At 12:56 AM 4/9/2007, L Goodwin wrote:
Hello. I tried posting this issue a few hours ago, but it did not appear
in my inbox, so I'm
trying once more. I've included details of the install in case it matters
(sorry about length).
I'm having trouble getting FreeBSD 6.2 to boot after installation. After a
"successful" install,
(re-)boot always fails with "DISK BOOT FAILURE, INSERT SYSTEM DISK AND
PRESS ENTER".
In order to boot the install CD on this machine, I have to disable ACPI by
selecting
"2. Boot FreeBSD with ACPI disabled" from the boot loader menu (the AWARD
BIOS does not allow
for disabling ACPI from the BIOS setup program).
At the end of a "successful" install, the installer asks "ACPI was
disabled during boot.
Would you like to disable it permanently?", to which I choose "Yes".
I am choosing to perform a "Standard" install.
Here are my FDISK selections:
Select Drive(s): "da0" (first SCSI drive of 6 9GB drives)
These are my selections in FDISK Partition Editor (before entering "Q"):
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Disk name: da0 FDISK Partition Editor
DISK Geometry: 1115 cyls/255 heads/63 sectors = 17912475 sectors (8746MB)
Offset Size(ST) End Name PType Desc Subtype
Flags
0 63 62 - 12 unused 0
63 17912412 17912474 da0s1 8 freebsd 165 A
17912475 3765 17916239 - 12 unused 0
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Install Boot Manager for drive da0?: Selected "BootMgr" (Install the
FreeBSD Boot Manager)
Select Drive(s): "da0" selected for Boot Manager (tab to "OK", press ENTER).
FreeBSD Disklabel Editor (create BSD Paritions): Select "A" (Auto Defaults)...
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Disk: da0 Partition name da0s1 Free: 17912412 blocks (8746MB)
Part Mount Size Newfs Part Mount Size Newfs
---- ----- ---- ----- ---- ----- ---- -----
da0s1a / 512MB UFS2 Y
da0s1b swap 486MB SWAP
da0s1d /var 1267MB UFS2+s Y
da0s1e /tmp 512MB UFS2+s Y
da0s1f /usr 5968MB UFS2+s Y
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
...then enter "Q" (Finish).
Choose Distributions: Select "A Minimal".
Choose Installation Media: "1 CD/DVD" (burned my own from
FreeBSD-6.2-disk1 ISO image)
"All filesystem information written correctly"...
Distribution extracted successfully...
"Congratulations! You now have FreeBSD installed on your system" (but
can't boot!).
Final Configuration: "No" to most questions (configure later). Yes to these:
Ethernet or SLIP/PPP network devices: fxp0 (Intel EtherExpress
Pro/100B PCI Fast Ethernet card
IPv6 configuration of the interfaces?: No
DHCP: No
Bring up fxp0 interface right now?: Yes Failed (only entered hostname
--will complete later)
Network gateway?: No
inetd?: No
SSH login?: Yes
anonymous FTP?: No
NFS server?: No
NFS client?: No
customize system console settings?: No
machine's time zone?: Yes
CMOS clock set to UTC?: No
Region: "2 America -- North and South"
Country or Region: "45 United States"
Time zone: "19 Pacific Time" ("PDT")
Linux binary compatibility?: No
PS/2 mouse?: Yes (test OK)
"ACPI was disabled during boot. Would you like to diswable it
parmanently?": Yes
Browse FreeBSD package collection?: No
Add initial user accounts?: No
set system manager's password: (done)
Visit general configuration menu one more time?: No
FreeBSD/i386 6.2-RELEASE - sysinstall Main Menu: Exit Install
Last thing to print to screen:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Boot from ATAPI CD-ROM : Failure ...
DISK BOOT FAILURE, INSERT SYSTEM DISK AND PRESS ENTER
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The first message is expected, as there is no disk in the CD-ROM drive.
If I set Boot Sequence to "C only" in BIOS setup, only the second message
appears.
Am I doing something wrong here?
Make sure your System BIOS is not set to not allow writing to the boot
area, often this is called boot sector virus protection in some BIOS's.
Go into your SCSI BIOS and make sure it is set to be bootable and has the
correct disk set for booting from.
-Derek
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