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Remove outdated web files

tags/v0.9.3
Marty Connor 17 년 전
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5개의 변경된 파일0개의 추가작업 그리고 606개의 파일을 삭제
  1. BIN
      eb.png
  2. 0
    254
      index-berlios.html
  3. 0
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      index.html
  4. 0
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      index.xhtml
  5. 0
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      style.css

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eb.png 파일 보기


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index-berlios.html 파일 보기

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-<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN">
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-<html>
3
-<head>
4
-<meta name="generator" content=
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-"HTML Tidy for Linux/x86 (vers 1st April 2002), see www.w3.org">
6
-<title>Welcome to EtherBoot.org</title>
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-<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content=
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-"text/html; charset=iso-8859-1">
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-<link rel=StyleSheet href="style.css" type="text/css"/>
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-</head>
11
-<body>
12
-<table summary="welcome" width="95%" border="0" cellspacing="0"
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-cellpadding="3" align="center">
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-<tr bgcolor="#0F3161">
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-<td width="278" bgcolor="#0F3161" valign="bottom">
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-<h2 class="c1">Welcome to the</h2>
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-</td>
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-<td bgcolor="#0F3161">
19
-</td>
20
-<td></td>
21
-</tr>
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-
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-<tr>
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-<td bgcolor="#BFCBD9">
25
-<div class="c2">EtherBoot Project</div>
26
-</td>
27
-<td align="middle">
28
-<div class="c2">
29
-<a href="http://osdir.com/Article198.phtml"><img src=
30
-"http://www.osdir.com/images/2003osdirwinnerbadge.gif" width=
31
-"125" height="65" border="0" alt="OSDir 2003 Winner Badge"></a>
32
-</div>
33
-</td>
34
-<td bgcolor="#BFCBD9">
35
-<div class="c4"><a href="index.html" class="c3"><img src=
36
-"doc/html/images/etherboot_logo.png" alt="Etherboot logo" width=
37
-"125" height="54" border="0"></a></div>
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-</td>
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-</tr>
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-</table>
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-
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-<table summary="index" width="95%" border="0" cellspacing="0"
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-cellpadding="0" align="center">
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-<tr>
45
-<td bgcolor="#0F3161" width="165" height="56" valign="top">
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-<table summary="index.html" width="100%" border="0" cellspacing=
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-"10" cellpadding="0" align="right">
48
-<tr>
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-<td height="45">
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-<div class="c4"><a href="index.html" class=
51
-"c5"><b>Home</b></a></div>
52
-</td>
53
-</tr>
54
-
55
-<tr>
56
-<td height="45">
57
-<div class="c4"><a href="http://sourceforge.net/projects/etherboot" class=
58
-"c3">Sourceforge project home</a></div>
59
-</td>
60
-</tr>
61
-
62
-<tr>
63
-<td height="45">
64
-<div class="c4"><a href="http://developer.berlios.de/projects/etherboot" class=
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-"c3">Berlios project mirror</a></div>
66
-</td>
67
-</tr>
68
-
69
-<tr>
70
-<td height="45">
71
-<div class="c4"><a href="http://sourceforge.net/news/?group_id=4233" class=
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-"c3">News</a></div>
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-</td>
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-</tr>
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-
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-<tr>
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-<td height="45">
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-<div class="c4"><a href="doc/html/documentation.html" class=
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-"c3">Documentation</a></div>
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-</td>
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-</tr>
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-
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-<tr>
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-<td height="45">
85
