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1  <html>  <html><head><title>Gavare's eXperimental Emulator:&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Installing and running "guest OSes"</title>
2  <head><title>GXemul documentation: Installing and running "guest OSes"</title>  <meta name="robots" content="noarchive,nofollow,noindex"></head>
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6  <td align="left" valign=center bgcolor="#d0efff"><font color="#6060e0" size="6">  <td align="left" valign=center bgcolor="#d0efff"><font color="#6060e0" size="6">
7  <b>GXemul documentation:</b></font>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;  <b>Gavare's eXperimental Emulator:</b></font><br>
8  <font color="#000000" size="6"><b>Installing and running "guest OSes"</b>  <font color="#000000" size="6"><b>Installing and running "guest OSes"</b>
9  </font></td></tr></table></td></tr></table><p>  </font></td></tr></table></td></tr></table><p>
10    
11  <!--  <!--
12    
13  $Id: guestoses.html,v 1.50 2005/06/11 11:53:33 debug Exp $  $Id: guestoses.html,v 1.149 2006/06/25 02:36:46 debug Exp $
14    
15  Copyright (C) 2003-2005  Anders Gavare.  All rights reserved.  Copyright (C) 2003-2006  Anders Gavare.  All rights reserved.
16    
17  Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without  Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
18  modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:  modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:
# Line 41  SUCH DAMAGE. Line 39  SUCH DAMAGE.
39    
40  -->  -->
41    
42    
43  <a href="./">Back to the index</a>  <a href="./">Back to the index</a>
44    
45  <p><br>  <p><br>
# Line 49  SUCH DAMAGE. Line 48  SUCH DAMAGE.
48  <p>  <p>
49  <ul>  <ul>
50    <li><a href="#generalnotes">General notes on running "guest OSes"</a>    <li><a href="#generalnotes">General notes on running "guest OSes"</a>
51    <li><a href="#netbsdinstall">Installing NetBSD/pmax in GXemul</a>    <li><a href="#netbsdpmaxinstall">NetBSD/pmax 3.0 or 1.6.2</a>
52    <li><a href="#netbsdarcinstall">Installing NetBSD/arc in GXemul</a>    <li><a href="#netbsdarcinstall">NetBSD/arc 1.6.2</a>
53    <li><a href="#netbsdhpcmipsinstall">Installing NetBSD/hpcmips in GXemul</a>    <li><a href="#netbsdhpcmipsinstall">NetBSD/hpcmips 3.0</a>
54    <li><a href="#netbsdcobaltinstall">Installing NetBSD/cobalt in GXemul</a>    <li><a href="#netbsdcobaltinstall">NetBSD/cobalt 2.1</a>
55  <!--    <li><a href="#netbsdevbmipsinstall">NetBSD/evbmips 2.1</a>
56    <li><a href="#netbsdsgimips">Running NetBSD/sgimips in GXemul</a>    <li><a href="#netbsdsgimips">NetBSD/sgimips 3.0</a>
57  -->    <li><a href="#netbsdcatsinstall">NetBSD/cats 3.0</a>
58    <li><a href="#openbsdinstall">Installing OpenBSD/pmax in GXemul</a>    <li><a href="#netbsdevbarminstall">NetBSD/evbarm 2.1</a>
59    <li><a href="#openbsdarcinstall">Installing OpenBSD/arc in GXemul</a>    <li><a href="#netbsdprepinstall">NetBSD/prep 2.1</a>
60  <!--    <li><a href="#openbsdpmaxinstall">OpenBSD/pmax 2.8-BETA</a>
61    <li><a href="#openbsdsgiinstall">Running OpenBSD/sgi in GXemul</a>    <li><a href="#openbsdcatsinstall">OpenBSD/cats 3.9</a>
62  -->    <li><a href="#ultrixinstall">Ultrix/RISC 4.5</a>
63    <li><a href="#ultrixinstall">Installing Ultrix/RISC in GXemul</a>    <li><a href="#sprite">Sprite for DECstation</a>
64    <li><a href="#sprite">Running Sprite for DECstation in GXemul</a>    <li><a href="#declinux">Debian GNU/Linux for DECstation</a>
65    <li><a href="#declinux">Installing Debian GNU/Linux for DECstation in GXemul</a>    <li><a href="#declinuxredhat">Redhat Linux for DECstation</a>
   <li><a href="#declinuxredhat">Running Redhat Linux for DECstation in GXemul</a>  
   <li><a href="#mach">Running Mach/PMAX in GXemul</a>  
66  </ul>  </ul>
67    
68    
# Line 78  SUCH DAMAGE. Line 75  SUCH DAMAGE.
75  <h3>General notes on running "guest OSes":</h3>  <h3>General notes on running "guest OSes":</h3>
76    
77  The emulator works well enough to run complete operating systems. These  The emulator works well enough to run complete operating systems. These
78  are often refered to as "guest" operating systems.  are often refered to as <i>guest</i> operating systems, in contrast to the
79    <i>host</i> operating system which the emulator is running under.
80    
81  <p>  <p>Although it is possible to let a guest OS access real hardware, such as
82  Although it is possible to let a guest OS access real hardware, such as  harddisks, it is much more flexible and attractive to simulate harddisks
83  harddisks, it is much more flexible and attractive to simulate harddisks  using files residing in the host's filesystem. On Unix-like systems, files
84  using files residing in the host's filesystem. On Unix-like systems, files  may contain holes, which makes this really simple. To the guest operating
 may contain holes, which makes this really simple. To the guest operating  
85  system, the harddisk image looks and acts like a real disk.  system, the harddisk image looks and acts like a real disk.
86    
87    <p>The version numbers of the various operating systems were the latest
88    versions that worked satisfactory with GXemul at the time this page was
89    updated; if new versions have been released since then, they might work as
90    well.
91    
92    <p>In addition to the "working" guest operating systems listed above,
93    you might find the following information interesting: (Some of these might
94    not be relevant for this specific release of GXemul.)
95    
96    <ul>
97      <li><a href="#mach">Mach/PMAX</a>
98      <li><a href="#openbsdsgiinstall">OpenBSD/sgi</a>
99      <li><a href="#openbsdarcinstall">OpenBSD/arc 2.3</a>
100      <li><a href="#debiancats">Debian GNU/Linux for CATS</a>
101      <li><a href="#netbsdnetwinderinstall">NetBSD/netwinder 2.1</a>
102      <li><a href="#netbsdmacppcinstall">NetBSD/macppc 3.0</a>
103    </ul>
104    
105    <p>Some operating systems are listed with a version number <i>less</i>
106    than what was available at the time of this GXemul release (e.g.
107    NetBSD/prep). The reasons for this is because of incompleteness in
108    GXemul's machine, device, and/or processor implementations.
109    
110    
111    
# Line 95  system, the harddisk image looks and act Line 114  system, the harddisk image looks and act
114    
115    
116  <p><br>  <p><br>
117  <a name="netbsdinstall"></a>  <a name="netbsdpmaxinstall"></a>
118  <h3>Installing NetBSD/pmax in GXemul:</h3>  <h3>NetBSD/pmax:</h3>
119    
120  <p>  <p><a href="http://www.netbsd.org/Ports/pmax/">NetBSD/pmax</a> was the
121  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;  first guest OS that could be installed onto a disk image in GXemul. The
122    device emulation of the DECstation 5000/200 is reasonably complete; it
123    should be enough to emulate a networked X-windows-capable workstation.
124    
125    <p>NetBSD/pmax 1.6.2 works perfectly with X out-of-the-box. Unfortunately,
126    newer NetBSD releases have changed slightly, and nowadays X does not
127    work straight away. (It seems that this has to do with NetBSD switching
128    console system to "WSCONS" somewhere between 1.6.2 and 2.0. I haven't had
129    time to figure out how to make it work; at worst it might require a kernel
130    recompilation.) What this means is that if you want to use emulated X11,
131    then you need to run NetBSD 1.6.2. If you feel that you only need
132    serial-console emulation, then choose the latest NetBSD version available.
133    
134    <p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
135  <a href="20050317-example.png"><img src="20050317-example_small.png"></a>  <a href="20050317-example.png"><img src="20050317-example_small.png"></a>
136    
137  <p>  <p>To install NetBSD/pmax onto a harddisk image in the emulator,
138  To install NetBSD/pmax onto a harddisk image in the emulator, follow these  follow these instructions:
 instructions:  
139    
140  <p>  <p><ol start="1">
 <ol start="1">  
141    <li>Create an empty harddisk image, which will be the root disk    <li>Create an empty harddisk image, which will be the root disk
142          that NetBSD installs itself onto:<pre>          that NetBSD installs itself onto:<pre>
143          $ <b>dd if=/dev/zero of=nbsd_pmax.img bs=1 count=512 seek=1900000000</b>          <b>dd if=/dev/zero of=nbsd_pmax.img bs=1024 count=1 seek=1900000</b>
144    
145  </pre>  </pre>
146  </ol>  </ol>
# Line 125  steps: Line 155  steps:
155  <ol start="2">  <ol start="2">
156    
157    <li>Download a NetBSD CD-ROM iso image:<pre>    <li>Download a NetBSD CD-ROM iso image:<pre>
158          <a href="ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/iso/1.6.2/pmaxcd.iso">ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/iso/1.6.2/pmaxcd.iso</a>          <a href="ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-archive/iso/1.6.2/pmaxcd.iso">ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-archive/iso/1.6.2/pmaxcd.iso</a>
159          or          or
160          <a href="ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/iso/2.0/pmaxcd.iso">ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/iso/2.0/pmaxcd.iso</a>          <a href="ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/iso/3.0/pmaxcd-3.0.iso">ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/iso/3.0/pmaxcd-3.0.iso</a>
161    
162  </pre>  </pre>
163    <li>Start the emulator like this:<pre>    <li>Start the emulator like this:<pre>
164          $ <b>gxemul -X -b -E dec -e 3max -d nbsd_pmax.img -d bc:pmaxcd.iso</b>          <b>gxemul -e 3max -d nbsd_pmax.img -d bc:pmaxcd-3.0.iso</b>
165            (or <b>pmaxcd.iso</b>)
166  </pre>  </pre>
167            and proceed like you would do if you were installing NetBSD on a real
168            DECstation. Remember to choose <tt>vt100</tt> as your terminal
169            type, and not <tt>rcons</tt>.
170  </ol>  </ol>
171  <p>  <p>
172  For an ftp install, substitute steps 2 and 3 above with these:  For an ftp install, substitute steps 2 and 3 above with these:
173  <p>  <p>
174  <ol start="2">  <ol start="2">
175    
176    <li>Download a NetBSD pmax INSTALL kernel, and gunzip it:<pre>    <li>Download a NetBSD pmax INSTALL kernel:<pre>
177          <a href="ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-1.6.2/pmax/binary/kernel/netbsd-INSTALL.gz">ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-1.6.2/pmax/binary/kernel/netbsd-INSTALL.gz</a>          <a href="ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-archive/NetBSD-1.6.2/pmax/binary/kernel/netbsd-INSTALL.gz">ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-archive/NetBSD-1.6.2/pmax/binary/kernel/netbsd-INSTALL.gz</a>
178          or          or
179          <a href="ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-2.0/pmax/binary/kernel/netbsd-INSTALL.gz">ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-2.0/pmax/binary/kernel/netbsd-INSTALL.gz</a>          <a href="ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-3.0/pmax/binary/kernel/netbsd-INSTALL.gz">ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-3.0/pmax/binary/kernel/netbsd-INSTALL.gz</a>
   
         $ <b>gunzip netbsd-INSTALL.gz</b>  
180    
181  </pre>  </pre>
182    <li>Start the emulator like this:<pre>    <li>Start the emulator like this:<pre>
183          $ <b>gxemul -X -b -E dec -e 3max -d nbsd_pmax.img -O netbsd-INSTALL</b>          <b>gxemul -e 3max -d nbsd_pmax.img -O netbsd-INSTALL.gz</b>
184  </pre>  </pre>
185  </ol>          and proceed like you would do if you were installing NetBSD on a real
186            DECstation. Remember to choose <tt>vt100</tt> as your terminal
187  <p>          type, and not <tt>rcons</tt>. Suitable networking parameters are as
188  (If you don't want to use a graphical framebuffer during the install,          follows:<pre>
 you can remove <b>-X</b> from the command line, but then make sure you  
 choose 'vt100' when prompted with which terminal type to use, and not  
 'rcons'.)  
   
 <p>  
 Then proceed like you would do if you were installing NetBSD on a real  
 DECstation. If you are installing from the network, then suitable networking  
 parameters are as follows:<pre>  
189          Which device shall I use? [le0]: <b>le0</b>          Which device shall I use? [le0]: <b>le0</b>
190          ..          ..
191          Your DNS domain: <b>mydomain.com</b>          Your DNS domain: <b>mydomain.com</b>
# Line 171  parameters are as follows:<pre> Line 195  parameters are as follows:<pre>
195          IPv4 gateway: <b>10.0.0.254</b>          IPv4 gateway: <b>10.0.0.254</b>
196          IPv4 name server: <b>10.0.0.254</b>          IPv4 name server: <b>10.0.0.254</b>
197  </pre>  </pre>
198            (If using 10.0.0.254 as the nameserver fails, then try entering the
199            IP number of a real-world nameserver instead.)
200    </ol>
201    
202  <p>  <p>If you want to use a graphical framebuffer during the install, you can
203  (If using 10.0.0.254 as the nameserver fails, then try entering the  add <b><tt>-X -Y2</tt></b> to the command line, and choose <tt>rcons</tt>
204  IP number of a real-world nameserver instead.)  instead of <tt>vt100</tt> when prompted with which terminal type to use.
205    (By just using <tt><b>-X</b></tt>, you will get a full-size framebuffer
206    window.)
207    
208  <p>  <p>When the installation is finished, the following command should start
 When the installation is completed, the following command should start  
209  NetBSD from the harddisk image:<pre>  NetBSD from the harddisk image:<pre>
210          $ <b>gxemul -X -b -M64 -E dec -e 3max -d nbsd_pmax.img</b>          <b>gxemul -e 3max -d nbsd_pmax.img</b>
211  </pre>  </pre>
212    
213  <p>  <p>If you installed NetBSD/pmax 1.6.2, then try the following to start
214  Use <b>startx</b> to start X windows.  with a framebuffer:<pre>
215            <b>gxemul -X -e 3max -d nbsd_pmax.img</b>
 <p>  
 <font color="#ff0000">NOTE:</font> For some reason, NetBSD 2.0 doesn't  
 work with X out-of-the-box on pmax. It seems that this has to do with a  
 switch to WSCONS. For now, if you want X, then try NetBSD 1.6.2.  
   
