xfs
[Top] [All Lists]

Re: ultra 320 and XFS

To: Murthy Kambhampaty <murthy.kambhampaty@xxxxxxxxx>
Subject: Re: ultra 320 and XFS
From: Chris Wedgwood <cw@xxxxxxxx>
Date: Fri, 21 Mar 2003 12:37:36 -0800
Cc: "'Simon Matter'" <simon.matter@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, Michael Whang <mwhang77@xxxxxxxxxxx>, linux-xfs@xxxxxxxxxxx
In-reply-to: <2D92FEBFD3BE1346A6C397223A8DD3FC0921A5@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
References: <2D92FEBFD3BE1346A6C397223A8DD3FC0921A5@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sender: linux-xfs-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxx
User-agent: Mutt/1.3.28i
On Fri, Mar 21, 2003 at 10:26:10AM -0500, Murthy Kambhampaty wrote:

Warning: Non Super-Difficult-Red-Hat-Solution-Ahead :)

> 1. Install with vanilla RedHat distro (not XFS Installer)
> 2. On your vanilla RedHat system, recompile the kernel with XFS and
>    aic79xx support
> 3. Reboot to the new kernel; drop to single user; move partitions
>    around; fix lilo
> 4. Reboot to you target system.

or

build a non-modular kernel with all the right magic bits in it (super
easy) and put this on a floppy (cp), use rdev to make the floppy strap
suitably using a ramdisk, usually "rdev -r /dev/fd0 49152 ; rdev
/dev/fd0 /dev/fd0" suffices

boot this disk --- it will prompt for a second disk, at this point
give it a Debian rootfs image on a floppy and follow the prompts...

sorry i can't tell you how to do this with Red Hat, I tried to find
out last night how this was done and everyone tells me it can't be,
so, if someone does know of a Red Hat solution then perhaps post it
here and maybe I'll compile a list of 'more difficult' XFS
installation methods or something

the other suggestion i have is since most network cards can PXE boot,
then PXE boot a kernel which mounts / via nfs --- again, I know how to
do this with Debian but not Red Hat[1]


  --cw

[1] bug me if interested


<Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread>