Alpha Console Firmware Console firmware is stored in a flash ROM and started when an Alpha system is powered up or reset. There are two different console specifications used on Alpha systems, and hence two classes of console firmware available: SRM console, based on the Alpha Console Subsystem specification, which provides an operating environment for OpenVMS, Tru64 UNIX, and Linux operating systems. ARC, AlphaBIOS, or ARCSBIOS console, based on the Advanced RISC Computing (ARC) specification, which provides an operating environment for Windows NT. From the user's perspective, the most important difference between SRM and ARC is that the choice of console constrains the possible disk-partitioning scheme for the hard disk which you wish to boot off of. ARC requires that you use an MS-DOS partition table (as created by cfdisk) for the boot disk. Therefore MS-DOS partition tables are the native partition format when booting from ARC. In fact, since AlphaBIOS contains a disk partitioning utility, you may prefer to partition your disks from the firmware menus before installing Linux. Conversely, SRM is incompatible Specifically, the bootsector format required by the Console Subsystem Specification conflicts with the placement of the DOS partition table. with MS-DOS partition tables. Since Tru64 Unix uses the BSD disklabel format, this is the native partition format for SRM installations. GNU/Linux is the only operating system on Alpha that can be booted from both console types, but &debian; &release; only supports booting on SRM-based systems. If you have an Alpha for which no version of SRM is available, if you will be dual-booting the system with Windows NT, or if your boot device requires ARC console support for BIOS initialization, you will not be able to use the &debian; &release; installer. You can still run &debian; &release; on such systems by using other install media; for instance, you can install Debian woody with MILO and upgrade. Because MILO is not available for any of the Alpha systems currently in production (as of February 2000), and because it is no longer necessary to buy an OpenVMS or Tru64 Unix license to have SRM firmware on your older Alpha, it is recommended that you use SRM when possible. The following table summarizes available and supported system type/console combinations (see for the system type names). The word ARC below denotes any of the ARC-compliant consoles. System Type Console Type Supported alcor ARC or SRM avanti ARC or SRM book1 SRM only cabriolet ARC or SRM dp264 SRM only eb164 ARC or SRM eb64p ARC or SRM eb66 ARC or SRM eb66p ARC or SRM jensen SRM only lx164 ARC or SRM miata ARC or SRM mikasa ARC or SRM mikasa-p SRM only nautilus ARC (see motherboard manual) or SRM noname ARC or SRM noritake SRM only noritake-p SRM only pc164 ARC or SRM rawhide SRM only ruffian ARC only sable SRM only sable-g SRM only sx164 ARC or SRM takara ARC or SRM xl ARC only xlt ARC only Generally, none of these consoles can boot Linux directly, so the assistance of an intermediary bootloader is required. For the SRM console, aboot, a small, platform-independent bootloader, is used. See the (unfortunately outdated) SRM HOWTO for more information on aboot. The following paragraphs are from the woody install manual, and are included here for reference; they may be useful to someone at a later date when Debian supports MILO-based installs again. Generally, none of these consoles can boot Linux directly, so the assistance of an intermediary bootloader is required. There are two mainstream Linux loaders: MILO and aboot. MILO is itself a console, which replaces ARC or SRM in memory. MILO can be booted from both ARC and SRM and is the only way to bootstrap Linux from the ARC console. MILO is platform-specific (a different MILO is needed for each system type) and exist only for those systems, for which ARC support is shown in the table above. See also the (unfortunately outdated) MILO HOWTO. aboot is a small, platform-independent bootloader, which runs from SRM only. See the (also unfortunately outdated) SRM HOWTO for more information on aboot. Thus, three scenarios are generally possible, depending on the system's console firmware and whether or not MILO is available: SRM -> aboot SRM -> MILO ARC -> MILO Because MILO is not available for any of the Alpha systems currently in production (as of February 2000), and