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							| Contents: 
									
										Introduction
										
									
										Getting Started
										
									
										Installation
										
									
										First things first
										
									
										Getting Help
										
									
										Contacts, Links & Credits
										
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							| Introduction
 Explanation for this Document
 
									This document has been written as a resource for all those 
									wanting to do an installation of NetBSD but not quite knowing 
									how to get their teeth into such a task.
									
 Everything written here was part of my own installation, and 
									as such I have written and explained everything in the manner 
									that I did it myself. It should, therefore, be accurate and 
									clear. I would recommend reading the whole document through 
									prior to beginning the install. Printing it out may also be a 
									wise move.
 
 Please feel free to contact me 
									with any queries, comments or suggestions for other documents, 
									or future versions of this one.
 Why the hell would I want to do this, anyway?
 
									Good question. That deserves a good answer; if you happen to 
									have an older machine feeling lost and lonely in a cupboard. 
									Why not put him out of his misery and install an industrial 
									strength, open-source, freely-downloadable operating system 
									which will, once again, make him very very useful indeed.
									
 If you have a couple of machines in your network, or a cable 
									modem you'd like to share with the rest of the house, installing 
									NetBSD on an old machine to use as a Router & Firewall is 
									a very appropriate step.
 Why NetBSD?
 
									NetBSD is a fast-moving, very stable blend of the Unix operating 
									system with an emphasis on its portability to other platforms. 
									This, dear reader, includes Mac68k. There are other Unixes, 
									such as OpenBSD, which may be equally suitable, but, for the purpose 
									of this guide, I will focus on NetBSD. Maybe you prefer the logo.
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							| Getting Started
 Choosing a Machine
 
									Assuming you don't already have a long-forgotten machine in your closet, 
									you are going to need to choose one for the task.
									
 So, let's get down a few objectives, here. It must be: Mac68k, 
									Cheap, Low Power Consumption, Of Reasonable Speed, 
									At least 68020 processor (with MMU, otherwise 68030+), Nubus 
									or PDS slots.
 
 Power is a consideration. If you're leaving this baby on 24/7 you want 
									something which can do this with the minimum of effort. You're also gonna 
									want Nubus or PDS slots for all those Ethernet cards. We also need at least a 
									68020 processor with an MMU (or 68030+ without).
 
 Have a look at EveryMac.com 
									and eBay for such a Dream-Machine.
 Hard Disk & RAM Considerations
 
									You need a minimum of about 150MB of Hard Disk space, but 
									realistically, you'll want 1GB (trust me, I ate 350MB in 3 
									days).
									
 RAM-wise. 4MB will do. But anything less than 8MB is foolish. 
									8MB is fine.
 Download your files
 
									You will need a few files downloaded before you can begin the installation 
									(obviously). Get the following for NetBSD 1.5:
									
 
										Do not attempt to un-stuff the .tgz files. 
									The installer works just fine as they are.
											NetBSD Files
											
										
											Mac OS Files
											
										 
 Instructions for patching Apple HD SC Setup so that
									it will recognize non-Apple drives are available at:
									http://www.euronet.nl/users/ernstoud/patch.html
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							| Installation
 Formatting Disks
 
									You will need to Format and Partition your disks prior to 
									installing NetBSD. Most people consider this to be the trickiest 
									step. But if you follow these instructions, it should be fairly 
									simple.
									
 Using Apple's HD SC Setup utility, select your drive and click 
									Initialise. About 15 minutes later the drive will be completely 
									blank.
 
 Ensure that the drive is still selected and click Partition. 
									Click Custom. Select each partition except for the Mac 
									Driver and click Remove.
 
 Now click and drag in the grey area. A box will appear. Select 
									A/UX Root&Usr. Type in KiloBytes the size you would like it to be. 
									If you are using a 1GB disk, I recommend 950000KB for this partition.
 
 Click Done and click and drag again in the grey area. Now 
									select A/UX Swap put in another value in KiloBytes. I'd recommend 
									32000KB.
 
 Click Done again and do the same one last time. This time 
									make it Macintosh Standard and use whatever you have left.
									Click Done and quit the Program.
 
 You now have a disk ready for your NetBSD FileSystem.
 
 Using the Mkfs utility, select your Root&Usr partition 
									and click Change. In the dialog that pops up, click Do 
									it. Do the same for your Swap partition.
 
 Now click the Root&Usr partition and click Format 
									watch the window for errors, click I read it when it finishes 
									and do the same for the Swap volume. Now quite out of Mkfs.
 
