BOOT_HP300(8) BSD/hp300 System Manager's Manual BOOT_HP300(8)NAME
boot — system bootstrapping procedures
DESCRIPTION
Power fail and crash recovery. Normally, the system will reboot itself at
power-up or after crashes. An automatic consistency check of the file
systems will be performed, and unless this fails, the system will resume
multi-user operations.
Cold starts. On an HP300, the boot procedure uses the boot ROM to load a
boot program from an LIF format directory at the beginning of an attached
disk. The /usr/mdec directory contains a disk boot programs which should
be placed in a new pack automatically by newfs(8) when the ``a'' parti‐
tion file system on the pack is created.
This boot program finds the corresponding file on the given device
(vmunix by default), loads that file into memory, and starts the program
at the entry address specified in the program header.
The boot program can be interrupted by typing `^C' (ctrl-C). This will
force the boot program to interactively prompt for a system to boot. If
not interrupted, it will boot from the device from which the boot program
itself was loaded.
The file specifications used for an interactive boot are of the form:
device(unit, minor)
where device is the type of the device to be searched, unit is 8 * the
hpib number plus the unit number of the disk or tape, and minor is the
disk partition or tape file number. Normal line editing characters can
be used when typing the file specification. Currently, ``rd'' and ``sd''
are the only valid device specifiers.
For example, to boot from the `a' file system of unit 0 on HP-IB 2, type
‘rd(16, 0)vmunix’ to the boot prompt. For tapes, the minor device number
gives a file offset.
In an emergency, the bootstrap methods described in the paper Installing
4.3bsd on the HP300 can be used to boot from a distribution tape.
FILES
/vmunix system code
/usr/mdec/bootrd LIF format boot block
/usr/mdec/installboot program to install boot blocks
SEE ALSOhalt(8), reboot(8), shutdown(8)BSD April 19, 1994 BSD