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Top Forums UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers SCO OpenServer 5 Will Not Boot Post 303026807 by hicksd8 on Monday 3rd of December 2018 02:33:12 PM
Old 12-03-2018
Quote:
Originally Posted by spock9458
The contents of /etc/conf/cf.d/mscsi changes whenever I go into "mkdev cdrom" to make changes. I have tried to remove the cdrom drive and start fresh twice, and I need to have a couple of things clarified, I think: #1 - is the "mkdev cdrom" the right command to start with? #2 - what is the difference between adding a driver or adding a device? If I start with trying to add the CD Rom device, it says that I first need to install a driver. So I proceed to install a CD Rom driver using my IDE info (which I think is Secondary Master), rebuild kernel, etc. and reboot. Then when I go and try to add the CD Rom device, it tells me there is already a device configured with that IDE info. At no time, however, have I been able to do a successful mounting of the CD using:
Code:
mount /dev/cd0 /mnt

So I know I'm doing something wrong, but I don't know what to do differently.
From above:
Quote:
what is the difference between adding a driver or adding a device?
Since your HD came from a different platform, I think the steps would be:
1. 'mkdev cdrom' to remove the old device config and driver. Relink the kernel and reboot.

When completely happy that all traces of old CDROM config have gone, i.e. system complains that there's no driver.....

2. 'mkdev cdrom' to install the new driver. Relink the kernel and reboot.

3. 'mkdev cdrom' (again!!) to configure the device. Prompts are different from (2) above. Relink the kernel and reboot.

Having to run 'mkdev cdrom' twice to configure a new disk or CDROM device, first for the driver and second for the configuration, confuses many. Have no doubt about that.
 

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BOOTP(8)						      System Manager's Manual							  BOOTP(8)

NAME
bootp, rarpd, tftpd - Internet booting SYNOPSIS
ip/bootp [-d] ip/rarpd [-d] [-e etherdev] ip/tftpd [-dr] [-h homedir] DESCRIPTION
These programs support booting over the Internet. They should all be run on the same server to allow other systems to be booted. Bootp and tftpd are used to boot everything; rarpd is an extra piece just for Suns. Bootp passes to Plan 9 systems their IP address, IP mask, default boot file, default file server, default authentication server, and default gateway. These come from the network database file attributes ip, ipmask, bootf, fs, auth, and ipgw attributes respectively (see ndb(6) and ndb(8)). The attributes come from the entry for the system, its subnet, and its network with the system entry having prece- dence, subnet next, and network last. Bootp will answer requests only if it has been specifically targeted or if it has read access to the boot file for the requester. The -d option causes debugging to be printed to standard output. Rarpd performs the Reverse Address Resolution Protocol, translating Ethernet addresses into IP addresses. The options are: d print debugging to standard output e use the Ethernet mounted at /net/etherdev Tftpd transfers files to systems that are booting. It runs as user none and can only access files with global read permission. The options are: d print debugging to standard output h change directory to homedir. The default is /lib/tftpd. All requests for files with non-rooted file names are served starting at this directory with the exception of files of the form xxxxxxxx.SUNyy. These are Sparc kernel boot files where xxxxxxxx is the hex IP address of the machine requesting the kernel and yy is an architecture identifier. Tftpd looks up the file in the network data- base using ipinfo (see ndb(2)) and responds with the boot file specified for that particular machine. If no boot file is specified, the transfer fails. Tftpd supports only octet mode. r restricts access to only files rooted in the homedir. SOURCE
/sys/src/cmd/ip SEE ALSO
ndb(6) BOOTP(8)
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