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  1. {\rtf1\ansi\ansicpg1252\deff0\nouicompat\deflang1033{\fonttbl{\f0\fnil\fcharset0 Calibri;}{\f1\fnil Calibri;}}
  2. {\*\generator Riched20 10.0.18362}\viewkind4\uc1
  3. \pard\sa200\sl276\slmult1\f0\fs22\lang9\par
  4. \par
  5. NAME\par
  6. \tab plan9.ini \f1\endash configuration file primarily for PCs\par
  7. \par
  8. SYNOPSIS\par
  9. \tab none\par
  10. \par
  11. DESCRIPTION\par
  12. \tab When booting Plan 9 on a PC, the bootstrap programs described in 9boot(8) first read, via TFTP or a FAT filesystem on the boot disk, a file containing configuration information. This file, /cfg/pxe/hex\endash digits (TFTP; see 9boot(8)) or plan9.ini (FAT), looks like a shell script containing lines of the form\par
  13. \tab name=value\par
  14. \par
  15. each of which defines a kernel or device parameter.\par
  16. \par
  17. Blank lines and Carriage Returns (\\r) are ignored. # comments are ignored, but are only recognised if # appears at the start of a line.\par
  18. \par
  19. For devices, the generic format of value is\par
  20. \tab type=TYPE [port=N] [irq=N] [mem=N] [size=N] [dma=N] [ea=N]\par
  21. \par
  22. specifying the controller type, the base I/O port of the interface, its interrupt level, the physical starting address of any mapped memory, the length in bytes of that memory, the DMA channel, and for Ethernets an override of the physical network address. Not all elements are relevant to all devices; the relevant values and their defaults are defined below in the description of each device.\par
  23. \par
  24. The file is used by the bootstrap programs and the kernel to configure the hardware available, although nowadays the kernel can usually detect the attached hardware by itself. The information it contains is also passed to the boot process, and subsequently other programs, as environment variables (see boot(8)). However, values whose names begin with an asterisk * are used by the kernel and are stored in #ec rather than #e.\par
  25. \par
  26. The following sections describe how variables are used.\par
  27. \par
  28. ETHERNET\par
  29. \par
  30. etherX=value\par
  31. This defines an Ethernet interface. X, a unique monotonically increasing number beginning at 0, identifies an Ethernet card to be probed at system boot. Probing stops when a card is found or there is no line for etherX+1. After probing as directed by the etherX lines, any remaining Ethernet cards that can be automatically detected are added. Almost all cards can be automatically detected. For debugging purposes, automatic probing can be disabled by specifying the line *noetherprobe=.\par
  32. \par
  33. Many cards are software configurable and do not require all options. Unspecified options default to the factory defaults.\par
  34. \par
  35. Known TYPEs are\par
  36. igbe The Intel 8254X Gigabit Ethernet controllers, as found on the Intel PRO/1000 adapters for copper (not fiber). Completely configurable.\par
  37. igbepcie\par
  38. \tab\par
  39. \tab The Intel 8256[36], 8257[12], and 82573[ev] Gigabit Ethernet PCI\endash Express controllers. Completely configurable.\par
  40. rtl8169The Realtek 8169 Gigabit Ethernet controller. Completely configurable.\par
  41. ga620 Netgear GA620 and GA620T Gigabit Ethernet cards, and other cards using the Alteon Acenic chip such as the Alteon Acenic fiber and copper cards, the DEC DEGPA\endash SA and the SGI Acenic. Completely configurable.\par
  42. dp83820National Semiconductor DP83820\endash based Gigabit Ethernet adapters, notably the D\endash Link DGE\endash 500T. Completely configurable.\par
  43. vgbe The VIA Velocity Gigabit Ethernet controller. Known to drive the VIA8237 (ABIT AV8), but at 100Mb/s full\endash duplex only.\par
  44. m10g The Myricom 10\endash Gigabit Ethernet 10G\endash PCIE\endash 8A controller. Completely configurable.\par
