About this Document............................................1
What is NetBSD?................................................1
Upgrade path to NetBSD 1.5.3...................................2
Major Changes Between 1.5.2 and 1.5.3..........................2
Known Caveats with 1.5.3.......................................3
Major Changes Between 1.5.1 and 1.5.2..........................3
Major Changes Between 1.5 and 1.5.1............................4
Changes Between The NetBSD 1.4 and 1.5 Releases................6
Kernel......................................................6
Networking..................................................7
File system.................................................7
Security....................................................7
System administration and user tools........................8
Miscellaneous...............................................8
The Future of NetBSD...........................................9
Sources of NetBSD..............................................9
NetBSD 1.5.3 Release Contents..................................9
NetBSD/pc532 subdirectory structure........................11
Binary distribution sets...................................11
NetBSD/pc532 System Requirements and Supported Devices........13
Getting the NetBSD System on to Useful Media..................13
Preparing your System for NetBSD installation.................14
Installing the NetBSD System..................................14
The install procedure......................................14
Post installation steps.......................................17
Upgrading a previously-installed NetBSD System................19
Compatibility Issues With Previous NetBSD Releases............20
General issues.............................................20
Issues affecting an upgrade from NetBSD 1.4 or prior.......20
Using online NetBSD documentation.............................21
Administrivia.................................................21
Thanks go to..................................................22
We are........................................................24
Legal Mumbo-Jumbo.............................................28
The End.......................................................31
This document describes the installation procedure for
NetBSD1.5.3
on the
pc532
platform. It is available in four different formats titled
INSTALL.
ext,
where
.ext
is one of
.ps
, .html
, .more
,
or .txt
:
.ps
.html
.more
more(1)
and
less(1)
pager utility programs. This is the format in which the on-line
man
pages are generally presented.
.txt
You are reading the HTML version.
The
NetBSD
Operating System is a fully functional
Open Source
UNIX-like
operating system derived from the University of California, Berkeley
Networking Release 2 (Net/2), 4.4BSD-Lite, and 4.4BSD-Lite2 sources.
NetBSD
runs on thirty-one different system architectures featuring twelve distinct
families of CPUs, and is being ported to more. The
NetBSD1.5.3
release contains complete binary releases for fifteen different
machine types. (The sixteen remaining are not fully supported at this time
and are thus not part of the binary distribution. For information on
them, please see the
NetBSD
web site at
http://www.netbsd.org/.)
NetBSD
is a completely integrated system.
In addition to its highly portable, high performance kernel,
NetBSD
features a complete set of user utilities, compilers for several
languages, the X Window System, firewall software
and numerous other tools, all accompanied by full source code.
NetBSD
is a creation of the members of the Internet community.
Without the unique cooperation and coordination the net makes
possible, it's likely that
NetBSD
wouldn't exist.
NetBSD
1.5.3 is an upgrade of
NetBSD
1.5, 1.5.1, 1.5.2, and earlier major and maintenance releases of
NetBSD.
The intermediate development versions of code available on the main trunk
in our CVS repository (also known as ``NetBSD-current'') from
after
the point where the release cycle for 1.5 was started are designated
by version identifiers such as 1.5A, 1.5B, etc.
These identifiers do not designate releases, but indicate major changes
in internal kernel APIs.
Note that the kernel from
NetBSD
1.5.3 can
not
be used to upgrade a system running one of those intermediate development
versions.
Trying to use the
NetBSD
1.5.3 kernel on such a system
will
probably result in problems.
Please also note that it is not possible to do a direct ``version''
comparison between any of the intermediate development versions mentioned
above and 1.5.3 to determine if a given feature is present or absent
in 1.5.3. The development of 1.5 and the subsequent maintenance releases
is done on a separate branch in the CVS repository.
The branch was created when
the release cycle for 1.5 was started, and during the release cycle of
1.5 and its maintenance releases, selected fixes and enhancements have been
imported from the main development trunk.
So, there are features in 1.5.3 which were not in, e.g. 1.5B, and vice
versa.
In addition, many bugs have been fixed--more than 70 problems
reported through our problem tracking system have been fixed,
and several other non-reported problems have also been found and fixed.
See the CHANGES-1.5.3 file for the complete list.
Additionally, a few more bugs have been fixed.
See the CHANGES-1.5.2 file for the complete list of changes.
In addition, many bugs have been fixed--more than 95 problems
reported through our problem tracking system have been fixed,
and some other non-reported problems have also been found and fixed.
See the CHANGES-1.5.1 file for the complete list.
The NetBSD Packages Collection (pkgsrc) which is used to maintain,
build, track dependencies, and maintain NetBSD-specific fixes to
third-party programs, has received a major overhaul for NetBSD 1.5.1.
Some highlights are:
Please note that at the moment,
sysinst
will not assist you in
installing pre-built third-party binary packages or the pkgsrc
system itself, so you will have to manually install packages using
pkg_install
or fetch and extract the pkgsrc.tgz tar file to get started.
Lastly, it should be noted that the X11 binaries shipped in
NetBSD
1.5.3
is still based on XFree86 version 3.3.6.
Several newer graphics cards are inadequately supported
by that code base, but on the other hand support for several
older graphics cards is not available in newer XFree86 code.
NetBSD
is in the process of moving to XFree86 version 4, and is currently
maintaining both the XFree86 3.3.6 and the XFree86 version 4 code
in the
xsrc
source set, and you may at compile time pick which sources to
build and install.
To ease installation, testing and use of the XFree86 version 4
code, a binary snapshot based on XFree86
version 4.0.3 will be made available for at least the i386
architecture shortly after the release of
NetBSD
1.5.3.
The
NetBSD1.5
release
provides numerous significant functional enhancements, including
support for many new devices, integration of hundreds of bug fixes,
new and updated kernel subsystems, and many userland enhancements. The
result of these improvements is a stable operating system fit for
production use that rivals most commercially available systems.
It is impossible to completely summarize over one year of
development that went into the
NetBSD1.5.3
release. Some highlights include:
Kernel interfaces have continued to be refined, and more subsystems
and device drivers are shared among the different ports. You can look
for this trend to continue.
This is the sixth major release of
NetBSD/pc532.
There are a few known problems in the pc532 port. They include:
The
NetBSD
Foundation has been incorporated as a non-profit
organization. Its purpose is to encourage, foster and promote the
free exchange of computer software, namely the
NetBSD
Operating
System. The foundation will allow for many things to be handled more
smoothly than could be done with our previous informal organization.
In particular, it provides the framework to deal with other parties
that wish to become involved in the
NetBSD
Project.
