How to make a tape 386 Unix boot diskette
Dennis S. Breckenridge
root at nebulus.UUCP
Sat Feb 10 08:09:54 AEST 1990
Oh well, it was inevitable that the question would be asked.
Probably the easiest way of putting the packages on tape would
be to copy them on, an archive at a time. For instance if
the first package was face (2 disks) cpio BOTH disks into
a /usr/tmp directory then type:
# find . -print | cpio -ocvC32768 > /dev/rmt/c0s0n
Notice the "c0s0n" NO REWIND device. Blow away the /usr/tmp/* stuff
and repeat until done! Play with a shell script that will install
it in this format. AT&T 3B2 Sysadm will give you some clues on this
type of media. Thier BOOTABLE tape has a boot image, a directory of
whats on the rest of the tape in a magic format (look at sysadm tapepackage
stuff its pretty wild), then each archive on the no-rewind device.
This is not what I have done, it's just a suggestion.
I set my system up the way I like it, all drivers installed
accounts set up, etc... then:
# cd /
# find . -print | cpio -ocvC32768 > /dev/rmt/c0s0
This way all I have to do is boot disk #1 and cpio
all the goodies back into the system.
Don't forget to do an idbuild when the system restores.
"/etc/conf/bin/idbuild"
BTW: -C32768 almost keeps my tape drive streaming, but its much
faster than the default of 512 bytes.
--
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NAME: Dennis S. Breckenridge UUCP: dennis at nebulus
EMACS: Eight Megabytes And Constantly Swapping!
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