1 | .TH BOOT 8
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2 | .SH NAME
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3 | boot \- from power on to the login prompt
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4 | .SH DESCRIPTION
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5 | .de SP
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6 | .if t .sp 0.4
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7 | .if n .sp
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8 | ..
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9 | At power on the machine reads the first sector of the boot device into memory
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10 | and executes it. This bootstrap code loads
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11 | .BR /boot/boot ,
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12 | the MINIX 3 Boot Monitor. The monitor loads the kernel binaries from
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13 | .BR /boot/image ,
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14 | or the newest file in
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15 | .B /boot/image
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16 | if it is a directory.
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17 | .PP
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18 | The MINIX 3 system is now running, the different tasks initialize themselves
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19 | and control is transferred to the last one,
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20 | .BR init .
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21 | .PP
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22 | .B Init
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23 | is the grandparent of all MINIX 3 processes, it is responsible for starting
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24 | login processes on each terminal, but first it runs
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25 | .BR /etc/rc .
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26 | .PP
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27 | .B /etc/rc
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28 | checks the state of the system and starts daemons. First it sets the
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29 | keyboard translation to the mapping in
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30 | .B /etc/keymap
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31 | if present, followed by a call to
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32 | .BR readclock (8)
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33 | to set MINIX 3 time from the hardware clock. Next the file systems are checked
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34 | if necessary and the
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35 | .B /usr
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36 | file system is mounted.
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37 | .PP
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38 | The system is now ready for multiuser startup,
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39 | .B /etc/rc
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40 | calls
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41 | .B /usr/etc/rc
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42 | that cleans out /tmp, /usr/tmp, and resets or cycles log files by running
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43 | .BR /usr/etc/daily ,
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44 | starts the
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45 | .BR update (8)
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46 | and
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47 | .BR cron (8)
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48 | daemons, and initializes the network services.
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49 | .B /etc/rc
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50 | finally runs
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51 | .BR /usr/local/etc
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52 | to initialize the system in a site or host dependent way.
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53 | .PP
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54 | .B Init
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55 | reads
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56 | .B /etc/ttytab
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57 | and starts a
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58 | .BR getty (8)
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59 | for each enabled terminal line to allow a user to log in.
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60 | .SH OPTIONS
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61 | .TP
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62 | .B bootopts=\-s
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63 | The value of the boot variable
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64 | .B bootopts
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65 | is passed to
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66 | .BR /etc/rc .
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67 | If it contains
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68 | .B \-s
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69 | then the system will run a single user shell before continuing with multiuser
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70 | startup. (Note that one normally uses
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71 | .B boot \-s
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72 | instead of setting
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73 | .BR bootopts .)
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74 | .TP
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75 | .B bootopts=\-a
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76 | This flag tells that
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77 | .B /etc/fstab
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78 | must be ignored. The system asks for a device to use as /usr instead. This
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79 | will also be done if the root device is not as mentioned in
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80 | .BR /etc/fstab .
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81 | .TP
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82 | .B bootopts=\-f
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83 | Force a file system check, even if the system was shut down properly. (Do
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84 | this once in a while to be sure about the state of the file systems.)
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85 | .TP
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86 | .BI servers= program\fR[,\fIprogram\fR...]
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87 | Names the special servers that must be started in /usr/etc/rc. The setting
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88 | .BR "servers=inet"
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89 | will start the TCP/IP server.
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90 | .SH "BOOT ENVIRONMENT"
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91 | Many features of the drivers inside the kernel are controlled by settings in
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92 | the boot environmenti, like
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93 | .B bootopts
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94 | above does for
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95 | .BR /etc/rc .
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96 | The values of these variables are usually colon or comma separated
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97 | numbers configuring the driver.
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98 | .B "DPETH0 = 300:10"
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99 | tells the DP ethernet driver to use I/O address 0x300, interrupt request
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100 | 10, and the default memory address (0xD0000, values may be omitted) for the
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101 | first ethernet board. (Note that IRQ 2 is redirected to IRQ 9 on AT's and
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102 | PS/2's, so use 9 if a device is jumpered for 2.)
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103 | .PP
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104 | Variables that are special to both the monitor and the kernel are described
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105 | in
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106 | .BR monitor (8).
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107 | This section lists extra variables or variable settings:
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108 | .TP
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109 | \fBc\fIn\fR = \fBat\fR | \fBbios\fR | \fBesdi\fR | \fBxt\fR | \fBaha1540\fR | \fBdosfile\fR | \fBfatfile\fR
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110 | Choose the driver that is to be used as controller
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111 | .IR n ,
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112 | in order: IBM/AT (classic AT or newer IDE), BIOS (any disk), ESDI
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113 | (some PS/2s), IBM/XT, Adaptec 154x, MINIX 3 under DOS "file as disk",
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114 | FAT file system "file as disk".