  45. i82598 The Intel 8259[89] 10\endash Gigabit Ethernet PCI\endash Express controllers. Completely configurable.\par
  46. i82557 Cards using the Intel 8255[789] Fast Ethernet PCI Bus LAN Controller such as the Intel EtherExpress PRO/100B. Completely configurable, no options need be given. If you need to force the media, specify one of the options (no value) 10BASE\endash T, 10BASE\endash 2, 10BASE\endash 5, 100BASE\endash TX, 10BASE\endash TFD,\par
  47. \tab\par
  48. \tab 100BASE\endash TXFD, 100BASE\endash T4, 100BASE\endash FX, or 100BASE\endash FXFD. Completely configurable.\par
  49. 2114x Cards using the Digital Equipment (now Intel) 2114x PCI Fast Ethernet Adapter Controller, for example the Netgear FA310. Completely configurable, no options need be given. Media can be specified the same was as for the i82557. Some cards using the PNIC and PNIC2 near\endash clone chips may also work. 83815 National Semiconductor DP83815\endash based adapters, notably the Netgear FA311, Netgear FA312, and various SiS built\endash in controllers such as the SiS900. On the SiS controllers, the Ethernet address is not detected properly; specify it with an ea= attribute. Completely configurable. rtl8139The Realtek 8139 Fast Ethernet controller. Completely configurable.\par
  50. vt6102 The VIA VT6102 Fast Ethernet Controller (Rhine II).\par
  51. vt6105mThe VIA VT6105M Fast Ethernet Controller (Rhine III).\par
  52. smc91cxx\par
  53. \tab\par
  54. \tab SMC 91cXX chip\endash based PCMCIA adapters, notably the SMC EtherEZ card.\par
  55. elnk3 The 3COM Etherlink III series of cards including the 5x9, 59x, and 905 and 905B. Completely configurable, no options need be given. The media may be specified by setting media= to the value 10BaseT, 10Base2, 100BaseTX, 100BaseFX, aui, and mii. If you need to force full duplex, because\par
  56. \tab\par
  57. \tab for example the Ethernet switch does not negotiate correctly, just name the word (no value) fullduplex or 100BASE\endash TXFD. Similarly, to force 100Mbit operation, specify force100. Port 0x110 is used for the little ISA configuration dance.\par
  58. 3c589 The 3COM 3C589 series PCMCIA cards, including the 3C562 and the 589E. There is no support for the modem on the 3C562. Completely configurable, no options need be given. Defaults are\par
  59. \tab\par
  60. \tab port=0x240 irq=10\par
  61. The media may be specified as media=10BaseT or media=10Base2.\par
  62. ec2t The Linksys Combo PCMCIA EthernetCard (EC2T), EtherFast 10/100 PCMCIA cards (PCMPC100) and integrated controllers (PCM100), the Netgear FA410TX 10/100 PCMCIA card and the Accton EtherPair\endash PCMCIA (EN2216). Completely configurable, no options need be given. Defaults are\par
  63. \tab\par
  64. \tab port=0x300 irq=9\par
  65. These cards are NE2000 clones. Other NE2000 compatible PCMCIA cards may be tried with the option\par
  66. id=string\par
  67. where string is a unique identifier string contained in the attribute memory of the card (see pcmcia(8)); unlike most options in plan9.ini, this string is case\endash sensitive. The option dummyrr=[01] can be used to turn off (0) or on (1) a dummy remote read in the driver in such cases, depending on how NE2000 compatible they are.\par
  68. ne2000 Not software configurable iff ISA; PCI clones or supersets are software configurable; includes the Realtek 8029 clone used by Parallels. 16\endash bit card. Defaults are\par
  69. \tab\par
  70. \tab port=0x300 irq=2 mem=0x04000 size=0x4000\par
  71. The option (no value) nodummyrr is needed on some (near) clones to turn off a dummy remote read in the driver.\par
  72. amd79c970\par
  73. \tab\par
  74. \tab The AMD PCnet PCI Ethernet Adapter (AM79C970). (This is the Ethernet adapter used by VMware.) Completely configurable, no options need be given.\par
  75. wd8003 Includes WD8013 and SMC Elite and Elite Ultra cards. There are varying degrees of software configurability. Cards may be in either 8\endash bit or 16\endash bit slots. Defaults are\par
