Skip site navigation (1)Skip section navigation (2)
Date:      Thu, 17 Nov 2016 20:10:01 -0500
From:      Baho Utot <baho-utot@columbus.rr.com>
To:        Mailinglists FreeBSD <freebsd-questions@freebsd.org>
Subject:   Re: Ok How do I boot this monster?
Message-ID:  <222fccf6-f049-601c-02ba-d4d9a92ef176@columbus.rr.com>
In-Reply-To: <alpine.BSF.2.20.1611171651020.67199@wonkity.com>
References:  <07218d20-34a5-171b-f6a8-de3c271733cc@columbus.rr.com> <alpine.BSF.2.20.1611171215010.67199@wonkity.com> <575baf45-b23d-163f-79b0-213a6ba51c91@columbus.rr.com> <alpine.BSF.2.20.1611171651020.67199@wonkity.com>

next in thread | previous in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help


On 11/17/16 19:04, Warren Block wrote:
> On Thu, 17 Nov 2016, Baho Utot wrote:
>
>>
>>
>> On 11/17/16 14:19, Warren Block wrote:
>>> On Thu, 17 Nov 2016, Baho Utot wrote:
>>>
>>>> Ok I have installed 11.0 latest memstick image.
>>>>
>>>> I patched/hacked bsdinstall ( /usr/libexec/bsdinstall/zfsboot) to 
>>>> install my zfs raidz2 using 800GB partitions.  And it even worked!
>>>>
>>>> Now I need to boot this monster as well as my current 10.0 version 
>>>> until I can build my desktop upon the raidz, then I will 
>>>> decommission the 10.0 version when the 11.0 version is up to snuff.
>>>>
>>>> I have boot0 install to ada0 which boots win7 and 10.0 freebsd.
>>>>
>>>> Can this also boot the raidz?
>>>
>>> No, boot0 is MBR-only.  The easiest way I see to do this is to 
>>> install gptzfsboot bootcode to the ZFS drives and choose one of them 
>>> from the BIOS boot menu.  Grub can multi-boot GPT also, although it 
>>> needs a small partition of its own.
>>
>> I think the bsdinstall puts that code onto the zfs drives already or 
>> am I miss informed?
>>
>> Would creating the raidz on MBR partitions be an answer?
>
> That might actually work.  Too much work, and too much a step 
> backwards for me.
>
>> Is there a HowTo that shows me how to setup grub if so I have some 
>> space left on the drives so I can give grub what it needs.
>
> If you have any reasonably standard machine from the last decade or 
> so, there is a keypress on boot to choose a boot device.  This might 
> have been disabled, but then could be re-enabled.  For quality 
> home-builder motherboards like Gigabyte, it's F12.  For quality 
> prebuilt systems like Dell, it's usually F12.
>
> For HP... it could be pretty much anything.  F10, F9, Esc. Anything, 
> really, except F12.
Does anyone know if ports/sysutils/grub2 works?  I found some old posts 
on the net that is saying that it has some problems building and 
installing under FreeBSD.

It might be a solution for me as I really don't want to do the hit the 
keyboard at boot thing

Thanks




Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?222fccf6-f049-601c-02ba-d4d9a92ef176>