Red Hat Linux 7.1 for pSeries (64-bit) - Seawolf
================================================

The contents of this CD-ROM are Copyright (C) 1995-2002 Red Hat, Inc.
and others.  Please see the individual copyright notices in each
source package for distribution terms.  The distribution terms of the
tools copyrighted by Red Hat, Inc. are as noted in the file COPYING.

Red Hat and RPM are trademarks of Red Hat, Inc.

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DIRECTORY ORGANIZATION

Red Hat Linux is delivered on two CDROMs (disc 1 and disc 2). Disc 1 can
be directly booted into the installation on most modern PCs, and contains
the following directory structure:

/mnt/redhat
 |----> RedHat
 |        |----> RPMS         -- binary packages
 |        `----> base         -- information on this release of Red Hat
 |                               Linux used by the installation process
 |----> ppc
 |        `----> chrp         -- pSeries boot images
 |
 |----> etc
 |        `----> yaboot.conf  -- bootloader configuration file
 |
 |----> COPYING               -- copyright information
 |----> README                -- this file
 |----> RELEASE-NOTES         -- the latest information about this release
 |                               of Red Hat Linux
 `----> RPM-GPG-KEY           -- GPG signature for packages from Red Hat


The directory layout of disc 2 is as follows:

/mnt/redhat
 |----> RedHat
 |        `----> RPMS         -- additional binary packages
 |----> SRPMS                 -- source packages (more are on the dedicated
 |                               SRPMS CD)
 |----> COPYING               -- copyright information
 |----> README                -- this file
 |----> RELEASE-NOTES         -- the latest information about this release
 |                               of Red Hat Linux
 `----> RPM-GPG-KEY           -- GPG signature for packages from Red Hat

If you are setting up an image for NFS, FTP, or HTTP installations, you
need to get everything from the RedHat directory from both CDs. On Linux
and Unix, the following process will properly set up the /target/directory
on your server for installing Red Hat.

   1) Insert disc 1
   2) mount /mnt/cdrom
   3) cp -a /mnt/cdrom/RedHat /target/directory
   4) umount /mnt/cdrom
   5) Replace disc 1 with disc 2
   6) mount /mnt/cdrom
   7) cp -a /mnt/cdrom/RedHat /target/directory
   8) umount /mnt/cdrom

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INSTALLING

If you have a CDROM and it is properly configured, you can boot the Red Hat
Linux CDROM directly without using any boot disk. After booting, you'll be
able to install your system from the CDROM. Note that booting from a CDROM
is equivalent to booting the ppc/bootinfo.txt file on a pSeries machine.

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UPGRADING

When running an upgrade on a machine which contains Red Hat's 32-bit
kernel, you will need to set the machine's hardware clock manually
when the System Boot Configuration screen appears. To set the hardware
clock, follow these steps:

   - switch to the interactive shell terminal by pressing <ctl>+<alt>+<f2>

   - execute the command

       chroot /mnt/sysimage

   - set the hardware clock using the command

       /usr/sbin/hwclock --set --date="9/22/1996 16:45:05"

       using the correct date, of course.

   - set the system clock using the command

       /usr/sbin/hwclock --hctosys

   - execute the command

       exit 0

   - return to the installer by pressing <ctl>+<alt>+<F7>

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IBM JAVA 2 SDK 1.3.1

Both IBM Developer Kit and Runtime Environment for Linux, Java 2 Technology
Edition, Version 1.3.1, 32-bit version for POWER, are available on disk 5
of this distribution.  This is software licensed to you from IBM
Corporation.  For the precise terms of the license to you for these IBM
programs, please check the on-line documentation that accompanies them or
review the license at http://www.redhat.com/licenses/. If you do not agree
to abide by the applicable license terms for these IBM Programs, then do not
install them on your computer. If you wish to install these IBM programs on
more than one computer, please contact IBM to purchase additional licenses.

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JAPANESE LANGUAGE INSTALLS

Japanese language installations can only be performed in GUI mode.

If the install is performed using media other than CDROM, the installation
program will start initially in text (TUI) mode, which is incapable of
displaying multibyte characters. If you choose to use installation media
other than CDROM, you will have to select language and installation
media/source in the English language. Once the installation media has been
located, provided you have selected an install method that supports
graphical installation (CDROM or NFS only), the installer will start in
GUI mode using the Japanese character set and keyboard map on the display
you specified.

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GETTING HELP

For those that have web access, see http://www.redhat.com.  In particular,
access to our mailing lists can be found at:

                   http://www.redhat.com/mailing-lists

ppc64 7.1