas Pornin

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