The
NetBSD
Foundation will help improve the quality of
NetBSD
by:
We intend to begin narrowing the time delay between releases. Our
ambition is to provide a full release every six to eight months.
We hope to support even
more
hardware in the future, and we have a
rather large number of other ideas about what can be done to improve
NetBSD.
We intend to continue our current practice of making the
NetBSD-current development source available on a daily basis.
We intend to integrate free, positive changes from whatever sources
submit them, providing that they are well thought-out and increase the
usability of the system.
Above all, we hope to create a stable and accessible system, and to be
responsive to the needs and desires of
NetBSD
users, because it is for
and because of them that
NetBSD
exists.
Refer to
http://www.netbsd.org/Sites/net.html.
The root directory of the
NetBSD1.5.3
release is organized as follows:
In addition to the files and directories listed above, there is one
directory per architecture, for each of the architectures for which
NetBSD1.5.3
has a binary distribution.
There are also
The source distribution sets can be found in subdirectories of the
All the above source sets are located in the
The source sets are distributed as compressed tar files. They may be
unpacked into
The
The split distributions may be reassembled and extracted with
cat
as follows:
In each of the source distribution set directories, there are
files which contain the checksums of the files in the directory:
The MD5 digest is the safest checksum, followed by the POSIX
checksum. The other two checksums are provided only to ensure
that the widest possible range of system can check the integrity
of the release files.
NetBSD
maintains its own set of sources for the X Window System in order to
assure tight integration and compatibility.
These sources are based on XFree86, and tightly track XFree86 releases.
The binaries shipped with
NetBSD
1.5.3
are based on XFree86 version 3.3.6.
NetBSD
is in the process of moving to XFree86 version 4, and
the X source set actually contains source for both XFree86 3.3.6
and XFree86 4, and the ability to decide
at compile-time which one to build and install.
The X Window System binary sets distributed with
NetBSD
are:
The pc532 binary distribution sets are distributed as gzipped tar files
named with the extension
.tgz, e.g.
The instructions given for extracting the source sets work equally
well for the binary sets, but it is worth noting that if you use that
method, the files are
The initial installation process on a pc532 without a previous
NetBSD
installation is supported by the following files:
The upgrade process is supported by having a copy of a 1.5.3 kernel
available. This file is:
NetBSD/pc532
1.5.3 runs on a
PC532
computer. It supports a subset of the
``standard''
hardware to date. This is defined as:
NetBSD/pc532
currently expects the ROM monitor to be the
``autoboot monitor''
of Oct/Nov 1991. It includes support to set up auto booting of
NetBSD,
including a secondary boot program that the autoboot monitor
will load that in turn loads the
NetBSD
kernel from a
NetBSD
file system.
Source and ROM images of the autoboot monitor are located at
ftp://ftp.cs.wwu.edu/pub/pc532/mon.auto.tar.gz
Most of the pc532 specific development of
NetBSD/pc532
was done on a
machine with 8 MB of memory. It should run with 4 MB of memory
although it may be slower.
The
`standard'
method of getting
NetBSD/pc532
onto your pc532 is
via the console terminal and using the downloading parts of the
ROM monitor. As such, usually another computer has the distribution
on disk and is connected via a serial line to your pc532's console
port. A terminal connected to the attached host computer is used
to access the pc532 console via a terminal program. The source for
a program called download is part of this distribution. Download
sends data to the ROM monitor over the serial line.
You may need to find and read the documentation about the ROM monitor
download command and other low level comands.
Other methods of getting
NetBSD/pc532
on your pc532 may include
SCSI tape or SCSI floppy disk or cloning a disk on a system
already running
NetBSD/pc532.
If you have some operating system already running on your pc532,
you can use that OS to get
NetBSD/pc532
on a hard disk much easier than
with the ROM monitor.
NetBSD/pc532
was developed from Minix/pc532
until it was self hosting. You can run
NetBSD
and Minix or other OS
off the same disk.
The major preparation needed is to make sure you can recover any
current bits stored on your pc532. If you don't care about your
data on the disk, you don't need to do anything.
(If you already have
NetBSD/pc532
installed and you only want to update
your system, see the next section.)
To install
NetBSD/pc532,
there are several things you need to know.
First,
NetBSD
``autoconfig 's''
the SCSI devices.
Only
Next you need to know what the install script wants to do. This install
is script on the ram disk root that can do most of the work of configuring
your disk.
Replace
X
with your drive number. For KLONDIKE,
X
would be
2.
The boot program will ask you now for a kernel to load. Answer
To help in this process, there is a program
factor
that is on the
Not many to choose from, so we tried ...
Now we'd like to get about a megabyte per track:
Now we need the number of tracks (or cylinders):
So we ended up choosing 1030 cylinders, 1 head, 1994 sectors/track.
We
``lost''
only 60 sectors, but got a
``reasonable''
geometry.
If you are not using the autoboot monitor, you will have to
figure out the starting sector of the boot images partition
and manually load the
NetBSD
boot loader from the disk using
the
read
command. If you would rather use the autoboot monitor
you can get source and ROM images from the URL
ftp://ftp.cs.wwu.edu/pub/pc532/mon.auto.tar.gz
Get the .tgz files from the cd-rom
Add v to the flags if you want a verbose extract.
The
--unlink
is to make sure that the install versions
of sh, init, ... are replaced by their proper versons
in base.tgz. We think it is wise to include the
--unlink
for other things.
Now you can adjust the kernel's default baud rate to match your
monitor's default baud rate. Do the following:
where
your_baud_rate is the actual value, 19200, 38400 or
something slower than 9600.
If you set scndefaultrate to something bogus, you'll probably
not be able to reboot... So be carefull!
Once you've got the operating system running, there are a few
things you need to do in order to bring the system into a properly
configured state, with the most important ones described below.
If you or the installation software haven't done any configuration of
and with the root file system
(
If your
If you have
Other values that need to be set in
or, if you have
myname.my.dom
in
To enable proper hostname resolution, you will also want to add an
Other files in
After reboot, you can log in as
Use the
If you have installed the X Window System, look at the files in
Don't forget to add
If you wish to install any of the software freely available for
UNIX-like
systems
you are strongly advised to first check the
NetBSD
package system. This automatically handles any changes necessary to
make the software run on
NetBSD,
retrieval and installation of any other packages on which the software
may depend, and simplifies installation (and deinstallation), both
from source and precompiled binaries.
The above commands will install the tcsh shell, the CVS source code
management system, the Apache web server and
the perl programming language as well as all the packages they
depend on.