 <p>  
 If you want to run without the X framebuffer, use this instead:<pre>  
         $ <b>gxemul -E dec -e 3max -b -d nbsd_pmax.img</b>  
216  </pre>  </pre>
217    and log in as <tt>root</tt> and type <tt>startx</tt> to start X windows.
218    
219    
220    
221    
# Line 203  If you want to run without the X framebu Line 225  If you want to run without the X framebu
225    
226  <p><br>  <p><br>
227  <a name="netbsdarcinstall"></a>  <a name="netbsdarcinstall"></a>
228  <h3>Installing NetBSD/arc in GXemul:</h3>  <h3>NetBSD/arc:</h3>
229    
230  It is possible to run NetBSD/arc on an emulated Acer PICA-61 in the emulator.  It is possible to install and run an old version of <a
231    href="http://www.netbsd.org/Ports/arc/">NetBSD/arc</a>
232    on an emulated Acer PICA-61 in the emulator.
233    
234  <p>  <p>
235  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
236  <a href="20041024-netbsd-arc-installed.gif"><img src="20041024-netbsd-arc-installed_small.gif"></a>  <a href="20041024-netbsd-arc-installed.gif"><img src="20041024-netbsd-arc-installed_small.gif"></a>
237    
238  <p>  <p>
239  To install NetBSD/arc from a CDROM image onto an emulated harddisk image,  To install NetBSD/arc 1.6.2 from a CDROM image onto an emulated
240  follow these instructions:  harddisk image, follow these instructions:
241    
242  <p>  <p>
243  <ol start="1">  <ol start="1">
244    <li>Create an empty harddisk image, which will be the root disk    <li>Create an empty harddisk image, which will be the root disk
245          that NetBSD installs itself onto:<pre>          that NetBSD installs itself onto:<pre>
246          $ <b>dd if=/dev/zero of=nbsd_arc.img bs=1024 count=1 seek=900000</b>          <b>dd if=/dev/zero of=nbsd_arc.img bs=1024 count=1 seek=900000</b>
247    
248  </pre>  </pre>
249    <li>Download a NetBSD/arc 1.6.2 CDROM image from ftp:<pre>    <li>Download a NetBSD/arc 1.6.2 CDROM image, and a generic NetBSD/arc
250          <a href="ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/iso/1.6.2/arccd.iso">ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/iso/1.6.2/arccd.iso</a>          kernel:<pre>
251            <a href="ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-archive/iso/1.6.2/arccd.iso">ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-archive/iso/1.6.2/arccd.iso</a>
252            <a href="ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-archive/NetBSD-1.6.2/arc/binary/kernel/netbsd-GENERIC.gz">ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-archive/NetBSD-1.6.2/arc/binary/kernel/netbsd-GENERIC.gz</a>
253    
254  </pre>  </pre>
255    <li>Start the emulator using this command line:<pre>    <li>Start the emulator using this command line:<pre>
256          $ <b>gxemul -E arc -e pica -x -b -d nbsd_arc.img -d bc:arccd.iso \          <b>gxemul -e pica -x -d nbsd_arc.img -d bc:arccd.iso \
257            -j arc/binary/kernel/netbsd.RAMDISK.gz</b>            -j arc/binary/kernel/netbsd.RAMDISK.gz</b>
258    
259  </pre>  </pre>
260          (Try removing <tt>-x</tt> if you have problems with the xterm.)          (Try removing <tt>-x</tt> if you have problems with the xterm.)
261      <p>      <p>
262    <li>From now on, you have to use your imagination, as there is no    <li>From now on, you have to use your imagination, as there is no
263          automatic installation program for NetBSD/arc. Here are some tips          automatic installation program for NetBSD/arc 1.6.2. Here are
264          and hints on how you can proceed with the install:<pre>          some tips and hints on how you can proceed with the install:
265          $ <b>mount /dev/cd0a /mnt2</b>  <p><table border="0"><tr><td><tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</tt></td><td><pre>
266          $ <b>disklabel -i -I sd0</b>    (for example 'a', '4.2BSD', '1c',  <b>mount /dev/cd0a /mnt2
267              '700M', 'b', 'swap', '701M', '$', 'P', 'W', 'y', and 'Q')  disklabel -i -I sd0</b>    (for example 'a', '4.2BSD', '1c',
268          $ <b>newfs /dev/sd0a</b>      '700M', 'b', 'swap', '701M', '$', 'P', 'W', 'y', and 'Q')
269          $ <b>mount /dev/sd0a /mnt</b>  <b>newfs /dev/sd0a
270          $ <b>cd /mnt</b>  mount /dev/sd0a /mnt
271          $ <b>for a in /mnt2/arc/binary/sets/*.tgz; do echo $a; tar xzpf $a; done</b>  cd /mnt
272          $ <b>cd dev; sh MAKEDEV all</b>  for a in /mnt2/arc/binary/sets/*.tgz; do echo $a; tar xzpf $a; done
273          $ <b>cd ../etc; echo "rc_configured=YES" &gt;&gt; rc.conf</b>  cd dev; sh MAKEDEV all
274          $ <b>cat > /mnt/etc/fstab</b>  cd ../etc; echo "rc_configured=YES" &gt;&gt; rc.conf
275              /dev/sd0a / ffs rw 1 1  cat > /mnt/etc/fstab
276              /dev/sd0b none swap sw 0 0  /dev/sd0a / ffs rw 1 1
277              (ctrl-d)  /dev/sd0b none swap sw 0 0
278          $ <b>cd /; umount /mnt; umount /mnt2</b>  </b>(press ctrl-d)
279          $ <b>halt</b>  <b>cd /; umount /mnt; umount /mnt2
280    halt</b>
281  </pre>  </pre></td></tr></table>
   <li>Download a generic NetBSD/arc kernel,  
         and gunzip it:<pre>  
         <a href="ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-1.6.2/arc/binary/kernel/netbsd-GENERIC.gz">ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-1.6.2/arc/binary/kernel/netbsd-GENERIC.gz</a>  
   