  76. \tab\par
  77. \tab port=0x280 irq=3 mem=0xD0000 size=0x2000\par
  78. BUG: On many machines only the 16 bit card works.\par
  79. sink A /dev/null for Ethernet packets -- the interface discards sent packets and never receives any. This is used to provide a test bed for some experimental Ethernet bridging software.\par
  80. wavelanLucent Wavelan (Orinoco) IEEE 802.11b and compatible PCMCIA cards. Compatible cards include the Dell TrueMobile 1150 and the Linksys Instant Wireless Network PC Card. Port and IRQ defaults are 0x180 and 3 respectively.\par
  81. \tab\par
  82. \tab These cards take a number of unique options to aid in identifying the card correctly on the 802.11b network. The network may be ad hoc or managed (i.e. use an access point):\par
  83. mode=[adhoc, managed]\par
  84. and defaults to managed. The 802.11b network to attach to (managed mode) or identify as (ad hoc mode), is specified by\par
  85. essid=string\par
  86. and defaults to a null string. The card station name is given by\par
  87. station=string\par
  88. and defaults to Plan 9 STA. The channel to use is given by\par
  89. channel=number\par
  90. where number lies in the range 1 to 16 inclusive; the channel is normally negotiated automatically.\par
  91. If the card is capable of encryption, the following options may be used:\par
  92. crypt=[off, on]\par
  93. and defaults to on.\par
  94. keyN=string\par
  95. sets the encryption key N (where N is in the range 1 to 4 inclusive) to string; this will also set the transmit key to N (see below). There are two formats for string which depend on the length of the string. If it is exactly 5 or 13 characters long it is assumed to be an alphanumeric key; if it is exactly 10 or 26 characters long the key is assumed to be in hex format (without a leading 0x). The lengths are checked, as is the format of a hex key.\par
  96. txkey=number\par
  97. sets the transmit key to use to be number in the range 1 to 4 inclusive. If it is desired to exclude or include unencrypted packets\par
  98. clear=[off, on]\par
  99. configures reception and defaults to inclusion.\par
  100. The defaults are intended to match the common case of a managed network with encryption and a typical entry would only require, for example\par
  101. essid=left\endash armpit key1=afish key2=calledraawaru\par
  102. if the port and IRQ defaults are used. These options may be set after boot by writing to the device's ctl file using a space as the separator between option and value, e.g.\par
  103. echo 'key2 1d8f65c9a52d83c8e4b43f94af' >/net/ether0/0/ctl\par
  104. Card\endash specific power management may be enabled/disabled by\par
  105. pm=[on, off]\par
  106. wavelanpci\par
  107. \tab\par
  108. \tab PCI Ethernet adapters that use the same Wavelan programming interface. Currently the only tested cards are those based on the Intersil Prism 2.5 chipset.\par
  109. \par
  110. DISKS, TAPES\par
  111. (S)ATA controllers are autodetected.\par
  112. \par
  113. usbX=type=uhci\par
  114. \par
  115. usbX=type=ohci\par
  116. \par
  117. usbX=type=ehci\par
  118. This specifies the settings for a USB UHCI, OHCI or EHCI controller. Like the Ethernet controllers, USB controllers are autodetected after scanning for the ones listed in plan9.ini. Thus, most systems will not need a usbX line. Also like the Ethernet controllers, USB autoprobing can be disabled by specifying the line *nousbprobe=.\par
  119. \par
  120. scsiX=value\par
  121. This defines a SCSI interface which cannot be automatically detected by the kernel.\par
  122. \par
  123. Known TYPEs are\par
  124. aha1542\par
  125. \tab Adaptec 154x series of controllers (and clones). Almost completely configurable, only the\par
  126. \tab port=0x300\par
  127. option need be given.\par
  128. \par
  129. NCR/Symbios/LSI\endash Logic 53c8xx\endash based adapters and Mylex MultiMaster (Buslogic BT\endash *) adapters are automatically detected and need no entries.\par