because it is no longer necessary to buy an OpenVMS or Tru64 Unix license to have SRM firmware on your older Alpha, it is recommended that you use SRM and aboot on new installations of GNU/Linux, unless you wish to dual-boot with Windows NT. The majority of AlphaServers and all current server and workstation products contain both SRM and AlphaBIOS in their firmware. For half-flash machines such as the various evaluation boards, it is possible to switch from one version to another by reflashing the firmware. Also, once SRM is installed, it is possible to run ARC/AlphaBIOS from a floppy disk (using the arc command). For the reasons mentioned above, we recommend switching to SRM before installing &debian;. As on other architectures, you should install the newest available revision of the firmware Except on Jensen, where Linux is not supported on firmware versions newer than 1.7 — see for more information. before installing &debian;. For Alpha, firmware updates can be obtained from Alpha Firmware Updates. Booting with TFTP In SRM, Ethernet interfaces are named with the ewa prefix, and will be listed in the output of the show dev command, like this (edited slightly): >>> show dev ewa0.0.0.9.0 EWA0 08-00-2B-86-98-65 ewb0.0.0.11.0 EWB0 08-00-2B-86-98-54 ewc0.0.0.2002.0 EWC0 00-06-2B-01-32-B0 You first need to set the boot protocol: >>> set ewa0_protocols bootp Then check the medium type is correct: >>> set ewa0_mode mode You can get a listing of valid modes with >>>set ewa0_mode. Then, to boot from the first Ethernet interface, you would type: >>> boot ewa0 -flags "" This will boot using the default kernel parameters as included in the netboot image. If you wish to use a serial console, you must pass the console= parameter to the kernel. This can be done using the -flags argument to the SRM boot command. The serial ports are named the same as their corresponding files in /dev. Also, when specifying additional kernel parameters, you must repeat certain default options that are needed by the &d-i; images. For example, to boot from ewa0 and use a console on the first serial port, you would type: >>> boot ewa0 -flags "root=/dev/ram ramdisk_size=16384 console=ttyS0" Booting from CD-ROM with the SRM Console Type >>> boot xxxx -flags 0 where xxxx is your CD-ROM drive in SRM notation. Booting from CD-ROM with the ARC or AlphaBIOS Console To boot a CD-ROM from the ARC console, find your sub-architecture code name (see ), then enter \milo\linload.exe as the boot loader and \milo\subarch (where subarch is the proper subarchitecture name) as the OS Path in the `OS Selection Setup' menu. Ruffians make an exception: You need to use \milo\ldmilo.exe as boot loader. Booting from Floppies with the SRM Console At the SRM prompt (>>>), issue the following command: >>> boot dva0 -flags 0 possibly replacing dva0 with the actual device name. Usually, dva0 is the floppy; type >>> show dev to see the list of devices (e.g., if you want to boot from a CD). Note that if you are booting via MILO, -flags argument is ignored, so you can just type boot dva0. If everything works OK, you will eventually see the Linux kernel boot. If you want to specify kernel parameters when booting via aboot, use the following command: >>> boot dva0 -file linux.bin.gz -flags "root=/dev/fd0 load_ramdisk=1 arguments" (typed on one line), substituting, if necessary, the actual SRM boot device name for dva0, the Linux boot device name for fd0, and the desired kernel parameters for arguments. If you want to specify kernel parameters when booting via MILO, you will have to interrupt bootstrap once you get into MILO. See . Booting from Floppies with the ARC or AlphaBIOS Console In the OS Selection menu, set linload.exe as the boot loader, and milo as the OS Path. Bootstrap using the newly created entry. Booting with MILO MILO contained on the bootstrap media is configured to proceed straight to Linux automatically. Should you wish to intervene, all you need is to press space during MILO countdown. If you want to specify all the bits explicitly (for example, to supply additional parameters), you can use a command like this: MILO> boot fd0:linux.bin.gz root=/dev/fd0 load_ramdisk=1 If you are booting from something other than a floppy, substitute fd0 in the above example with the appropriate device name in Linux notation. The help command would give you a brief MILO command reference.