After extracting, then see the
is likely to give you more information on these files.
The upgrade to
NetBSD
1.5.3 is a binary upgrade; it can be quite difficult
to advance to a later version by recompiling from source due primarily
to interdependencies in the various components.
To do the upgrade, you must have at least base.tgz on disk and
a copy of the proper netbsd.default. It will require quite a bit
of disk space to do the upgrade.
Since upgrading involves replacing the kernel, and most of the system
binaries, it has the potential to cause data loss. You are strongly
advised to BACK UP ANY IMPORTANT DATA ON YOUR DISK, whether on the
NetBSD
partition or on another operating system's partition, before
beginning the upgrade process.
To upgrade your system, follow the following instructions:
Users upgrading from previous versions of
NetBSD
may wish to bear the
following problems and compatibility issues in mind when upgrading to
NetBSD1.5.3.
Prior to
NetBSD1.5,
At system startup,
At system shutdown,
Local and third-party scripts may be installed into
Previous releases of
NetBSD
disabled a feature of
Due to
Documentation is available if you first install the manual
distribution set. Traditionally, the
``man pages''
(documentation) are denoted by
`
The section numbers group the topics into several categories, but three
are of primary interest: user commands are in section 1, file formats
are in section 5, and administrative information is in section 8.
The man
command is used to view the documentation on a topic, and is
started by entering
man[ section]
topic.
The brackets
[]
around the
section should not be entered, but rather indicate that the section is
optional. If you don't ask for a particular section, the topic with the
lowest numbered section name will be displayed. For instance, after
logging in, enter
to read the documentation for
instead.
If you are unsure of what man page you are looking for, enter
apropos subject-word
where
subject-word
is your topic of interest; a list of possibly
related man pages will be displayed.
If you've got something to say, do so! We'd like your input.
There are various mailing lists available via the mailing list
server at
majordomo@netbsd.org.
To get help on using the mailing
list server, send mail to that address with an empty body, and it will
reply with instructions.
There are various mailing lists set up to deal with comments and
questions about this release. Please send comments to:
netbsd-comments@netbsd.org.
To report bugs, use the
Use of
There are also port-specific mailing lists, to discuss aspects of
each port of
NetBSD.
Use majordomo to find their addresses, or visit
http://www.netbsd.org/MailingLists/.
If
you're interested in doing a serious amount of work on a specific
port, you probably should contact the
`owner'
of that port (listed
below).
If you'd like to help with this effort, and have an idea as to how
you could be useful, send us mail or subscribe to:
netbsd-help@netbsd.org.
As a favor, please avoid mailing huge documents or files to these
mailing lists. Instead, put the material you would have sent up
for FTP or WWW somewhere, then mail the appropriate list about it, or, if
you'd rather not do that, mail the list saying you'll send the data
to those who want it.
for their ongoing work on
BSD
systems, support, and encouragement.
for answering lots of questions, fixing bugs, and doing the various work
they've done.
(in alphabetical order)
Upgrade path to NetBSD 1.5.3
If you are not installing your system ``from scratch'' but instead
are going to upgrade an existing system already running
NetBSD
you need to know which versions you can upgrade with
NetBSD
1.5.3.
Major Changes Between 1.5.2 and 1.5.3
Some highlights are:
lpd(8)
has been fixed to deal with a security issue (SA2001-018).
ca(4)
to be replaced by
ld(4)
.
Drivers for the Mylex DAC960 management interface
and DPT/Adaptec I2O RAID management interface has also been added.
See
dpti(4)
and
mlxctl(8)
.
twe(4)
.
ep(4)
,
ex(4)
,
rtk(4)
,
sip(4)
,
ti(4)
,
tl(4)
,
and
wi(4)
.
rtk(4)
on CardBus has been added.
ne(4)
driver has been extended to support some more pcmcia cards.
pciide(4)
controllers added: HPT-370A, Acard ATP-850/860, and AMD-768.
Ultra-DMA 100 support added for CMD 0649.
emuxki(4)
.
esa(4)
.
siop(4)
driver.
sendmail(8)
has been upgraded to version 8.11.6.
Known Caveats with 1.5.3
The following are the major known issues with
NetBSD
1.5.3.
Major Changes Between 1.5.1 and 1.5.2
The main purpose of
NetBSD
1.5.2 is to fix some problems discovered shortly after the release of
NetBSD
1.5.1.
Some highlights are:
telnetd(8)
has been fixed to deal with a security issue (SA2001-012).
mount(8)
.
dump(8)
has been fixed to deal with a local security issue (SA2001-014).
Major Changes Between 1.5 and 1.5.1
The complete list of changes between
NetBSD
1.5 and 1.5.1 can be found in the file CHANGES-1.5.1 in the top directory
of the source tree.
The following are highlights only:
an(4)
.
siop(4)
driver has improved in performance and robustness.
ifconfig(8)
.
vlan(4)
.
isp(4)
driver has been upgraded to (among other things) work on MacPPC.
lfs(4)
file system has again been substantially updated, but is still
experimental.
pciide(4)
driver.
Support for Intel 82801BAM controllers has also been added, and
handling of Ali controllers has been improved.
ex(4)
driver has added support for 3Com 3c555, 3c556 and 3c556B MiniPCI Ethernet
cards.
awacs(4)
.
sip(4)
driver has been fixed to properly support the dp83815, as found in
current Netgear FA311 10/100 cards.
ftpd(8)
has been updated to deal with two security issues (SA2000-018 and
SA2001-005).
ntpd(8)
has been updated to deal with a security issue (SA2001-004).
telnetd(8)
has been updated to deal with a security issue (SA2000-017).
ne(4)
.
dhclient(8)
,
among other things. Please note that the new
dhcpd(8)
forces you to configure a "ddns-update-style" of either
"ad-hoc", "interim" or "none".
kerberos(8)
implementation has been upgraded to version 0.3e.
tlp(4)
driver.
yds(4)
.
esm(4)
),
NeoMagic 256 (see
neo(4)
),
and Cirrus Logic CrystalClear PCI Audio CS4281 (see
clct(4)
)have been added.
Changes Between The NetBSD 1.4 and 1.5 Releases
Kernel
ktruss(1)
.
swapctl(8)
.
Networking
pcap(3)
is incremented and you may need to recompile userland tools.
The KAME IPv6 part includes results from the unified-IPv6 effort.
File system
/
)
on a RAID set.
rpc.lockd(8)
)
now works.
