pavement

Intel (x86) - Quick Install Guide

From FreeBSDwiki
Revision as of 14:00, 27 November 2007 by Silicon.wolf (Talk | contribs)
Jump to: navigation, search

Lets have to misconceptions here... Please. This guide, is only what it says it is. A Quick Install Guide. This guide, says very little, to nothing of how to secure your newly installed BSD system. Only the quickest, and easiest way to do so. Hopefully, someone rather knowledgeable in that subject will write that one for us.  ;)

Contents

Introduction

This guide, will cover installing FreeBSD 6.2-Release from CD/FTP for the Intel x86, x86-64, and AMD64 platforms. Since the variation between 32bit and 64bit is nominal, additional information or instructions will be indicated when applicable.

This guide, will also assume that the general person reading it, is migrating from a Windows environment. (ie. Windows ME, 2000, XP, Vista)

In the interim of this guide being completed, please refer to the installation chapters in The FreeBSD Handbook.

A Note to Windows Users:
It's time to put away your thoughts, and misconceptions about the ways that computers do things. Unix is going to take you on a journey, of relearning what you know. If you have previous experience with DOS, or you happen to be using the CMD command a lot, then you're in luck. For those of you whom arn't, we have quick ways of getting you to a GUI. You will see your shortcut, when the time comes, I promise.

You need to leave behind the idea of drive letters. Drives are no longer letters, and individual beasts as windows used to treat them. Drives in BSD are file systems. Simply a collection of your files, ready for your access when you want them. I mean, really, how many of us have named our "data" drives as something other than "New Volume" or "Local Disk". Well, it's so much easier to access files now then doing all of the drive changing, and such. You're drives, and file systems, are seamlessly aligned into place for you, with easy names to remember (usually ones you create).

Thank you for your patience while I complete this. And have a scien-tastic day.

System Requirements

The basic system requirements, for installation of the AMD64 build of FreeBSD requires the following base hardware:

a 486 or better processor
at least 24 MB of RAM
150MB free HD space.
DVD/CD-ROM Drive
VGA Compatible video card
patience

For the purposes of this tutorial, I will be installing FreeBSD on two different systems. An Intel Server System (x86 32bit), and an AMD64x2 (x86-84, AMD64, 64bit). Both using the FreeBSD 6.2-RELEASE, found at The FreeBSD Website

Pre-Install Checklist

As you should be doing on a regular basis anyway (stops to laugh for a while). You need to make sure you have a good current backup of your data files. As with any operating system installation, you may accidentally delete something that you wanted to save. trust me. please.

The next step, is to check your personal hardware setup, verses that of the Intel - Hardware Compatibility List. Hopefully, you did this in the last step, but if you didn't, please take the time to do it now. It will save you some stress later. I promise.

Once you have determined whether or not your specific hardware is supported, you need to find windows drivers for your hardware that is not supported directly by BSD. Instructions will be given later on how to make all of your goodies work.

Ok, next comes your boot / install media. FTP, CD, DVD, or NetBoot are all nice options, but we're only talking about FTP, and CD/DVD. (BTW - if FreeBSD does not support one of your networking cards natively, then you won't be able to do an FTP install) I suggest, that if you're going to download a medium from the FreeBSD Server, that you go ahead, and download the full disc one. Unless you're low on space, or have a thing for burning your installer to a business card cd. But generally, the first CD has the fixit recovery shell available, should you need to fix your fstab file or something like that <cough>.

I guess all you really need now, is a brief thing about the way BSD names devices.

fd0 is your floppy, cd0 is your cdrom, cd1 is your 2nd rom drive

ad0 is an ide device (sata, pata)

da0 is a scsi device

net0 is a networking card - Now, watch out here, cause this isn't always true. networking cards get real tricky with BSD, cause BSD names them after their manufacturer (often). So you may see such entries as eth0, nvd0, it's important to note which cards BSD supports for your configuration, as you can save time, and energy by letting SYSINSTALL do your network setup for you.

fw0 is a firewire device

lo0 is your local loopback device (127.0.0.1)

ar0 is a hardware raid device.

Starting The Install

end of line

Personal tools