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Operating Systems BSD Bootable usb-stick, need help, sos Post 302989802 by Peasant on Wednesday 18th of January 2017 11:56:54 AM
Old 01-18-2017
For debian iso, for instance, a simple dd on whole device (not partition) should create usb bootable disk.

As i see online, it should work for PCBSD as well, if whole device is used not partition.

This will, of course leave no space, but you can resize carefully after (with parted or similar tool, dunno in BSD really) and create additional partition and filesystem from remaining space.

My suggestion is, if machine supports PXE and has network, use it.
It's much easier to handle, supporting all kinds of goodies.
 

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WSP(4)							   BSD Kernel Interfaces Manual 						    WSP(4)

NAME
wsp -- Wellspring touchpad driver SYNOPSIS
To compile this driver into the kernel, place the following lines into your kernel configuration file: device wsp device usb Alternatively, to load the driver as a module at boot time, place the following line in loader.conf(5): wsp_load="YES" DESCRIPTION
The wsp driver provides support for the Apple Internal Trackpad device found in many Apple laptops. The driver simulates a three-button mouse using multi-finger tap detection. A single-finger press generates a left button click. A two-fin- ger tap maps to the right button; whereas a three-finger tap gets treated as a middle button click. wsp supports dynamic reconfiguration using sysctl(8) through nodes under hw.usb.wsp. Pointer sensitivity can be controlled using the sysctl tunable hw.usb.wsp.scale_factor. FILES
wsp creates a blocking pseudo-device file, /dev/wsp0, which presents the mouse as a sysmouse or mousesystems type device--see moused(8) for an explanation of these mouse types. SEE ALSO
sysmouse(4), usb(4), loader.conf(5), xorg.conf(5) (ports/x11/xorg), moused(8), sysctl(8) AUTHORS
The wsp driver was written by Huang Wen Hui <huanghwh@gmail.com>. BSD
February 7, 2014 BSD
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