Security
sysctl(3)
interfaces to various elements of process and system information,
allowing programs such as
ps(1)
,
dmesg(1)
and the like to operate without recompilation after kernel upgrades,
and remove the necessity to run setgid kmem (thus improving system
security).
sshd(8)
and
ssh(1)
now require
rnd(4)
kernel random number devices.
System administration and user tools
rc(8)
system startup and shutdown scripts to an
`rc.d'
mechanism, with separate control scripts for each service, and
appropriate dependency ordering provided by
rcorder(8)
.
postfix(1)
provided as alternative mail transport agent to
sendmail(8)
.
useradd(8)
,
usermod(8)
,
userdel(8)
,
groupadd(8)
,
groupmod(8)
,
and
groupdel(8)
added to the system.
/etc/login.conf
)
from
BSD/OS.
at(1)
and
w(1)
.
ftpd(8)
providing features found in larger and less secure FTP daemons,
such as user classes, connection limits, improved support for
virtual hosting, transfer statistics, transfer rate throttling,
and support for various IETF ftpext working group extensions.
ftp(1)
client has been improved even further, including
transfer rate throttling, improved URL support, command line uploads.
See the man page for details.
Miscellaneous
/usr/share/misc/style
)
to use ANSI C only (instead of K&R) and reflect current (best) practice,
and begin migrating the
NetBSD
source code to follow it.
curses(3)
library, including support for color.
file(1)
,
ipfilter(4)
,
ppp(4)
,
and
sendmail(8)
to the latest stable release.
The Future of NetBSD
Sources of NetBSD
NetBSD 1.5.3 Release Contents
.../NetBSD-1.5.3/
CHANGES
LAST_MINUTE
MIRRORS
README.files
TODO
patches/
source/
README.export-control
files sprinkled liberally throughout the
distribution tree, which point out that there are some portions of the
distribution that may be subject to
export regulations of the United States, e.g.
code under
src/crypto
and
src/sys/crypto
.
It is your responsibility
to determine whether or not it is legal for you to export these portions
and to act accordingly.
source
subdirectory of the distribution tree. They contain the
complete sources to the system. The source distribution sets
are as follows:
22.3 MB gzipped, 98.8 MB uncompressed
7.4 MB gzipped, 73.0 MB uncompressed
3.3 MB gzipped, 13.2 MB uncompressed
24.8 MB gzipped, 123.1 MB uncompressed
config(8)
;
and
dbsym(8)
.
18.0 MB gzipped, 90.9 MB uncompressed
78.1 MB gzipped, 393.6 MB uncompressed
source/sets
subdirectory of the distribution tree.
/usr/src
with the command:
#
( cd / ; tar -zxpf - ) < set_name.tgz
sets/Split/
subdirectory contains split
versions of the source sets for those users who need to load the
source sets from floppy or otherwise need a split distribution. The
split sets are named
set_name.
xx
where
set_name
is the distribution set name, and
xx
is the sequence number of the file,
starting with
``aa''
for the first file in the distribution set, then
``ab''
for the next, and so on. All of these files except the last one
of each set should be exactly 240,640 bytes long. (The last file is
just long enough to contain the remainder of the data for that
distribution set.)
#
cat set_name.?? | ( cd / ; tar -zxpf - )
BSDSUM
CKSUM
MD5
SYSVSUM
NetBSD/pc532 subdirectory structure
The pc532-specific portion of the
NetBSD1.5.3
release is found in the
pc532
subdirectory of the distribution:
.../NetBSD-1.5.3/pc532/
INSTALL.html
INSTALL.ps
INSTALL.txt
INSTALL.more
.more
file contains underlined text using the
more(1)
conventions for indicating italic and bold display.
binary/
kernel/
netbsd.GENERIC.gz
sets/
installation/
floppy/
misc/
Binary distribution sets
The
NetBSD
pc532
binary distribution sets contain the binaries which
comprise the
NetBSD1.5.3
release for the pc532. There are eight binary distribution sets.
The binary distribution sets can be found in the
pc532/binary/sets
subdirectory
of the
NetBSD1.5.3
distribution tree, and are as follows:
15.9 MB gzipped, 37.9 MB uncompressed
/usr/include
)
and the various system libraries (except the shared
libraries, which are included as part of the
base
set). This set also includes the manual pages for
all of the utilities it contains, as well as the
system call and library manual pages.
11.6 MB gzipped, 37.7 MB uncompressed
/etc
and in several other places. This set
must
be installed if you are installing the system from scratch, but should
not
be used if you are upgrading.
0.1 MB gzipped, 0.6 MB uncompressed
2.9 MB gzipped, 7.2 MB uncompressed
GENERIC
kernel, named
/netbsd
.
You must
install this distribution set.
0.6 MB gzipped, 1.2 MB uncompressed
5.6 MB gzipped, 22.7 MB uncompressed
/usr/share
.
2.2 MB gzipped, 7.5 MB uncompressed
groff(1)
,
all related programs, and their manual pages.
1.3 MB gzipped, 4.6 MB uncompressed
? MB gzipped, ? MB uncompressed
? MB gzipped, ? MB uncompressed
? MB gzipped, ? MB uncompressed
6.2 MB gzipped, 7.5 MB uncompressed
base.tgz
.
/
-relative
and therefore are extracted
below
the current directory. That
is, if you want to extract the binaries into your system, i.e.
replace the system binaries with them, you have to run the
tar -xpf
command from
/
.
floppy-144.fs
download.c
inst-11.fs
into memory via the pc532
ROM monitor.
kern.tgz
DEFAULT
configuration file in
pc532/conf
.
NetBSD/pc532 System Requirements and Supported Devices
Getting the NetBSD System on to Useful Media
Preparing your System for NetBSD installation
Installing the NetBSD System
floppy-144.fs
has only
support for disks configured into the kernel. Starting the search at
SCSI address 0, lun 0 and increasing, the first disk found will be
sd0
regardless of the address, the second will be sd1.
KLONDIKE
for example has the following devices installed:
sd0
sd1
sd2
sd3
cd0
st0
sd0
-
sd3
are supported by the
floppy-144.fs
kernel.
The install procedure
sdXa:/netbsd
floppy-144.fs
into RAM.
floppy-144.fs
at
0x260000
0x3BE020
md0a:/netbsd.gz
download.c
).
This program when used as
``download file''
will read the contents of the file and
output to standard output a byte sequence used by the pc532
ROM monitor to download a binary file into RAM. Using this
program on a computer connected to the pc532, one can
load a copy of
floppy-144.fs
into RAM at
0x260000
.
