>
> I tried doing the virtual image thing with mine and couldn't get it to work.
> I ended up doing the same. You can get cf to USB adapters fairly cheap. And
> did the initial install with my laptop then logged in and fixed the
> networking stuff. I later did a fresh install over pxe using the
On May 22, 2019 6:05 PM, Chris Zakelj wrote:
>
> When I set my 4801 up years and years ago, I did it by using an IDE>CF
> adapter on an old Athlon system I had hanging around rather than messing
> around with virtual images, PXE booting, or the like. The Geode processor
> is roughly equivalent
When I set my 4801 up years and years ago, I did it by using an IDE>CF
adapter on an old Athlon system I had hanging around rather than messing
around with virtual images, PXE booting, or the like. The Geode processor
is roughly equivalent to a Pentium II, so use i386 images. Past that, from
my n
> What kernel did you install? I know I'm running i386 on mine, and I'm
> also sure I'd be running amd64 if I could, so I'd say the 4801 can't
> handle amd64 kernels.
I installed i386, of course. Are you running 6.5 on yours?
>
> I never had any trouble booting from a serial console. The defa
Have you tried
boot> stty com0 38400
boot> set tty com0
On Wed, May 22, 2019 at 2:14 PM Alberto Mijares wrote:
> Hi guys,
>
> I'm new on this list. Greetings everyone.
>
> Here is my case:
>
> I installed OpenBSD on a 4GB Flash Card by attaching the card to a
> Bhyve VM as a "ahci-hd" custom
Hi guys,
I'm new on this list. Greetings everyone.
Here is my case:
I installed OpenBSD on a 4GB Flash Card by attaching the card to a
Bhyve VM as a "ahci-hd" custom drive. Then, booted the VM and disabled
a few of services. Also disabled kernel and libs randomization, since
it's not needed and
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