[rescue] BOOTING SOLARIS 10 on a ULTRA 2/200

Brian Howe bwhowe at gmail.com
Sat Oct 16 14:00:15 CDT 2004


Actually, the easiest way I can think to do it is to burn the ISO to a
CDRW, edit the file there and then bit-for-bit copy it to a CDR (if
your drive doesn't support CDRW disks).


On Sat, 16 Oct 2004 2:06:59 +0000, Lionel Peterson
<lionel4287 at verizon.net> wrote:
> > From: Mike F <lists at ibrew.net>
> > Date: 2004/10/15 Fri PM 11:45:24 GMT
> > To: rescue at sunhelp.org
> > Subject: Re: [rescue] BOOTING SOLARIS 10 on a ULTRA 2/200
> >
> > On Fri, Oct 15, 2004 at 09:49:31PM +0100, Dan Williams wrote:
> 
> > > I don't have any machines newer then my ultra-2, but could you install
> > > on another machine. Edit that line, swap disks and then boot -r
> > >
> > > Dan
> >
> > Thanks for the tip... When I get a chance, I'll look into modifying the
> > ISO image or doing a jumpstart install.
> 
> I suspect that once installed on a "valid" system, you could transfer the system disk, "boot -r" and have Solaris 10 running... I wonder if Solaris really checks the CPU on startup every time  if it installed, it should be valid, right? ;^)
> 
> Just a thought - of course, the real answer is to get a couple nice 300 MHz CPUs...
> 
> 
> _______________________________________________
> rescue list - http://www.sunhelp.org/mailman/listinfo/rescue
> 


-- 
Brian Howe
bwhowe at gmail.com
-----------------
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