  130. \par
  131. By default, the NCR 53c8xx driver searches for up to 32 controllers. This can be changed by setting the variable *maxsd53c8xx.\par
  132. \par
  133. By default the Mylex driver resets SCSI cards by using both the hard reset and SCSI bus reset flags in the driver interface. If a variable *noscsireset is defined, the SCSI bus reset flag is omitted.\par
  134. \par
  135. aoeif=list\par
  136. This specifies a space\endash separated list of Ethernet interfaces to be bound at boot to the ATA\endash over\endash Ethernet driver, aoe(3). For example, aoeif=ether0 ether1. Only interfaces on this list will initially be accessible via AoE.\par
  137. \par
  138. aoedev=e!#\f0\'e6/aoe/shelf.slot\par
  139. This specifies an ATA\f1\endash over\endash Ethernet device accessible via the interfaces named in aoeif on AoE shelf and slot to use as a root device for bootstrapping.\par
  140. \par
  141. AUDIO\par
  142. \par
  143. audioX=value\par
  144. This defines a pre\endash USB sound interface.\par
  145. \par
  146. Known types are\par
  147. sb16 Sound Blaster 16.\par
  148. ess1688 A Sound Blaster clone.\par
  149. \par
  150. The DMA channel may be any of 5, 6, or 7. The defaults are\par
  151. \tab port=0x220 irq=7 dma=5\par
  152. \par
  153. Uarts\par
  154. Plan 9 automatically configures COM1 and COM2, if found, as eia0 (port 0x3F8, IRQ4) and eia1 (port 0x2F8, IRQ3) respectively. These devices can be disabled by adding a line:\par
  155. \tab eiaX=disabled\par
  156. \par
  157. This is typically done in order to reuse the IRQ for another device.\par
  158. \par
  159. Plan 9 used to support various serial concentrators, including the TTC 8 serial line card and various models in the Star Gate Avanstar series of intelligent serial boards. These are no longer supported; the much simpler Perle PCI\endash Fast4, PCI\endash Fast8, and PCI\endash Fast16 controllers have taken their places. These latter cards are automatically detected and need no configuration lines.\par
  160. \par
  161. The line serial=type=com can be used to specify settings for a PCMCIA modem.\par
  162. \par
  163. mouseport=value\par
  164. This specifies where the mouse is attached. Value can be\par
  165. ps2 the PS2 mouse/keyboard port. The BIOS setup procedure should be used to configure the machine appropriately.\par
  166. ps2intellimouse\par
  167. \tab an Intellimouse on the PS2 port.\par
  168. 0 for COM1\par
  169. 1 for COM2\par
  170. \par
  171. modemport=value\par
  172. Picks the UART line to call out on. This is used when connecting to a file server over an async line. Value is the number of the port.\par
  173. \par
  174. console=value params\par
  175. This is used to specify the console device. The default value is cga; a number 0 or 1 specifies COM1 or COM2 respectively. A serial console is initially configured with the uart(3) configuration string b9600 l8 pn s1, specifying 9600 baud, 8 bit bytes, no parity, and one stop bit. If params is given, it will be used to further configure the uart. Notice that there is no = sign in the params syntax. For example,\par
  176. \tab console=0 b19200 po\par
  177. \par
  178. would use COM1 at 19,200 baud with odd parity.\par
  179. \par
  180. PC CARD\par
  181. \par
  182. pccard0=disabled\par
  183. Disable probing for and automatic configuration of PC card controllers.\par
  184. \par
  185. pcmciaX=type=XXX irq=irq\par
  186. If the default IRQ for the PCMCIA is correct, this entry can be omitted. The value of type is ignored.\par
  187. \par
  188. pcmcia0=disabled\par
  189. Disable probing for and automatic configuration of PCMCIA controllers.\par
  190. \par
  191. NVRAM\par
  192. \par
  193. nvram=file\par
  194. \par
  195. nvrlen=\par
  196. \par
  197. length\par
  198. \par
  199. nvroff=\par
  200. \par
  201. offset\par
