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gnuboot/site/docs/bsd/netbsd.md
Denis 'GNUtoo' Carikli 0e3ff8047f
Announce and release GNU Boot 0.1 RC2 and project status.
The file adding the news is named gnuboot-december-2023.md instead of
gnuboot-0.1-rc1.md as the later is understood as a translation in the
'1-rc1' lang. Renaming the file to gnuboot-0.1-rc1.en.md instead makes
untitled detect the lang correctly but then it assumes this is a
translation and adds a broken link for "English" on the new page.

For now the older Libreboot news were kept as this shows the history
of the project and since GNU Boot is a continuation of the Libreboot
project it makes sense to also keep them.

The CSS also needed to be separated from the template because
otherwise the generated news page would be incomplete and miss all
what comes before the CSS like '<!DOCTYPE html>' for instance.

Finally x-reviewed was changed into x-unreviewed because we can't set
x-reviewed for the news, so the only way to remove the banner for the
individual news is to default to reviewed (and to mark all unreviewed
files as such).

As for the Untitled patch it is needed to make the news page work.

Signed-off-by: Denis 'GNUtoo' Carikli <GNUtoo@cyberdimension.org>
Acked-by: Adrien 'neox' Bourmault <neox@gnu.org>
2023-12-09 16:01:23 +01:00

148 lines
4.3 KiB
Markdown

---
title: How to install NetBSD on x86 GNU GRUB payload
x-unreviewed: true
...
GRUB supports booting NetBSD kernels directly. However, you're better off
simply using the SeaBIOS payload; BSD works well with BIOS or UEFI setups.
GRUB is acceptable for booting unencrypted BSD installations. However,
encrypted BSD installations will probably require the use of SeaBIOS/Tianocore.
Prepare the USB drive (in NetBSD)
---------------------------------
[This
page](https://wiki.netbsd.org/tutorials/how_to_install_netbsd_from_an_usb_memory_stick/)
on the NetBSD website shows how to create a NetBSD bootable USB drive
from within NetBSD itself. You should use the *dd* method documented
there.
Prepare the USB drive (in FreeBSD)
----------------------------------
[This page](https://www.freebsd.org/doc/handbook/bsdinstall-pre.html) on
the FreeBSD website shows how to create a bootable USB drive for
installing FreeBSD. Use the *dd* on that page. You can also use the same
instructions with a NetBSD ISO image.
Prepare the USB drive (in OpenBSD or NetBSD)
-----------------------------------------------
If you downloaded your ISO on a OpenBSD or NetBSD system, here is how
to create the bootable NetBSD USB drive:
Connect the USB drive. Check dmesg:
dmesg | tail
Check to confirm which drive it is, for example, if you think its sd3:
disklabel sd3
Check that it wasn't automatically mounted. If it was, unmount it. For
example:
doas umount /dev/sd3i
dmesg told you what device it is. Overwrite the drive, writing the
NetBSD installer to it with dd. For example:
doas netbsd.iso of=/dev/rsdXc bs=1M; sync
You should now be able to boot the installer from your USB drive.
Continue reading, for information about how to do that.
Prepare the USB drive (in GNU+Linux)
------------------------------------
If you downloaded your ISO on a GNU+Linux system, here is how to create
the bootable NetBSD USB drive:
Connect the USB drive. Check dmesg:
dmesg
Check lsblk to confirm which drive it is:
lsblk
Check that it wasn't automatically mounted. If it was, unmount it. For
example:
sudo umount /dev/sdX\*
umount /dev/sdX\*
dmesg told you what device it is. Overwrite the drive, writing your
distro ISO to it with dd. For example:
sudo dd if=install60.fs of=/dev/sdX bs=8M; sync
dd if=netbsd.iso of=/dev/sdX bs=8M; sync
You should now be able to boot the installer from your USB drive.
Continue reading, for information about how to do that.
Installing NetBSD without full disk encryption
----------------------------------------------
You might have to use an external USB keyboard during the installation.
Press C to access the GRUB terminal.
grub> knetbsd -r sd0a (usb0,netbsd1)/netbsd
grub> boot
It will start booting into the NetBSD installer. Follow the normal
process for installing NetBSD.
Installing NetBSD with full disk encryption
-------------------------------------------
TODO
Booting
-------
Press C in GRUB to access the command line:
grub> knetbsd -r wd0a (ahci0,netbsd1)/netbsd
grub> boot
NetBSD will start booting. Yay!
Configuring Grub
----------------
If you don't want to drop to the GRUB command line and type in a
command to boot NetBSD every time, you can create a GRUB configuration
that's aware of your NetBSD installation and that will automatically be
used by libreboot.
On your NetBSD root partition, create the `/grub` directory and add
the file `libreboot_grub.cfg` to it. Inside the
`libreboot_grub.cfg` add these lines:
default=0
timeout=3
menuentry "NetBSD" {
knetbsd -r wd0a (ahci0,netbsd1)/netbsd
}
The next time you boot, you'll see the old Grub menu for a few seconds,
then you'll see the a new menu with only NetBSD on the list. After 3
seconds NetBSD will boot, or you can hit enter to boot.
Troubleshooting
===============
Most of these issues occur when using Libreboot with coreboot's 'text
mode' instead of the coreboot framebuffer. This mode is useful for
booting payloads like memtest86+ which expect text-mode, but for NetBSD
it can be problematic when they are trying to switch to a framebuffer
because it doesn't exist.
won't boot...something about file not found
---------------------------------------------
Your device names (i.e. usb0, usb1, sd0, sd1, wd0, ahci0, hd0, etc) and
numbers may differ. Use TAB completion.