On Mon, Mar 15, 1999 at 07:16:24PM +0900, Daniel C. Sobral wrote:
> "Donald J . Maddox" wrote:
> >
> > If you are *really* -current, /boot/loader.rc should probably
> > just contain something like:
> >
> > include /boot/loader.4th
> > start
> >
> > Then, you should copy /boot/defaults/loader.co
The answer depends on exactly how current you are...
With -current from a few days ago, I would have said:
Make sure you have a /boot/loader.rc file that contains at least
these lines:
load /kernel
load -t /boot.config
Then, make sure /boot.config contains all the stuff that you would
normally
On Mon, Mar 15, 1999 at 07:16:24PM +0900, Daniel C. Sobral wrote:
> "Donald J . Maddox" wrote:
> >
> > If you are *really* -current, /boot/loader.rc should probably
> > just contain something like:
> >
> > include /boot/loader.4th
> > start
> >
> > Then, you should copy /boot/defaults/loader.con
"Donald J . Maddox" wrote:
>
> If you are *really* -current, /boot/loader.rc should probably
> just contain something like:
>
> include /boot/loader.4th
> start
>
> Then, you should copy /boot/defaults/loader.conf to /boot/loader.conf
> and edit it to match what you want to happen at boot.
Copy
Yeah, you're right on all counts, of course...
I've answered this question so many times in
the last 10 days that I'm starting to go on
autopilot :-/
Robert Nordier wrote:
>
> Donald J . Maddox wrote:
>
> > The answer depends on exactly how current you are...
> >
> > With -current from a few day
Donald J . Maddox wrote:
> The answer depends on exactly how current you are...
>
> With -current from a few days ago, I would have said:
>
> Make sure you have a /boot/loader.rc file that contains at least
> these lines:
>
> load /kernel
> load -t /boot.config
>
> Then, make sure /boot.config
The answer depends on exactly how current you are...
With -current from a few days ago, I would have said:
Make sure you have a /boot/loader.rc file that contains at least
these lines:
load /kernel
load -t /boot.config
Then, make sure /boot.config contains all the stuff that you would
normally
When I boot up my -current box, I hit 'c' to get to the boot prompt. Then
I do "boot -c", and then "vi" to configure my kernel. But any changes I
make via userconfig aren't saved for when the next time I boot.
Is it a problem with the boot loader, or do I have to type some commands
to save my co