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Date:      Thu, 8 Oct 1998 02:45:16 -0700
From:      "David O'Brien" <obrien@NUXI.com>
To:        Satoshi Asami <asami@FreeBSD.ORG>
Cc:        current@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: CDROM as system disk
Message-ID:  <19981008024516.A28636@nuxi.com>
In-Reply-To: <199810072338.QAA11608@silvia.hip.berkeley.edu>; from Satoshi Asami on Wed, Oct 07, 1998 at 04:38:39PM -0700
References:  <199810071347.GAA03046@dingo.cdrom.com> <199810072338.QAA11608@silvia.hip.berkeley.edu>

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>  * You want to discover that CDROM drives have a similar MTBF under 
>  * constant use?  They'd slower, have lower data density, and if anything, 
>  * will fail more rapidly.
> 
> Eek.

Why not cut your own FreeBSD install CD?  This shouldn't be too hard to
do since sysinstall is scriptable.

When you get a new machine/internal disk replaced, pop in this CD and
boot.  It would partition the entire disk for FreeBSD, use one of the
"standard" partitioning schemes, install your favorite bits.  Then eject
the cdrom using ``cdcontrol eject''.  When you see the CDROM tray open,
remove CD and reboot.

This special version of FreeBSD would be hacked simular to what you were
going to put on the CDROM.  It would get as much information about itself
dynamically.  You could supply ``/etc/Distfile'' and let /etc/daily
update things if you like.

-- 
-- David    (obrien@NUXI.ucdavis.edu  -or-  obrien@FreeBSD.org)

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