  202. This is used to specify an nvram device and optionally the length of the ram and read/write offset to use. These values are consulted by readnvram (see authsrv(2)). The most common use of the nvram is to hold a secstore(1) password for use by factotum(4).\par
  203. \par
  204. nvr=value\par
  205. This is used by the WORM file server kernel to locate a file holding information to configure the file system. The file cannot live on a SCSI disk. The default is fd!0!plan9.nvr (sic), unless bootfile is set, in which case it is plan9.nvr on the same disk as bootfile. The syntax is either fd!unit!name or hd!unit!name where unit is the numeric unit id. This variant syntax is a vestige of the file server kernel's origins.\par
  206. \par
  207. BOOTING\par
  208. \par
  209. bootfile=value\par
  210. This is used to direct the actions of the bootstrap programs by naming the device and file from which to load the kernel.\par
  211. \par
  212. rootdir=dir\par
  213. \par
  214. rootspec=spec\par
  215. These are used by the bootstrap programs to identify the directory dir to make the root directory for the kernel, and the file system specifier spec (see mount in bind(2)) on which it can be found. These are usually used to test variant file systems for distributions, etc.\par
  216. \par
  217. bootargs=args\par
  218. The value of this variable is passed to boot(8) by the kernel as the name of the root file system. It is typically used to specify additional arguments to pass to kfs(4) or ipconfig(8). For example, if the system is to run from a local kfs(4) partition, the definition might read bootargs=local!#S/sdC0/fs. See boot(8) for more.\par
  219. \par
  220. nobootprompt=root\par
  221. Suppress the root from prompt and use root as the answer instead.\par
  222. \par
  223. user=user\par
  224. Suppress the user prompt and use user as the answer instead.\par
  225. \par
  226. debugfactotum=\par
  227. Causes boot(8) to start factotum with the \endash p option, so that it can be debugged.\par
  228. \par
  229. factotumopts=options\par
  230. Causes boot(8) to start factotum with the given options, which must be a single word (i.e., contain no whitespace).\par
  231. \par
  232. venti=value\par
  233. When booting from a local fossil server backed by a local or remote venti server, this variable specifies how to establish the connection to the venti server. See boot(8) for more.\par
  234. \par
  235. cfs=partition\par
  236. This names the file holding the disk partition for the cache file system, cfs(4). Extending the bootargs example, one would write cfs=#S/sdC0/cache.\par
  237. \par
  238. bootdisk=value\par
  239. This deprecated variable was used to specify the disk used by the cache file system and other disk\endash resident services. It is superseded by bootargs and cfs.\par
  240. \par
  241. partition=value\par
  242. This defines the partition table 9load(8) will examine to find disk partitioning information. By default, a partition table in a Plan 9 partition is consulted; if no such table is found, an old\endash Plan 9 partition table on the next\endash to\endash last or last sector of the disk is consulted. A value of new consults only the first table, old only the second.\par
  243. \par
  244. readparts=\par
  245. Causes boot(8) to look for MBR and Plan 9 partition tables on all sd(3) disks, even before factotum is started, so NVRAM, for example, may be found. On PCs, 9load (but not 9boot) normally does this and passes the partitions found in #ec/sdCnpart.\par
  246. \par
  247. fs=a.b.c.d\par
  248. \par
  249. auth=a.b.c.d\par
  250. These specify the IP address of the file and authentication server to use when mounting a network\endash provided root file system. They are used only if the addresses cannot be determined via DHCP.\par
  251. \par
  252. PROCESSOR\par
  253. \par
  254. *norealmode=\par
  255. The PC kernel switches the processor to 16\endash bit real mode to run BIOS interrupts, for example to find the memory map or to enable VESA. This variable disables such switches.\par