 </pre>  
282  </ol>  </ol>
283    
284  <p>  <p>You can now use the generic NetBSD/arc kernel to boot from the harddisk
285  You can now use the generic NetBSD/arc kernel to boot from the harddisk  image, using the following command:<pre>
286  image, using the following command:          <b>gxemul -e pica -x -d nbsd_arc.img netbsd-GENERIC.gz</b>
 <p>  
 <pre>  
         $ <b>gxemul -E arc -e pica -xb -d nbsd_arc.img netbsd-GENERIC</b>  
287    
288  </pre>  </pre>
289    
290    <p>When asked for "<tt>root device: </tt>", enter <b><tt>sd0</tt></b>.
291    
292    
293    
# Line 278  image, using the following command: Line 297  image, using the following command:
297    
298  <p><br>  <p><br>
299  <a name="netbsdhpcmipsinstall"></a>  <a name="netbsdhpcmipsinstall"></a>
300  <h3>Installing NetBSD/hpcmips in GXemul:</h3>  <h3>NetBSD/hpcmips:</h3>
301    
302  It is possible to install NetBSD/hpcmips onto a disk image, on an an  It is possible to install <a
303  emulated MobilePro 770, 780, 800, or 880. The emulator treats the  href="http://www.netbsd.org/Ports/hpcmips/">NetBSD/hpcmips</a> onto a disk
304  different machine models as being almost identical; the most important  image, on an an emulated MobilePro 770, 780, 800, or 880. The emulator
305  difference is regarding the framebuffer.  treats the different machine models as being almost identical; the most
306    important difference is regarding the framebuffer.
307    
308  <p>  <p><table border="0">
 <table border="0">  
309          <tr>          <tr>
310                  <td width="80">&nbsp;</td>                  <td width="80">&nbsp;</td>
311                  <td><u>Model:</u></td>                  <td><u>Model:</u></td>
# Line 330  difference is regarding the framebuffer. Line 349  difference is regarding the framebuffer.
349  </table>  </table>
350    
351  <p>  <p>
352  (<super>*</super>) = not aligned at a 4 KB boundary, so it will not work  (<super>*</super>) = not aligned at a page boundary, so it will not work
353  efficiently with the current bintrans system. Using this mode will still  efficiently with the current dyntrans system. Using this mode will still
354  work, but each load and store will be emulated much more slowly than is  work, but each load and store will be emulated much more slowly than is
355  possible with an aligned framebuffer.  possible with an aligned framebuffer.
356    
# Line 347  than the other models, for some reason. Line 366  than the other models, for some reason.
366    
367  <p>  <p>
368  These instructions show an example of how to install  These instructions show an example of how to install
369  NetBSD/hpcmips on an emulated MobilePro 800:  NetBSD/hpcmips on an emulated MobilePro 770:
370    
371  <p>  <p>
372  <ol start="1">  <ol start="1">
373    <li>Create an empty harddisk image, which will be the root disk    <li>Create an empty harddisk image, which will be the root disk
374          that you will install NetBSD/hpcmips onto:<pre>          that you will install NetBSD/hpcmips onto:<pre>
375          $ <b>dd if=/dev/zero of=nbsd_hpcmips.img bs=1024 count=1 seek=1990000</b>          <b>dd if=/dev/zero of=nbsd_hpcmips.img bs=1024 count=1 seek=1990000</b>
376    
377  </pre>  </pre>
378    <li>Download the NetBSD 2.0 for hpcmips ISO image:<pre>    <li>Download the NetBSD/hpcmips 3.0 ISO image, and a generic kernel:<pre>
379          <a href="ftp://ftp.se.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/iso/2.0/">ftp://ftp.se.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/iso/2.0</a>/<a href="ftp://ftp.se.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/iso/2.0/hpcmipscd.iso">hpcmipscd.iso</a>          <a href="ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/iso/3.0/">ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/iso/3.0</a>/<a href="ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/iso/3.0/hpcmipscd-3.0.iso">hpcmipscd-3.0.iso</a>
380    
381  </pre>(You may want to choose a mirror closer to you, if .se is slow.)          <a href="ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-3.0/hpcmips/binary/kernel/">ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-3.0/hpcmips/binary/kernel</a>/<a href="ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-3.0/hpcmips/binary/kernel/netbsd-GENERIC.gz">netbsd-GENERIC.gz</a>
382    
383    </pre>
384    <p>    <p>
385    <li>Start the installation like this:<pre>    <li>Start the installation like this:<pre>
386          $ <b>gxemul -E hpc -e mobilepro800 -b -X -d nbsd_hpcmips.img  \          <b>gxemul -e mobilepro770 -X -d nbsd_hpcmips.img  \
387            -d b:hpcmipscd.iso -j hpcmips/installation/netbsd.gz</b>            -d b:hpcmipscd-3.0.iso -j hpcmips/installation/netbsd.gz</b>
388    
389  </pre>  </pre>
390          and proceed like you would do if you were installing NetBSD on a real          and proceed like you would do if you were installing NetBSD on a real
391          MobilePro 800. (Install onto wd0, choose "Use entire disk" when          MobilePro 770. (Install onto wd0, choose "Use entire disk" when
392          doing the MBR partitioning, and choose wd1d (not cd0c) as the          doing the MBR partitioning, and choose to install from CD-ROM.)
         CDROM device to install from.)  
393  </ol>  </ol>
394    
395  <p>  <p>
396  If everything worked, NetBSD should now be installed on the disk image.  If everything worked, NetBSD should now be installed on the disk image.
397  GXemul does not (yet) support reading the kernel directly from the  Use the following command line to boot the emulated hpcmips machine:<pre>
398  disk image, so you need to download a generic kernel separately:<pre>          <b>gxemul -e mobilepro770 -X -d nbsd_hpcmips.img netbsd-GENERIC.gz</b>
         <a href="ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-2.0/hpcmips/binary/kernel/">ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-2.0/hpcmips/binary/kernel</a>/<a href="ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-2.0/hpcmips/binary/kernel/netbsd-GENERIC.gz">netbsd-GENERIC.gz</a>  
399    
400  </pre>  </pre>
401    
402  <p>  <p>If you change your mind at this point regarding which machine type to
403  Once you have gunziped the generic kernel, you can now use it to boot from  emulate, you might for example prefer a MobilePro 800, then you can change
404  the harddisk image, using the following command:<pre>  that at any time. NetBSD/hpcmips is designed to be able to boot on many
405          $ <b>gxemul -E hpc -e mobilepro800 -b -X -d nbsd_hpcmips.img netbsd-GENERIC</b>  types, without any need to change the kernel.
406    
407  </pre>  <p>When you have logged in as <tt>root</tt>, you can use <tt>startx</tt> to
408    start X Windows, but there is no mouse support yet so only keyboard input
409  <p>  is available. This makes it a bit akward to use X.
 When you have logged in as root, you can use <b>startx</b> to start X  
 Windows. (Note: There is no mouse support yet; you can only use  
 keyboard input.)  
410    
411    
412    
# Line 401  keyboard input.) Line 417  keyboard input.)
417    
418  <p><br>  <p><br>
419  <a name="netbsdcobaltinstall"></a>  <a name="netbsdcobaltinstall"></a>
420  <h3>Installing NetBSD/cobalt in GXemul:</h3>  <h3>NetBSD/cobalt:</h3>
421    
422  <a href="http://www.netbsd.org/Ports/cobalt/">NetBSD/cobalt</a> is tricky  <a href="http://www.netbsd.org/Ports/cobalt/">NetBSD/cobalt</a> is tricky
423  to install, because the Cobalt machines were designed for Linux, and not  to install, because the Cobalt machines were designed for Linux, and not
424  very flexible. There is no INSTALL kernel for NetBSD/cobalt. One way to  very flexible. There is no traditional INSTALL kernel for NetBSD/cobalt.
425  install the NetBSD/cobalt distribution onto a disk image is to do it from  One way to install the NetBSD/cobalt distribution onto a disk image is to
426  another (emulated) machine.  do it from another (emulated) machine.
427    
428  <p>  <p>
429  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
# Line 421  image, from an emulated DECstation 3MAX Line 437  image, from an emulated DECstation 3MAX
437  <ol>  <ol>
438    <li>Create an empty harddisk image, which will be the disk image    <li>Create an empty harddisk image, which will be the disk image
439          that you will install NetBSD/cobalt onto:<pre>          that you will install NetBSD/cobalt onto:<pre>
440          $ <b>dd if=/dev/zero of=nbsd_cobalt.img bs=1024 count=1 seek=1999000</b>          <b>dd if=/dev/zero of=nbsd_cobalt.img bs=1024 count=1 seek=1999000</b>
441    
442  </pre>  </pre>
443    <li>Download the generic kernel for Cobalt (and gunzip it) and    <li>Download the generic kernel for Cobalt and the 2.1 ISO image:<pre>
444          the 2.0 ISO image:<pre>          <a href="ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-2.1/cobalt/binary/kernel/netbsd-GENERIC.gz">ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-2.1/cobalt/binary/kernel/netbsd-GENERIC.gz</a>
445          <a href="ftp://ftp.se.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-2.0/cobalt/binary/kernel/netbsd-GENERIC.gz">ftp://ftp.se.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-2.0/cobalt/binary/kernel/netbsd-GENERIC.gz</a>          <a href="ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/iso/2.1/cobaltcd.iso">ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/iso/2.1/cobaltcd.iso</a>
         <a href="ftp://ftp.se.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/iso/2.0/cobaltcd.iso">ftp://ftp.se.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/iso/2.0/cobaltcd.iso</a>  
446    
447  </pre>(You may want to choose a mirror closer to you, if .se is slow.)  </pre>
448    <p>    <p>
449    <li>Install NetBSD/pmax 2.0 according to instructions further up    <li>Install NetBSD/pmax 3.0 according to instructions
450          on this page.          <a href="#netbsdpmaxinstall">further up on this page</a>.
451    <p>    <p>
452    <li>Start NetBSD/pmax like this:<pre>    <li>Start NetBSD/pmax like this:<pre>
453          $ <b>gxemul -b -Edec -e3max -d nbsd_pmax.img -d cobaltcd.iso -d nbsd_cobalt.img</b>          <b>gxemul -e3max -d nbsd_pmax.img -d cobaltcd.iso -d nbsd_cobalt.img</b>
454    
455  </pre>  </pre>
456    <li>Log in as root (on the emulated 3MAX machine), and execute the    <li>Log in as root (on the emulated 3MAX machine), and execute the
457          following commands: (adjust according to taste)<pre>          following commands: (adjust according to taste)
458          # <b>newfs /dev/sd1c</b>  <p><table border="0"><tr><td><tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</tt></td><td><pre>
459          # <b>mount /dev/cd0c /mnt</b>  <b>newfs /dev/sd1c
460          # <b>mkdir /mnt2; mount /dev/sd1c /mnt2</b>  mount /dev/cd0c /mnt
461          # <b>cd /mnt2; sh</b>  mkdir /mnt2; mount /dev/sd1c /mnt2
462          # <b>for a in /mnt/cobalt/binary/sets/*.tgz; do echo $a; tar zxfp $a; done</b>  cd /mnt2; sh
463          # <b>exit</b>  for a in /mnt/cobalt/binary/sets/*.tgz; do echo $a; tar zxfp $a; done
464          # <b>cd dev; sh ./MAKEDEV all; cd ../etc</b>  exit
465          # <b>echo rc_configured=YES >> rc.conf</b>  cd dev; sh ./MAKEDEV all; cd ../etc
466          # <b>echo "/dev/wd0d / ffs rw 1 1" > fstab</b>  echo rc_configured=YES &gt;&gt; rc.conf
467          # <b>cd /; umount /mnt; umount /mnt2; halt</b>  echo "/dev/wd0d / ffs rw 1 1" > fstab
468  </pre>  cd /; umount /mnt; umount /mnt2; halt</b>
469    </pre></td></tr></table>
470  </ol>  </ol>
471    
472  <p>  <p>
473  You should now be able to boot NetBSD/cobalt like this:<pre>  You should now be able to boot NetBSD/cobalt like this:<pre>
474          $ <b>gxemul -b -M128 -E cobalt -d nbsd_cobalt.img netbsd-GENERIC</b>          <b>gxemul -M128 -E cobalt -d nbsd_cobalt.img netbsd-GENERIC.gz</b>
475  </pre>  </pre>
476    
477  Note that the installation instructions above create a filesystem  Note that the installation instructions above create a filesystem
# Line 474  generic kernel:<pre> Line 490  generic kernel:<pre>
490    
491    
492    
493  <!--  <p><br>
494    <a name="netbsdevbmipsinstall"></a>
495    <h3>NetBSD/evbmips:</h3>
496    
497    <a href="http://www.netbsd.org/Ports/evbmips/">NetBSD/evbmips</a> can run
498    in GXemul on an emulated Malta evaluation board (with a 5Kc or 4Kc CPU).
499    
500    <p>
501    &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
502    <a href="20050622-netbsd-evbmips-malta.png"><img src="20050622-netbsd-evbmips-malta_small.png"></a>
503    
504    <p>It is tricky to install, because there is (as far as I know) no INSTALL
505    kernel. One way to install the NetBSD/evbmips distribution onto a disk
506    image is to install the files using another (emulated) machine.
507    
508    <p>
509    The following instructions will let you install NetBSD/evbmips onto a disk
510    image, from an emulated DECstation 3MAX machine:
511    
512    <p>
513    <ol>
514      <li>Install NetBSD/pmax 3.0 according to instructions
515            <a href="#netbsdpmaxinstall">further up on this page</a>.
516      <p>
517      <li>Create an empty harddisk image, which will be the disk image
518            that you will install NetBSD onto:<pre>
519            <b>dd if=/dev/zero of=nbsd_malta.img bs=1024 count=1 seek=999000</b>
520    
521    </pre>
522      <li>Download the generic kernel and the 2.1 ISO image:<pre>
523            <a href="ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-2.1/evbmips-mipsel/binary/kernel/netbsd-MALTA.gz">ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-2.1/evbmips-mipsel/binary/kernel/netbsd-MALTA.gz</a>
524            <a href="ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/iso/2.1/evbmips-mipselcd.iso">ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/iso/2.1/evbmips-mipselcd.iso</a>
525    
526    </pre>
527      <p>
528      <li>Start NetBSD/pmax like this:<pre>
529            <b>gxemul -e 3max -d nbsd_pmax.img -d nbsd_malta.img -d evbmips-mipselcd.iso</b>
530    
531    </pre>and execute the following commands as <tt>root</tt>:
532    <p><table border="0"><tr><td><tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</tt></td><td><pre>
533    <b>newfs /dev/sd1c
534    mount /dev/cd0c /mnt
535    mkdir /mnt2; mount /dev/sd1c /mnt2
536    cd /mnt2; sh
537    for a in /mnt/evbmips-mipsel/binary/sets/*.tgz; do echo $a; tar zxfp $a; done
538    exit
539    cd dev; sh ./MAKEDEV all; cd ../etc
540    echo rc_configured=YES >> rc.conf
541    echo "/dev/wd0c / ffs rw 1 1" > fstab
542    cd /; umount /mnt; umount /mnt2; halt</b>
543    </pre></td></tr></table>
544    </ol>
545    
546    <p>You should now be able to boot NetBSD/evbmips using this command:<pre>
547            <b>gxemul -e malta -d nbsd_malta.img netbsd-MALTA.gz</b>
548    </pre>
549    
550    <p>NOTE: To select a 4Kc (MIPS32) CPU instead of the default 5Kc
551    (MIPS64) CPU, add <tt><b>-C 4Kc</b></tt> to the command line. With NetBSD
552    2.1, however, there will be little or no difference in functionality, as
553    NetBSD still runs in 32-bit mode on 64-bit MIPS CPUs. There are two things
554    that differ:<ol>
555      <li>The dynamic translation core runs faster when emulating 32-bit
556            processors, so <tt><b>-C 4Kc</b></tt> might make things go faster.
557      <li>4Kc only has 16 TLB entries, whereas 5Kc has 48. This makes 4Kc
558            emulation slower in general, because there are more TLB misses.
559    </ol>
560    
561    <p>The installation instructions above create a filesystem
562    <i>without</i> a disklabel, so there is only one ffs partition and no
563    swap. You will need to enter the following things when booting with the
564    generic kernel:<pre>
565            root device (default wd0a): <b>wd0c</b>
566            dump device (default wd0b): <b>none</b>
567            file system (default generic): <b>ffs</b>
568            init path (default /sbin/init):     <i>(just press enter here)</i>
569    </pre>
570    
571    
572    
573    
574    
575    
576    
577  <p><br>  <p><br>
578  <a name="netbsdsgimips"></a>  <a name="netbsdsgimips"></a>
579  <h3>Running NetBSD/sgimips in GXemul:</h3>  <h3>NetBSD/sgimips:</h3>
580    
581    <p>
582    &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
583    <a href="20060623-netbsd-sgimips-3.0.png"><img src="20060623-netbsd-sgimips-3.0_small.png"></a>
584    
585  <a href="http://www.netbsd.org/Ports/sgimips/">NetBSD/sgimips</a>  <p><a href="http://www.netbsd.org/Ports/sgimips/">NetBSD/sgimips</a> can run
586  can theoretically run in GXemul on an emulated O2 (SGI-IP32) with root on nfs.  in GXemul on an emulated O2 (SGI-IP32). However, GXemul does not yet
587    emulate the AHC PCI SCSI controller in the O2. (I have mailed Adaptec
588    several times, asking for documentation, but never received any reply.)
589    NetBSD can still run in the emulator, as long as it doesn't use SCSI.
590    
591    <p>For a simple test with the ramdisk/install kernel, try
592    dowloading<pre>
593            <a href="ftp://ftp.NetBSD.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-3.0/sgimips/binary/kernel/netbsd-INSTALL32_IP3x.gz">ftp://ftp.NetBSD.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-3.0/sgimips/binary/kernel/netbsd-INSTALL32_IP3x.gz</a>
594    
595    </pre>and run&nbsp;&nbsp;<b><tt>gxemul -x -e o2 netbsd-INSTALL32_IP3x.gz</tt></b>.
596    
597    <p>It is possible to set up an environment for netbooting the emulated SGI
598    machine off of another emulated machine. Performing this setup is quite
599    time consuming, but necessary:
600    
601  <p>  <p>
602  <font color="#ff0000">NOTE: I haven't succeeded with this yet.</font>  <ol>
603      <li>First of all, the "<tt>nfs server</tt>" machine must be set up.
604            This needs to have a 750 MB <tt>/tftpboot</tt> partition.
605            <a href="#netbsdpmaxinstall">Install NetBSD/pmax 3.0 from CDROM</a>.
606            (Don't forget to add the extra partition!)
607      <p>
608      <li>Configure the nfs server machine to act as an nfs server.
609            Start up the emulated DECstation:<pre>
610            <b>gxemul -e 3max -d nbsd_pmax.img</b>
611    </pre>and enter the following commands as <tt>root</tt>
612            inside the emulator:
613    <table border="0"><tr><td><tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</tt></td><td><pre>
614    <b>echo hostname=server &gt;&gt; /etc/rc.conf
615    echo ifconfig_le0=\"inet 10.0.0.2\" &gt;&gt; /etc/rc.conf
616    echo nameserver 10.0.0.254 &gt;&gt; /etc/resolv.conf
617    echo 10.0.0.254 &gt; /etc/mygate
618    echo /tftpboot -maproot=root 10.0.0.1 &gt; /etc/exports
619    echo rpcbind=YES &gt;&gt; /etc/rc.conf
620    echo nfs_server=YES &gt;&gt; /etc/rc.conf
621    echo mountd=YES &gt;&gt; /etc/rc.conf
622    echo bootparamd=YES &gt;&gt; /etc/rc.conf
623    printf "client root=10.0.0.2:/tftpboot \\\n swap=10.0.0.2:/tftpboot/swap\n" &gt; /etc/bootparams
624    echo "bootps dgram udp wait root /usr/sbin/bootpd bootpd -d 4 -h 10.0.0.2" &gt;&gt; /etc/inetd.conf
625    cat &gt;&gt; /etc/bootptab
626    client:\
627            :ht=ether:\
628            :ha=102030000010:\
629            :sm=255.0.0.0:\
630            :lg=10.0.0.254:\
631            :ip=10.0.0.1:\
632            :rp=/tftpboot:
633    </b>(press CTRL-D)
634    <b>echo "10:20:30:00:00:10 client" &gt; /etc/ethers
635    echo 10.0.0.1 client &gt; /etc/hosts
636    reboot</b>
637    </pre></td></tr></table>
638      <li>Start the DECstation emulation again, and download the
639            NetBSD/sgimips distribution sets:<br>(NOTE: This
640            takes quite some time, even if you have a fast network connection.)
641    <table border="0"><tr><td><tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</tt></td><td><pre>
642    <b>cd /tftpboot; ftp -i ftp.se.netbsd.org</b>
643    (log in as anonymous...)
644    <b>cd /pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-3.0/sgimips/binary/sets
645    mget base.tgz comp.tgz etc.tgz games.tgz man.tgz misc.tgz text.tgz
646    quit
647    sh
648    for a in *.tgz; do echo $a; tar zxfp $a; rm -f $a; done
649    echo 10.0.0.2:/tftpboot / nfs rw 0 0 &gt; /tftpboot/etc/fstab
650    echo rc_configured=YES &gt;&gt; /tftpboot/etc/rc.conf
651    dd if=/dev/zero of=swap bs=1024 count=32768
652    halt</b>
653    </pre></td></tr></table>
654      <li>Download the NetBSD/sgimips GENERIC and INSTALL kernels:<pre>
655            <a href="ftp://ftp.NetBSD.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-3.0/sgimips/binary/kernel/netbsd-GENERIC32_IP3x.gz">ftp://ftp.NetBSD.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-3.0/sgimips/binary/kernel/netbsd-GENERIC32_IP3x.gz</a>
656            <a href="ftp://ftp.NetBSD.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-3.0/sgimips/binary/kernel/netbsd-INSTALL32_IP3x.gz">ftp://ftp.NetBSD.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-3.0/sgimips/binary/kernel/netbsd-INSTALL32_IP3x.gz</a>
657    
658    </pre>
659      <li>Create a configuration file called <tt>config_client</tt>:
660    <table border="0"><tr><td><tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</tt></td><td><pre>
661    <font color="#2020cf">!  Configuration file for running NetBSD/sgimips diskless with
662    !  a NetBSD/pmax machine as the nfs server.</font>
663    
664    <b>    net(
665            add_remote("localhost:12444")   </b>! the server<b>
666            local_port(12445)               </b>! the client<b>
667        )
668    
669        machine(
670            name("client machine")
671            serial_nr(1)
672    
673            type("sgi")
674            subtype("o2")
675    
676            load("netbsd-INSTALL32_IP3x.gz")</b>
677            ! load("netbsd-GENERIC32_IP3x.gz")<b>
678        )
679    </b>
680    </pre></td></tr></table>
681            ... and another configuration file for the server,
682            <tt>config_server</tt>:
683    <table border="0"><tr><td><tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</tt></td><td><pre>
684    <b>    net(
685            local_port(12444)               </b>! the server<b>
686            add_remote("localhost:12445")   </b>! the client<b>
687        )
688    
689        machine(
690            name("nfs server")
691            serial_nr(2)
692    
693            type("dec")
694            subtype("5000/200")
695    
696            disk("nbsd_pmax.img")
697        )
698    </b>
699    </pre></td></tr></table>
700      <li>Boot the "<tt>nfs server</tt>" and the NetBSD/sgimips
701            "<tt>client machine</tt>" as two separate emulator instances:<pre>
702            in one xterm:
703            <b>gxemul @config_server</b>
704    
705            and then, in another xterm:
706            <b>gxemul @config_client</b>
707    
708    </pre>
709      <li>In the NetBSD/sgimips window, choose "<tt>x: Exit Install System</tt>"
710            in the installer's main menu, and then type:<pre>
711            <b>ifconfig mec0 10.0.0.1; route add default 10.0.0.254</b>
712            <b>mount -v 10.0.0.2:/tftpboot /mnt</b>
713            <b>cd /mnt/dev; ./MAKEDEV all; cd /; umount /mnt</b>
714            <b>halt</b>
715    </pre>Then, once the client machine has halted, log in as <tt>root</tt>
716            on the server machine and type <tt><b>reboot</b></tt>.
717      <p>
718      <li>Once everything has been set up correctly, change
719            <tt>netbsd-INSTALL32_IP3x.gz</tt> in <tt>config_client</tt> to
720            <tt>netbsd-GENERIC32_IP3x.gz</tt> (the GENERIC kernel).
721    </ol>
722    
723    <p>You might want to log in as <tt>root</tt> on the server machine, and
724    run <tt>tcpdump -lnvv</tt> or similar, to see that what the client machine
725    actually does on the network.
726    
727    <p>It should now be possible to boot NetBSD/sgimips using the NetBSD/pmax
728    nfs server, using the following commands: (NOTE! Execute these two
729    commands in separate xterms!)<pre>
730            <b>gxemul @config_server</b>
731            <b>gxemul @config_client</b>
732    </pre>
733    
734    <p>When asked for "<tt>root device:</tt>" etc. on the client machine, enter
735    the following values:<pre>
736            root device: <b>mec0</b>
737            dump device:                            <b>(leave blank)</b>
738            file system (default generic):          <b>(leave blank)</b>
739            ..
740            init path (default /sbin/init):         <b>(leave blank)</b>
741            Enter pathname of shell or RETURN for /bin/sh:  <b>(leave blank)</b>
742            Terminal type? [unknown] <b>xterm</b>
743            ..
744            # <b>exit</b>                   (to leave the single-user shell)
745    </pre>
746    
747    <p>Note: Netbooting like this is very slow, so you need a lot of patience.
748    For example, when NetBSD says "<tt>nfs_boot: trying DHCP/BOOTP</tt>",
749    there will be a long pause, even on a very fast host machine. The reason
750    for this is mostly because the emulator doesn't deal with timing issues
751    very well, but also because NetBSD tries IPv6 first, before falling back
752    to IPv4.
753    
754    
755    
756    
757    
758    
759    <p><br>
760    <a name="netbsdcatsinstall"></a>
761    <h3>NetBSD/cats:</h3>
762    
763    It is possible to install and run
764    <a href="http://www.netbsd.org/Ports/cats/">NetBSD/cats</a> in GXemul.
765    
766    <p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
767    <a href="20051007-netbsd-cats-installed.png"><img src="20051007-netbsd-cats-installed_small.png"></a>
768    
769  <p>  <p>
770  See the section on <a href="#openbsdsgiinstall">how to run OpenBSD/sgi</a>  To install NetBSD/cats onto a disk image, follow these instructions:
 for more information.  
771    
772  <p>  <p>
773  TODO...  <ol start="1">
774      <li>Create an empty harddisk image, which will be the root disk
775            that you will install NetBSD/cats onto:<pre>
776            <b>dd if=/dev/zero of=nbsd_cats.img bs=1024 count=1 seek=2000000</b>
777    
778  <pre>  </pre>
779  cd /tftpboot; ftp -i ftp.se.netbsd.org    <li>Download the NetBSD/cats 3.0 ISO image and the generic and install kernels:<pre>
780  ..          <a href="ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/iso/3.0/catscd-3.0.iso">ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/iso/3.0/catscd-3.0.iso</a>
781  cd pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-2.0/sgimips/binary/sets          <a href="ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-3.0/cats/binary/kernel/netbsd.aout-GENERIC.gz">ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-3.0/cats/binary/kernel/netbsd.aout-GENERIC.gz</a>
782  mget *.tgz          <a href="ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-3.0/cats/binary/kernel/netbsd.aout-INSTALL.gz">ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-3.0/cats/binary/kernel/netbsd.aout-INSTALL.gz</a>
783    
784    </pre>
785      <p>
786      <li>Start the installation like this:<pre>
787            <b>gxemul -XEcats -d nbsd_cats.img -d catscd-3.0.iso netbsd.aout-INSTALL.gz</b>
788    
789    </pre>
790            and proceed like you would do if you were installing NetBSD on a real
791            CATS from CDROM.
792    </ol>
793    
794    <p>Alternatively, to install from FTP, you can skip downloading the ISO,
795    and start the install without <tt>-d catscd-3.0.iso</tt>. Suitable network
796    settings are IP 10.0.0.1, gateway/default route 10.0.0.254, netmask
797    255.0.0.0, nameserver 10.0.0.254.
798    
799    <p>If everything worked, NetBSD should now be installed on the disk image.
800    Use the following command line to boot the emulated CATS machine:<pre>
801            <b>gxemul -XEcats -d nbsd_cats.img netbsd.aout-GENERIC.gz</b>
802    
803    </pre>
804    
805    
806    
807    
808    
809    
810    
811    <p><br>
812    <a name="netbsdevbarminstall"></a>
813    <h3>NetBSD/evbarm:</h3>
814    
815    <a href="http://www.netbsd.org/Ports/evbarm/">NetBSD/evbarm</a> can
816    run in GXemul on an emulated IQ80321 evaluation board.
817    
818    <p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
819    <a href="20060218-netbsd-evbarm.png"><img src="20060218-netbsd-evbarm_small.png"></a>
820    
821    <p>It is tricky to install, because there is (as far as I know) no INSTALL
822    kernel. One way to install the NetBSD/evbarm distribution onto a disk
823    image is to install the files using another (emulated) machine.
824    
825    <p>The following instructions will let you install NetBSD/evbarm onto a disk
826    image, from an emulated CATS machine:
827    
828    <p>
829    <ol>
830      <li>Install NetBSD/cats 3.0 according to instructions
831            <a href="#netbsdcatsinstall">further up on this page</a>.
832      <p>
833      <li>Create an empty harddisk image, which will be the disk image
834            that you will install NetBSD onto:<pre>
835            <b>dd if=/dev/zero of=nbsd_iq80321.img bs=1024 count=1 seek=999000</b>
836    
837    </pre>
838      <li>Download an IQ80321 kernel with wdc support, and the 2.1 ISO image:<pre>
839            <a href="ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-2.1/evbarm/binary/kernel/">ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-2.1/evbarm/binary/kernel</a>/<a href="ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-2.1/evbarm/binary/kernel/netbsd-wd0-IQ80321.gz">netbsd-wd0-IQ80321.gz</a>
840            <a href="ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/iso/2.1/evbarmcd.iso">ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/iso/2.1/evbarmcd.iso</a>
841    
842    </pre>
843      <p>
844      <li>The first step is to copy the .tgz files we want onto the CATS
845            machine's harddisk. Start the CATS machine like this:<pre>
846            <b>gxemul -XEcats -d nbsd_cats.img -d evbarmcd.iso netbsd.aout-GENERIC.gz</b>
847    
848    </pre>and execute the following commands as <tt>root</tt>:
849    <p><table border="0"><tr><td><tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</tt></td><td><pre>
850    <b>mount /dev/cd0a /mnt; cd /root; cp /mnt/evbarm/binary/sets/[bcegmt]* .
851    sync; halt</b>
852    </pre></td></tr></table>
853      <p>
854      <li>Now let's extract the files onto the IQ80321's disk image. Start the
855            CATS machine again, with the following command line:<pre>
856            <b>gxemul -XEcats -d nbsd_cats.img -d nbsd_iq80321.img netbsd.aout-GENERIC.gz</b>
857    
858    </pre>and execute the following commands as <tt>root</tt>:
859    <p><table border="0"><tr><td><tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</tt></td><td><pre>
860    <b>disklabel -I -i wd1</b>
861        (enter suitable commands, e.g. <i>a, 4.2BSD, 1c, 750M, b,
862         swap, a, 200M, P, W, y, Q</i>)
863    <b>newfs /dev/wd1a; mount /dev/wd1a /mnt; cd /mnt; sh
864    for a in /root/[bcegmt]*.tgz; do echo $a; tar zxfp $a; done
865  exit  exit
866  sh  cd dev; sh ./MAKEDEV all; cd ../etc
867  for a in etc.tgz base.tgz comp.tgz; do tar zxvfp $a; done  echo rc_configured=YES &gt;&gt; rc.conf
868    echo "/dev/wd0a / ffs rw 1 1" &gt; fstab
869    echo "/dev/wd0b none swap sw 0 0" &gt;&gt; fstab
870    cd /; umount /mnt; sync; halt</b>
871    </pre></td></tr></table>
872    </ol>
873    
874    <p>You should now be able to boot NetBSD/evbarm using this command:<pre>
875            <b>gxemul -xEiq80321 -d nbsd_iq80321.img netbsd-wd0-IQ80321.gz</b>
876  </pre>  </pre>
877    
 -->  
878    
879    
880    
881    
882    
883    <p><br>
884    <a name="netbsdprepinstall"></a>
885    <h3>NetBSD/prep:</h3>
886    
887    It is possible to install and run
888    <a href="http://www.netbsd.org/Ports/prep/">NetBSD/prep</a> 2.1 in GXemul
889    on an emulated IBM 6050 (PowerPC) machine. (NetBSD 3.0 uses the wdc
890    controller in a way which isn't implemented in GXemul yet.)
891    
892    <p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
893    <a href="20051123-netbsd-prep.png"><img src="20051123-netbsd-prep_small.png"></a>
894    
895    <p>To install NetBSD/prep onto a disk image, follow these instructions:
896    
897    <p>
898    <ol start="1">
899      <li>Create an empty harddisk image, which will be the root disk
900            that you will install NetBSD/prep onto:<pre>
901        <b>dd if=/dev/zero of=nbsd_prep.img bs=1024 count=1 seek=1000000</b>
902    
903    </pre>
904      <li>Download the NetBSD/prep 2.1 ISO image and the generic kernel:<pre>
905        <a href="ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/iso/2.1/prepcd.iso">ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/iso/2.1/prepcd.iso</a>
906        <a href="ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-2.1/prep/binary/kernel/netbsd-GENERIC.gz">ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-2.1/prep/binary/kernel/netbsd-GENERIC.gz</a>
907    
908    </pre>
909      <p>
910      <li>Start the installation like this:<pre>
911        <b>gxemul -x -e ibm6050 -d nbsd_prep.img -d rdb:prepcd.iso -j prep/binary/kernel/netbsd-INSTALL.gz</b>
912    
913    </pre>
914      <p>
915      <li>Installation is a bit unsmooth, possibly due to bugs in GXemul,
916            possibly due to bugs in NetBSD itself; others have been having
917            problems on real hardware: <a href="http://mail-index.NetBSD.org/port-prep/2005/11/25/0004.html">http://mail-index.NetBSD.org/port-prep/2005/11/25/0004.html</a>.
918            Creating an MBR slice and a disklabel with sysinst bugs out, so
919            some things have to be done manually:<p>
920            At "<tt>(I)nstall, (S)hell, or (H)alt</tt>", choose
921                    <tt><b><u>s</u></b></tt>.
922            <br><tt># <b><u>fdisk -u wd0</u></b></tt>
923            <br><tt>Do you want to change our idea of what BIOS thinks? [n]</tt>
924                    (just press <b>ENTER</b>)
925            <br><tt>Which partition do you want to change?: [none] <b><u>0</u></b></tt>
926            <br><tt>sysid: ... </tt> (just press <B>ENTER</b>)
927            <br><tt>start: ... <b><u>1cyl</u></b></tt>
928            <br><tt>size: ... </tt> (just press <B>ENTER</b>)
929            <br><tt>Which partition do you want to change?: [none]</tt> (press <b>ENTER</b>)
930            <br><tt>Should we write new partition table? [n] <b><u>y</u></b></tt>
931            <br><tt># <b><u>disklabel -I -i wd0</u></b></tt>
932            <br><tt>partition&gt; <b><u>a</u></b></tt>
933            <br><tt>Filesystem type [?] [unused]: <b><u>4.2BSD</u></b></tt>
934            <br><tt>Start offset ('x' to start after partition 'x') [0c, 0s, 0M]: <b><u>1c</u></b></tt>
935            <br><tt>Partition size ('$' for all remaining) [0c, 0s, 0M]: <b><u>900M</u></b></tt>
936            <br><tt>partition&gt; <b><u>b</u></b></tt>
937            <br><tt>Filesystem type [?] [unused]: <b><u>swap</u></b></tt>
938            <br><tt>Start offset ('x' to start after partition 'x') [0c, 0s, 0M]: <b><u>a</u></b></tt>
939            <br><tt>Partition size ('$' for all remaining) [0c, 0s, 0M]: <b><u>$</u></b></tt>
940            <br><tt>partition&gt; <b><u>W</u></b></tt>
941            <br><tt>Label disk [n]? <b><u>y</u></b></tt>
942            <br><tt>partition&gt; <b><u>Q</u></b></tt>
943            <br><tt># <b><u>newfs wd0a</u></b></tt>
944            <br><tt># <b><u>sysinst</u></b></tt>
945            <br>Choose to install onto <b>wd0</b>. Choose
946                    "<tt>a: Edit the MBR partition table</tt>"
947                    when presented with that option.
948            <br>Choose the 'a' partition/slice,
949                    set the 'e' ("active") and 'f' ("install") fields to <b>Yes</b>,
950                    and then choose "<tt>x: Partition table OK</tt>".
951            <br>Choose "<tt>b: Use existing partition sizes</tt>" in the next
952                    menu.
953            <br>Select partition 'a' and press ENTER. Set field 'k' (mount point)
954                    to '<tt><b>/</b></tt>'.
955            <br>Get out of the partitioner by selecting
956                    "<tt>x: Partition sizes ok</tt>" twice.
957            <br>At "<tt>Write outside MBR partition? [n]:</tt>", just press
958                    <b>ENTER</b>.
959            <br>Install from CD-ROM, device <b>wd1c</b>.
960    </ol>
961    
962    <p>If everything worked, NetBSD should now be installed on the disk image.
963    Use the following command line to boot the emulated machine:<pre>
964            <b>gxemul -x -e ibm6050 -d nbsd_prep.img netbsd-GENERIC.gz</b>
965    
966    </pre>
967    
968    <p>When asked which the root device is, type <tt><b>wd0</b></tt> and
969    just press ENTER to select the default values for dump device, file
970    system type, and init path.
971    
972    
973    
974    
975    
976    
977  <p><br>  <p><br>
978  <a name="openbsdinstall"></a>  <a name="openbsdpmaxinstall"></a>
979  <h3>Installing OpenBSD/pmax in GXemul:</h3>  <h3>OpenBSD/pmax:</h3>
980    
981  Installing OpenBSD/pmax is a bit harder than installing NetBSD/pmax.  Installing <a href="http://www.openbsd.org/pmax.html">OpenBSD/pmax</a> is
982  You should first read the section above on how to install NetBSD/pmax,  a bit harder than installing NetBSD/pmax. You should first read the <a
983    href="#netbsdpmaxinstall">section above</a> on how to install NetBSD/pmax,
984  before continuing here. If you have never installed OpenBSD on any  before continuing here. If you have never installed OpenBSD on any
985  architecture, then you need a great deal of patience to do this.  architecture, then you need a great deal of patience to do this. If, on
986  If, on the other hand you are used to installing OpenBSD, then  the other hand you are used to installing OpenBSD, then this should be no
987  this should be no problem for you.  problem for you.
988    
989  <p>  <p>
990  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
# Line 542  common sense and imagination to modify t Line 1005  common sense and imagination to modify t
1005  <ol>  <ol>
1006    <li>Create an empty harddisk image, which will be the root disk    <li>Create an empty harddisk image, which will be the root disk
1007          that OpenBSD installs itself onto:<pre>          that OpenBSD installs itself onto:<pre>
1008          $ <b>dd if=/dev/zero of=obsd_pmax.img bs=1 count=512 seek=900000000</b>          <b>dd if=/dev/zero of=obsd_pmax.img bs=1 count=512 seek=900000000</b>
1009    
1010  </pre>  </pre>
1011    <li>Download the entire pmax directory from the ftp server: (approx. 99 MB)<pre>    <li>Download the entire pmax directory from the ftp server: (approx. 99 MB)<pre>
1012          $ <b>wget -r <a href="ftp://ftp.se.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/2.8/pmax/">ftp://ftp.se.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/2.8/pmax/</a></b>          <b>wget -r <a href="ftp://ftp.se.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/2.8/pmax/">ftp://ftp.se.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/2.8/pmax/</a></b>
1013    
1014  </pre>  </pre>
1015    
1016    <li>Execute the following commands:<pre>    <li>Execute the following commands:
1017          $ <b>mv ftp.se.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/2.8/pmax/simpleroot28.fs.gz .</b>  <p><table border="0"><tr><td><tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</tt></td><td><pre>
1018          $ <b>gunzip simpleroot28.fs.gz</b>  <b>mv ftp.se.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/2.8/pmax/simpleroot28.fs.gz .
1019          $ <b>chmod +w simpleroot28.fs</b>               &lt;--- make sure  gunzip simpleroot28.fs.gz
1020    chmod +w simpleroot28.fs</b>            &lt;--- make sure
1021  </pre>  </pre></td></tr></table>
1022    <li>You now need to make an ISO image of the entire directory you downloaded.    <li>You now need to make an ISO image of the entire directory you downloaded.
1023          I recommend using <tt>mkisofs</tt> for that purpose. If you don't          (I recommend using <tt>mkisofs</tt> for that purpose. If you don't
1024          already have <tt>mkisofs</tt> installed on your system, you need          already have <tt>mkisofs</tt> installed on your system, you need
1025          to install it in order to do this.<pre>          to install it in order to do this.)<pre>
1026          $ <b>mkisofs -o openbsd_pmax_2.8.iso ftp.se.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/2.8/pmax</b>          <b>mkisofs -o openbsd_pmax_2.8.iso ftp.se.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/2.8/pmax</b>
1027            <b>rm -rf ftp.se.openbsd.org</b>      <i>(this directory is not needed anymore)</i>
1028    
1029  </pre>  </pre>
1030    <li>Start the emulator with all three (!) disk images:<pre>    <li>Start the emulator with all three (!) disk images:<pre>
1031          $ <b>gxemul -E dec -e 3max -b -d obsd_pmax.img -d b:simpleroot28.fs -j bsd -d c:openbsd_pmax_2.8.iso</b>          <b>gxemul -e 3max -d obsd_pmax.img -d b:simpleroot28.fs -j bsd -d c:openbsd_pmax_2.8.iso</b>
1032    
1033  </pre>  </pre>
1034          (If you add <tt><b>-X</b></tt>, you will run with the graphical          (If you add <tt>-X</tt>, you will run with the graphical
1035          framebuffer. This is <i>REALLY</i> slow because the console has to          framebuffer. This is <i>REALLY</i> slow because the console has to
1036          scroll a lot during the install. I don't recommend it.)          scroll a lot during the install. I don't recommend it.)
1037    <p>    <p>
# Line 581  common sense and imagination to modify t Line 1045  common sense and imagination to modify t
1045            <li>When asked for the "<b>root device?</b>", enter <b>rz1</b>.            <li>When asked for the "<b>root device?</b>", enter <b>rz1</b>.
1046            <li>At "<b>Enter pathname of shell or RETURN for sh:</b>", press enter.            <li>At "<b>Enter pathname of shell or RETURN for sh:</b>", press enter.
1047            <li>At the # prompt, do the following:<pre>            <li>At the # prompt, do the following:<pre>
1048          $ <b>fsck /dev/rz1a</b>        (and mark the filesystem as clean)          <b>fsck /dev/rz1a</b>        (and mark the filesystem as clean)
1049          $ <b>mount /dev/rz1a /</b>          <b>mount /dev/rz1a /</b>
1050          $ <b>mount -t kernfs kern kern</b>          <b>mount -t kernfs kern kern</b>
1051          $ <b>./install</b>          <b>./install</b>
1052    
1053  </pre>  </pre>
1054                  and proceed with the install. Good luck. :-)                  and proceed with the install. Good luck. :-)
# Line 595  common sense and imagination to modify t Line 1059  common sense and imagination to modify t
1059                  the directory containing the install sets.                  the directory containing the install sets.
1060          </ul>          </ul>
1061    <p>    <p>
1062    <li>    <li>For some unknown reason, the install script does not set the root
1063  For some unknown reason, the install script does not set the root          password! The first time you boot up OpenBSD after the install, you
1064  password! The first time you boot up OpenBSD after the install, you          need to go into single user mode and run <b>passwd root</b> to set
1065  need to go into single user mode and run <b>passwd root</b> to set          the root password, or you will not be able to log in at all!<pre>
1066  the root password, or you will not be able to log in at all!          <b>gxemul -e 3max -d obsd_pmax.img -d 2c:openbsd_pmax_2.8.iso -j bsd -o '-s'</b>
 <pre>  
         $ <b>gxemul -E dec -e 3max -b -d obsd_pmax.img -d 2c:openbsd_pmax_2.8.iso -j bsd -o '-s'</b>  
1067  </pre>  </pre>
1068  While you are at it, you might want to extract the X11 install sets  While you are at it, you might want to extract the X11 install sets
1069  as well, as the installer seems to ignore them too. (Perhaps due to a bug  as well, as the installer seems to ignore them too. (Perhaps due to a bug
1070  in the installer, perhaps because of the way I used mkisofs.)  in the installer, perhaps because of the way I used mkisofs.)
1071  <p>  <p>
1072  Execute the following commands in the emulator:  Execute the following commands in the emulator:
1073  <pre>  <p><table border="0"><tr><td><tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</tt></td><td><pre>
1074          # <b>fsck /dev/rz0a</b>  <b>fsck /dev/rz0a
1075          # <b>mount /</b>  mount /
1076          # <b>passwd root</b>  passwd root
1077    
1078          # <b>cd /; mount -t cd9660 /dev/rz2c /mnt; sh</b>  cd /; mount -t cd9660 /dev/rz2c /mnt; sh
1079          # <b>for a in /mnt/[xX]*; do tar zxvf $a; done</b>  for a in /mnt/[xX]*; do tar zxvf $a; done
1080          # <b>ln -s /usr/X11R6/bin/Xcfbpmax /usr/X11R6/bin/X</b>  ln -s /usr/X11R6/bin/Xcfbpmax /usr/X11R6/bin/X
1081          # <b>ln -s /dev/fb0 /dev/mouse</b>  ln -s /dev/fb0 /dev/mouse
1082          # <b>echo /usr/X11R6/lib >> /etc/ld.so.conf</b>  echo /usr/X11R6/lib &gt;&gt; /etc/ld.so.conf
1083          # <b>ldconfig</b>  ldconfig
1084    
1085          # <b>sync</b>  sync
1086          # <b>halt</b>  halt</b>
1087  </pre>  </pre></td></tr></table>
1088  </ol>  </ol>
1089    
1090  <p>  <p>
# Line 635  root password, and so on. Line 1097  root password, and so on.
1097  Once you have completed the installation procedure, the following command  Once you have completed the installation procedure, the following command
1098  will let you boot from the new rootdisk image:  will let you boot from the new rootdisk image:
1099  <pre>  <pre>
1100          $ <b>gxemul -E dec -e 3max -b -X -M64 -o '-aN' -d obsd_pmax.img -j bsd</b>          <b>gxemul -e 3max -X -o '-aN' -d obsd_pmax.img -j bsd</b>
1101  </pre>  </pre>
1102    
1103  <p>  <p>
# Line 653  enter <b><tt>rcons</tt></b> if you are u Line 1115  enter <b><tt>rcons</tt></b> if you are u
1115    
1116    
1117    
 <p><br>  
 <a name="openbsdarcinstall"></a>  
 <h3>Installing OpenBSD/arc in GXemul:</h3>  
1118    
 It is possible to run OpenBSD/arc on an emulated Acer PICA-61 in the  
 emulator.  
1119    
 <p>  
 &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;  
 <a href="20041024-openbsd-arc-installed.gif"><img src="20041024-openbsd-arc-installed_small.gif"></a>  
1120    
1121  <p>  <p><br>
1122  (You should be aware of the fact that OpenBSD for the ARC platform died at  <a name="openbsdcatsinstall"></a>
1123  release 2.3, so this will not give you an up-to-date OpenBSD system.  <h3>OpenBSD/cats:</h3>
 See  
 <a href="http://www.openbsd.org/arc.html">http://www.openbsd.org/arc.html</a>  
 for more information.)  
1124    
1125  <p>  It is possible to install and run
1126  To install OpenBSD/arc onto an emulated harddisk image, follow these  <a href="http://www.openbsd.org/cats.html">OpenBSD/cats</a>
1127  instructions:  in GXemul.
1128    
1129    <p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
1130    <a href="20051007-openbsd-cats-installed.png"><img src="20051007-openbsd-cats-installed_small.png"></a>
1131    
1132    <p>To install OpenBSD/cats onto an emulated harddisk image,
1133    follow these instructions:
1134    
1135  <p>  <p>
1136  <ol>  <ol>
1137    <li>Create an empty harddisk image, which will be the root disk    <li>Create an empty harddisk image, which will be the root disk
1138          that OpenBSD installs itself onto:<pre>          that OpenBSD installs itself onto:<pre>
1139          $ <b>dd if=/dev/zero of=obsd_arc.img bs=1024 count=1 seek=700000</b>          <b>dd if=/dev/zero of=obsd_cats.img bs=1024 count=1 seek=1900000</b>
1140    
1141  </pre>  </pre>
1142    <li>Download the entire arc directory from the ftp server: (approx. 75 MB)<pre>    <li>Download the entire cats directory from the ftp server:<pre>
1143          $ <b>wget -np -l 0 -r <a href="ftp://ftp.se.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/2.3/arc/">ftp://ftp.se.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/2.3/arc/</a></b>          <b>wget -np -l 0 -r <a href="ftp://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/3.9/cats/">ftp://ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/3.9/cats/</a></b>
1144            <b>cp ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/3.9/cats/bsd .</b>
1145            <b>cp ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/3.9/cats/bsd.rd .</b>
1146    
1147  </pre>  </pre>
1148            (Replace ftp.openbsd.org with a server closer to you, for
1149            increased download speed.)
1150      <p>
1151    <li>You now need to make an ISO image of the entire directory you downloaded.    <li>You now need to make an ISO image of the entire directory you downloaded.
1152          I recommend using <tt>mkisofs</tt> for that purpose. If you don't          (I recommend using <tt>mkisofs</tt> for that purpose. If you don't
1153          already have <tt>mkisofs</tt> installed on your system, you need          already have <tt>mkisofs</tt> installed on your system, you need
1154          to install it in order to do this.<pre>          to install it in order to do this.)<pre>
1155          $ <b>mkisofs -o openbsd_arc_2.3.iso ftp.se.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/</b>          <b>mkisofs -allow-lowercase -o openbsd_cats_3.9.iso ftp.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/</b>
1156            <b>rm -rf ftp.openbsd.org</b>      <i>(this directory is not needed anymore)</i>
1157    
1158  </pre>  </pre>
1159    <li>Start the emulator using this command line:<pre>    <li>Start the emulator using this command line:<pre>
1160          $ <b>gxemul -X -b -E arc -e pica -d obsd_arc.img -d b:openbsd_arc_2.3.iso -j 2.3/arc/bsd.rd</b>          <b>gxemul -XEcats -d obsd_cats.img -d openbsd_cats_3.9.iso bsd.rd</b>
1161    
1162  </pre>  </pre>
1163          and proceed like you would do if you were installing OpenBSD          and proceed like you would do if you were installing OpenBSD
1164          on a real Acer PICA-61. (Answer 'no' when asked if you want to          on a real CATS. (Install onto <tt>wd0</tt>, don't configure the
1165          configure networking, and then install from CD-ROM.)          network, install from CD.)
1166  </ol>  </ol>
1167    
1168  <p>  <p>(Although it <i>is</i> possible to configure the network, IPv4 address
1169  Once the install has finished, the following command should let you  10.0.0.1, netmask 255.0.0.0, gateway/default route 10.0.0.254, and
1170  boot from the harddisk image:  nameserver 10.0.0.254, the userland NAT-like networking layer is not
1171  <p>  stable enough yet to support a full install via ftp.)
1172  <pre>  
1173          $ <b>gxemul -X -b -E arc -e pica -d obsd_arc.img ftp.se.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/2.3/arc/bsd</b>  <p><b>NOTE:</b> Make sure that you <tt>sync</tt> and <tt>reboot</tt>
1174    correctly once the installation is finished, or the <tt>/dev</tt> nodes
1175  </pre>  may not have been written correctly to disk.
   