The boot sequence is now the same as with tape.
floppy-144.fs
will run the new
sysinst
utility as the standard
setup. It assumes a VT100 compatible terminal. If you don't want
to try using
sysinst
or you don't have a VT100, type f followed by
the return. Then following these instructions for installation.
If you want to use
sysinst,
read the i386 INSTALL instructions to
learn about
sysinst.
floppy-144.fs
.
The usage is
factor number
and it lists the prime factors of number.
For example, with the 2053880 sector disk we got:
$
factor 2053880
2053880:
2
2
2
5
51347
$
factor 2053820
2053820:
2
2
5
103
997
$
echo 2 * 997"|bc"
1994
$
echo 2 * 5 * 103"|bc"
1030
/
),
your swap partition,
and then any other partitions you may want. For the
`other'
partitions, it will ask for a mount point. The mount point will
be
``relative to /''
and should not include the leading
`/'.
Also, if you do not want the partition to have newfs run on it (that is
it might be the last one and have a copy of
floppy-144.fs
)
enter
`NO'
to the mount point and it will not run
newfs
on the partition.
It will enter the partition into the disklabel.
/netbsd
.
You can get it to do it faster by pressing return.
/etc/resolv.conf
, ...
)
mount -rt cd9660 /dev/cd0a /mnt
/gz.files
and put them there. If you are
``short on space,''
you might want to load them and extract them one
at a time. A minimum installation is
base
and
etc.
It takes about 32 Megs installed + 20 Megs for the
base.tgz
.
/
.
For example, if your
*.tgz
files were in a directory
/gz.files
,
to extract
base.tgz
you would:
cd /
tar --unlink -zxpf /gz.files/base.tgz
/etc
to
/etc.old
and then extract
etc.
You should extract
etc
for upgrades. For
``full''
installations, extract all files.
/etc
rc.conf
hosts
resolv.conf
ttys
gettytab
fstab
#
gdb -w /netbsd
(gdb)
set scndefaultrate = your_baud_rate
(gdb)
quit
Post installation steps
/etc/rc.conf
/etc/rc.conf
(sysinst
usually will),
the system will drop you into single user mode on first reboot with the
message
/etc/rc.conf
is
not
configured.
Multiuser
boot
aborted.
/
)
mounted read-write. When the system
asks you to choose a shell, simply press
RETURN
to get to a
/bin/sh
prompt. If you are asked for a terminal type, respond with
vt220
(or whatever is appropriate for your terminal type)
and press
RETURN
.
You may need to type one of the following commands to get your delete key
to work properly, depending on your keyboard:
#
stty erase '^h'
#
stty erase '^?'
At this point, you need to configure at least
one file in the
/etc
directory. You will need to mount your root filesystem read/write with:
#
/sbin/mount -u -w /
Change to the
/etc
directory and take a look at the
/etc/rc.conf
file. Modify it to your tastes, making sure that you set
rc_configured=YES
so that your changes will be enabled and a multi-user boot can
proceed.
Default values for the various programs can be found in
/etc/defaults/rc.conf
,
where some in-line documentation may be found.
More complete documentation can be found in
rc.conf(5)
.
/usr
directory is on a separate partition and you do not know how to use
ed,
you will have to mount your
/usr
partition to gain access to
ex
or
vi.
Do the following:
#
mount /usr
#
export TERM=vt220
/var
on a separate partition, you need to repeat
that step for it. After that, you can edit
/etc/rc.conf
with
vi(1)
.
When you have finished, type
exit
at the prompt to
leave the single-user shell and continue with the multi-user boot.
/etc/rc.conf
for a networked environment are
hostname and possibly
defaultroute,
furthermore add an
ifconfig_int
for your
<int>
network interface,
along the lines of
ifconfig_de0="inet
123.45.67.89
netmask
255.255.255.0"
/etc/hosts
:
ifconfig_de0="inet
myname.my.dom
netmask
255.255.255.0"
/etc/resolv.conf
file or (if you are feeling a little more adventurous) run
named(8)
.
See
resolv.conf(5)
or
named(8)
for more information.
/etc
that may require modification or setting up include
/etc/mailer.conf
,
/etc/nsswitch.conf
,
and
/etc/wscons.conf
.
root
at the login prompt. Unless you've set a password in
sysinst,
there
is no initial password. If you're using the machine in a
networked environment, you should create an account for yourself
(see below) and protect it and the
``root''
account with good passwords.
Unless you have connected an unusual terminal device as the console
you can just press
RETURN
when it prompts for
Terminal
type?
[...]
.
useradd(8)
command to add accounts to your system,
do not
edit
/etc/passwd
directly. See
useradd(8)
for more information on how to add a new user to the system.
/usr/X11R6/lib/X11/doc
for information.
/usr/X11R6/bin
to your path in your shell's dot file so that you have access to the X binaries.
1.5.3/pc532/All
subdir. You can install them with the following commands:
# export PKG_PATH=\
ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/packages/1.5.3/pc532/All\;\
ftp://ftp.netbsd.org/pub/NetBSD/packages/1.5/pc532/All
# pkg_add -v tcsh
# pkg_add -v cvs
# pkg_add -v apache
# pkg_add -v perl
...
/usr/pkgsrc
(though other locations work fine), with the commands:
#
mkdir /usr/pkgsrc
#
( cd /usr/pkgsrc ; tar -zxpf - ) < pkgsrc.tar.gz
README
file in the extraction directory (e.g.
/usr/pkgsrc/README
)
for more information.
/etc/mail/aliases
to forward root mail to the right place. Don't forget to run
newaliases(1)
afterwards.
/etc/mail/sendmail.cf
file will almost definitely need to be adjusted;
files aiding in this can be found in
/usr/share/sendmail
.
See the
README
file there for more information.
/etc/rc.local
to run any local daemons you use.
/etc
files are documented in section 5 of the manual; so just invoking
#
man 5 filename
Upgrading a previously-installed NetBSD System
base.tgz
:
#
cd /
#
pax -zrvpe -f /gz.files/base.tgz
/etc
.
There may be changes to file formats depending on what version of
NetBSD/pc532
you are running.
netbsd.default
in
/
as the file
netbsd
.
netbsd.default
is a 9600 console line kernel. Read the last part of the new installation
part of these notes to find out how to change your default speed.)
Compatibility Issues With Previous NetBSD Releases
General issues
/etc/rc
modified to use
/etc/rc.d/*
/etc/rc
was a traditional
BSD
style monolithic file; each discrete program or substem from
/etc/rc
and
/etc/netstart
has been moved into separate scripts in
/etc/rc.d/
.
