Commit Graph

10 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Patrick S. Gardella
99d780c74a Remove "conflicts" from kernel config files for picobsd.
PR:	17383
Submitted by: Kelly Yancey <kbyanc@posi.net>
2000-03-16 02:45:42 +00:00
Luigi Rizzo
ff74e1c8e9 Update kernel config file.
Approved-by: jordan
2000-02-09 08:48:36 +00:00
Greg Lehey
301cc81ed3 Install the crunched binaries into /sbin, not /stand. This was
originally done to track down yet another case of lost init, and is
not strictly necessary, but it seems more logical to have binaries in
/sbin than in /stand.  Previously /sbin and /bin were symlinks to
/stand.  Now /bin and /stand are symlinks to /sbin.
1999-12-20 02:16:55 +00:00
Greg Lehey
bc702a4474 Add content. This was one of the files that somehow got checked in
empty.  An empty loader.rc will enable the kernel to boot, but it
won't find init (because the MFS file system hasn't been loaded).
1999-12-20 02:15:04 +00:00
Greg Lehey
35bce93fbf Accept a lot of programs from the first floppy.
Reenable build of ppp and ipfw.

Include pccardd.
1999-12-20 02:13:28 +00:00
Greg Lehey
b8b1ea6738 Define RELEASE_CRUNCH as a make variable. Previously it was defined
as a preprocessor variable only.  This broke the build of ppp.  This
problem still exists in the old-style directories.

Debugging-help-supplied-by: brian
1999-12-20 02:12:27 +00:00
Greg Lehey
4f8959ac97 Move even more programs to the second floppy as the kernel bloats. 1999-12-20 02:10:55 +00:00
Greg Lehey
a06031eb6c Install the crunched binaries into /sbin, not /stand. This was
originally done to track down yet another case of lost init, and is
not strictly necessary, but it seems more logical to have binaries in
/sbin than in /stand.  Previously /sbin and /bin were symlinks to
/stand.  Now /bin and /stand are symlinks to /sbin.
1999-12-20 02:10:16 +00:00
John Polstra
740ab0e829 Something went wrong with an earlier commit and these files ended up
empty.  Fix that with help from grog.
1999-12-11 15:12:31 +00:00
Greg Lehey
0f33c9fb91 Add 'custom' directory with significantly restructured build (now
using make instead of custom scripts) and two floppies instead of
one.  The resultant floppy can do everything that the individual
floppies (dial, net, install, isp, router) could do, modulo some bit
rot that has occurred since PicoBSD last compiled.  It also includes
all the programs on the fixit floppy, which could thus also die.

/bin currently contains the following files:

-sh             dump            ln              ns              sps
[               ed              login           ping            stty
badsect         ex              ls              ps              swapon
cat             expr            mkdir           pwd             sync
chgrp           fdisk           mknod           pwd_mkdb        sysctl
chmod           find            more            rdump         syslogd
chown           fsck            mount           reboot          tar
chroot          ftp             mount_cd9660    restore         telnet
clri            getty           mount_msdos     rlogin                telnetd
cp              grep            mount_nfs       rm              test
date            gunzip          mount_std       rmdir         traceroute
dd              gzip            msg             route           umount
dev_mkdb        hostname        mt              routed          vi
df              ifconfig        mv              rrestore        view
dhclient        inetd           natd            rsh             vm
dhclient-script init            netstat         sed             w
disklabel       kget            newfs           sh              zcat
dmesg           kill            nfs             sleep

Structure is in place for using the same build for the other
directories, but I'm no longer sure we need this.  The current first
floppy will run fine by itself, but the size of a compressed kernel
has increased by nearly 50% since 3.2, and there's not much space for
anything useful on the remainder of the floppy.  The current method
creates a larger mfs and can read as many floppies as the user can
stand.  The footprint appears to be round 14 MB.
1999-12-10 21:52:18 +00:00