   
   
   
   
 <!--  
1176    
1177  <p><br>  <p>Once the install has finished, the following command should let you
1178  <a name="openbsdsgiinstall"></a>  boot from the harddisk image:
 <h3>Running OpenBSD/sgi in GXemul:</h3>  
   
 <a href="http://www.openbsd.org/sgi.html">OpenBSD/sgi</a>  
 can theoretically run in GXemul on an emulated O2 (SGI-IP32) with root on nfs.  
   
 <p>  
 <font color="#ff0000">NOTE: I haven't succeeded with this yet.</font>  
   
 <p>  
 GXemul does not yet emulate the AHC PCI SCSI controller in the O2, so  
 another emulated machine must be used as the nfs root server, and the  
 emulated O2 machine must boot as a  
 <a href="http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=diskless&manpath=OpenBSD+Current&format=html">diskless</a>  
 client. Performing this setup is very time consuming, but necessary.  
   
 <p>  
 <ol>  
   <li><a href="#netbsdinstall">Install NetBSD/pmax 2.0 from CDROM</a>  
         (or install some other similar OS) inside the emulator. This will  
         be the "nfs server" machine. Create a 600 MB <tt>/tftpboot</tt>  
         partition during the installation.  
   <p>  
   <li>Configure the nfs server machine to act as an nfs server.<pre>  
         # <b>echo hostname=server &gt;&gt; /etc/rc.conf</b>  
         # <b>echo ifconfig_le0=\"inet 10.0.0.2\" &gt;&gt; /etc/rc.conf</b>  
         # <b>echo nameserver 10.0.0.254 &gt;&gt; /etc/rc.conf</b>  
         # <b>echo 10.0.0.254 &gt; /etc/mygate</b>  
         # <b>echo /tftpboot -maproot=root 10.0.0.1 &gt; /etc/exports</b>  
         # <b>echo rpcbind=YES &gt;&gt; /etc/rc.conf</b>  
         # <b>echo nfs_server=YES &gt;&gt; /etc/rc.conf</b>  
         # <b>echo mountd=YES &gt;&gt; /etc/rc.conf</b>  
         # <b>echo bootparamd=YES &gt;&gt; /etc/rc.conf</b>  
         # <b>printf "client root=10.0.0.2:/tftpboot \\\n swap=10.0.0.2:/tftpboot/swap\n" &gt; /etc/bootparams</b>  
         # <b>echo 10.0.0.1 client &gt; /etc/hosts</b>  
   
         Reboot. Then download the OpenBSD/sgi distribution:  (NOTE: This  
         takes quite some time, even if you have a fast network connection.)  
1179    
1180          # <b>cd /tftpboot; ftp -i ftp.se.openbsd.org</b>  <p><pre>
1181          ...          <b>gxemul -XEcats -d obsd_cats.img bsd</b>
         <b>cd pub/OpenBSD/3.7/sgi</b>  
         <b>mget *</b>  
   
         # <b>sh</b>  
         # <b>for a in base* etc* misc*; do tar vzxfp $a; done</b>  
         # <b>dd if=/dev/zero of=swap bs=1024 count=16384</b>  
1182    
1183  </pre>  </pre>
   <p>  
   <li>Create a configuration file along these lines:<pre>  
         <font color="#2020cf">!!gxemul  
         !  
         !  Configuration file for running OpenBSD/sgi diskless with  
         !  a NetBSD/pmax machine as the nfs server.  
         !  
         !  Change the filenames to suit your setup.</font>  
   
         <b>emul(  
             net()  
   
             machine(  
                 name("client machine")  
                 type("sgi")  
                 subtype("ip32")  
                 bintrans(yes)  
                 load("openbsd-sgi-20050202-bsd")  
                 start_paused(yes)  
             )  
   
             machine(  
                 name("nfs server")  
                 type("dec")  
                 subtype("5000/200")  
                 bintrans(yes)  
                 disk("nbsd_pmax.img")  
             )  
         )</b>  
   
 </pre>  
   <li>Boot the nfs server and the OpenBSD/sgi client machine like this:<pre>  
         $ <b>gxemul @myconf</b>  
   
 </pre>  
         You might want to log in as root on the server machine, and  
         run <b>tcpdump -lnvv</b> or similar, to see that what the client  
         machine actually does on the network.  
         <p>  
         The OpenBSD box ("client machine") will be paused, so when you  
         are ready to unpause it, press CTRL-C in the main GXemul  
         window and use the <b>focus</b> and <b>pause</b> commands to  
         unpause the main CPU in that machine, and then <b>continue</b>  
         to resume execution.  
         <p>  
         When asked for "root device :", enter <b>mec0</b>.  
 </ol>  
1184    
 <p>  
 TODO...  
1185    
 -->  
1186    
1187    
1188    
# Line 827  TODO... Line 1190  TODO...
1190    
1191  <p><br>  <p><br>
1192  <a name="ultrixinstall"></a>  <a name="ultrixinstall"></a>
1193  <h3>Installing Ultrix/RISC in GXemul:</h3>  <h3>Ultrix/RISC:</h3>
1194    
1195  Ultrix 4.x can run in GXemul on an emulated DECstation 5000/200.  Ultrix 4.x can run in GXemul on an emulated DECstation 5000/200.
1196    (Ultrix was the native OS for these machines, but NetBSD/pmax is
1197    also usable.)
1198    
1199  <p>  <p>
1200  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
1201  <a href="20040504-ultrix45-boot1.png"><img src="20040504-ultrix45-boot1_small.gif"></a>  <a href="20040504-ultrix45-boot1.png"><img src="20040504-ultrix45-boot1_small.png"></a>
1202  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
1203  <a href="ultrix4.5-20040706.png"><img src="ultrix4.5-20040706_small.gif"></a>  <a href="ultrix4.5-20040706.png"><img src="ultrix4.5-20040706_small.png"></a>
1204    
1205  <p>  <p>
1206  The following instructions should let you install Ultrix onto a disk image:  The following instructions should let you install Ultrix onto a disk image:
# Line 843  The following instructions should let yo Line 1208  The following instructions should let yo
1208  <ol>  <ol>
1209    <li>Create an empty harddisk image, which will be the root disk    <li>Create an empty harddisk image, which will be the root disk
1210          that Ultrix installs itself onto:<pre>          that Ultrix installs itself onto:<pre>
1211          $ <b>dd if=/dev/zero of=rootdisk.img bs=1024 count=1 seek=800000</b>          <b>dd if=/dev/zero of=rootdisk.img bs=1024 count=1 seek=800000</b>
1212    
1213  </pre>  </pre>
1214    <li>Place your Ultrix installation media in your CDROM drive.    <li>Place your Ultrix installation media in your CDROM drive.
1215          (On FreeBSD and similar systems, it is called <tt>/dev/cd0c</tt>.          (On FreeBSD and similar systems, it is called <tt>/dev/cd0c</tt>.
1216          Replace that with the name of your CDROM drive, or the name of a          Replace that with the name of your CDROM drive, or the name of a
1217          .iso image file.) Then, start the emulator like this:<pre>          .iso image file.) Then, start the emulator like this:<pre>
1218          $ <b>gxemul -X -b -M64 -E dec -e 3max -d rootdisk.img -d bc:/dev/cd0c -j vmunix</b>          <b>gxemul -X -e 3max -d rootdisk.img -d bc:/dev/cd0c -j vmunix</b>
1219    
1220  </pre>  </pre>
1221    <li>Once the first stage of the installation is done (restoring the root    <li>Once the first stage of the installation is done (restoring the root
# Line 858  The following instructions should let yo Line 1223  The following instructions should let yo
1223          new rootdisk, to continue the installation process.          new rootdisk, to continue the installation process.
1224          This is done by removing the bootflag ('<tt>b</tt>') from the second          This is done by removing the bootflag ('<tt>b</tt>') from the second
1225          diskimage argument:<pre>          diskimage argument:<pre>
1226          $ <b>gxemul -X -b -M64 -E dec -e 3max -d rootdisk.img -d c:/dev/cd0c -j vmunix</b>          <b>gxemul -X -e 3max -d rootdisk.img -d c:/dev/cd0c -j vmunix</b>
1227    
1228  </pre>  </pre>
1229  </ol>  </ol>
# Line 866  The following instructions should let yo Line 1231  The following instructions should let yo
1231  <p>  <p>
1232  When the installation is completed, the following command should start    When the installation is completed, the following command should start  
1233  Ultrix from the harddisk image:<pre>  Ultrix from the harddisk image:<pre>
1234          $ <b>gxemul -X -b -M64 -E dec -e 3max -j vmunix -d rootdisk.img</b>          <b>gxemul -X -e 3max -j vmunix -d rootdisk.img</b>
1235  </pre>  </pre>
1236    
1237  <p>  <p>If you have a very fast host machine, you might experience a weird
1238  Ultrix mostly seems to work with dynamic binary translation (enabled by  timer related bug, which makes it impossible to logon to the system. It is
1239  the <b><tt>-b</tt></b> command line option). If you have a very fast  triggered when the emulation goes faster than any real DECstation machine
1240  host machine, and use bintrans, you might experience a weird timer related  was capable of running. A temporary workaround is to add
1241  bug, which makes it impossible to logon to the system. It is triggered  <b><tt>-I33000000</tt></b> to fix the emulated clock speed to 33 million
1242  when the emulation goes faster than any real DECstation machine was  instructions per emulated second. (When using <tt><b>-CR4400</b></tt>,
1243  capable of running. A temporary workaround is to add <b><tt>-I33000000</tt></b>  <b><tt>-I16000000</tt></b> should be used instead.)
 to fix the emulated clock speed to 33 million instructions per emulated  
 second. (When using <tt><b>-CR4400</b></tt>, <b><tt>-I16000000</tt></b>  
 should be used instead.)  
1244    
1245  <p>  <p>
1246  You can experiment with adding <b><tt>-Z2</tt></b> (for emulating a  You can experiment with adding <b><tt>-Z2</tt></b> (for emulating a
# Line 889  There is also a <b><tt>-z</tt></b> optio Line 1251  There is also a <b><tt>-z</tt></b> optio
1251  displays to use. The following example starts Ultrix on an emulated  displays to use. The following example starts Ultrix on an emulated
1252  tripple-headed workstation, on three different displays (<tt>remote1:0.0</tt>,  tripple-headed workstation, on three different displays (<tt>remote1:0.0</tt>,
1253  <tt>localhost:0.0</tt>, and <tt>remote2:0.0</tt>), using no scaledown:<pre>  <tt>localhost:0.0</tt>, and <tt>remote2:0.0</tt>), using no scaledown:<pre>
1254          $ <b>gxemul -M64 -bN -E dec -e 3max -jgenvmunix -d rootdisk.img \          <b>gxemul -N -e 3max -jgenvmunix -d rootdisk.img \
1255              -XZ3 -z remote1:0.0 -z localhost:0.0 -z remote2:0.0</b>              -XZ3 -z remote1:0.0 -z localhost:0.0 -z remote2:0.0</b>
1256  </pre>  </pre>
1257    
# Line 930  that file as a disk image file in the em Line 1292  that file as a disk image file in the em
1292    
1293  <p><br>  <p><br>
1294  <a name="sprite"></a>  <a name="sprite"></a>
1295  <h3>Running Sprite for DECstation in GXemul:</h3>  <h3>Sprite for DECstation:</h3>
1296    
1297  Sprite was a research operating system at the University of Berkeley.  Sprite was a research operating system at the University of Berkeley.
1298  The Unix Heritage Society (TUHS, <a href="http://www.tuhs.org">www.tuhs.org</a>)  The Unix Heritage Society (TUHS, <a href="http://www.tuhs.org">www.tuhs.org</a>)
# Line 950  The following instructions should let yo Line 1312  The following instructions should let yo
1312    
1313  <p>  <p>
1314  <ol>  <ol>
1315    <li>Download the Sprite harddisk image using ftp or http:<pre>    <li>Download the Sprite harddisk image:<pre>
1316          <a href="http://www.es.embnet.org/Services/ftp/misc/TUHS/other_os/Sprite/">http://www.es.embnet.org/Services/ftp/misc/TUHS/other_os/Sprite</a>/<a href="http://www.es.embnet.org/Services/ftp/misc/TUHS/other_os/Sprite/ds5000.bt">ds5000.bt</a>          <a href="ftp://ftp.es.embnet.org/pub/misc/TUHS/other_os/Sprite/ds5000.bt">ftp://ftp.es.embnet.org/pub/misc/TUHS/other_os/Sprite/ds5000.bt</a>
         or <a href="ftp://ftp.es.embnet.org/pub/misc/TUHS/other_os/Sprite/ds5000.bt">ftp://ftp.es.embnet.org/pub/misc/TUHS/other_os/Sprite/ds5000.bt</a>  
1317          83973120 bytes, MD5 = ec84eeeb20fe77b758370d5e312e4a5e          83973120 bytes, MD5 = ec84eeeb20fe77b758370d5e312e4a5e
1318    
1319  </pre>  </pre>
1320    <li>Start the emulator with the following command line:<pre>    <li>Start the emulator with the following command line:<pre>
1321          $ <b>gxemul -X -b -E dec -e 3max -M128 -d ds5000.bt -j vmsprite -o ''</b>          <b>gxemul -X -e 3max -M128 -d ds5000.bt -j vmsprite -o ''</b>
1322    
1323  </pre>  </pre>
1324  </ol>  </ol>
# Line 969  values, then you should use the followin Line 1330  values, then you should use the followin
1330  <p>  <p>
1331    
1332  <pre>  <pre>
1333      Your machine's Ethernet address:    10:20:30:40:50:60      Your machine's Ethernet address:    10:20:30:00:00:10
1334      Your machine's IP:                  10.0.0.1      Your machine's IP:                  10.0.0.1
1335      Subnet mask:                        0xff000000      Subnet mask:                        0xff000000
1336      Gateway's Ethernet address:         60:50:40:30:20:10      Gateway's Ethernet address:         60:50:40:30:20:10
# Line 977  values, then you should use the followin Line 1338  values, then you should use the followin
1338  </pre>  </pre>
1339    
1340  <p>  <p>
1341  Unfortunately, at the end of <a href="http://www.es.embnet.org/Services/ftp/misc/TUHS/other_os/Sprite/boot.txt">  Unfortunately, at the end of <a href="ftp://ftp.es.embnet.org/pub/misc/TUHS/other_os/Sprite/boot.txt">ftp://ftp.es.embnet.org/pub/misc/TUHS/other_os/Sprite/boot.txt</a>,
1342  http://www.es.embnet.org/Services/ftp/misc/TUHS/other_os/Sprite/boot.txt</a>, the  the following sad statement can be found:
 following sad statement can be found:  
1343  <pre>  <pre>
1344      The bootable Sprite image is meant to be a demonstration of Sprite, not      The bootable Sprite image is meant to be a demonstration of Sprite, not
1345      a robust Sprite system.  There are several missing things, such as      a robust Sprite system.  There are several missing things, such as
1346      floating point and network support.      floating point and network support.
1347  </pre>  </pre>
1348    
1349  <p>  <p>Once you are logged in as root, running <b><tt>xinit</tt></b> will
1350  Once you are logged in as root, running <b>xinit</b> will start the X11  start the X11 environment.
1351  environment.  
1352    
1353    
1354    
# Line 996  environment. Line 1356  environment.
1356    
1357  <p><br>  <p><br>
1358  <a name="declinux"></a>  <a name="declinux"></a>
1359  <h3>Installing Debian GNU/Linux for DECstation in GXemul:</h3>  <h3>Debian GNU/Linux for DECstation:</h3>
1360    
1361  <font color="#ef0000">NOTE: This is experimental, and <i>extremely</i>  It is possible to run Debian GNU/Linux for DECstation in the emulator,
1362  unstable. During my tests, even pressing the wrong key during the install  on an emulated 5000/200 ("3max"). Although the Debian project has released
1363  (for example the wrong cursor key) can cause a kernel Oops.  install ramdisk kernels for this purpose, these do not always work:
1364  I <i>think</i> this has to do with interrupts from the serial controller.  <ul>
1365  Hopefully using the <tt><b>-U</b></tt> command line option will reduce the    <li>Serial console output doesn't work too well in GXemul. Linux
1366  risk for such crashes. (I haven't had time to come up with a clean          oopses randomly, which may be due to bugs in GXemul, but may
1367  solution to this yet; it feels like a buffer overflow in Linux' serial          also be due to bugs in the serial controller code in Linux.
1368  driver for the 5000/200, but it is also likely that it is a bug in GXemul.)          (The speed at which serial interrupts are generated can be
1369  </font>          lowered with the <tt>-U</tt> command line option, but it only
1370            reduces the risk, it doesn't take away the oopses completely.)
1371      <li>Old install kernels supported the graphical framebuffer on the
1372            3max, but not the keyboard.
1373      <li>For quite some time, the MIPS linux cvs tree had support for the
1374            keyboard, but it did <i>not</i> include Debian's patches for
1375            networking. (Perhaps this has been fixed now, I don't know.)
1376    </ul>
1377    
1378  <p>  <p>David Muse has made available a precompiled install kernel which
1379  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;  has support for framebuffer, keyboard, and networking, which works
1380  <a href="20041212-debian_1.png"><img src="20041212-debian_1_small.gif"></a>  pretty well. Thanks David. :-)
 &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;  
 <a href="20041212-debian_2.png"><img src="20041212-debian_2_small.gif"></a>  
 &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;  
 <a href="20041213-debian_3.png"><img src="20041213-debian_3_small.gif"></a>  
 &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;  
 <a href="20041213-debian_4.png"><img src="20041213-debian_4_small.gif"></a>  
1381    
1382  <p>  <p>
1383  The following steps should let you install Debian GNU/Linux for DECstation  The following steps should let you install Debian GNU/Linux for DECstation
# Line 1026  onto a harddisk image: Line 1387  onto a harddisk image:
1387  <ol>  <ol>
1388    <li>Create an empty harddisk image, which will be the root disk    <li>Create an empty harddisk image, which will be the root disk
1389          that Debian installs itself onto:<pre>          that Debian installs itself onto:<pre>
1390          $ <b>dd if=/dev/zero of=debian.img bs=1024 count=1 seek=2000000</b>          <b>dd if=/dev/zero of=debian_pmax.img bs=1024 count=1 seek=3300000</b>
1391    
1392  </pre>  </pre>
1393    <li>Download an install kernel:<pre>    <li>Download David Muse' install kernel, and a Debian Netinstall CD-ROM:<pre>
1394          <a href="http://http.us.debian.org/debian/dists/testing/main/installer-mipsel/current/images/r3k-kn02/boot.img">http://http.us.debian.org/debian/dists/testing/main/</a>          <a href="http://www.firstworks.com/mips-linux-2.4.31/vmlinux-2.4.31">http://www.firstworks.com/mips-linux-2.4.31/vmlinux-2.4.31</a>
1395              <a href="http://http.us.debian.org/debian/dists/testing/main/installer-mipsel/current/images/r3k-kn02/boot.img">installer-mipsel/current/images/r3k-kn02/boot.img</a>          <a href="http://cdimage.debian.org/debian-cd/3.1_r0a/mipsel/iso-cd/debian-31r0a-mipsel-netinst.iso">http://cdimage.debian.org/debian-cd/3.1_r0a/mipsel/iso-cd/debian-31r0a-mipsel-netinst.iso</a>
         or  
         <a href="http://http.us.debian.org/debian/dists/unstable/main/installer-mipsel/current/images/r3k-kn02/boot.img">http://http.us.debian.org/debian/dists/unstable/main/</a>  
             <a href="http://http.us.debian.org/debian/dists/unstable/main/installer-mipsel/current/images/r3k-kn02/boot.img">installer-mipsel/current/images/r3k-kn02/boot.img</a>  
1396    
1397  </pre>  </pre>
         depending on whether you want to install Debian "Testing" or  
         "Unstable".  
1398    <p>    <p>
1399    <li>For a text-mode installation, start the emulator like this:<pre>    <li>Start the installation like this:<pre>
1400          $ <b>gxemul -E dec -e 3max -b -U -M64 -o 'console=ttyS3' -d debian.img -O boot.img</b>          <b>gxemul -X -e3max -d debian_pmax.img -d debian-31r0a-mipsel-netinst.iso vmlinux-2.4.31</b>
   
1401  </pre>  </pre>
 </ol>  
1402    
1403  <p>          <p>If everything goes well, you will see Linux' boot messages, and then
1404  Debian GNU/Linux on DECstation works reasonably fine with dynamic          arrive at the language chooser.
 binary translation, enabled by the <b><tt>-b</tt></b> command line option.  
 (Without this option, the emulator might be less buggy, but also too slow  
 to be useful when running Linux as a guest OS.)  
1405    
1406  <p>  <p>
1407  (If you want to, you can try <b>-X</b> instead of <b>-o 'console=ttyS3'</b> on  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="debian-1.png"><img src="debian-1-small.png"></a>
1408  the command line. This will cause Linux to use the graphical framebuffer.  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="debian-2.png"><img src="debian-2-small.png"></a>
1409  Unfortunately, Linux does not seem to have a driver for the DZ11 keyboard  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="debian-3.png"><img src="debian-3-small.png"></a>
1410  controller yet, so you cannot interact with the system. You will see the  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="debian-4.png"><img src="debian-4-small.png"></a>
 penguin in the upper lefthand corner while booting, and nicely rendered Unicode  
 characters, but that's about it.)  
1411    
1412  <p>          <p>There will be a warning about the keyboard
1413  You need to enter some values during the installation procedure, for example          layout. Don't mind this. Continue, and then select <b>Detect
1414  network settings. The following should work:          and mount CD-ROM</b> in the next menu.
 <p>  
 <pre>  
     DHCP:                       No, choose "Configure network manually"  
     IP address:                 10.0.0.1  
     Netmask:                    255.0.0.0  
     Gateway:                    10.0.0.254  
     Name server addresses:      10.0.0.254  
 </pre>  
1415    
1416  <p>  <p>
1417  <ol start="4">  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="debian-5.png"><img src="debian-5-small.png"></a>
1418    <li>Once the first phase of the install has finished, the following command  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="debian-6.png"><img src="debian-6-small.png"></a>
1419          should let you boot into Debian, and perform post-install  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="debian-7.png"><img src="debian-7-small.png"></a>
1420          configuration:<pre>  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="debian-8.png"><img src="debian-8-small.png"></a>
1421          $ <b>gxemul -E dec -e 3max -U -b -M64 -o 'console=ttyS3' -d debian.img</b>  
1422            <p>
1423            There will also be a warning about lack of loadable modules. Don't
1424            mind this either, continue anyway by choosing <b>Yes</b>.
1425            <p>
1426            When you reach the network configuration part of the install, choose
1427            <b>Configure network manually</b> and enter the following values:<pre>
1428            IP address:                 <b>10.0.0.1</b>
1429            Netmask:                    <b>255.0.0.0</b>
1430            Gateway:                    <b>10.0.0.254</b>
1431            Name server addresses:      <b>10.0.0.254</b>
1432    
1433  </pre>  </pre>
1434  </ol>          <p>Choose <b>Erase entire disk</b> in the partitioner.
1435    
1436  <p>          <p>Wait for the base system to be installed. This takes almost forever,
1437  It seems that there's a problem with getting a login prompt on serial          so you can go fetch several <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jolt_Cola">Jolts</a>
1438  console (at least when I've done test installs), so when the installation          or cups of coffee in the meanwhile.
 is finished and you're supposed to get a login prompt, you need to press  
 CTRL-C and type <b>quit</b>, and then:  
1439    
1440  <p>  <p>
1441  <ol start="5">  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="debian-9.png"><img src="debian-9-small.png"></a>
1442    <li>Download a normal kernel (<i>not</i> a RAMDISK kernel):<pre>  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="debian-10.png"><img src="debian-10-small.png"></a>
1443          <a href="http://http.us.debian.org/debian/dists/testing/main/installer-mipsel/current/images/cdrom/vmlinux-2.4.27-r3k-kn02">http://http.us.debian.org/debian/dists/testing/main/</a>  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="debian-11.png"><img src="debian-11-small.png"></a>
1444           <a href="http://http.us.debian.org/debian/dists/testing/main/installer-mipsel/current/images/cdrom/vmlinux-2.4.27-r3k-kn02">installer-mipsel/current/images/cdrom/vmlinux-2.4.27-r3k-kn02</a>  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="debian-12.png"><img src="debian-12-small.png"></a>
1445    
1446  </pre>          <p>Congratulations! The first phase of the installation is now completed.
1447    <li>Boot Debian using the following command line:<pre>          Reboot using the following command line:<pre>
1448          $ <b>gxemul -E dec -e 3max -U -b -M64 -o \          <b>gxemul -X -e3max -o 'root=/dev/sda1' -d debian_pmax.img vmlinux-2.4.31</b>
             'console=ttyS3 root=/dev/sda1 rw init=/bin/sh' \  
             -d debian.img vmlinux-2.4.27-r3k-kn02</b>  
1449    
1450  </pre>  </pre>
1451          You'll enter single-user mode. You need to add a line to          <p>The post-install step takes quite some time as well. A perfect opportunity
1452          /etc/inittab, to enable logins via serial console.<pre>          for more coffee.
         sh-2.05b# <b>echo 'T3:23:respawn:/sbin/getty -L ttyS3 9600 vt100' >> /etc/inittab</b>  
         sh-2.05b# <b>echo 'ttyS3' >> /etc/securetty</b>  
         sh-2.05b# <b>sync; umount /</b>  
 </pre>  
 </ol>  
1453    
1454  <p>          <p>When asked about "Apt configuration", choose <b>http</b> as the method
1455  The system should now be ready for everyday use.          to use for accessing the Debian archive.
1456    
1457  <p>  <p>
1458  Use this command to boot from the completely installed disk image:<pre>  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="debian-13.png"><img src="debian-13-small.png"></a>
1459          $ <b>gxemul -E dec -e 3max -U -b -M64 -o 'console=ttyS3' -d debian.img</b>  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="debian-14.png"><img src="debian-14-small.png"></a>
1460    &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="debian-15.png"><img src="debian-15-small.png"></a>
1461    
1462            <p>Downloading the packages takes almost forever. Be patient.
1463    
1464            <p>Congratulations (again)! You are now fully done with the installation.
1465    
1466    </ol>
1467    
1468    <p><br>Debian GNU/Linux for DECstation is now installed and ready to be used.
1469    Use this command to boot from the installed disk image:<pre>
1470            <b>gxemul -X -e3max -o 'root=/dev/sda1' -d debian_pmax.img vmlinux-2.4.31</b>
1471    
1472  </pre>  </pre>
1473    
 <p>  
 [&nbsp;<font color="#ff0000">UPDATE 2005-01-19:</font>&nbsp;  
 Kaj-Michael Lang noticed that the current CVS-version of  
 <a href="http://www.linux-mips.org/">linux-mips</a> has  
 support for keyboards now, on DECstation 5000/200, so it is  
 possible to run Debian GNU/Linux with framebuffer/keyboard.  
 (Add <b><tt>-X</tt></b> (or <b><tt>-XY2</tt></b>) and remove the  
 <b><tt>console=ttyS3</tt></b> option.) He has made a kernel available here:  
 <a href="http://home.tal.org/~milang/o2/kernels/vmlinux-2.4.29-rc2-r3k-mipsel-decstation">  
 http://home.tal.org/~milang/o2/kernels/vmlinux-2.4.29-rc2-r3k-mipsel-decstation</a>  
 It has other problems (ethernet doesn't seem to work, for  
 example), but at least it doesn't Oops that often.&nbsp;]  
1474    
1475    
1476    
# Line 1138  example), but at least it doesn't Oops t Line 1479  example), but at least it doesn't Oops t
1479    
1480  <p><br>  <p><br>
1481  <a name="declinuxredhat"></a>  <a name="declinuxredhat"></a>
1482  <h3>Running Redhat Linux for DECstation in GXemul:</h3>  <h3>Redhat Linux for DECstation:</h3>
1483    
 <font color="#ff0000">NOTE: This is experimental, and <i>extremely</i>  
 unstable. Read the note about <b><tt>-U</tt></b> in the section on how to  
 install Debian.  
 </font>  
1484    
1485  <p>  <p>
1486  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;  &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
# Line 1154  The following steps should let you run R Line 1491  The following steps should let you run R
1491    
1492  <p>  <p>
1493  <ol>  <ol>
1494    <li>Download a kernel. This is a Debian kernel, but it works fine:<pre>    <li>Download a kernel. David Muse' Debian-install kernel works fine:<pre>
1495          <a href="http://http.us.debian.org/debian/dists/testing/main/installer-mipsel/current/images/cdrom/vmlinux-2.4.27-r3k-kn02">http://http.us.debian.org/debian/dists/testing/main/</a>          <a href="http://www.firstworks.com/mips-linux-2.4.31/vmlinux-2.4.31">http://www.firstworks.com/mips-linux-2.4.31/vmlinux-2.4.31</a>
          <a href="http://http.us.debian.org/debian/dists/testing/main/installer-mipsel/current/images/cdrom/vmlinux-2.4.27-r3k-kn02">installer-mipsel/current/images/cdrom/vmlinux-2.4.27-r3k-kn02</a>  
1496    
1497  </pre>  </pre>
1498    <li>Download a root filesystem tree:<pre>    <li>Download a root filesystem tree:<pre>
# Line 1165  The following steps should let you run R Line 1501  The following steps should let you run R
1501          19486676 bytes, md5 = 5bcb725c90209479cd7ead8ad0c4a414          19486676 bytes, md5 = 5bcb725c90209479cd7ead8ad0c4a414
1502    
1503  </pre>  </pre>
1504    <li>This is the tricky part: Create an ext2 filesystem image called redhat.img using    <li>Create a disk image which will contain the Redhat filesystem:<pre>
1505          the filesystem tree you just downloaded. The disk image should have a MS-DOS          <b>dd if=/dev/zero of=redhat_mips.img bs=1024 count=1 seek=2000000</b>
1506          partition table (!), and then one or more ext2 partitions.  
1507          (Use loopback mount, or similar. This is probably easiest to do on a Linux host.)  </pre>
1508          However, in order to actually boot the system you need to modify /etc/fstab.    <li>This is the tricky part: on redhat_mips.img, you need to create an MS-DOS
1509            (!) partition table, and then an ext2 partition. This is what Linux
1510            will then see as /dev/sda1.
1511            <p>I recommend you run fdisk and mke2fs and untar the archive from within
1512            Debian/DECstation or <a href="#debiancats">Debian/CATS</a> running
1513            inside the emulator. (Alternatively, if you are on a Linux host,
1514            you could use a loopback mount, or similar. This might require
1515            root access. See e.g.
1516            <a href="http://www.mega-tokyo.com/osfaq2/index.php/Disk%20Images%20Under%20Linux">http://www.mega-tokyo.com/osfaq2/index.php/Disk%20Images%20Under%20Linux</a>.)
1517            <p>
1518            In order to actually boot the system you need to modify /etc/fstab.
1519          Change<pre>          Change<pre>
1520          /dev/root               /               nfs     defaults        1 1          /dev/root               /               nfs     defaults        1 1
1521          #/dev/sdc1              /               ext2    defaults        1 1          #/dev/sdc1              /               ext2    defaults        1 1
# Line 1183  The following steps should let you run R Line 1529  The following steps should let you run R
1529          none                    /dev/pts        devpts  mode=0622       0 0          none                    /dev/pts        devpts  mode=0622       0 0
1530    
1531  </pre>(Note sda1 instead of sdc1.)  </pre>(Note sda1 instead of sdc1.)
   <p>  
   <li>To boot Linux, start the emulator like this:<pre>  
         $ <b>gxemul -E dec -e 3max -U -b -M128 -o \  
             "console=ttyS3 root=/dev/sda1 ro" -d redhat.img vmlinux-2.4.27-r3k-kn02</b>  
   
