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authorgrant <grant>2004-03-11 13:03:58 +0000
committergrant <grant>2004-03-11 13:03:58 +0000
commit22558400f48c03ddcc5a52850ff9a7db1d5d7f64 (patch)
tree3434d463e0789e4ff8d9e78dbc0ec913e5aec800 /bootstrap/README.MacOSX
parentdba57bcb6a167974762bd4e69d11a298b01cebc3 (diff)
downloadpkgsrc-22558400f48c03ddcc5a52850ff9a7db1d5d7f64.tar.gz
import the required bits of bootstrap-pkgsrc from 20040311.
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+$NetBSD: README.MacOSX,v 1.1.1.1 2004/03/11 13:03:59 grant Exp $
+
+Please read "README.Darwin" first, as it applies to Mac OS X.
+
+Since most Macintoshes come with only 1 disk installed, and you
+want to have your pkgsrc UFS partition on that disk, there's a
+little trick you will have to do.
+
+The problem is that none of the disk tools will let you touch a
+disk that is booted from. In my case, I have a 30G drive that I
+partitioned 4G for Classic/OS9, 4G for pkgsrc, and the rest for OS
+X. Now, you can unmount the pkgsrc partition, but even if you
+newfs it, the partition map will show the partition as Apple_HFS
+and not Apple_UFS as automounter needs it to say. The result of
+that newfs would be that the partition wouldn't be automounted,
+and if you manually mount it, it won't appear in Finder.
+
+You'll need to boot off of the OS X Installation (User) CD. When
+the Installtion program starts, go up to the menu and select Disk
+Utility. Now, you will be able to select the partition you want
+to be UFS, and Format it Apple UFS.
+
+Once you've done that, you Quit the Disk Utility and Quit the
+Installer... which will reboot your computer. Now the new UFS
+partition will show up, but the permissions will be set to root,
+so you won't be able to write to it. You'll have to chown the
+mount point to you (/Volumes/whatever).
+
+This note is as of 10.2 (Jaguar) and applies to earlier versions.
+[Hopefully Apple will fix Disk Utility in 10.3 (Panther)].