diff options
author | jkh <jkh@FreeBSD.org> | 1995-05-29 12:00:11 +0000 |
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committer | jkh <jkh@FreeBSD.org> | 1995-05-29 12:00:11 +0000 |
commit | 8ed85cb05a72ec302c2bd6934442cbb2af864206 (patch) | |
tree | 3d68264273057cd907b32a4737fb9df4b4d79f6e | |
parent | 7b81005ba26f7d1b11837134093353f058b18697 (diff) | |
download | FreeBSD-src-8ed85cb05a72ec302c2bd6934442cbb2af864206.zip FreeBSD-src-8ed85cb05a72ec302c2bd6934442cbb2af864206.tar.gz |
My first round at all the help files needed explicitly by various menus.
Folks - please review these! I'm quite sleepy at the moment, and I'm
sure that some of this could be worded better. I'd like to have at least
a reasonable syntax pass over this before handing it off to the translation
folks! Thanks! Feel free to commit any changes directly if it's any time
in the next 8 hours, BTW. I won't mind since I'll be asleep!
8 files changed, 238 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/release/sysinstall/help/en_US.ISO8859-1/configure.hlp b/release/sysinstall/help/en_US.ISO8859-1/configure.hlp new file mode 100644 index 0000000..4f37bb5 --- /dev/null +++ b/release/sysinstall/help/en_US.ISO8859-1/configure.hlp @@ -0,0 +1,11 @@ +This menu lets you configure your system a little after it's +installed. In particular, you should probably set the system +manager's password and the system time zone. + +For extra goodies like bash, emacs, pascal, etc. you should almost +certainly look at the Packages item in this menu. Note that this is +currently only really useful if you have a CDROM or an existing +packages collection somewhere in the file system hierarchy where the +package management tool can get to it. Automatic transfer of packages +over FTP is not yet supported! + diff --git a/release/sysinstall/help/en_US.ISO8859-1/drives.hlp b/release/sysinstall/help/en_US.ISO8859-1/drives.hlp new file mode 100644 index 0000000..b4c59c3 --- /dev/null +++ b/release/sysinstall/help/en_US.ISO8859-1/drives.hlp @@ -0,0 +1,22 @@ +Select the drives you wish FreeBSD to be able to use. + +If you are going to actually install some portion of FreeBSD on a +drive, then PLEASE BE VERY CERTAIN that the Geometry reported in the +Partition Editor (see Installation Menu) is the correct one for your +drive and controller combination! + +IDE drives often have a certain geometry set during the PC BIOS setup, +or (in the case of larger IDE drives) have their geometry "remapped" +by either the IDE controller or a special boot-sector translation +utility (such as that by OnTrack Systems). In these cases, knowing +the correct geometry gets even more complicated as it's not something +you can easily tell by looking at the drive or the PC BIOS setup. The +best way of determining your geometry in such situations is to boot +DOS (from the hard disk, not a floppy!) and run the ``pfdisk'' utility +provided in the tools/ subdirectory. It will report the geometry that +DOS sees, which is generally the correct one. + +FreeBSD does its best to guess all of this automatically, of course, +but it sometimes fails which is why it's a good idea to check it. The +Partition Editor has a `(G)eometry' command that will allow you to +change it as necessary. diff --git a/release/sysinstall/help/en_US.ISO8859-1/media.hlp b/release/sysinstall/help/en_US.ISO8859-1/media.hlp new file mode 100644 index 0000000..8b081bc --- /dev/null +++ b/release/sysinstall/help/en_US.ISO8859-1/media.hlp @@ -0,0 +1,29 @@ +You can install from the following types of media: + + CDROM - requires one of the following supported CDROM drives: + + Sony CDU 31/33A + Matushita/Panasonic "Sound Blaster" CDROM. + Mitsumi FX-001{A-D} (older non-IDE drives). + SCSI - Any standard SCSI CDROM drive hooked to + a supported controller (see Hardware Guide). + + DOS - A DOS primary partition with the required FreeBSD + distribution files copied onto it (e.g. C:\FREEBSD\) + + FS - Assuming a disk or partition with an existing + FreeBSD file system and distribution set on it, + get the distribution files from there. + + Floppy - Get distribution files from one or more DOS formatted + floppies. + + FTP - Get the distribution files from an anonymous ftp server + (you will be presented with a list). + + NFS - Get the distribution files from an NFS server somewhere + (make sure that permissions on the server allow this!) + + Tape - Extract distribution files from tape into a temporary + directory and install from there. + diff --git a/release/sysinstall/help/en_US.ISO8859-1/network_device.hlp b/release/sysinstall/help/en_US.ISO8859-1/network_device.hlp new file mode 100644 index 0000000..0a7dc8e --- /dev/null +++ b/release/sysinstall/help/en_US.ISO8859-1/network_device.hlp @@ -0,0 +1,57 @@ +You can do network installations over 3 types of communications links: + + Serial port: SLIP / PPP + + Parallel