  256. \par
  257. *noe820scan=\par
  258. When available, the PC kernel uses the BIOS E820 memory map to size memory. This variable disables the scan.\par
  259. \par
  260. *maxmem=address\par
  261. This defines the maximum physical address that the system will scan when sizing memory. By default the PC operating system will scan up to 3.75 gigabytes (0xF0000000, the base of kernel virtual address space), but setting *maxmem will limit the scan. *maxmem must be less than 3.75 gigabytes. This variable is not consulted if using the E820 memory map.\par
  262. \par
  263. *kernelpercent=percent\par
  264. This defines the percentage of available memory reserved for the kernel allocation pool. The remainder is left for user processes. The default percent is 30 on CPU servers, 60 on terminals with less than 16MB of memory, and 40 on terminals with memories of 16MB or more. Terminals use more kernel memory because draw(3) maintains its graphic images in kernel memory. This deprecated option is rarely necessary in newer kernels.\par
  265. \par
  266. *nomce=value\par
  267. If machine check exceptions are supported by the processor, then they are enabled by default. Setting this variable to 1 causes them to be disabled even when available.\par
  268. \par
  269. *nomp=\par
  270. A multiprocessor machine will enable all processors by default. Setting *nomp restricts the kernel to starting only one processor and using the traditional interrupt controller.\par
  271. \par
  272. *ncpu=cpus\par
  273. Setting *ncpu restricts the kernel to starting at most cpus processors.\par
  274. \par
  275. *pcimaxbno=bno\par
  276. Limits the maximum bus number probed on a PCI bus (default 7). For example, a bno of 1 should suffice on a 'standard' motherboard with an AGP slot. This, and *pcimaxdno below are rarely used and only on troublesome or suspect hardware.\par
  277. \par
  278. *pcimaxdno=dno\par
  279. Limits the maximum device number probed on a PCI bus (default 31).\par
  280. \par
  281. *nopcirouting=\par
  282. Disable pci routing during boot. May solve interrupt routing problems on certain machines.\par
  283. \par
  284. *nodumpstack=\par
  285. Disable printing a stack dump on panic. Useful if there is only a limited cga screen available, otherwise the textual information about the panic may scroll off.\par
  286. \par
  287. ioexclude=range\par
  288. Specifies a list of ranges of I/O ports to exclude from use by drivers. Ranges are inclusive on both ends and separated by commas. For example:\par
  289. \tab ioexclude=0x330\endash 0x337,0x430\endash 0x43F\par
  290. \par
  291. umbexclude=\par
  292. \par
  293. range\par
  294. Specifies a list of ranges of UMB to exclude from use by drivers. Ranges are inclusive on both ends and separated by commas. For example:\par
  295. \tab umbexclude=0xD1800\endash 0xD3FFF\par
  296. \par
  297. apm0=\par
  298. This enables the ``advanced power management'' interface as described in apm(3) and apm(8). The main feature of the interface is the ability to watch battery life (see stats(8)). It is not on by default because it causes problems on some laptops.\par
  299. \par
  300. VIDEO\par
  301. \par
  302. monitor=monitor\par
  303. \par
  304. vgasize=xxyxd\par
  305. These are used not by the kernel but by termrc (see cpurc(8)) when starting vga(8).\par
  306. \par
  307. *dpms=value\par
  308. This is used to specify the screen blanking behavior of the MGA4xx video driver. Values are standby, suspend, and off. The first two specify differing levels of power saving; the third turns the monitor off completely.\par
  309. \par
  310. Multiple Configurations\par
  311. \par
  312. A plan9.ini file may contain multiple configurations, each within a block beginning with a line\par
  313. \tab [tag]\par