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115 | By default
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116 | .B at
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117 | is used on AT bus systems,
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118 | .B bios
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119 | on PS/2s and XTs, and
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120 | .B dosfile
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121 | when running under DOS.
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122 | Most drivers are present in the kernel as distributed, but may be taken out
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123 | by modifying
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124 | .BR /usr/include/minix/config.h .
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125 | See
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126 | .BR controller (4).
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127 | (An XT should always use the BIOS driver, not the XT driver, because BIOS
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128 | calls are cheap on an XT. The XT driver can be used on AT machines with an
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129 | old XT controller.)
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130 | .TP
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131 | \fBDPETH\fIn\fR = \fBon\fR | \fBoff\fR
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132 | Turn an ethernet board on or off. The driver is by default in "sink" mode
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133 | for all boards. The sink mode allows one to use the driver without an
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134 | ethernet board installed. The driver will play /dev/null for that device,
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135 | i.e. nothing comes in, and anything send out is dropped on the floor. If
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136 | the board is turned on then the driver will use it to send out packets, if
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137 | it is turned off then the driver will fail for that board.
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138 | .PP
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139 | .if n .ta \w'DPETHn = I/O-addr:irq:mem_addr:mem_size'u+2m
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140 | .if t .ta \w'\fBDPETH\fIn\fR = \fII/O-addr\fR:\fIirq\fR:\fImem_addr\fR:\fImem_size\fR'u+2m
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141 | \fBDPETH\fIn\fR = \fII/O-addr\fR:\fIirq\fR:\fImem_addr\fR:\fImem_size\fR (WD80x3)
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142 | .br
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143 | \fBDPETH\fIn\fR = \fII/O-addr\fR:\fIirq\fR:\fB0\fR (NE2000)
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144 | .br
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145 | \fBDPETH\fIn\fR = \fII/O-addr\fR:\fIirq\fR:\fIflags\fR (3c503)
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146 | .RS
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147 | Set the I/O address (hex), IRQ (decimal), memory address (hex), memory
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148 | size (hex), or flags (hex) of the
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149 | .IR n -th
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150 | ethernet board and turn it on. By default they are configured as
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151 | 280:3:D0000 and 300:5:C8000 with the memory size set to 2000, 4000, or 8000
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152 | depending on the type of board found.
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153 | For the Western Digital cards the IRQ must be what the board expects,
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154 | but the memory address is programmed into the board by the driver.
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155 | The SMC EtherEZ board, a WD8013 successor, has only 8K
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156 | memory. This confuses the driver, so you need to explicitly specify the
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157 | board size as being 2000.
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158 | The memory address and size have no meaning for the Novell ethernet boards,
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159 | but the address may be explicitly set to zero to indicate that the board
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160 | .B is
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161 | a Novell ethernet board.
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162 | For the 3Com 3c503 the third parameter are flags, with the low bit indicates
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163 | that the on-board tranceiver must be used if 0 (thin ethernet), or that an
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164 | external tranceiver is used on the AUI port if set to 1.
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165 | The IRQ is software settable, and must be specified as 2 (XT), 3, 4, 5,
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166 | or 9 (AT). The memory address is set on the board by jumpers. The driver
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167 | does not support I/O mode for the 3c503.
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168 | (Note the little differences between board types. For the 8003/8013 and
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169 | NE1000/NE2000 the IRQ is fixed and the memory address variable, for the
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170 | 3c503 the IRQ is variable and the memory address is fixed, but need not be
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171 | specified. Messy.)
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172 | .RE
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173 | .TP
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174 | \fBDPETH\fIn\fB_EA\fR = \fIe0\fR:\fIe1\fR:\fIe2\fR:\fIe3\fR:\fIe4\fR:\fIe5\fR
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175 | Set the ethernet address of the
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176 | .IR n -th
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177 | ethernet board. The address is normally obtained from the ethernet board,
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178 | so only in exceptional circumstances is this setting ever needed. (Use the
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179 | address of the main server if you want a career change.)
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180 | .TP
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181 | \fBAHA0\fR = \fII/O-addr\fR:\fIbus-on\fR:\fIbus-off\fR:\fItr-speed\fR
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182 | Configure the Adaptec 154xA SCSI host adapter to use the given I/O address
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183 | (hex), Bus-on time (decimal), Bus-off time (decimal) and transfer speed
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184 | (hex). The default is 330:15:1:00. The default transfer speed is always
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185 | 5.0 Mb/s (code 00) ignoring the jumper settings.