/etc/rc
uses
rcorder(8)
to build a dependency list of the files in
/etc/rc.d
and then executes each script in turn with an argument of
`start'.
Many
rc.d
scripts won't start unless the appropriate
rc.conf(5)
entry in
/etc/rc.conf
is set to
`YES.'
/etc/rc.shutdown
uses
rcorder(8)
to build a dependency list of the files in
/etc/rc.d
that have a
``KEYWORD: shutdown''
line, reverses the resulting list, and then executes each script in turn
with an argument of
`stop'.
The following scripts support a specific shutdown method:
cron
,
inetd
,
local
,
and
xdm
.
/etc/rc.d
as necessary.
Refer to the other scripts in that directory and
rc(8)
for more information on implementing
rc.d
scripts.
Issues affecting an upgrade from NetBSD 1.4 or prior
named(8)
leaks version information
named(8)
where the version number of the server could be determined by remote clients.
This feature has not been disabled in
NetBSD1.5,
because there is a
named.conf(5)
option to change the version string:
option {
version "newstring";
};
sysctl(8)
pathname changed
sysctl(8)
is moved from
/usr/sbin/sysctl
to
/sbin/sysctl
.
If you have hardcoded references to the full pathname
(in shell scripts, for example)
please be sure to update those.
sendmail(8)
configuration file pathname changed
sendmail(8)
upgrade from 8.9.x to 8.10.x,
/etc/sendmail.cf
is moved to
/etc/mail/sendmail.cf
.
Also, the default
sendmail.cf(5)
refers different pathnames than before.
For example,
/etc/aliases
is now located at
/etc/mail/aliases
,
/etc/sendmail.cw
is now called
/etc/mail/local-host-names
,
and so forth.
If you have customized
sendmail.cf(5)
and friends, you will need to move the files to the new locations.
See
/usr/share/sendmail/README
for more information.
Using online NetBSD documentation
name(section)
'.
Some examples of this are
intro(1)
,
man(1)
,
apropros(1)
,
passwd(1)
,
and
passwd(5)
.
#
man passwd
passwd(1)
.
To view the documentation for
passwd(5)
,
enter
#
man 5 passwd
Administrivia
send-pr(1)
command shipped with
NetBSD,
and fill in as much information about the problem as you can. Good
bug reports include lots of details. Additionally, bug reports can
be sent by mail to:
netbsd-bugs@netbsd.org.
send-pr(1)
is encouraged, however, because bugs reported with it
are entered into the
NetBSD
bugs database, and thus can't slip through
the cracks.
Thanks go to
Keith Bostic
Ralph Campbell
Mike Karels
Marshall Kirk McKusick
Mike Hibler
Rick Macklem
Jan-Simon Pendry
Chris Torek
Steve Allen
Jason Birnschein
Mason Loring Bliss
Jason Brazile
Mark Brinicombe
David Brownlee
Simon Burge
Dave Burgess
Ralph Campbell
Brian Carlstrom
James Chacon
Bill Coldwell
Charles Conn
Tom Coulter
Charles D. Cranor
Christopher G. Demetriou
Scott Ellis
Hubert Feyrer
Castor Fu
Greg Gingerich
William Gnadt
Michael Graff
Guenther Grau
Ross Harvey
Charles M. Hannum
Michael L. Hitch
Kenneth Alan Hornstein
Jordan K. Hubbard
Søren Jørvang
Scott Kaplan
Noah M. Keiserman
Harald Koerfgen
John Kohl
Chris Legrow
Ted Lemon
Norman R. McBride
Neil J. McRae
Perry E. Metzger
Toru Nishimura
Herb Peyerl
Mike Price
Dave Rand
Michael Richardson
Heiko W. Rupp
Brad Salai
Chuck Silvers
Thor Lancelot Simon
Bill Sommerfeld
Paul Southworth
Eric and Rosemary Spahr
Ted Spradley
Kimmo Suominen
Jason R. Thorpe
Steve Wadlow
Krister Walfridsson
Jim Wise
Reinoud Zandijk
Christos Zoulas
(If you're not on that list and should be, tell us! We probably were
not able to get in touch with you, to verify that you wanted to be
listed.)
AboveNet Communications, Inc.
Advanced System Products, Inc.
Avalon Computer Systems
Bay Area Internet Solutions
Brains Corporation, Japan
Canada Connect Corporation
Co-operative Research Centre for Enterprise Distributed Systems Technology
Demon Internet, UK
Digital Equipment Corporation
Distributed Processing Technology
Easynet, UK
Free Hardware Foundation
Innovation Development Enterprises of America
Internet Software Consortium
MS Macro System GmbH, Germany
Numerical Aerospace Simulation Facility, NASA Ames Research Center
Piermont Information Systems Inc.
Precedence Technologies Ltd
Salient Systems Inc.
VMC Harald Frank, Germany
Warped Communications, Inc.
Whitecross Database Systems Ltd.
We are...