 </pre>  
1532  </ol>  </ol>
1533    
1534  <p>  <p>To boot Redhat linux from the disk image, use the following command line:<pre>
1535  If you need to boot into single user mode, try the following:<pre>          <b>gxemul -X -e3max -o "root=/dev/sda1 ro" -d redhat_mips.img vmlinux-2.4.31</b>
         $ <b>gxemul -E dec -e 3max -U -b -o "console=ttyS3 root=/dev/sda1 rw init=/bin/sh" \  
             -d redhat.img vmlinux-2.4.27-r3k-kn02</b>  
1536    
1537  </pre>  </pre>
1538    If you need to boot into single user mode, change options to
1539    <tt><b>-o "root=/dev/sda1 rw init=/bin/sh"</b></tt>.
1540    
 <p>  
 Redhat Linux on DECstation in R3000 mode should work fine with dynamic binary  
 translation (enabled by the <b>-b</b> command line option).  
1541    
 <p>  
 NOTE: You can add <b>-X</b> and remove <b>console=ttyS3</b> from the command  
 line, if you want to use a graphical framebuffer. Unfortunately, Linux  
 doesn't have support for keyboards on DECstation 5000/200 yet, so you cannot  
 actually interact with the sytem. :-(  
1542    
1543  <p>  
1544  [&nbsp;<font color="#ff0000">UPDATE 2005-01-22:</font>&nbsp;  
1545  Read the 2005-01-19 update in the Debian section above, and then, if  
1546  you do not need ethernet support, try Kaj-Michael Lang's kernel compiled  
1547  from <a href="http://www.linux-mips.org/">linux-mips</a>' CVS.  <p><br>
1548  <a href="http://home.tal.org/~milang/o2/patches/vmlinux-2.4.29-rc2-r3k-mipsel-decstation">  <hr>
1549  http://home.tal.org/~milang/o2/patches/vmlinux-2.4.29-rc2-r3k-mipsel-decstation</a>  
 It should work with framebuffer/keyboard.&nbsp;]  
1550    
1551    
1552    
# Line 1224  It should work with framebuffer/keyboard Line 1555  It should work with framebuffer/keyboard
1555    
1556  <p><br>  <p><br>
1557  <a name="mach"></a>  <a name="mach"></a>
1558  <h3>Running Mach/PMAX in GXemul:</h3>  <h3>Mach/PMAX:</h3>
1559    
1560  Read the following link if you want to know more about Mach in general:  Read the following link if you want to know more about Mach in general:
1561  <a href="http://www-2.cs.cmu.edu/afs/cs/project/mach/public/www/mach.html">  <a href="http://www-2.cs.cmu.edu/afs/cs/project/mach/public/www/mach.html">
# Line 1248  for DECstation in the emulator: Line 1579  for DECstation in the emulator:
1579  <p>  <p>
1580  <ol>  <ol>
1581    <li>Compile gxemul with cache emulation: (<b>NOTE: --enable-caches</b>)<pre>    <li>Compile gxemul with cache emulation: (<b>NOTE: --enable-caches</b>)<pre>
1582          $ <b>./configure --enable-caches; make</b>          <b>./configure --enable-caches; make</b>
1583    
1584  </pre>  </pre>
1585    <li>Download the pmax binary distribution for Mach 3.0:<pre>    <li>Download the pmax binary distribution for Mach 3.0:<pre>
1586          <a href="http://lost-contact.mit.edu/afs/athena/user/d/a/daveg/Info/Links/Mach/src/release/pmax.tar.Z">http://lost-contact.mit.edu/afs/athena/user/d/a/daveg/Info/Links/Mach/src/release/pmax.tar.Z</a>          <a href="http://lost-contact.mit.edu/afs/athena/user/d/a/daveg/Info/Links/Mach/src/release/pmax.tar.Z">http://lost-contact.mit.edu/afs/athena/user/d/a/</a>
1587                <a href="http://lost-contact.mit.edu/afs/athena/user/d/a/daveg/Info/Links/Mach/src/release/pmax.tar.Z">daveg/Info/Links/Mach/src/release/pmax.tar.Z</a>
1588          7263343 bytes, md5 = f9d76c240a6e169921a1df99ad560cc0          7263343 bytes, md5 = f9d76c240a6e169921a1df99ad560cc0
1589    
1590  </pre>  </pre>
1591    <li>Extract the Mach kernel:<pre>    <li>Extract the Mach kernel:<pre>
1592          $ <b>tar xfvz pmax.tar.Z pmax_mach/special/mach.boot.MK83.STD+ANY</b>          <b>tar xfvz pmax.tar.Z pmax_mach/special/mach.boot.MK83.STD+ANY</b>
1593    
1594  </pre>  </pre>
1595    <li>Create an empty disk image:<pre>    <li>Create an empty disk image:<pre>
1596          $ <b>dd if=/dev/zero of=disk.img bs=1 count=512 seek=400000000</b>          <b>dd if=/dev/zero of=disk.img bs=1 count=512 seek=400000000</b>
1597    
1598  </pre>  </pre>
1599    <li>Load the contents of pmax.tar.Z onto the disk image. This is    <li>Load the contents of pmax.tar.Z onto the disk image. This is
# Line 1278  for DECstation in the emulator: Line 1610  for DECstation in the emulator:
1610          cd /; sync; umount /mnt</i>)          cd /; sync; umount /mnt</i>)
1611          <p>          <p>
1612    <li>Start the emulator with the following command:<pre>    <li>Start the emulator with the following command:<pre>
1613          $ <b>gxemul -E dec -e 3max -X -d disk.img \          <b>gxemul -e 3max -X -d disk.img \
1614              pmax_mach/special/mach.boot.MK83.STD+ANY</b>              pmax_mach/special/mach.boot.MK83.STD+ANY</b>
1615    
1616  </pre>  </pre>
# Line 1289  for DECstation in the emulator: Line 1621  for DECstation in the emulator:
1621    
1622    
1623    
1624    
1625    <p><br>
1626    <a name="openbsdsgiinstall"></a>
1627    <h3>OpenBSD/sgi:</h3>
1628    
1629    <a href="http://www.openbsd.org/sgi.html">OpenBSD/sgi</a>
1630    can (almost) run in GXemul on an emulated O2 (SGI-IP32) with root on nfs.
1631    
1632    <p>
1633    &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
1634    <a href="20050617-openbsd-sgi.png"><img src="20050617-openbsd-sgi_small.png"></a>
1635    
1636    <p><font color="#ff0000">NOTE: I haven't succeeded all the way with
1637    this yet, and this shows/triggers many bugs in the emulator, but some of
1638    it works.</font>
1639    
1640    <p>GXemul does not yet emulate the AHC PCI SCSI controller in the O2. (I have
1641    mailed Adaptec several times, asking for documentation, but never received
1642    any reply.) OpenBSD/sgi can still run in the emulator, as long as it doesn't
1643    use SCSI. For a simple test with the ramdisk (install) kernel, try dowloading<pre>
1644            <a href="ftp://ftp.se.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/3.9/sgi/">ftp://ftp.se.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/3.9/sgi</a>/<a href="ftp://ftp.se.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/3.9/sgi/bsd.rd">bsd.rd</a>
1645    
1646    </pre>and run <b><tt>gxemul -xeo2 bsd.rd</tt></b>.
1647    
1648    <p>It might also be possible to netboot. Another emulated machine must
1649    then be used as the nfs root server, and the emulated O2 machine must boot
1650    as a <a href="http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=diskless&amp;manpath=OpenBSD+Current&amp;format=html">diskless</a>
1651    client. Performing this setup is quite time consuming, but necessary:
1652    
1653    <p>
1654    <ol>
1655      <li>First of all, the "<tt>nfs server</tt>" machine must be set up.
1656            This needs to have a 800 MB <tt>/tftpboot</tt> partition.
1657            <a href="#netbsdpmaxinstall">Install NetBSD/pmax 3.0 from CDROM</a>.
1658            (Don't forget to add the extra partition!)
1659      <p>
1660      <li>Configure the nfs server machine to act as an nfs server.
1661            Start up the emulated DECstation:<pre>
1662            <b>gxemul -e 3max -d nbsd_pmax.img</b>
1663    </pre>and enter the following commands as <tt>root</tt>
1664            inside the emulator:
1665    <table border="0"><tr><td><tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</tt></td><td><pre>
1666    <b>echo hostname=server &gt;&gt; /etc/rc.conf
1667    echo ifconfig_le0=\"inet 10.0.0.2\" &gt;&gt; /etc/rc.conf
1668    echo nameserver 10.0.0.254 &gt;&gt; /etc/resolv.conf
1669    echo 10.0.0.254 &gt; /etc/mygate
1670    echo /tftpboot -maproot=root 10.0.0.1 &gt; /etc/exports
1671    echo rpcbind=YES &gt;&gt; /etc/rc.conf
1672    echo nfs_server=YES &gt;&gt; /etc/rc.conf
1673    echo mountd=YES &gt;&gt; /etc/rc.conf
1674    echo bootparamd=YES &gt;&gt; /etc/rc.conf
1675    printf "client root=10.0.0.2:/tftpboot \\\n swap=10.0.0.2:/tftpboot/swap\n" &gt; /etc/bootparams
1676    echo "10:20:30:00:00:10 client" &gt; /etc/ethers
1677    echo 10.0.0.1 client &gt; /etc/hosts
1678    reboot</b>
1679    </pre></td></tr></table>
1680      <li>Start the DECstation emulation again, and enter the following
1681            commands to download the OpenBSD/sgi distribution:<br>(NOTE: This
1682            takes quite some time, even if you have a fast network connection.)
1683    <table border="0"><tr><td><tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</tt></td><td><pre>
1684    <b>cd /tftpboot; ftp -i ftp.se.openbsd.org</b>
1685    (log in as anonymous...)
1686    <b>cd pub/OpenBSD/3.9/sgi
1687    mget b*tgz c*tgz e* g* m*
1688    quit
1689    sh
1690    for a in *.tgz; do echo $a; tar zxfp $a; done
1691    echo 10.0.0.2:/tftpboot / nfs rw 0 0 &gt; /tftpboot/etc/fstab
1692    rm *.tgz
1693    dd if=/dev/zero of=swap bs=1024 count=32768
1694    halt</b>
1695    </pre></td></tr></table>
1696      <li>Download the OpenBSD/sgi GENERIC and RAMDISK kernels:<pre>
1697            <a href="ftp://ftp.se.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/3.9/sgi/bsd">ftp://ftp.se.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/3.9/sgi/bsd</a>
1698            <a href="ftp://ftp.se.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/3.9/sgi/bsd.rd">ftp://ftp.se.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/3.9/sgi/bsd.rd</a>
1699    
1700    </pre>
1701      <li>Create a configuration file called <tt>config_client</tt>:
1702    <table border="0"><tr><td><tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</tt></td><td><pre>
1703    <font color="#2020cf">!  Configuration file for running OpenBSD/sgi diskless with
1704    !  a NetBSD/pmax machine as the nfs server.
1705    !
1706    !  This config file is for the client.</font>
1707    
1708    <b>    net(
1709            add_remote("localhost:12444")   </b>! the server<b>
1710            local_port(12445)               </b>! the client<b>
1711        )
1712    
1713        machine(
1714            name("client machine")
1715            serial_nr(1)
1716    
1717            type("sgi")
1718            subtype("o2")
1719    
1720            </b>! load("bsd")<b>
1721            load("bsd.rd")
1722        )
1723    </b>
1724    </pre></td></tr></table>
1725            ... and another configuration file for the server,
1726            <tt>config_server</tt>:
1727    <table border="0"><tr><td><tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</tt></td><td><pre>
1728    <b>    net(
1729            local_port(12444)               </b>! the server<b>
1730            add_remote("localhost:12445")   </b>! the client<b>
1731        )
1732    
1733        machine(
1734            name("nfs server")
1735            serial_nr(2)
1736    
1737            type("dec")
1738            subtype("5000/200")
1739    
1740            disk("nbsd_pmax.img")
1741        )
1742    </b>
1743    </pre></td></tr></table>
1744      <li>Boot the "<tt>nfs server</tt>" and the OpenBSD/sgi
1745            "<tt>client machine</tt>" as two separate emulator instances:<pre>
1746            in one xterm:
1747            <b>gxemul @config_server</b>
1748    
1749            and then, in another xterm:
1750            <b>gxemul @config_client</b>
1751    
1752    </pre>
1753      <li>In the OpenBSD/sgi window, choose "<tt>s</tt>" (for Shell), and type:
1754    <table border="0"><tr><td><tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</tt></td><td><pre>
1755    <b>ifconfig mec0 10.0.0.1; route add default 10.0.0.254
1756    mount -v 10.0.0.2:/tftpboot /mnt
1757    cd /mnt/dev; ./MAKEDEV all; cd /; umount /mnt
1758    halt</b>
1759    </pre></td></tr></table>
1760            You might want to log in as <tt>root</tt> on the server machine, and
1761            run <tt>tcpdump -lnvv</tt> or similar, to see that what the client
1762            machine actually does on the network. The <tt>MAKEDEV</tt> script
1763            takes almost forever, so be patient.
1764    </ol>
1765    
1766    
1767    <p><font color="#ff0000">NOTE: Everything up to this point should work.
1768    However, the next step (in gray) doesn't actually work:</font>
1769    
1770    <p><font color="#888888">Once everything has been set up correctly, change
1771    <tt>bsd.rd</tt> in <tt>config_client</tt> to just <tt>bsd</tt> (the GENERIC
1772    kernel). It should now be possible to boot OpenBSD/sgi using the NetBSD/pmax
1773    nfs server. (When asked for "<tt>root device :</tt>" on the OpenBSD machine,
1774    enter <tt><b>mec0</b></tt>.)</font>
1775    
1776    <p><font color="#ff0000">But it doesn't work. Probably because GXemul's
1777    implementation of the mec (ethernet card used in the O2) is too much of
1778    a quick hack. For now, use the <tt>bsd.rd</tt> kernel, and (at every
1779    boot) type:</font><pre>
1780            <b>s</b>  (for Shell)
1781            <b>ifconfig mec0 10.0.0.1; route add default 10.0.0.254</b>
1782            <b>mount -v 10.0.0.2:/tftpboot /mnt</b>
1783            <b>cd /mnt; usr/sbin/chroot .</b>
1784            <b>sh etc/rc</b>
1785    </pre>
1786    
1787    <p><font color="#ff0000">This will not cause OpenBSD to be booted
1788    normally, but at least a few basic things will work.
1789    By the way, the emulator performs so poorly, that you will have time to
1790    fetch several cups of coffee for each of the steps above.</font>
1791    
1792    
1793    
1794    
1795    
1796    
1797    
1798    
1799    
1800    <p><br>
1801    <a name="openbsdarcinstall"></a>
1802    <h3>OpenBSD/arc:</h3>
1803    
1804    It is (almost) possible to install and run OpenBSD/arc on an emulated Acer
1805    PICA-61 in the emulator.
1806    
1807    <p><font color="#e00000">Earlier, I had this guest OS listed as
1808    officially working in the emulator, but for several reasons, it has
1809    been moved down here to the "informative-but-not-really-working"
1810    section.</font>
1811    
1812    <p>
1813    <ul>
1814      <li>The last OpenBSD/arc release was 2.3. This means that it is very
1815            old, it would not give a fair picture of what OpenBSD is (if you
1816            are just looking to find out what it is like), and it is not
1817            worth experimenting with it. See
1818            <a href="http://www.openbsd.org/arc.html">http://www.openbsd.org/arc.html</a>
1819            for more information.
1820      <li>OpenBSD/arc was (if I understood things correctly) never really
1821            stable, even on real hardare. Problems with too small an interrupt
1822            stack. Bugs are triggered in the emulator that have to do with
1823            issues such as this.
1824    </ul>
1825    
1826    <p>
1827    &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
1828    <a href="20041024-openbsd-arc-installed.gif"><img src="20041024-openbsd-arc-installed_small.gif"></a>
1829    
1830    <p>
1831    <font color="#e00000">Currently, I don't test for every release whether
1832    or not OpenBSD/arc can be installed. Releases prior to 0.3.7
1833    (but probably <i>not</i> 0.3.7) should work. Anyway, here are the
1834    old installation instructions:</font>
1835    
1836    <p>To install OpenBSD/arc onto an emulated harddisk image, follow these
1837    instructions:
1838    
1839    <p>
1840    <ol>
1841      <li>Create an empty harddisk image, which will be the root disk
1842            that OpenBSD installs itself onto:<pre>
1843            <b>dd if=/dev/zero of=obsd_arc.img bs=1024 count=1 seek=700000</b>
1844    
1845    </pre>
1846      <li>Download the entire arc directory from the ftp server: (approx. 75 MB)<pre>
1847            <b>wget -np -l 0 -r <a href="ftp://ftp.se.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/2.3/arc/">ftp://ftp.se.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/2.3/arc/</a></b>
1848    
1849    </pre>
1850    
1851      <li>You now need to make an ISO image of the entire directory you downloaded.
1852            (I recommend using <tt>mkisofs</tt> for that purpose. If you don't
1853            already have <tt>mkisofs</tt> installed on your system, you need
1854            to install it in order to do this.)<pre>
1855            <b>mkisofs -o openbsd_arc_2.3.iso ftp.se.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/</b>
1856    
1857    </pre>
1858      <li>Start the emulator using this command line:<pre>
1859            <b>gxemul -e pica -X -d obsd_arc.img -d b:openbsd_arc_2.3.iso -j 2.3/arc/bsd.rd</b>
1860    
1861    </pre>
1862            and proceed like you would do if you were installing OpenBSD
1863            on a real Acer PICA-61. (Answer 'no' when asked if you want to
1864            configure networking, and then install from CD-ROM.)
1865    </ol>
1866    
1867    <p>
1868    Once the install has finished, the following command should let you
1869    boot from the harddisk image:
1870    <p>
1871    <pre>
1872            <b>gxemul -X -e pica -d obsd_arc.img ftp.se.openbsd.org/pub/OpenBSD/2.3/arc/bsd</b>
1873    
1874    </pre>
1875    
1876    The system is very sensitive to (I think) kernel stack overflow, so it
1877    crashes easily. If I remember correctly from mailing lists, this also
1878    happened on real hardware.
1879    
1880    
1881    
1882    
1883    
1884    
1885    
1886    
1887    
1888    
1889    
1890    <p><br>
1891    <a name="debiancats"></a>
1892    <h3>Debian GNU/Linux for CATS:</h3>
1893    
1894    Debian GNU/Linux for CATS (ARM) could <i>theoretically</i> run in GXemul,
1895    however:
1896    
1897    <ul>
1898      <li>The DEC 21143 NIC is not emulated well enough for Linux to accept it.
1899      <li>Development of Debian for CATS seems to have died? The latest
1900            install kernel is quite old.
1901    </ul>
1902    
1903    <p><font color="#ff0000">IT DOES <b>NOT</b> WORK YET!</font>
1904    
1905    <p>The following installation instructions would theoretically work:
1906    
1907    <p>
1908    <ol>
1909      <li>Create an empty harddisk image, which will be the root disk
1910            that Debian installs itself onto:<pre>
1911            <b>dd if=/dev/zero of=debian_cats.img bs=1024 count=1 seek=3300000</b>
1912    
1913    </pre>
1914      <li>Download the tftpboot install kernel:<pre>
1915            <a href="http://ftp.debian.org/debian/dists/oldstable/main/disks-arm/current/cats/tftpboot.img">http://ftp.debian.org/debian/dists/oldstable/main/disks-arm/current/cats/tftpboot.img</a>
1916    
1917    </pre>
1918      <li>Start the installation using the following command line:<pre>
1919            <b>gxemul -XEcats -d debian_cats.img tftpboot.img</b>
1920    
1921    </pre>
1922    </ol>
1923    
1924    <p>It doesn't work, though, because the NIC isn't working well enough.
1925    
1926    <p>The only use of Debian/CATS in the emulator right now is as a way to
1927    manipulate Linux disk images, if you are on a non-Linux host. By choosing
1928    "Execute a shell" in the installer's menu, you can have access to tools such as
1929    fdisk and mke2fs, which are useful for creating Linux paritions on disk images.
1930    
1931    
1932    
1933    
1934    
1935    
1936    
1937    <p><br>
1938    <a name="netbsdnetwinderinstall"></a>
1939    <h3>NetBSD/netwinder:</h3>
1940    
1941    <a href="http://www.netbsd.org/Ports/netwinder/">NetBSD/netwinder</a>
1942    could possibly run in GXemul.
1943    <font color="#ff0000">IT DOES <b>NOT</b> WORK YET!</font>
1944    
1945    <p>It is tricky to install, because there is (as far as I know) no INSTALL
1946    kernel. One way to install the NetBSD/netwinder distribution onto a disk
1947    image is to install the files using another (emulated) machine.
1948    
1949    <p>
1950    The following instructions will let you install the NetBSD/netwinder
1951    distribution onto a disk image, from an emulated DECstation 3MAX machine:
1952    
1953    <p>
1954    <ol>
1955      <li>Install NetBSD/pmax 3.0 according to instructions
1956            <a href="#netbsdpmaxinstall">further up on this page</a>.
1957      <p>
1958      <li>Create an empty harddisk image, which will be the disk image
1959            that you will install NetBSD onto:<pre>
1960            <b>dd if=/dev/zero of=nbsd_netwinder.img bs=1024 count=1 seek=999000</b>
1961    
1962    </pre>
1963      <li>Download the generic kernel and the 2.1 ISO image:<pre>
1964            <a href="ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-2.1/netwinder/binary/kernel/netbsd-GENERIC.gz">ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-2.1/netwinder/binary/kernel/netbsd-GENERIC.gz</a>
1965            <a href="ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/iso/2.1/netwindercd.iso">ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/iso/2.1/netwindercd.iso</a>
1966    
1967    </pre>
1968      <p>
1969      <li>Start NetBSD/pmax like this:<pre>
1970            <b>gxemul -e 3max -d nbsd_pmax.img -d nbsd_netwinder.img -d netwinder.iso</b>
1971    
1972    </pre>and execute the following commands as <tt>root</tt>:
1973    <p><table border="0"><tr><td><tt>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</tt></td><td><pre>
1974    <b>newfs /dev/sd1c
1975    mount /dev/cd0c /mnt
1976    mkdir /mnt2; mount /dev/sd1c /mnt2
1977    cd /mnt2; sh
1978    for a in /mnt/netwinder/binary/sets/*.tgz; do echo $a; tar zxfp $a; done
1979    exit
1980    cd dev; sh ./MAKEDEV all; cd ../etc
1981    echo rc_configured=YES >> rc.conf
1982    echo "/dev/wd0c / ffs rw 1 1" > fstab
1983    cd /; umount /mnt; umount /mnt2; halt</b>
1984    </pre></td></tr></table>
1985    </ol>
1986    
1987    <p>NetBSD/netwinder is now installed on the disk image. But actually
1988    running it does <b>not work yet</b>. Sorry.
1989    
1990    <p>Something like the following command line would be used to start
1991    NetBSD, if it worked:<pre>
1992            <b>gxemul -E netwinder -d nbsd_netwinder.img netbsd-GENERIC.gz</b>
1993    </pre>
1994    
1995    <p>Note: The installation instructions above create a filesystem
1996    <i>without</i> a disklabel, so there is only one ffs partition and no
1997    swap. You will need to enter the following things when booting with the
1998    generic kernel:<pre>
1999            root device (default wd0a): <b>wd0c</b>
2000            dump device (default wd0b): <b>none</b>
2001            file system (default generic):    <i>(just press enter)</i>
2002            init path (default /sbin/init):   <i>(just press enter)</i>
2003    </pre>
2004    
2005    
2006    
2007    
2008    
2009    
2010    
2011    
2012    <p><br>
2013    <a name="netbsdmacppcinstall"></a>
2014    <h3>NetBSD/macppc:</h3>
2015    
2016    It is <font color="#ff0000"><b>ALMOST</b></font> possible to install and run
2017    <a href="http://www.netbsd.org/Ports/macppc/">NetBSD/macppc</a> in GXemul
2018    on an emulated generic PowerPC machine. No specific Machintosh model
2019    is emulated, but it is enough to for NetBSD to recognize it.
2020    
2021    <p>To install NetBSD/macppc onto a disk image, follow these instructions:
2022    
2023    <p>
2024    <ol start="1">
2025      <li>Create an empty harddisk image, which will be the root disk
2026            that you will install NetBSD/macppc onto:<pre>
2027        <b>dd if=/dev/zero of=nbsd_macppc.img bs=1024 count=1 seek=2000000</b>
2028    
2029    </pre>
2030      <li>Download the NetBSD/macppc 3.0 ISO image and a generic kernel:<pre>
2031        <a href="ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/iso/3.0/macppccd-3.0.iso">ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/iso/3.0/macppccd-3.0.iso</a>
2032        <a href="ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-3.0/macppc/binary/kernel/">ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-3.0/macppc/binary/kernel</a>/<a href="ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/NetBSD-3.0/macppc/binary/kernel/netbsd-GENERIC.MP.gz">netbsd-GENERIC.MP.gz</a>
2033    
2034    </pre>
2035      <p>
2036      <li>Start the installation like this:<pre>
2037        <b>gxemul -x -e g4 -d nbsd_macppc.img -d b:macppccd-3.0.iso -j macppc/binary/kernel/netbsd-INSTALL.gz</b>
2038    
2039    </pre>
2040    </ol>
2041    
2042    <p>If everything worked, NetBSD/macppc should now be installed on the disk image.
2043    
2044    <p><font color="#ff0000"><b>2006-02-26:</b></font> That's it. The installation
2045    succeeds, but it is not possible to start from the newly installed disk.
2046    /sbin/init dies, so the following command doesn't really work yet:
2047    
2048    <p>Use the following command line to boot the emulated machine:<pre>
2049            <b>gxemul -x -e g4 -d nbsd_macppc.img netbsd-GENERIC.MP.gz</b>
2050    
2051    </pre>
2052    
2053    
2054    
2055    
2056    
2057  </p>  </p>

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