On 17 Feb, this message from Ethan Benson echoed through cyberspace: > On Sat, Feb 17, 2001 at 01:45:51PM +0100, Michel Lanners wrote: >> On 17 Feb, this message from Sebastiaan echoed through cyberspace: >> > it took me a couple of days before I had figured out how it works. The >> > solution was in the manpage of nvsetenv. >> > >> > This is what I did for my 7300: >> > boot-device scsi-int/[EMAIL PROTECTED]:0 >> > boot-file /vmlinuz root=/dev/sda2 >> ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ >> >> When using nvsetenv, make sure to enclose your boot-file value in quotes >> and add a space in front. The leading space is important as it specifies >> a string in Forth. And OF is nothing else than a Forth interpreter ;-) > > boot-file should be redunant if you have a proper /etc/quik.conf > though, quik is supposed to find its config file and go from that...
Depends. quik uses the boot-file as the label of the config to be booted; i.e. it permits to select different kernels via the quik.conf configuration file, but without the need to directly interact with OF on the console. Michel ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Michel Lanners | " Read Philosophy. Study Art. 23, Rue Paul Henkes | Ask Questions. Make Mistakes. L-1710 Luxembourg | email [EMAIL PROTECTED] | http://www.cpu.lu/~mlan | Learn Always. "