Do you do this everytime or just to get things started?
If it's everytime, man that's a pain, if it's just to get things
started it's easier than what I did. (but now I get a list of what I
want to boot from the NT bootloader, and I just hit the arrow down to
FreeBSD and go.)
-Charlie
On Wed, Mar 29, 2000 at 03:21:39PM -0500, Vladik wrote:
> Hello,
> I am not sure if this exactly on topic,
> but this is how I boot freeBSD partition that is installed
> beyond cyl 1024
>
>
> I use GRUB boot loader that understands LBA (www.gnu.org/grub)
>
> Once GRUB boots from a floppy, go to GRUB's command prompt and
> do the following:
>
> root (hd0,3,a) # or whatever your FreeBSD root slice is
> #after the command above, it mounted the partition
>
> kernel /kernel -remount
> boot
>
> When kernel boots to the point where it needs to mount a root
> partion it will ask you,
> in there you type
> ufs:/dev/ad0s4a
>
>
> ----
> Vladislav
--
Charles Anderson [EMAIL PROTECTED]
No quote, no nothin'
To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with "unsubscribe freebsd-current" in the body of the message