When you have
a LOT of unix experience they do seem about as easy to
install, but I am a fairly normal, knowledgable person and it took me
roughly 12 hours to get my first NetBSD system running on a Mac IIci as a
limited function Nat/firewall. I still don't "understand" much of what I
had to do, but the mechanics of doing it are much more familiar. Exiting vi
the first time I edited /etc/resolv.rc only took about an hour.
NetBSD wasn't one of the eaisest things I've installed (on an HP/Apollo
400 series---ended up having to recompile my Linux kernel and calculate the
physical layout of the drives and partition them by hand) but it was a fun
way to spend a day (looking back, at the time I was cursing up a storm).
My NetBSD install experience started very badly with a whole host of alarming
SCSI errors because the installer still doesn't support drives greater than 1GB
(it will bomb out during the install process after a certain point). I ended
up installing the files manually with cpin and tar xvpf after slogging through
the voluminous but thorough NetBSD/mac68k FAQ. The result, of course, was an
ultrareliable server that has been wonderful, but the getting there took some
time.
--
----------------------------- personal page:
http://www.armory.com/~spectre/ --
Cameron Kaiser, Point Loma Nazarene University * ckaiser(a)stockholm.ptloma.edu
-- Research is what I'm doing when I don't know what I'm doing. -- W. von
Braun