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186 | .TP
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187 | \fBaha1540-d\fIn\fR = \fIsleep-time\fR:\fItarget\fR,\fIlun\fR
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188 | Program SCSI disk
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189 | .I n
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190 | to have the given target and logical unit number. The target and lun
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191 | of a tape or other SCSI device may be changed by setting the
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192 | .BI aha1540-d n
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193 | variable that would be used had it been a disk. So tape device c0t7 can be
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194 | set to target 4, lun 1 with aha1540-d7=:4,1.
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195 | (The
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196 | .I sleep-time
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197 | parameter is present but ignored to be compatible with Minix-vmd.)
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198 | .TP
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199 | \fBdosfile-d\fIn\fR = \fIfile\fR
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200 | Tells the DOS virtual disk driver for disk
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201 | .I n
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202 | to use a given file as a disk. The file is a DOS file name that the
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203 | boot monitor must be able to open.
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204 | .TP
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205 | \fBfatfile-d\fIn\fR = \fIdriver:minor:file\fR
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206 | Tells the FAT virtual disk driver for disk
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207 | .I n
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208 | to use a given file as a disk. The
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209 | .I driver
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210 | parameter is the name of driver that handles the disk, and
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211 | .I minor
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212 | is the device number of the partition where the file is found. See
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213 | .BR controller (4)
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214 | for names and numbers.
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215 | The
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216 | .I file
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217 | argument is the path to the file from the root directory down. The driver
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218 | named must also be tied to a controller with a
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219 | .BI c n
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220 | variable, so that the FAT file driver can find it.
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221 | A handy way to find the proper minor number is to run
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222 | .B "ls\ \-l"
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223 | on the device where the file is found. As a example, we assume the most
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224 | common situation of a disk file on the first partition of the first drive
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225 | on an ATA (IDE) controller:
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226 | .SP
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227 | .in +5
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228 | .ft B
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229 | .nf
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230 | c0 = fatfile
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231 | c1 = at
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232 | fatfile-d0 = at:1:/minix/minix.mnx
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233 | .fi
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234 | .ft P
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235 | .in -5
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236 | .TP
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237 | .BR TZ " = " GMT0
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238 | This sets the time zone the hardware clock is running in.
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239 | .B Readclock
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240 | uses this to correctly obtain the time of the clock. The timezone of the
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241 | system is set in
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242 | .BR /etc/profile .
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243 | This boot variable is normally not set, only a few UNIX die-hards who
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244 | don't care about the time Windows sees and don't want to change the clock
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245 | twice a year for daylight savings use this option. (Set Windows time to the
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246 | time zone of Casablanca to match.)
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247 | .SH "TCP/IP CONFIGURATION"
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248 | To use TCP/IP you need to run the
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249 | .B inet
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250 | server, and unless you are running standalone you have to enable the
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251 | ethernet driver. See the
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252 | .B servers
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253 | and
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254 | .BI DPETH n
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255 | boot variables above. The driver supports these ethernet cards: Western
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256 | Digital 8003, Western Digital 8013, SMC Elite Ultra 16,
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257 | Novell NE1000 and NE2000, 3Com Etherlink II (3c503). Many newer
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258 | variants of the WD8013, now under the SMC brand, may also work.
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259 | A common PCI reimplementation of the NE2000 using the Realtek 80 chipset is
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260 | also supported. Make sure it's just a 10 mbit device and that it has a
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261 | chip marked "RTL 8029".
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262 | .PP
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263 | You are likely to use TCP/IP in one of three situations:
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264 | .PP
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265 | .RS
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266 | Standalone with no connection to a network.
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267 | .SP
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268 | In a small network with no support from a "big" host.
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269 | .SP
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270 | Connected to a large network with address and name servers.
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271 | .RE
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272 | .PP
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273 | In each situation you need a different set of configuration files.
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274 | .SS Standalone
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275 | All you need is a name and an IP address. Suppose the name is "flotsam"
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276 | and the IP address is 192.168.0.1 from the private IP space, then this is
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277 | put in
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278 | .BR /etc/hosts :
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279 | .PP
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280 | .RS
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281 | .ta +\w'192.168.0.1'u+3n
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282 | 192.168.0.1 flotsam
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283 | .RE
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284 | .PP
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285 | And this in
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286 | .BR /etc/dhcp.conf :
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287 | .PP
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288 | .RS
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289 | .nf
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290 | host 192.168.0.0/24 {};
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291 | interface ip0 flotsam;
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292 | .fi
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293 | .RE
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294 | .SS "Small Network"
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295 | A network requires an ethernet driver. You need to enable one in
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296 | <minix/config.h> and you need to tell
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297 | .B inet
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298 | that it should use that driver by making
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299 | .B /etc/inet.conf
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300 | look like this:
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301 | .PP
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302 | .RS
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303 | .nf
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304 | eth0 DP8390 0 { default; };
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305 | .fi
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306 | .RE
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307 | .PP
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308 | The second word (DP8390) must the name of the ethernet driver you've enabled.
