blob: a08be742fbd982dde5a289a4406c7972684d7b95 [file] [log] [blame] [raw]
## Example yaboot.conf for ybin and yaboot >= 0.6
## see man yaboot.conf for more details.
## Change `unconfigured' to your bootstrap partition ie: /dev/hda2
boot=unconfigured
## device is the OpenFirmware device path to the disk containing
## kernel images. if your disk is /dev/hda you can find the
## OpenFirmware path by running the command: ofpath /dev/hda DO NOT
## specify a partition number for this! This is generally not
## necessary for IBM hardware
#device=hd:
## partition is the partition number where the kernel images are
## located. The kernel images should be on your root filesystem, so
## this is usually the same partition number as your root filesystem.
## so if root = /dev/hda3 (the 3rd partition) then you should have
## partition=3 This *MUST* be set correct or yaboot won't boot! This
## option can be either set globally as shown here, or per image in
## the image= sections
partition=3
## timeout is the amount of time in tenths of a second that yaboot
## will wait before booting the default kernel image (the first image=
## section in this config file or the value of default=).
timeout=20
install=/usr/local/lib/yaboot/yaboot
## nonvram is required for IBM hardware currently since ofpath does
## not support them, it is also probably not necessary.
nonvram
## Password supplied in plaintext, required for yaboot to boot, unless
## restricted is also present (see below). Be sure to
## chmod 600 /boot/yaboot.conf if you set this!
#password=secret
## Password supplied as an md5 hash, see above
#password=$1$saltstrg$HnJ/gcM3oKhNbnzUPgXTD/
## A password is only required to boot an image specified here if
## parameters are specified on the command line or if the user enters
## an image is not specified in the configuration file at all (ie.
## arbitrary file load). restricted can also be placed in an image
## section in that case any image not including the restricted keyword
## will be fully password protected.
#restricted
## image is the kernel itself, commonly kept in / but also commonly
## found in /boot. Note that /boot should generally not be its own
## partition on powerpcs, its not necessary and complicates things.
## Make sure /boot is on the partition specified by partition= see
## above. /boot should never be an HFS filesystem. You may point
## image= to a symbolic link so long as the symlink does not cross
## partition boundries.
image=/vmlinux
label=Linux
root=/dev/sda3
read-only