From memory, but I think I got it right:
Press the <stop> and <d> keys during boot-up. This gets you to the Open
Firmware (actually a full Forth language system) and the ok prompt.
then type: boot cdrom
There are full SS10 and 20, and Open Firmware manuals online which you
might find useful.
--
Stan Barr pla...@dial.pipex.com
>Mike Ingram <mike....@iinet.net.au> wrote:
Stop-A (not Stop-D)
Or a break on a serial console.
Casper
--
Expressed in this posting are my opinions. They are in no way related
to opinions held by my employer, Sun Microsystems.
Statements on Sun products included here are not gospel and may
be fiction rather than truth.
Hold down the "Stop" key and strike the "A" key. At the ">" prompt,
type "boot -s cdrom" (without the quotes) then edit /etc/passwd and
/etc/shadow to clear the root password. Now you can boot from disk, log
in as root, and do anything you want to do.
Write down the new root password, seal it in an envelope, lock the
envelope in the safe. That means, of course, that you must remember the
combination of the safe!!
> Stop-A (not Stop-D)
>
Yes, a touch of brain-fade there - not used my SS20 in a while :-)
--
Stan Barr pla...@dial.pipex.com
I have to ask here:
Am I the only one who still thinks "L1-A" in my mind?
Colin
What's "L1-A"? Obsolete terminology for Stop-A?
+1. Showing my age - and yours...
I had to go look at my Ultra 10 keyboard. I thought it those still
said L1-A. It doesn't. Now I've got to go to the office and see
what the IPC keyboard says. We still use that antique to test the
occasional Sbus board.
Bill
--
William D Waddington
william.w...@beezmo.com
"Even bugs...are unexpected signposts on
the long road of creativity..." - Ken Burtch
Basically, yes.
Older sun keyboards (type3 and before) didn't have specific terms on the
left-hand function keys, but simply numbered them L1 through L12. (I
think the right-hand keys had some arrows, but otherwise they were also
just numbered R1 through R15. Starting with type4, the GUI nav terms
were listed on the left-hand keys, with the L# terms on the front face.
I think since type5, the L identification has been removed. The "stop"
key is in the first position, and was originally labled only "L1".
Not really clear enough to read, but an image of a type3 keyboard:
http://www.sunstuff.org/hardware/components/keyboards/sun.type3-keyboard.jpg
--
Darren
Mmmmm! I think I prefer my type 5 keyboard!
> In article <KjGWk.9022$YU2....@nlpi066.nbdc.sbc.com>,
> Did those left-hand keys ever do anything? During my time on these
> machines, the L1 key was the only one I ever used.
I'm pretty sure they did things back in SunView. But I do remember
hacking some file to make "Front" and "Open" work in X11 back in
Solaris 2.5.
--
Chris
>I have to ask here:
>Am I the only one who still thinks "L1-A" in my mind?
I still think "L1-A" but I don't think I have any keyboards with a
"L1" key.
>>I have to ask here:
>>Am I the only one who still thinks "L1-A" in my mind?
>>
>>Colin
>
>+1. Showing my age - and yours...
>I had to go look at my Ultra 10 keyboard. I thought it those still
>said L1-A. It doesn't. Now I've got to go to the office and see
>what the IPC keyboard says. We still use that antique to test the
>occasional Sbus board.
The type 4 keyboard still had the L1-L10 on the sides of the keycaps.
I think the keys from a keyboard sense were identical. If you ran
'xev', they generated very normal events. However, the stock MIT X11
distribution didn't seem to do anything with them. I manually mapped
some as window controls under TWM. I used SunTools/SunView, but not
extensively. They could have had meanings there, but I won't remember.
I wasn't very happy when the default mappings came from Sun and all my
made-up mappings were wrong... :-)
--
Darren
> "Colin B." <cbi...@somewhereelse.shaw.ca> writes:
>
> >I have to ask here:
> >Am I the only one who still thinks "L1-A" in my mind?
>
>
> I still think "L1-A" but I don't think I have any keyboards with a
> "L1" key.
My first desktop Sun had a Type 5 keyboard so it's always been Stop-A
to me.
Previous to that my access to Sun machines was via telnet from a VAX
which I accessed from a VT320 terminal :)
Chris
--
Chris Morgan
"Post posting of policy changes by the boss will result in
real rule revisions that are irreversible"
- anonymous correspondent