port: PLIP (laplink cable) + + Ethernet: A standard ethernet controller (includes some PCMCIA). + + +SLIP support is rather primitive, and limited primarily to hard-wired +links, such as a serial cable running between a laptop computer and +another computer. The link should be hard-wired as the SLIP +installation doesn't currently offer a dialing capability; that +facility is provided with the PPP utility, which should be used in +preference to SLIP whenever possible. When you choose a serial port +device, you'll be given the option later to edit the slattach command +before it's run on the serial line. It is expected that you'll run +slattach (or some equivalent) on the other end of the link at this +time and bring up the line. FreeBSD will then install itself over the +serial line at speeds of up to 115.2K/baud (the recommended speed for +a hardwired cable). + +If you're using a modem, then PPP is almost certainly your only +choice. Make sure that you have your service provider's information +handy as you'll need to know it fairly soon in the installation +process. You will need to know, at the minimum, your service +provider's IP address and possibly your own (though you can also leave +it blank and allow PPP to negotiate it with your ISP). You also need +to know how to use the various "AT commands" to dial the ISP with your +particular modem as the PPP dialer provides only a very simple +terminal emulator. + +If a hard-wired connection to another FreeBSD (2.0R or later) machine +is available, you might also consider installing over a "laplink" +parallel port cable. The data rate over the parallel port is much +higher than is what's typically possible over a serial line (up to +50k/sec), thus resulting in a quicker installation. + +Finally, for the fastest possible installation, an ethernet adaptor is +always a good choice! FreeBSD supports most common PC ethernet cards, +a table of supported cards (and their required settings) provided as +part of the FreeBSD Hardware Guide - see the Documentation menu on the +boot floppy. If you are using one of the supported PCMCIA ethernet +cards, also be sure that it's plugged in _before_ the laptop is +powered on! FreeBSD does not, unfortunately, currently support "hot +insertion" of PCMCIA cards. + +You will also need to know your IP address on the network, the the +"netmask" value for your address class and the name of your machine. +Your system administrator can tell you which values to use for your +particular network setup. If you will be referring to other hosts by +name rather than IP address, you'll also need a name server and +possibly the address of a gateway (if you're using PPP, it's your +provider's IP address) to use in talking to it. If you do not know +the answers to all or or most of these questions, then you should +really probably talk to your system administrator _first_ before +trying this type of installation! diff --git a/release/sysinstall/help/en_US.ISO_8859-1/configure.hlp b/release/sysinstall/help/en_US.ISO_8859-1/configure.hlp new file mode 100644 index 0000000..4f37bb5 --- /dev/null +++ b/release/sysinstall/help/en_US.ISO_8859-1/configure.hlp @@ -0,0 +1,11 @@ +This menu lets you configure your system a little after it's +installed. In particular, you should probably set the system +manager's password and the system time zone. + +For extra goodies like bash, emacs, pascal, etc. you should almost +certainly look at the Packages item in this menu. Note that this is +currently only really useful if you have a CDROM or an existing +packages collection somewhere in the file system hierarchy where the +package management tool can get to it. Automatic transfer of packages +over FTP is not yet supported! + diff --git a/release/sysinstall/help/en_US.ISO_8859-1/drives.hlp b/release/sysinstall/help/en_US.ISO_8859-1/drives.hlp new file mode 100644 index 0000000..b4c59c3 --- /dev/null +++ b/release/sysinstall/help/en_US.ISO_8859-1/drives.hlp @@ -0,0 +1,22 @@ +Select the drives you wish FreeBSD to be able to use. + +If you are going to actually install some portion of FreeBSD on a +drive, then PLEASE BE VERY CERTAIN that the Geometry reported in the +Partition Editor (see Installation Menu) is the correct one for your +drive and controller combination! + +IDE drives often have a certain geometry set during the PC BIOS setup, +or (in the case of larger IDE drives) have their geometry "remapped" +by either the IDE controller or a special boot-sector translation +utility (such as that by OnTrack Systems). In these cases, knowing +the correct geometry gets even more complicated as it's not something +you can easily tell by looking at the drive or the PC BIOS setup. The +best way of determining your geometry in such situations is to boot +DOS (from the hard disk, not a floppy!) and run the ``pfdisk'' utility +provided in the tools/ subdirectory. It