 You are now ready to install NetBSD on your FileSystem!
 What to install
 
									Double click the Installer Application. Select Install from the 
									File Menu. Find the NetBSD files you downloaded earlier (the ones that 
									end in .tgz) Select each of them except kern_sbc.tgz 
									and click Add.
									
 Click Done. The installation will begin and should take 
									about 5 hours. (You may want to get some sleep at this point).
 
 When it is finished, select Build Devices from the File Menu.
 
 Now quit the installer, you are ready to boot.
 Configuration Boot
 
									Double-click the Booter application. Select Booting 
									from the Options Menu and ensure it reads NetBSD Root&Usr 
									for the Partition Name.
									
 Check the Single User mode checkbox. Leave everything else 'as is'.
 
 Select Boot Now.
 
 Cross your fingers.
 
 Assuming it all goes well, you should be raced with a standard 
									terminal. Type the following:
 
										export TERM=vt100
										You are now ready to edit the file, so type:tset vt100
 clear
 mount /dev/sd0a
 
										vi /etc/rc.conf
									That is the vi editor. Move about with the arrows, 
									press i (aye) when you want to type. Make the change, 
									hit escape a couple of times, then use the quit commands 
									explained further down. 
 Change:
 
										rc_configured=NO
									to 
										rc_configured=YES
									Quit out of vi by typing: 
										:wq!
									or if you made an error and don't want to save: 
										:q!
									If you are using an installer version prior to 1.1h you will 
									now need to type the following, if not, ignore: 
										cd /
										Finally, type:mount -rw /
 cd /dev
 ./MAKEDEV all
 
										reboot
									You will fly back into the Mac OS. Follow the same booting 
									instructions as before, this time leaving Single User 
									un-checked. You now have a working system. Read on. 
 If you got an error when you were booting about the FileSystem 
									not being able to be read, type halt and reboot. 
									Re-format all of your partitions and install again with the 
									kern_sbc.tgz kernel (instead of kern.tgz) this offers superior SCSI support 
									in this situation. You should not, however, use it without testing 
									the GENERIC kernel first, since it is slightly slower.
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							| First Things First
 Add a User
 
									No-one who has every run Unix has been completely faultless 
									in their operation. Unix assumes that the person running the 
									Root account is a master, as such he can do anything. 
									It seems obviously therefore, not to run as root all the time. 
									Therefore you're going to want to add a user.
									
 The process is quite simple, although there are a couple of steps. 
									Say you wanted to add the user matthew.
									Type the following:
 
										useradd -m matthew
										You have now added a user.passwd matthew
 New password for Matthew. Type this twice.
 
 Type exit to logout, log back in with matthew and 
									your chosen password to test it.
 
 Type exit again and log back in as root. Now would 
									be a good time to password protect the root account. Type passwd 
									and choose your password, you will need to type it twice.
 
 You should never log in as root on a normal system, merely use the 
									su command whenever you need full privileges. To do this you 
									will have to edit /etc/group to allow users to su to root.
 
 Type the following:
 
										vi /etc/group
									Find the top line, and if you wanted the user matthew to be 
									able to become root, change it as follows. Note that there are 
									on spaces: 
										wheel:*:0:root,matthew
									Matthew will now be able to su to root. He will, of course, still 
									need the root password. Configuring for Networking
 
									A Unix machine is as good as useless without being attached to 
									a network, be it the Internet or a LAN.
									
 So... We're going to get yours configured into your Ethernet LAN. 
									Then we're going to use one of your other Mac OS boxes as a router 
									in association with IPNetRouter.
 
 There are quite a few files which need to be edited, start with the 
									edding the /etc/rc.conf file:
 
										vi /etc/rc.conf
									Write the following: 
										hostname="Your chosen computer name"
										Since I don't have a domain I wish to use with this box, 
									I left that blank. My 7100 running IPNetRouter has the 
									IP of 192.168.1.2domainname="If you have a domain, write it here"
 defaultroute="The machine running IPNetRouter"
 This is mine:
 
										hostname="gellum"
										Now create a file named /etc/resolv.conf by typing:domainname=""
 defaultroute="192.168.1.2"
 
										vi /etc/resolv.conf
									Since you are going to be connecting to the 'net on this machine, 
									Write the following: 
										domain Your domain if you have one
										This will tell it to check the /etc/hosts file first, if it cannot 
									find the entry, it uses the nameservers. If you want it the 
									other way round, use:nameserver ISPs nameserver
 nameserver ISPs Secondary nameserver - optional
 lookup file bind
 
										lookup bind file
									On Gellum (as I have no domain) I have it as follows: 
										nameserver 195.92.195.94
										You now need to edit /etc/hosts to let your network 
									know what's going on. I have mine like this:nameserver 195.92.195.95
 lookup bind file
 
