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H A D | README | diff 68d566e62ef82d359ffae7876329787eb4269611 Sat Jan 17 21:30:06 CET 2009 Poul-Henning Kamp <phk@FreeBSD.org> Release the evil twin of nanobsd.sh: sysbuild.sh
quoth the README:
I have been running -current on my laptop since before FreeBSD 2.0 was released and along the way developed this little trick to making the task easier.
sysbuild.sh is a way to build a new FreeBSD system on a computer from a specification, while leaving the current installation intact.
sysbuild.sh assume you have two partitions that can hold your rootfs and can be booted, and roughly speaking, all it does is build a new system into the one you don't use, from the one you do use.
A partition named /freebsd is assumed to be part of your layout, and that is where the sources and ports will be found.
If you know how nanobsd works, you will find a lot of similarity. 68d566e62ef82d359ffae7876329787eb4269611 Sat Jan 17 21:30:06 CET 2009 Poul-Henning Kamp <phk@FreeBSD.org> Release the evil twin of nanobsd.sh: sysbuild.sh
quoth the README:
I have been running -current on my laptop since before FreeBSD 2.0 was released and along the way developed this little trick to making the task easier.
sysbuild.sh is a way to build a new FreeBSD system on a computer from a specification, while leaving the current installation intact.
sysbuild.sh assume you have two partitions that can hold your rootfs and can be booted, and roughly speaking, all it does is build a new system into the one you don't use, from the one you do use.
A partition named /freebsd is assumed to be part of your layout, and that is where the sources and ports will be found.
If you know how nanobsd works, you will find a lot of similarity.
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H A D | sysbuild.sh | diff 68d566e62ef82d359ffae7876329787eb4269611 Sat Jan 17 21:30:06 CET 2009 Poul-Henning Kamp <phk@FreeBSD.org> Release the evil twin of nanobsd.sh: sysbuild.sh
quoth the README:
I have been running -current on my laptop since before FreeBSD 2.0 was released and along the way developed this little trick to making the task easier.
sysbuild.sh is a way to build a new FreeBSD system on a computer from a specification, while leaving the current installation intact.
sysbuild.sh assume you have two partitions that can hold your rootfs and can be booted, and roughly speaking, all it does is build a new system into the one you don't use, from the one you do use.
A partition named /freebsd is assumed to be part of your layout, and that is where the sources and ports will be found.
If you know how nanobsd works, you will find a lot of similarity. 68d566e62ef82d359ffae7876329787eb4269611 Sat Jan 17 21:30:06 CET 2009 Poul-Henning Kamp <phk@FreeBSD.org> Release the evil twin of nanobsd.sh: sysbuild.sh
quoth the README:
I have been running -current on my laptop since before FreeBSD 2.0 was released and along the way developed this little trick to making the task easier.
sysbuild.sh is a way to build a new FreeBSD system on a computer from a specification, while leaving the current installation intact.
sysbuild.sh assume you have two partitions that can hold your rootfs and can be booted, and roughly speaking, all it does is build a new system into the one you don't use, from the one you do use.
A partition named /freebsd is assumed to be part of your layout, and that is where the sources and ports will be found.
If you know how nanobsd works, you will find a lot of similarity.
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