em(4): Don't write ITR, if the NIC is not running yet.
[dragonfly.git] / UPDATING
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1# Updating Information for DragonFly users.
2#
3#
4# This file should warn you of any pitfalls which you might need to work around
5# when trying to update your DragonFly system. The information below is
6# in reverse-time order, with the latest information at the top.
7#
8# If you discover any problem, please contact the bugs@lists.dragonflybsd.org
9# mailing list with the details.
10#
11# $DragonFly: src/UPDATING,v 1.26 2008/09/15 20:03:36 thomas Exp $
12
13+-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
14+ UPGRADING DRAGONFLY ON AN EXISTING DRAGONFLY SYSTEM +
15+ GENERAL +
16+-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
17
18Instructions on how to obtain and maintain DragonFly source code using git
19are in the development(7) manual page.
20
21To upgrade a DragonFly system from sources you run the following sequence:
22
23 cd /usr/src
24 make buildworld
25 make buildkernel KERNCONF=<KERNELNAME>
26 make installkernel KERNCONF=<KERNELNAME>
27 make installworld
28
29You will also want to run the 'upgrade' target to upgrade your /etc and the
30rest of your system. The upgrade target is aware of stale files created by
31older DragonFly installations and should delete them automatically.
32
33 make upgrade
34
35See the build(7) manual page for further information.
36
37Once you've done a full build of the world and kernel you can do incremental
38upgrades of either by using the 'quickworld' and 'quickkernel' targets
39instead of 'buildworld' and 'buildkernel'. If you have any problems with
40the quick targets, try updating your repo first, and then a full buildworld
41and buildkernel as shown above, before asking for help.
42
43+-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
44+ UPGRADING FROM DRAGONFLY <= 2.0 TO DRAGONFLY >= 2.1 +
45+-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
46
47In 2.1 kernel and modules has moved to boot directory. For most cases
48this is handled automatically by 'make upgrade'. A few cases needs manual
49intervention:
50
51 * When installing a kernel without first doing a make buildworld,
52 installworld and upgrade to the same DESTDIR as kernel:
53 make DESTDIR/boot directory and move kernel and modules into this boot
54 directory; also move kernel.old and modules.old.
55 Typical example is vkernel(7), use (no modules used):
56
57 cd /var/vkernel
58 mkdir boot
59 chflags noschg kernel
60 mv kernel kernel.old boot
61 chflags schg boot/kernel
62
63 * When using a boot-only partition, /boot/loader.rc needs to be edited:
64 delete occurrences of '/boot/'.
65 These occurences can normally be deleted in any case, see loader(8).
66
67+-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
68+ UPGRADING FROM DRAGONFLY <= 1.8 TO DRAGONFLY >= 1.9 +
69+-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
70
71In 1.9 major changes to the disk management infrastructure have taken
72place. make upgrade may not catch all of your disk devices in /dev,
73so after upgrading be sure to cd /dev; ./MAKEDEV <blah> where <blah>
74are all of your disk devices.
75
76The biggest changes in 1.9 are:
77
78(1) That whole-slice devices such as da0s1 no longer share the same device
79 id as partition c devices such as da0s1c.
80
81(2) The whole-disk device (e.g. da0) is full raw access to the disk,
82 with no snooping or reserved sectors. Consequently you cannot run
83 disklabel on this device. Instead you must run disklabel on a
84 whole-slice device.
85
86(3) The 'compatibility' partitions now use slice 0 in the device name,
87 so instead of da0a you must specify da0s0a. Also, as per (1) above,
88 accessing the disklabel for the compatibility partitions must be
89 done via slice 0 (da0s0).
90
91(4) Many device drivers that used to fake up labels, such as CD, ACD, VN,
92 and CCD now run through the disk management layer and are assigned
93 real disk management devices. VN and CCD in particular do not usually
94 use a MBR and disklabels must be accessed through the compatibility
95 slice 0. Your /etc/ccd.conf file still specifies 'ccd0', though, you
96 don't name it 'ccd0s0' in the config file.
97
98Generally speaking, you have to get used to running fdisk and disklabel on
99the correctly specified device names. A lot of the wiggle, such as running
100disklabel on a partition, has been removed.
101
102+-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
103+ UPGRADING FROM OLDER VERSIONS OF DRAGONFLY OR FREEBSD +
104+-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
105
106> Kerberos IV
107-------------
108
109Kerberos IV (eBones) was removed from the tree, please consider moving to
110Kerberos 5 (Heimdal).
111
112> Package Management System
113---------------------------
114
115Starting with the 1.4 release, DragonFly uses NetBSD's pkgsrc package
116management system. The necessary tools to build and maintain packages
117are provided in /usr/pkg/bin and /usr/pkg/sbin. Make sure that these
118directories are in your PATH variable.
