Dnia nie, 16 paE: 2011, 15:47:53 Christer Solskogen pisze:
I've tried 4.9 and todays snapshot, and both i386 and amd64.
Installing OpenBSD was no problem, but when booting for the first time
i get this:
Using drive 0, partition 3.
Loading.
probing: pc0 apm pci mem[619K, 3326M 768M a20=on]
On Sun, Oct 16, 2011 at 3:55 PM, Marc Smith marc_sm...@gmx.com wrote:
Are you sure you used kernel that is designed for your CPU
architecture? Also, have you tried with:
'boot -c'
and then:
'disable acpi'
and
'quit'
?
I not getting that far. The kernel isn't even loaded yet. Yeah, I
On Sun, Oct 16, 2011 at 5:58 PM, Christer Solskogen
christer.solsko...@gmail.com wrote:
Then this happend:
boot boot hd0a:/bsd
booting hd0a:/bsd: /
And it stops there. This is with the most recent snapshot.
And now I installed again, but with auto layout of the partitions. And
now the
On 10/16/11 17:20, Christer Solskogen wrote:
On Sun, Oct 16, 2011 at 5:58 PM, Christer Solskogen
christer.solsko...@gmail.com wrote:
Then this happend:
boot boot hd0a:/bsd
booting hd0a:/bsd: /
And it stops there. This is with the most recent snapshot.
And now I installed again, but with
Then this happend:
boot boot hd0a:/bsd
booting hd0a:/bsd: /
And it stops there. This is with the most recent snapshot.
And now I installed again, but with auto layout of the partitions. And
now the machine boots. Is there a limit of how big / can be?
The machine have a 1TB disk. The
On Sun, Oct 16, 2011 at 7:02 PM, Theo de Raadt dera...@cvs.openbsd.org
wrote:
You don't want a giant root file system. It won't work.
Not only that, but I also ignored the FAQ. The latter was my biggest sin :-)
--
chs,
The biosboot (ie. boot sector) must be able to load the /boot file.
Then, the /boot file must be able to load the kernel.
Both need to be BIOS-reachable.
You don't want a giant root file system. It won't work.
We actually have other reasons to have our users not use giant root
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