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309 | It can also be seen among the drivers in the output of
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310 | .BR "ps ax" .
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311 | See also
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312 | .BR inet (8).
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313 | .PP
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314 | In a small network there may not be a DHCP server for MINIX 3 to obtain its IP
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315 | address and name from, so you need specify the ethernet address of your machine
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316 | and host names of all machines in the hosts and DHCP configuration files.
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317 | Suppose your machine is to be named "flotsam", and another machine in the
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318 | network is named "jetsam", and let's use network 192.168.0.0/24 again. The
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319 | file
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320 | .B /etc/hosts
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321 | now looks like this:
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322 | .PP
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323 | .RS
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324 | .ta +\w'192.168.0.1'u+3n
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325 | .nf
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326 | 192.168.0.1 flotsam
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327 | 192.168.0.2 jetsam
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328 | .fi
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329 | .RE
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330 | .PP
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331 | And
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332 | .B /etc/dhcp.conf
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333 | like this:
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334 | .PP
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335 | .RS
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336 | .nf
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337 | host 192.168.0.0/24 {};
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338 | client 0:1:1b:a:68:ce flotsam;
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339 | .fi
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340 | .RE
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341 | .PP
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342 | Use
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343 | .B hostaddr \-e
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344 | to find out what the ethernet address of your network card is. (The address
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345 | above is an example.)
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346 | .PP
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347 | A host needs to have all hostnames used on your little network in its
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348 | host file. In the DHCP configuration you only need the client entry of the
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349 | system itself, but it may be useful to add all client entries to make them all
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350 | the same.
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351 | .PP
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352 | If one of the machines is always on when any of the others is, then you can let
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353 | it be a DHCP server. The other machines don't need a hosts or DHCP file
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354 | anymore. If flotsam is the server then its
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355 | .BR /etc/dhcp.conf
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356 | looks like this:
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357 | .PP
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358 | .RS
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359 | .nf
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360 | .ta +4m
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361 | host 192.168.0.0/24 {
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362 | DNSserver flotsam;
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363 | };
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364 | client 0:1:1b:a:68:ce flotsam { option server; };
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365 | client 0:0:c0:3a:12:10 jetsam;
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366 | .fi
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367 | .RE
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368 | .SS "Large Network"
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369 | In a network with a central network administration your machine's IP address
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370 | and name are given by the DHCP server. You don't need any configuration
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371 | files. If you want your machine to do more, like being a router or
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372 | something, then see
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373 | .BR inet (8)
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374 | on setting up more than one network interface.
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375 | .PP
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376 | .SS "Simpler configuration tools"
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377 | The
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378 | .BR dhcpd
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379 | and
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380 | .BR nonamed
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381 | daemons are complex little programs that try to obtain information about
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382 | their surroundings automatically to tell the machine what its place in the
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383 | network is. It should come as no surprise that there are simpler utilities
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384 | to configure a machine. On a memory starved machine it may even be wise to
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385 | configure a machine statically to get rid of the daemons. The first daemon,
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386 | .BR dhcpd ,
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387 | can be replaced by:
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388 | .PP
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389 | .RS
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390 | .B ifconfig \-h
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391 | .I host-IP-address
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392 | .B \-n
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393 | .I netmask
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394 | .br
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395 | .B add_route \-g
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396 | .I gateway-IP-address
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397 | .RE
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398 | .PP
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399 | to set the IP address and netmask of the machine. Note that you can only
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400 | do this if the machine has a static IP address, or chaos will follow. Remove
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401 | .BR /usr/adm/dhcp.cache
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402 | if the DHCP daemon has run before.
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403 | .PP
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404 | The name daemon,
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405 | .BR nonamed ,
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406 | can be replaced by an entry in
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407 | .B /etc/resolv.conf
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408 | that specifies an external name daemon:
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409 | .PP
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410 | .RS
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411 | .B nameserver
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412 | .I nameserver-IP-address
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413 | .RE
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414 | .PP
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415 | The
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416 | .B ifconfig
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417 | and
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418 | .B add_route
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419 | calls can be placed in the file
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420 | .BR /etc/rc.net .