119
120In order to obtain a reasonably current snapshot of the pkgsrc tree, use
121the tarball from NetBSD:
122
123 fetch -o /tmp/pkgsrc.tar.gz ftp://ftp.NetBSD.org/pub/NetBSD/packages/pkgsrc.tar.gz
124 cd /usr; tar -xzf /tmp/pkgsrc.tar.gz; chown -R root:wheel pkgsrc
125
126This tree can then be kept up to date with cvs update:
127
128 cd /usr/pkgsrc; cvs up
129
130NOTE! If you upgraded from a pre-1.4 system to 1.4 or later, you need to
131build and install the pkgsrc bootstrap manually:
132
133 cd /usr/pkgsrc/bootstrap
134 ./bootstrap --pkgdbdir /var/db/pkg --prefix /usr/pkg
135
136+-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
137+ UPGRADING DRAGONFLY ON AN EXISTING DRAGONFLY SYSTEM +
138+ UPDATING FROM PRE-1.2 SYSTEMS OR FreeBSD 4.x TO +
139+ DRAGONFLY 1.3+ (EITHER PREVIEW or HEAD) +
140+-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
141
142The compatibility shims for the build environment have been removed, you
143have to update to DragonFly 1.2 release branch first.
144
145The default PAM configuration has moved from /etc/pam.conf to /etc/pam.d/.
146The existing configuration can be converted using /etc/pam.d/convert.sh.
147Entries in /etc/pam.d/ override entries in /etc/pam.conf. In addition
148the pam_skey.so module was retired, you have to remove it manually from
149your configuration, when you convert it.
150
151> Required user and group IDs when upgrading from either FreeBSD or DragonFly
152---------------------
153
154The following users may be missing from your password file. Use vipw and
155add any that are missing:
156
157smmsp:*:25:25::0:0:Sendmail Submission User:/var/spool/clientmqueue:/sbin/nologin
158_pflogd:*:64:64::0:0:pflogd privsep user:/var/empty:/sbin/nologin
159
160The following groups may be missing from your group file. Use vi /etc/group
161and add any that are missing:
162
163smmsp:*:25:
164authpf:*:63:
165_pflogd:*:64:
166
167
168> Upgrading to DragonFly from FreeBSD
169---------------------
170
171You can build the DragonFly world and DragonFly kernels on a FreeBSD-4.x or
172FreeBSD-5.x machine and then install DragonFly over FreeBSD, replacing
173FreeBSD. Note that the DragonFly buildworld target does not try to reuse
174make depend information, it starts from scratch, so no pre-cleaning of the
175object hierarchy is necessary.
176
177 # get the CVS repository (it is placed in /home/dcvs, 500MB).
178 # Please use the -h option and a mirror site to pull the
179 # initial repository, but feel free to use the main repository
180 # machine to pull updates.
181 cvsup /usr/share/examples/cvsup/DragonFly-cvs-supfile
182 # install the source from the CVS hierarchy (remove preexisting
183 # FreeBSD src first) (500MB)
184 cd /usr
185 rm -rf src
186 cvs -R -d /home/dcvs checkout -P src
187
188 # build it (500MB used in /usr/obj)
189 #
190 cd /usr/src
191 make buildworld
192 make buildkernel KERNCONF=<KERNELNAME>
193
194Once you have built DragonFly you have to install it over FreeBSD. Since
195DragonFly does not track changes made by FreeBSD to its include file
196hierarchy and include file pollution can cause all sorts of unexpected
197compilation issues to come up, it is best to wipe your include hierarchy
198prior to installing DragonFly. Note that you should not wipe any installed
199FreeBSD header files or binaries until after you have successfully completed
200the build steps above.
201
202 rm -rf /usr/include
203 mkdir /usr/include
204 make installkernel KERNCONF=<KERNELNAME>
205 make installworld
206
207Then you need to upgrade your system. DragonFly's 'make upgrade' target
208will unconditionally upgrade the /etc files that sysops do not usually
209mess around with, such as the files in /etc/rc.d. It will also remove any
210obsolete files such as utilities and manpages that have been removed from
211the system since the version you're coming from. If you are unsure we
212recommend that you make a backup of at least your /etc before applying
213this step. Note that DragonFly's RC system is basically RCNG from
214FreeBSD-5, but there are some differences in the contents of the RC files.
215
216 make upgrade
217
218NOTE! Never do a 'make upgrade' before 'make installworld' has been run.
219Doing so might leave your system in an unusable state.
220
221Finally we recommend that you do an 'ls -lta BLAH' for /bin, /sbin, /usr/bin,
222/usr/bin, and /usr/lib, and remove any stale files that you find. Please
223report these files to the DragonFly developers so that they can be added to
224the 'upgrade' target.
225