The NetBSD core group: | ||||||||
Jun-ichiro itojun Hagino | itojun@netbsd.org | |||||||
Frank van der Linden | fvdl@netbsd.org | |||||||
Luke Mewburn | lukem@netbsd.org | |||||||
Christos Zoulas | christos@netbsd.org | |||||||
| ||||||||
The portmasters (and their ports): | ||||||||
Mark Brinicombe | mark@netbsd.org | arm32 | ||||||
Simon Burge | simonb@netbsd.org | pmax | ||||||
Jeremy Cooper | jeremy@netbsd.org | sun3x | ||||||
Matt Fredette | fredette@netbsd.org | sun2 | ||||||
Ross Harvey | ross@netbsd.org | alpha | ||||||
Jun-ichiro itojun Hagino | itojun@netbsd.org | sh3 | ||||||
Ben Harris | bjh21@netbsd.org | arm26 | ||||||
Eduardo Horvath | eeh@netbsd.org | sparc64 | ||||||
Darrin Jewell | dbj@netbsd.org | next68k | ||||||
Søren Jørvang | soren@netbsd.org | cobalt | ||||||
Søren Jørvang | soren@netbsd.org | sgimips | ||||||
Wayne Knowles | wdk@netbsd.org | mipsco | ||||||
Paul Kranenburg | pk@netbsd.org | sparc | ||||||
Anders Magnusson | ragge@netbsd.org | vax | ||||||
Minoura Makoto | minoura@netbsd.org | x68k | ||||||
Phil Nelson | phil@netbsd.org | pc532 | ||||||
Tohru Nishimura | nisimura@netbsd.org | luna68k | ||||||
NONAKA Kimihiro | nonaka@netbsd.org | prep | ||||||
Scott Reynolds | scottr@netbsd.org | mac68k | ||||||
Kazuki Sakamoto | sakamoto@netbsd.org | bebox | ||||||
Noriyuki Soda | soda@netbsd.org | arc | ||||||
Wolfgang Solfrank | ws@netbsd.org | ofppc | ||||||
Ignatios Souvatzis | is@netbsd.org | amiga | ||||||
Jonathan Stone | jonathan@netbsd.org | pmax | ||||||
Shin Takemura | takemura@netbsd.org | hpcmips | ||||||
Jason Thorpe | thorpej@netbsd.org | alpha | ||||||
Jason Thorpe | thorpej@netbsd.org | hp300 | ||||||
Tsubai Masanari | tsubai@netbsd.org | macppc | ||||||
Tsubai Masanari | tsubai@netbsd.org | newsmips | ||||||
Izumi Tsutsui | tsutsui@netbsd.org | news68k | ||||||
Frank van der Linden | fvdl@netbsd.org | i386 | ||||||
Leo Weppelman | leo@netbsd.org | atari | ||||||
Nathan Williams | nathanw@netbsd.org | sun3 | ||||||
Steve Woodford | scw@netbsd.org | mvme68k | ||||||
| ||||||||
The NetBSD 1.5.3 Release Engineering team: | ||||||||
Chris G. Demetriou | cgd@netbsd.org | |||||||
Håvard Eidnes | he@netbsd.org | |||||||
Ted Lemon | mellon@netbsd.org | |||||||
Perry Metzger | perry@netbsd.org | |||||||
Curt Sampson | cjs@netbsd.org | |||||||
Jason Thorpe | thorpej@netbsd.org | |||||||
Todd Vierling | tv@netbsd.org | |||||||
| ||||||||
Developers and other contributors: | ||||||||
Nathan Ahlstrom | nra@NetBSD.org | |||||||
Steve Allen | wormey@netbsd.org | |||||||
Julian Assange | proff@netbsd.org | |||||||
Lennart Augustsson | augustss@netbsd.org | |||||||
Christoph Badura | bad@netbsd.org | |||||||
Bang Jun-Young | junyoung@netbsd.org | |||||||
Dieter Baron | dillo@netbsd.org | |||||||
Robert V. Baron | rvb@netbsd.org | |||||||
Jason Beegan | jtb@netbsd.org | |||||||
Erik Berls | cyber@netbsd.org | |||||||
John Birrell | jb@netbsd.org | |||||||
Mason Loring Bliss | mason@netbsd.org | |||||||
Rafal Boni | rafal@netbsd.org | |||||||
Manuel Bouyer | bouyer@netbsd.org | |||||||
John Brezak | brezak@netbsd.org | |||||||
Allen Briggs | briggs@netbsd.org | |||||||
Aaron Brown | abrown@netbsd.org | |||||||
Andrew Brown | atatat@netbsd.org | |||||||
David Brownlee | abs@netbsd.org | |||||||
Frederick Bruckman | fredb@netbsd.org | |||||||
Jon Buller | jonb@netbsd.org | |||||||
Dave Burgess | burgess@cynjut.infonet.net | |||||||
Robert Byrnes | byrnes@netbsd.org | |||||||
D'Arcy J.M. Cain | darcy@netbsd.org | |||||||
Dave Carrel | carrel@netbsd.org | |||||||
James Chacon | jmc@netbsd.org | |||||||
Bill Coldwell | billc@netbsd.org | |||||||
Julian Coleman | jdc@netbsd.org | |||||||
Chuck Cranor | chuck@netbsd.org | |||||||
Alistair Crooks | agc@netbsd.org | |||||||
Aidan Cully | aidan@netbsd.org | |||||||
Johan Danielsson | joda@netbsd.org | |||||||
Matt DeBergalis | deberg@netbsd.org | |||||||
Rob Deker | deker@netbsd.org | |||||||
Chris G. Demetriou | cgd@netbsd.org | |||||||
Tracy Di Marco White | gendalia@netbsd.org | |||||||
Jaromír Dolecek | jdolecek@netbsd.org | |||||||
Andy Doran | ad@netbsd.org | |||||||
Roland Dowdeswell | elric@netbsd.org | |||||||
Emmanuel Dreyfus | manu@netbsd.org | |||||||
Matthias Drochner | drochner@netbsd.org | |||||||
Jun Ebihara | jun@netbsd.org | |||||||
Håvard Eidnes | he@netbsd.org | |||||||
Stoned Elipot | seb@netbsd.org | |||||||
Enami Tsugutomo | enami@netbsd.org | |||||||
Bernd Ernesti | veego@netbsd.org | |||||||
Erik Fair | fair@netbsd.org | |||||||
Hubert Feyrer | hubertf@netbsd.org | |||||||
Jason R. Fink | jrf@netbsd.org | |||||||
Thorsten Frueauf | frueauf@netbsd.org | |||||||
Castor Fu | castor@netbsd.org | |||||||
Ichiro Fukuhara | ichiro@netbsd.org | |||||||
Brian R. Gaeke | brg@dgate.org | |||||||
Thomas Gerner | thomas@netbsd.org | |||||||
Simon J. Gerraty | sjg@netbsd.org | |||||||
Justin Gibbs | gibbs@netbsd.org | |||||||
Adam Glass | glass@netbsd.org | |||||||
Michael Graff | explorer@netbsd.org | |||||||
Brad Grantham | grantham@tenon.com | |||||||
Brian C. Grayson | bgrayson@netbsd.org | |||||||
Matthew Green | mrg@netbsd.org | |||||||
Juergen Hannken-Illjes | hannken@netbsd.org | |||||||
