# @(#)README.sunx86boot 1.2 05/01/11 Copyright 2003 J. Schilling A Solaris x86 Boot CD looks the like this: - A PC type fdisk partition map is in CD sector 0 at offset 0 This fdisk partition map contains a single Solaris 0x82 type partition starting at CD sector 0 at offset 512. - A SVr4 disk partition label is at CD sector 0 at offset 1024. This equates the usual 512 byte offset to the primary partition used by SVr4. This SVr4 partition label defines: - Partition 0 to contain a usually UFS type boot filesystem - Partition 1 to map the ISO-9660 filesystem. This seems to be a conceptual bug from Sun, as it is impossible to mount this partition because this partition would point outside the primary fdisk partition type 0x82 - Partition 2 maps the whole CD. A boot CD created by Sun contains a master boot record in CD sector 0 offset 0. The size if this MBR is 0x1BE (446 decimal) as usual on PCs. At CD sector 0 offset 512, there is a "primary boot sector". The MBR assumes that is always gets loaded together with the ""primary boot sector". The El-Torito map for this CD defines a "no-emulation" boot sitting at CD sector 0 and being 4 512 byte sectors in size. This covers the 1024 bytes of above boot code. Note that mkisofs will not put the no-emulation boot at sector 0 as it keeps the boot inside the area used for other file content data. At CD sector 1..15, there is a secondary boot code that understands UFS and tries to boot from UFS slice 0. If you like to boot from different filesystem types, you need to replace this boot code. The real size used by the secondary boot is 31 x 512 bytes == 15872 bytes. To get hold of the three boot files, do the following with e.g. a Solaris 10 boot CD: readcd dev=1,0 f=CD.out sectors=0-32 Replace dev=1,0 with the apropriate values for your system (see readcd -scanbus). sdd if=CD.out bs=446 count=1 of=mboot sdd if=CD.out count=1 isek=512 of=pboot sdd if=CD.out count=60 iseek=2048 of=bootblk To create the needed files for the misofs command line example below, do the following: sdd if=mboot -fill of=eltoritoboot cat pboot >> eltoritoboot sdd -inull bs=2k count=1 of=genboot cat bootblk >> genboot If you like the CD to look more similar to the original Sun CDs, use: cp eltoritoboot genboot sdd -inull bs=1k count=1 >> genboot cat bootblk >> genboot If you like to create a CD similar to the Solaris 10 boot CD, do the following: mkdir isodir star -cPM -C /vol/dev/dsk/c1t1d0/multi_icd_sol_10_x86/s2 . | star -xp -xdot -C isodir cp eltoritoboot isodir/.bootimage mkisofs -G genboot -no-emul-boot -b .bootimage -c .catalog -R -o bootcd.iso -sunx86-boot /vol/dev/dsk/c1t1d0/multi_icd_sol_10_x86/s0 isodir/