										127.0.0.1 localhost
										If you have multiple machines on your network. They must all 
									have the same /etc/hosts file.192.168.1.1 gellum
 192.168.1.2 7100
 
 This is the most important step, and probably the one most likely 
									to cause confusion. You must identify your Ethernet interface, to 
									allow your machine to talk to it. Type the following:
 
										dmesg
									Examine the log to find something about Ethernet. 
									I get the following, this tells me my card (it was clearly 
									recognised, is of type ae0) 
										ae0 at nubus0 slot a: EtherNet card, 32KB memory
										I therefore need to create a /etc/ifconfig.ae0 file. 
									If I had a sn0 interface, (built in on Quadras and Centris 
									machines), I would have created a /etc/ifconfig.sn0 file.ae0: Ethernet address 02:60:8c:05:bb:05
 
 You need to type your IP and Netmask into that file:
 
										inet Your IP netmask Your Netmask
									On Gellum, it is like this: 
										inet 192.168.1.1 netmask 255.255.255.0
									Finally, to allow yourself to log-in via telnet from the other 
									machines on your LAN. Edit /etc/inetd.conf. And un-comment 
									(ie remove the # at the beginning of the line) the things you 
									want to use. This will usually be ftp, telnet, 
									shell, and login. 
 Finally type reboot and Boot NetBSD with Single-User un-checked.
 
 You will now need to set-up IPNetRouter. That is beyond the scope 
									/ purpose of this document. Full instructions are right over 
									here, however.
 
 That's it! Your machine is ready for full action.
 Essential Programs
 
									These are the first things I would recommend installing on your 
									new system. To get them over there, use an FTP client and your 
									user-name and password. Alternatively, FTP them direct to your machine 
									using the ftp command. man ftp for instructions on 
									how to use this. Read on for configuring / compiling.
									
									Both nano and screen should be considered essential. 
									Nano is a very good text-editor. Screen allows you to have virtual 
									terminals, and do things in the background. Great fun!
									
 Assuming you've downloaded your source, you need to un-tar it. 
									Let's start with nano; type the following:
 
										tar xvfz nano-0.9.24.tar.gz
									You now want to be inside the nano directory: 
										cd nano-0.9.24
									If you want to read the various README and INSTALL files. Type: 
										more README.
									To configure it for your system, type: 
										./configure
									This may take several minutes, make a coffee. 
 When it is finished, you need to make the file. Type 
									the following:
 
										make
									This may take a while. Make a pizza. 
 When it is finished, to make it accessible to all users, you need 
									to make install. First su to root.
 
										su
										This should be quicker. You will need to log-out and log back 
									in to use your new program. Let's create a new file named 
									test.password
 make install
 
										nano test
									Type some stuff. Hit Control-X to exit. Control is referred to 
									as a ^ character. To search for text you use ^W 
									Control-W. 
 Congratulations! You've done it. You have installed a NetBSD 
									system, configured it to run headless, and installed some programs.
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							| Getting Help
 Man Pages
 
									The Man Pages are probably your most useful and reliable 
									resource. To read the manual entry for passwd, for example, 
									type:
									
										man passwd
									Hit q when you have finished, and space bar for the 
									next page. Mailing List
 
									Subscribe to the NetBSD Mailing List 
									for the best resource for all your questions and queries, 
									to get involved with the project, or to answer other's questions 
									and queries.
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							| Contact, Credits & Links
 Contact
 
									All the information here was accurate when I wrote it. If 
									you feel I've missed something, feel mis-led, or have a 
									question. Please 
									Email me.
									
 Finally, I'd encourage you to join the 
									Mailing List 
									for NetBSD.
 
 That's it. Enjoy the world of NetBSD.
 Links
 
									You probably want somewhere to go from here. Here are other pages 
									with additional or useful (or both) information:
									
									If I've missed anything, please tell me.
								 Credits
 
									Without the following people, all of this really would not 
									have been possible:
									
										Mark Andres.
										Thank you!Alex Barclay.
 Dave Huang.
 Bob Nestor.
 Erik Winkler.
 The rest of the NetBSD Port Mac68k Mailing List.
 
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