[Fwd: Re: DiskOnChip Questions]

Hendricks David W. dwh at lanl.gov
Fri Jun 25 10:57:00 CEST 2004


You can do it that way, too. The method suggested earlier was to use the 
distribution kernel on the compact flash device. If you want a stripped 
kernel to fit alongside LinuxBIOS on your BIOS ROM, you can do that as 
well (Look at targets/arima/hdama/Config.kernelimage.lb for an example). 
You could then use Kexec or Two Kernel Monte (kmonte) to boot 
another kernel.

So I guess what we need to figure out is how you want to boot your kernel. 
Do you want it to be booted off an IDE device or the same flash part 
alongside your BIOS?

On Fri, 25 Jun 2004, Michael Robinson wrote:

> So in my case FILO is booting the actual Linux kernel that you will be 
> using when you perform tasks on the computer?  So if you were using a 
> DiskOnChip your Linux distribution kernel would be on the actual 
> DiskOnChip?  I was under the impression that the LinuxBIOS kernel was on 
> the DiskOnChip and the distribution kernel was on a hard drive.  Could 
> you please clarify.
> 
> Thanks,
> Michael Robinson
> mrobinson at fuzzymuzzle.com
> www.fuzzymuzzle.com
> 
> Hendricks David W. wrote:
> 
> >Sounds about right. Put your kernel on an IDE device with a filesystem 
> >(FILO supports EXT2/3, Reiser, XFS, etc) and use FILO as your LinuxBIOS 
> >payload (payload /where/filo/is/located/filo.elf in your 
> >targets/via/epia-m/Config.lb file). You also need to tell FILO where 
> >yoru kernel is located and give it any options you want passed to the 
> >kernel in the "AUTOBOOT_FILE" line, which should look something like 
> >a LILO prompt: hda1:/kernel root/dev/hda3 console=ttyS0,115200 
> >
> >Boot image generally implies kernel. 
> >
> >On Fri, 25 Jun 2004, Michael Robinson wrote:
> >
> >  
> >
> >>---The trend seems to be NOT to use DiskOnChip but rather a CF <> IDE 
> >>adapter. Using FILO you can boot from the CF.---
> >>
> >>So I'd flash FILO to the BIOS, then it would load the LinuxBIOS kernel 
> >>image, and then the kernel image would do whatever you want LinuxBIOS to 
> >>do, right? Or am I wrong... It says FILO loads a "boot image", whats the 
> >>definition of a "boot image", is it just the kernel?
> >>
> >>Thanks,
> >>Michael Robinson
> >>mrobinson at fuzzymuzzle.com
> >>www.fuzzymuzzle.com
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >>Larry Matter wrote:
> >>
> >>    
> >>
> >>>>what
> >>>>does the DiskOnChip provide to the LinuxBIOs project that the standard
> >>>>flash chip can't?
> >>>>   
> >>>>
> >>>>        
> >>>>
> >>>More than 2 megabits of storage.
> >>>
> >>> 
> >>>
> >>>      
> >>>
> >>>>My second is that I'm going to be using the VIA EPIA
> >>>>MII motherboard which has a PLCC BIOS, as far as I can tell PLCC
> >>>>DiskOnChips aren't very readily available.  Should I use a DIP to PLCC
> >>>>adapter; how did the other people who used this board do it?
> >>>>   
> >>>>
> >>>>        
> >>>>
> >>>The trend seems to be NOT to use DiskOnChip but rather a CF <> IDE
> >>>adapter.  Using FILO you can boot from the CF.
> >>> 
> >>>
> >>> 
> >>>
> >>>      
> >>>
> >>>>My final
> >>>>question is how do I pick the size of the DiskOnChip.
> >>>>   
> >>>>
> >>>>        
> >>>>
> >>>So if you're going to go for the CF <> IDE, then it just needs to be as
> >>>big as your root partition (or even just an initrd).   There are many
> >>>other alternatives depending on network, disk, etc.
> >>>
> >>>And if you've been following this list for a bit you'll know that you
> >>>can't (yet) boot off of the CF adapter on the EPIA MII.
> >>>
> >>>One last word of advice, get a bios savior.
> >>>
> >>>Larry
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>
> >>> 
> >>>
> >>>      
> >>>
> >>_______________________________________________
> >>Linuxbios mailing list
> >>Linuxbios at clustermatic.org
> >>http://www.clustermatic.org/mailman/listinfo/linuxbios
> >>
> >>    
> >>
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >  
> >
> 




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