Charles M. Hannum | mycroft@netbsd.org | |||||||
Eric Haszlakiewicz | erh@netbsd.org | |||||||
John Hawkinson | jhawk@netbsd.org | |||||||
HAYAKAWA Koichi | haya@netbsd.org | |||||||
René Hexel | rh@netbsd.org | |||||||
Michael L. Hitch | mhitch@netbsd.org | |||||||
Christian E. Hopps | chopps@netbsd.org | |||||||
Ken Hornstein | kenh@netbsd.org | |||||||
Marc Horowitz | marc@netbsd.org | |||||||
Nick Hudson | skrll@netbsd.org | |||||||
Martin Husemann | martin@netbsd.org | |||||||
Dean Huxley | dean@netbsd.org | |||||||
Bernardo Innocenti | bernie@netbsd.org | |||||||
Tetsuya Isaki | isaki@netbsd.org | |||||||
ITOH Yasufumi | itohy@netbsd.org | |||||||
IWAMOTO Toshihiro | toshii@netbsd.org | |||||||
Matthew Jacob | mjacob@netbsd.org | |||||||
Lonhyn T. Jasinskyj | lonhyn@netbsd.org | |||||||
Chris Jones | cjones@netbsd.org | |||||||
Takahiro Kambe | taca@netbsd.org | |||||||
Antti Kantee | pooka@netbsd.org | |||||||
Masanori Kanaoka | kanaoka@netbsd.org | |||||||
KAWAMOTO Yosihisa | kawamoto@netbsd.org | |||||||
Mario Kemper | magick@netbsd.org | |||||||
Lawrence Kesteloot | kesteloo@cs.unc.edu | |||||||
Thomas Klausner | wiz@netbsd.org | |||||||
Klaus Klein | kleink@netbsd.org | |||||||
Wayne Knowles | wdk@netbsd.org | |||||||
John Kohl | jtk@netbsd.org | |||||||
Martti Kuparinen | martti@netbsd.org | |||||||
Kevin Lahey | kml@netbsd.org | |||||||
Johnny C. Lam | jlam@netbsd.org | |||||||
Martin J. Laubach | mjl@netbsd.org | |||||||
Ted Lemon | mellon@netbsd.org | |||||||
Joel Lindholm | joel@netbsd.org | |||||||
Mike Long | mikel@netbsd.org | |||||||
Warner Losh | imp@netbsd.org | |||||||
Tomasz Luchowski | zuntum@netbsd.org | |||||||
Federico Lupi | federico@netbsd.org | |||||||
Brett Lymn | blymn@netbsd.org | |||||||
Paul Mackerras | paulus@netbsd.org | |||||||
MAEKAWA Masahide | gehenna@netbsd.org | |||||||
David Maxwell | david@netbsd.org | |||||||
Dan McMahill | dmcmahill@netbsd.org | |||||||
Gregory McGarry | gmcgarry@netbsd.org | |||||||
Jared D. McNeill | jmcneill@netbsd.org | |||||||
Neil J. McRae | neil@netbsd.org | |||||||
Perry Metzger | perry@netbsd.org | |||||||
der Mouse | mouse@netbsd.org | |||||||
Joseph Myers | jsm@netbsd.org | |||||||
Ken Nakata | kenn@netbsd.org | |||||||
Bob Nestor | rnestor@netbsd.org | |||||||
NISHIMURA Takeshi | nsmrtks@netbsd.org | |||||||
NONAKA Kimihiro | nonaka@netbsd.org | |||||||
Jesse Off | joff@netbsd.org | |||||||
Tatoku Ogaito | tacha@netbsd.org | |||||||
Masaru Oki | oki@netbsd.org | |||||||
Atsushi Onoe | onoe@netbsd.org | |||||||
Greg Oster | oster@netbsd.org | |||||||
Herb Peyerl | hpeyerl@netbsd.org | |||||||
Matthias Pfaller | matthias@netbsd.org | |||||||
Chris Pinnock | cjep@netbsd.org | |||||||
Dante Profeta | dante@netbsd.org | |||||||
Chris Provenzano | proven@netbsd.org | |||||||
Michael Rauch | mrauch@netbsd.org | |||||||
Waldi Ravens | waldi@moacs.indiv.nl.net | |||||||
Darren Reed | darrenr@netbsd.org | |||||||
Michael Richardson | mcr@netbsd.org | |||||||
Tim Rightnour | garbled@netbsd.org | |||||||
Gordon Ross | gwr@netbsd.org | |||||||
Heiko W. Rupp | hwr@netbsd.org | |||||||
SAITOH Masanobu | msaitoh@netbsd.org | |||||||
Curt Sampson | cjs@netbsd.org | |||||||
Wilfredo Sanchez | wsanchez@netbsd.org | |||||||
Ty Sarna | tsarna@netbsd.org | |||||||
SATO Kazumi | sato@netbsd.org | |||||||
Matthias Scheler | tron@netbsd.org | |||||||
Karl Schilke (rAT) | rat@netbsd.org | |||||||
Konrad Schroder | perseant@netbsd.org | |||||||
Reed Shadgett | dent@netbsd.org | |||||||
Tim Shepard | shep@netbsd.org | |||||||
Takao Shinohara | shin@netbsd.org | |||||||
Takuya SHIOZAKI | tshiozak@netbsd.org | |||||||
Chuck Silvers | chs@netbsd.org | |||||||
Thor Lancelot Simon | tls@netbsd.org | |||||||
Jeff Smith | jeffs@netbsd.org | |||||||
SOMEYA Yoshihiko | someya@netbsd.org | |||||||
Bill Sommerfeld | sommerfeld@netbsd.org | |||||||
Bill Squier | groo@netbsd.org | |||||||
Bill Studenmund | wrstuden@netbsd.org | |||||||
Kevin Sullivan | sullivan@netbsd.org | |||||||
SUNAGAWA Keiki | kei@netbsd.org | |||||||
Kimmo Suominen | kim@netbsd.org | |||||||
TAMURA Kent | kent@netbsd.org | |||||||
Shin'ichiro TAYA | taya@netbsd.org | |||||||
Matt Thomas | matt@netbsd.org | |||||||
Christoph Toshok | toshok@netbsd.org | |||||||
UCHIYAMA Yasushi | uch@netbsd.org | |||||||
Shuichiro URATA | ur@netbsd.org | |||||||
Todd Vierling | tv@netbsd.org | |||||||
Aymeric Vincent | aymeric@netbsd.org | |||||||
Paul Vixie | vixie@netbsd.org | |||||||
Krister Walfridsson | kristerw@netbsd.org | |||||||
Lex Wennmacher | wennmach@netbsd.org | |||||||
Assar Westerlund | assar@netbsd.org | |||||||
Todd Whitesel | toddpw@netbsd.org | |||||||
Rob Windsor | windsor@netbsd.org | |||||||
Dan Winship | danw@netbsd.org | |||||||
Jim Wise | jwise@netbsd.org | |||||||
Michael Wolfson | mbw@netbsd.org | |||||||
Colin Wood | ender@netbsd.org | |||||||
YAMAMOTO Takashi | yamt@netbsd.org | |||||||
Yuji Yamano | yyamano@netbsd.org | |||||||
Reinoud Zandijk | reinoud@netbsd.org |
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The IEEE floating point support in
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/usr/src/sys/arch/pc532/fpu
has the following copyright: