I was aware of this release, but seems there is some interest on the forum to see the state of version 1.0 of our OS 
Instead of trying to run it "natively", this is an archaic OS used on very old PCs. Many of the peripherals this OS run worked in 16 bit mode. An PC emulator sounds like the most straightforward choice to make.
First things first, install emulators/86box.
Then go on and download https://winworldpc.com/download/40632273-18c3-9a11-c3a4-e284a2c3a570. Unzip the archive to get the ISO, and then extract the whole ISO somewhere on the disk.
Everything, including system requirements, can be found at floppies/install.txt file, cdinstall/INSTALL.TXT. Read as much as you can. There is a lot you can skip, about preparation of installation floppies on other OSes and such.
Apart from users basic understanding of installation procedure, which is very lean, the challenge of installing FreeBSD is matching both the hardware and its configuration, which back in the day, was done mostly statically, by jumping stuff around the boards. And here we also need to know what out emulator can provide of that hardware to find the match. If you go on without prior knowledge of affairs, via trial and error, you will find many of the platforms will simply refuse to work.
The scope of this first part of howto will be to install and boot into the system by setting up the proper 86box config. In subsequent parts we will explore networking, X Windows and running proprietary Unix software.
We will use the combination of IDE drive, a SCSI CD-ROM, but will perform a floppy based install. I find this procedure the most stable one. Also keep in mind that floppy images are for 5 25 drives, 1.2M.
(continued in next post)
Instead of trying to run it "natively", this is an archaic OS used on very old PCs. Many of the peripherals this OS run worked in 16 bit mode. An PC emulator sounds like the most straightforward choice to make.
First things first, install emulators/86box.
Then go on and download https://winworldpc.com/download/40632273-18c3-9a11-c3a4-e284a2c3a570. Unzip the archive to get the ISO, and then extract the whole ISO somewhere on the disk.
Everything, including system requirements, can be found at floppies/install.txt file, cdinstall/INSTALL.TXT. Read as much as you can. There is a lot you can skip, about preparation of installation floppies on other OSes and such.
Apart from users basic understanding of installation procedure, which is very lean, the challenge of installing FreeBSD is matching both the hardware and its configuration, which back in the day, was done mostly statically, by jumping stuff around the boards. And here we also need to know what out emulator can provide of that hardware to find the match. If you go on without prior knowledge of affairs, via trial and error, you will find many of the platforms will simply refuse to work.
The scope of this first part of howto will be to install and boot into the system by setting up the proper 86box config. In subsequent parts we will explore networking, X Windows and running proprietary Unix software.
We will use the combination of IDE drive, a SCSI CD-ROM, but will perform a floppy based install. I find this procedure the most stable one. Also keep in mind that floppy images are for 5 25 drives, 1.2M.
(continued in next post)