will report the geometry that +DOS sees, which is generally the correct one. + +FreeBSD does its best to guess all of this automatically, of course, +but it sometimes fails which is why it's a good idea to check it. The +Partition Editor has a `(G)eometry' command that will allow you to +change it as necessary. diff --git a/release/sysinstall/help/en_US.ISO_8859-1/media.hlp b/release/sysinstall/help/en_US.ISO_8859-1/media.hlp new file mode 100644 index 0000000..8b081bc --- /dev/null +++ b/release/sysinstall/help/en_US.ISO_8859-1/media.hlp @@ -0,0 +1,29 @@ +You can install from the following types of media: + + CDROM - requires one of the following supported CDROM drives: + + Sony CDU 31/33A + Matushita/Panasonic "Sound Blaster" CDROM. + Mitsumi FX-001{A-D} (older non-IDE drives). + SCSI - Any standard SCSI CDROM drive hooked to + a supported controller (see Hardware Guide). + + DOS - A DOS primary partition with the required FreeBSD + distribution files copied onto it (e.g. C:\FREEBSD\) + + FS - Assuming a disk or partition with an existing + FreeBSD file system and distribution set on it, + get the distribution files from there. + + Floppy - Get distribution files from one or more DOS formatted + floppies. + + FTP - Get the distribution files from an anonymous ftp server + (you will be presented with a list). + + NFS - Get the distribution files from an NFS server somewhere + (make sure that permissions on the server allow this!) + + Tape - Extract distribution files from tape into a temporary + directory and install from there. + diff --git a/release/sysinstall/help/en_US.ISO_8859-1/network_device.hlp b/release/sysinstall/help/en_US.ISO_8859-1/network_device.hlp new file mode 100644 index 0000000..0a7dc8e --- /dev/null +++ b/release/sysinstall/help/en_US.ISO_8859-1/network_device.hlp @@ -0,0 +1,57 @@ +You can do network installations over 3 types of communications links: + + Serial port: SLIP / PPP + + Parallel port: PLIP (laplink cable) + + Ethernet: A standard ethernet controller (includes some PCMCIA). + + +SLIP support is rather primitive, and limited primarily to hard-wired +links, such as a serial cable running between a laptop computer and +another computer. The link should be hard-wired as the SLIP +installation doesn't currently offer a dialing capability; that +facility is provided with the PPP utility, which should be used in +preference to SLIP whenever possible. When you choose a serial port +device, you'll be given the option later to edit the slattach command +before it's run on the serial line. It is expected that you'll run +slattach (or some equivalent) on the other end of the link at this +time and bring up the line. FreeBSD will then install itself over the +serial line at speeds of up to 115.2K/baud (the recommended speed for +a hardwired cable). + +If you're using a modem, then PPP is almost certainly your only +choice. Make sure that you have your service provider's information +handy as you'll need to know it fairly soon in the installation +process. You will need to know, at the minimum, your service +provider's IP address and possibly your own (though you can also leave +it blank and allow PPP to negotiate it with your ISP). You also need +to know how to use the various "AT commands" to dial the ISP with your +particular modem as the PPP dialer provides only a very simple +terminal emulator. + +If a hard-wired connection to another FreeBSD (2.0R or later) machine +is available, you might also consider installing over a "laplink" +parallel port cable. The data rate over the parallel port is much +higher than is what's typically possible over a serial line (up to +50k/sec), thus resulting in a quicker installation. + +Finally, for the fastest possible installation, an ethernet adaptor is +always a good choice! FreeBSD supports most common PC ethernet cards, +a table of supported cards (and their required settings) provided as +part of the FreeBSD Hardware Guide - see the Documentation menu on the +boot floppy. If you are using one of the supported PCMCIA ethernet +cards, also be sure that it's plugged in _before_ the laptop is +powered on! FreeBSD does not, unfortunately, currently support "hot +insertion" of PCMCIA cards. + +You will also need to know your IP address on the network, the the +"netmask" value for your address class and the name of your machine. +Your system administrator can tell you which values to use for your +particular network setup. If you will be referring to other hosts by +name rather than IP address, you'll also need a name server and +possibly the address of a gateway (if you're using PPP, it's your +provider's IP address) to use in talking to it. If you do not know +the answers to all or or most of these questions, then you should +really probably talk to your system administrator _first_ before +trying this type of installation! |