Hello All,

I'd posted this question earlier but had confused myself during the process
which didn't lead to much help from the community as the wrong questions
were asked. So let me try again.

I have a situation like so:

an x86 machine with Solaris 8 preinstalled on it. It's an appliance from a
vendor who's hardened it and/or made it in a way that no matter what one
does it always boots into this customized Solaris 8 OS automatically
starting their software. I added an extra HDD to it, and would like to
install Debian on it. However, no matter what I try, I'm unable to get it to
boot off of the network to pick up the boot.img file from the TFTP server.
RARP, TFTP etc is all setup and I have successfully installed Debian on a
couple of Sparc machines using this setup. However, even after changing the
values of boot-device etc using 'eeprom', I am unable to get this machine to
boot (or try to boot) from the network. This may be a function of the
network cards as well with the configuration assistant setup to not boot off
the network and maybe the network doesn't get initialized until after the OS
has been initialized. By interrupting the boot process however, I am able to
have it try booting from a CD or another HDD which it does detect early on
in the boot process.

So, the question is,

Does anyone know how to partition the 2nd HDD while in Solaris, install the
Debian boot files and bare-bone kernel from boot.img.gz archive, initrd and
vmlinuz on it so that when selected to boot from it, it boot into debian and
then install whatever I want to install on it.

The software installed on this machine from the vendor is unsupported now
and that company/vendor has been bought over twice since we bought this in
2004 and as a result am not able to get any support for it and am unable to
make it work the way I want to so the idea is to install another OS on it
(since these are very powerful machines) and install whatever I want on it.

Any ideas or help will be appreciated.

Thanks
AE

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