  314. A special block with the tag menu gives a list of blocks from which the user may interactively select the contents of plan9.ini. There may also be multiple blocks with the tag common which will be included in all selections; if any lines appear in plan9.ini before the first block, they are treated as a common block.\par
  315. \par
  316. Within the menu block the following configuration lines are allowed:\par
  317. \par
  318. menuitem=tag[, description]\par
  319. The block identified by tag will appear in the presented menu. The menu entry will consist of the tag unless the optional description is given.\par
  320. \par
  321. menudefault=tag[, timeout]\par
  322. Identifies a default block to be given in the menu selection prompt. If the optional timeout is given (in seconds), the default block will be selected if there is no user input within the timeout period.\par
  323. \par
  324. menuconsole=value[, baud]\par
  325. Selects a serial console upon which to present the menu as no console or baud configuration information will have been processed yet (the plan9.ini contents are still to be decided...).\par
  326. \par
  327. In response to the menu being printed, the user is prompted to select a menu item from the list. If the numeric response is followed by a p, the selected configuration is printed and the menu presented again.\par
  328. \par
  329. The line\par
  330. \tab menuitem=tag\par
  331. is prefixed to the selected configuration as an aid to user\endash level initialization scripts.\par
  332. \par
  333. EXAMPLES\par
  334. \par
  335. \tab A representative plan9.ini:\par
  336. \tab % cat /n/c:/plan9.ini\par
  337. ether0=type=3C509\par
  338. mouseport=ps2\par
  339. modemport=1\par
  340. serial0=type=generic port=0x3E8 irq=5\par
  341. monitor=445x\par
  342. vgasize=1600x1200x8\par
  343. %\par
  344. \par
  345. Minimum CONFIG.SYS and AUTOEXEC.BAT files to use COM2 as a console:\par
  346. \tab % cat /n/c:/config.sys\par
  347. SHELL=COMMAND.COM COM2 /P\par
  348. % cat /n/c:/autoexec.bat\par
  349. @ECHO OFF\par
  350. PROMPT $p$g\par
  351. PATH C:\\DOS;C:\\BIN\par
  352. mode com2:96,n,8,1,p\par
  353. SET TEMP=C:\\TMP\par
  354. %\par
  355. \par
  356. Simple plan9.ini with multiple configurations:\par
  357. \tab [menu]\par
  358. menuitem=vga, Plan 9 with VGA\par
  359. menuitem=novga, Plan 9 no automatic VGA\par
  360. menudefault=vga\par
  361. [vga]\par
  362. monitor=multisync135\par
  363. vgasize=1024x768x8\par
  364. [novga]\par
  365. [common]\par
  366. ether0=type=i82557\par
  367. audio0=type=sb16 port=0x220 irq=5 dma=1\par
  368. \par
  369. With this, the following menu will be presented on boot:\par
  370. \tab Plan 9 Startup Menu:\par
  371. ====================\par
  372. \tab 1. Plan 9 with VGA\par
  373. 2. Plan 9 no automatic VGA\par
  374. Selection[default==1]:\par
  375. \par
  376. Selecting item 1 generates the following plan9.ini to be used by the remainder of the bootstrap process:\par
  377. \tab menuitem=vga\par
  378. monitor=multisync135\par
  379. vgasize=1024x768x8\par
  380. ether0=type=i82557\par
  381. audio0=type=sb16 port=0x220 irq=5 dma=1\par
  382. \par
  383. and selecting item 2:\par
  384. \tab menuitem=novga\par
  385. ether0=type=i82557\par
  386. audio0=type=sb16 port=0x220 irq=5 dma=1\par
  387. \par
  388. SEE ALSO\par
  389. \tab 9boot(8), booting(8), boot(8)\par
  390. \par
  391. BUGS\par
  392. \tab Being able to set the console device to other than a display is marginally useful on file servers; MS\endash DOS and the programs which run under it are so tightly bound to the display that it is necessary to have a display if any setup or reconfiguration programs need to be run. Also, the delay before any messages appear at boot time is disconcerting, as any error messages from the BIOS are lost.\par
  393. \par
  394. This idea is at best an interesting experiment that needs another iteration.\par
  395. Copyright \f0\'a9 2016 Alcatel-Lucent. All rights reserved. \par
  396. }