On Fri, Dec 05, 2003 at 06:33:48PM +0100, Filip Hroch wrote: > > Thank you for information. My story continues... > > I was start by my firts step after the reading of the ansfer. > I reinstalled of the FreeBSD. Now, I have only one large slice > and a swap on my BSD partition. The file system is UFS1 (the details > about UFS1 and UFS2 are described in instalation manual of FreeBSD but > I didn't understant it during first reading). Unfortunatelly, the recent > linux kernels mounts the partition on read-only mode correctly but its > read-write mode fails (the most simple command touch /bsd/tmp/a > issues a kernel oops). Therefore, the simple solution by run crosshurd > from linux is not possible...
The basic difference from our POV is that UFS2 can't be accessed by GRUB nor Linux. > I take notice of debian/knetbsd archive with some iso images. Can I use > it on instalation of running system without any additional tools? I mean > by example, the Gentoo project provides instalation CDs. The CD is live > so it's possible to boot from it, create a new instalation from chroot > environment and set up complete box (in principle every instalation must > do it). Is there somethink like it for a debian/*bsd? We don't have any iso images yet. You must install a *BSD first, then use the tarball we provide to convert it into GNU/K*BSD. Base tarballs are to be found in: http://ftp.gnuab.org/pub/gnu/knetbsd/ http://ftp.gnuab.org/pub/gnu/kfreebsd/ -- Robert Millan "[..] but the delight and pride of Aule is in the deed of making, and in the thing made, and neither in possession nor in his own mastery; wherefore he gives and hoards not, and is free from care, passing ever on to some new work." -- J.R.R.T, Ainulindale (Silmarillion)

