NAME
boot
, boot.conf
— hppa64-specific
bootstrap
DESCRIPTION
The main purpose of this program is to load the system kernel while dealing with the various features of the PA-RISC hardware.
As described in boot_hppa64(8), this program is loaded by the PDC firmware and provides a convenient way to load the kernel.
Basic operations include:
- Loading kernels from any device supported by your system.
- Loading kernels compressed by gzip(1).
- Providing an interactive command line.
- Detecting and switching between multiple consoles.
The sequence of its operation is as follows: initialization,
parsing the configuration file, then an interactive command line. While at
the command line you have 5 seconds to type any commands, if needed. If time
expires, the kernel will be loaded according to the current variable
settings (see the set
command). Each time a kernel
load fails, the timeout is increased by one second. The sequence of
boot
operations is as follows:
- If the file /etc/boot.conf exists on the
filesystem or LIF image
boot
was loaded from, open and parse it. This file may contain any commandsboot
accepts at the interactive prompt. Though default settings usually suffice, they can be changed here. - The header line
>> OpenBSD/hppa64 BOOT [x.xx]
is displayed to the active console, where x.xx is the version number of the
boot
program, followed by theboot>
prompt, which means you are in interactive mode and may enter commands. If you do not,
boot
will proceed to load the kernel with the current parameters after the timeout period has expired.
By default, boot
attempts to load the
kernel executable /bsd. If it fails to find the
kernel and no alternative kernel image has been specified, the system will
be unable to boot.
COMMANDS
The following commands are accepted at the
boot
prompt:
- boot [image [
-acds
]] - Boots the kernel image specified by image with any
options given. Image specification consists of a pair
device:filename; either or
both can be omitted (`:' is not needed if both are omitted), in which case
values from
boot
variables will be used.-a
- Causes the kernel to ask for the
root
device to use. -c
- Causes the kernel to go into boot_config(8) before performing autoconf(4) procedures.
-d
- Causes the kernel to drop into ddb(4) at the earliest convenient point.
-s
- Causes the kernel to boot single-user.
- echo [args]
- Displays args on the console device.
- help
- Prints a list of available commands and machine dependent commands, if any.
- machine [command]
- Issues machine-dependent commands. These are defined for hppa64
architecture:
console
- Displays or sets the console path.
When invoked with no argument, this command will display the configured console path found in the stable storage area.
Otherwise, the argument will be interpreted as a console path definition string, and
boot
will attempt to switch the console configuration to the desired device. The console definition attempts to follow the PDC syntax, and would have a form of:graphics [_head] [.mode]for graphics console, andrs232 [_2] [.speed [.bits [.parity]]]for serial console.The default head and mode for graphics console are 0, that is the default videomode of the first graphics device. The default serial settings are 9600 bps, 8 data bits, and no parity.
keyboard
- Displays or sets the keyboard path.
When invoked with no argument, this command will display the configured keyboard path found in the stable storage area.
Otherwise, the argument will be interpreted as a keyboard path definition string, and
boot
will attempt to switch the keyboard configuration to the desired port. The keyboard definition attempts to follow the PDC syntax, and would have a form of:hilfor hil keyboard, andps2for PS/2 keyboard.
After changing any path settings, the machine usually has to be restarted for the changes to have effect.
- ls [directory]
- Prints contents of the specified directory in long format including: attributes and file type, owner, group, size, filename.
- reboot
- Reboots the machine by initiating a warm boot procedure.
- set [varname [value]]
- If invoked without arguments, prints a list of variables and their values.
If only varname is specified, displays contents of
that variable. If varname and
value are both specified, sets that variable to the
given value. Variables include:
addr
- Address at which to load the kernel.
debug
- Debug flag if
boot
was compiled with DEBUG defined. device
- Boot device name (i.e.,
lf0a
,sd0a
). howto
- Options to pass to the loaded kernel.
image
- File name containing the kernel image.
timeout
- Number of seconds boot will wait for human intervention before booting the default kernel image.
- time
- Displays system time and date.
FILES
- /boot
- system bootstrap
- /etc/boot.conf
- system bootstrap's startup file
- /bsd
- kernel image
- /bsd.rd
- kernel image for installation/recovery
EXAMPLES
Boot the default kernel:
boot> boot
Remove the 5 second pause at boot-time permanently, causing
boot
to load the kernel immediately without
prompting:
# echo "boot" >
/etc/boot.conf
Use serial console on the first serial port, with the usual 9600 8N1 settings. A null modem cable should connect the specified serial port to a terminal. Useful for debugging.
boot> machine console
rs232.9600.8.none
Boot the kernel named /bsd from the second
SCSI disk in “User Kernel Configuration” mode (see
boot_config(8)). This mechanism allows for the explicit
enabling and disabling of devices during the current boot sequence, as well
as the modification of device parameters. Once booted, such changes can be
made permanent by using
config(8)'s -e
option.
boot> boot sd1a:/bsd
-c
SEE ALSO
gzip(1), autoconf(4), ddb(4), boot_config(8), boot_hppa64(8), reboot(8)
HISTORY
This program was written by Michael Shalayeff for OpenBSD 2.1. The hppa64 specific parts were written by Michael Shalayeff and Miodrag Vallat for OpenBSD 3.1.
CAVEATS
Making mistakes in console paths may cost you a toupee.
BUGS
Changing the display resolution (mode) on a graphics console does not work correctly.