.\" OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
.\" SUCH DAMAGE.
.\"
-.\" @(#)2.t 8.1 (Berkeley) 7/27/93
+.\" @(#)2.t 8.3 (Berkeley) 6/13/94
.\"
.ds lq ``
.ds rq ''
should be restored to the ``f'' partition and
.Pn /usr
to the ``e'' partition.
+.ne 1i
.Sh 2 "Booting the SPARC"
.Sh 3 "Supported hardware"
.LP
T}
_
GRAPHICS T{
-bwtwo and cgthree.
+bwtwo, cgthree, and the GX (cgsix).
T}
_
INPUT T{
.LP
Major items that are not supported include
anything VME-based,
-the GX (cgsix) display,
the floppy disk, and SCSI tapes.
.Sh 3 "Limitations"
.LP
target 0 will become ``sd0'', where in SunOS the same disk will
normally be called ``sd3''. If your existing SunOS system is
diskful, it will be least painful to have SunOS running on the disk
-on target 0 lun 0 and put \*(4B on the disk on target 3 lun 0. Both
+on target 3 lun 0 and put \*(4B on the disk on target 0 lun 0. Both
systems will then think they are running on ``sd0'', and you can
boot either system as needed simply by changing the EEPROM's boot
device.
The SunOS compiler and linker should be able to produce SunOS binaries
under \*(4B, but this has not been tested. If you plan to try it you
will need the appropriate .sa files as well.
+.ne 1i
.Sh 2 "Booting the DECstation"
.Sh 3 "Supported hardware"
.LP
.DE
Supported disk types are listed in
.Pn /etc/disktab .
+.ne 1i
.IP 2)
Restore the root filesystem.
.DS