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421 | Check
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422 | .B /usr/etc/rc
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423 | to see how
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424 | .BR /etc/rc.net
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425 | can be used to override running the normal series of network deamons.
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426 | Note that
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427 | .BR /etc/rc.net
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428 | is sourced, so you can use the same variables and functions that
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429 | .BR /usr/etc/rc
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430 | uses.
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431 | These changes undo all the efforts to make MINIX 3 TCP/IP
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432 | autoconfigurable. Make very sure that all the IP addresses are correct, and
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433 | that the IP address of your machine is unique. (Mistakenly using the
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434 | address of a main server will make all other machines look at your machine,
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435 | and will make all the users of all other machines look at you.)
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436 | .SH FILES
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437 | .TP 20n
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438 | /boot
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439 | MINIX 3 Boot Monitor.
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440 | .TP
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441 | /minix
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442 | Kernel image, or directory containing them.
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443 | .TP
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444 | /etc/rc
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445 | Basic system initialization.
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446 | .TP
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447 | /usr/etc/rc
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448 | Complete system initialization.
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449 | .TP
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450 | /etc/rc.net
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451 | Specialized network initialization.
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452 | .TP
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453 | /usr/local/etc/rc
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454 | Per site initialization.
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455 | .TP
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456 | /etc/hosts
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457 | Name to IP address mapping.
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458 | .TP
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459 | /etc/dhcp.conf
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460 | Network initialization.
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461 | .TP
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462 | /etc/resolv.conf
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463 | Name resolver configuration.
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464 | .SH "SEE ALSO"
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465 | .BR monitor (8),
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466 | .BR init (8),
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467 | .BR inet (8),
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468 | .BR loadkeys (8),
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469 | .BR readclock (8),
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470 | .BR fsck (1),
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471 | .BR fstab (5),
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472 | .BR update (8),
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473 | .BR cron (8),
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474 | .BR ttytab (5),
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475 | .BR getty (8),
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476 | .BR hostaddr (1),
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477 | .BR ifconfig (8),
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478 | .BR dhcpd (8),
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479 | .BR nonamed (8),
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480 | .BR tcpd (8),
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481 | .BR hosts (5),
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482 | .BR ethers (5),
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483 | .BR resolv.conf (5),
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484 | .BR inet (8).
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485 | .SH DIAGNOSTICS
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486 | .TP 5n
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487 | Checking File Systems.
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488 | If the system has crashed then
|
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489 | .B fsck
|
---|
490 | is called for the root and /usr file systems. It is wise to reboot if the
|
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491 | root file system must be fixed.
|
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492 | .TP
|
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493 | Finish the name of device to mount as /usr: /dev/
|
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494 | The prompt for the
|
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495 | .B \-a
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496 | option, or if the name of the /usr file system has not been set in /etc/fstab.
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497 | You can type a device name, say
|
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498 | .BR fd0 .
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499 | .TP
|
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500 | Unable to obtain an IP address after 10 seconds.
|
---|
501 | TCP/IP misconfiguration. The DHCP daemon may have failed because the ethernet
|
---|
502 | address of the machine is not known to the DHCP server, the DHCP
|
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503 | configuration is not filled in properly, or the DHCP server can not be reached.
|
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504 | Either talk to your Network Administrator, or make a dhcp.conf
|
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505 | and a hosts file.
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506 | .TP
|
---|
507 | 1.2.3.4 login:
|
---|
508 | If you see an IP address instead of a host name then the system failed to
|
---|
509 | translate the IP address. Either talk to your Network Administrator to
|
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510 | have the reverse address translation tables fixed, or make a hosts file.
|
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511 | .SH NOTES
|
---|
512 | The 10.0.0.0/8, 172.16.0.0/12, and 192.168.0.0/16 networks can be used for
|
---|
513 | private networks. (This so-called CIDR notation names an IP address and
|
---|
514 | the number of bits in the network number. So 172.16.0.0/12 includes all
|
---|
515 | addresses from 172.16.0.0 to 172.31.255.255.)
|
---|
516 | RFC-1597 will tell you why private networks are good, and RFC-1627 why
|
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517 | they are bad.
|
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518 | .SH BUGS
|
---|
519 | Indefinite hangs are possible if I/O addresses or IRQ's are wrong. A driver
|
---|
520 | may babble about addresses and IRQ's, but that does not mean that what it
|
---|
521 | says is true, it may just be configured that way. It is very difficult to
|
---|
522 | find peripherals on a PC automatically, and MINIX 3 doesn't even try.
|
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523 | .SH AUTHOR
|
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524 | Kees J. Bot <kjb@cs.vu.nl>
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