-<div class="c4"><a href="http://wiki.etherboot.org" class=
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-"c3">Wiki</a></div>
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-</td>
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-</tr>
89
-
90
-<tr>
91
-<td height="45">
92
-<div class="c4"><a href="http://rom-o-matic.net/" class=
93
-"c3">Make ROMs</a></div>
94
-</td>
95
-</tr>
96
-
97
-<tr>
98
-<td height="45">
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-<div class="c4"><a href="http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=4233" class=
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-"c3">Download source from Sourceforge</a></div>
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-</td>
102
-</tr>
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-
104
-<tr>
105
-<td height="45">
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-<div class="c4"><a href="http://etherboot.berlios.de/dist/" class=
107
-"c3">Download source from Berlios (Germany)</a></div>
108
-</td>
109
-</tr>
110
-
111
-<tr>
112
-<td height="45">
113
-<div class="c4"><a href="doc/html/contributing.html" class=
114
-"c3">Volunteering</a></div>
115
-</td>
116
-</tr>
117
-
118
-<tr>
119
-<td height="45">
120
-<div class="c4"><a href="http://sourceforge.net/mail/?group_id=4233" class=
121
-"c3">Mailing Lists</a></div>
122
-</td>
123
-</tr>
124
-
125
-<tr>
126
-<td height="45">
127
-<div class="c4"><a href=
128
-"http://etherboot.sourceforge.net/relatedlinks.html" class=
129
-"c3">Related Links</a></div>
130
-</td>
131
-</tr>
132
-
133
-<tr>
134
-<td height="45">
135
-<div class="c4"><a href=
136
-"http://etherboot.sourceforge.net/clinks.html" class=
137
-"c3">Commercial Links</a></div>
138
-</td>
139
-</tr>
140
-</table>
141
-</td>
142
-<td width="700" height="56" bgcolor="#FFFFFF" valign="top" align=
143
-"left">
144
-<blockquote>
145
-<h2 class="c6">About EtherBoot</h2>
146
-
147
-<p class="c7">Etherboot is a software package for creating ROM
148
-images that can download code over an Ethernet network to be
149
-executed on an x86 computer. Many network adapters have a socket
150
-where a ROM chip can be installed. Etherboot is code that can be
151
-put in such a ROM. Etherboot is normally used for for booting PCs
152
-diskless. This is useful in various situations, for example:</p>
153
-
154
-<ul class="c11">
155
-<li>An X-terminal.</li>
156
-
157
-<li>Clusters of compute servers.</li>
158
-
159
-<li>Routers.</li>
160
-
161
-<li>Various kinds of remote servers, e.g. a tape drive server that
162
-can be accessed with the RMT protocol.</li>
163
-
164
-<li>Machines doing tasks in environments unfriendly to disks.</li>
165
-
166
-<li>A user platform where remote partitions are mounted over the
167
-network and you are willing to accept the lower speed compared to
168
-disk.</li>
169
-
170
-<li>Maintaining software for a cluster of equally configured
171
-workstations centrally.</li>
172
-</ul>
173
-
174
-<p class="c7">Etherboot can boot computers faster than from a disk
175
-because there are no delays in spinning up disks, etc. A moment's
176
-calculation will show that even with a 10Mbit Ethernet, sending a
177
-500kB kernel will take only a couple of seconds typically. With
178
-100Mbit Ethernet it gets even better.</p>
179
-
180
-<p class="c7">Compared to booting from solid-state devices, e.g.
181
-Flash disks, Etherboot has the advantage of centralising software
182
-adminstration, the tradeoff being the dependence on a server. This
183
-can be partly alleviated by providing redundant servers.</p>
184
-
185
-<p class="c7">Etherboot can work with RAM disks, NFS filesystems,
186
-or even local disks, if desired. It's a component technology and
187
-can be combined with other technologies to do things the way you
188
-want.</p>
189
-
190
-<p class="c7">Etherboot is usually used to load Linux, FreeBSD or
191
-DOS. However the protocol and boot file formats are general, so
192
-there is no reason why it could not be used to load arbitrary
193
-images to a PC, including other OSes.</p>
194
-
195
-<p class="c7">Etherboot is Open Source under the GNU General Public
196
-License Version 2 (GPL2).</p>
197
-
198
-<p class="c7">The components needed by Etherboot are</p>
199
-
200
-<ul class="c11">
201
-<li>A bootstrap loader, usually in an EPROM on a network card, or
202
-installed in the flash BIOS, but could be put anywhere in the
203
-address space the BIOS probes in. For testing this could be put on
204
-a floppy disk or a hard disk partition. Some configurations may
205
-even be always run from a floppy disk (e.g. temporary testing
206
-setups or pedagogic uses).</li>
207
-
208
-<li>A DHCP or bootp server, for returning an IP address and other
209
-information when sent a MAC (Ethernet card) address.</li>
210
-
211
-<li>A tftp server, for sending the kernel images and other files
212
-required in the boot process. Alternatively, Etherboot can boot
213
-from an NFS mount.</li>
214
-
215
-<li>A Linux or FreeBSD kernel.</li>
216
-
217
-<li>Optionally, a NFS server, for providing the disk partitions
218
-that will be mounted if Linux or FreeBSD is being booted.</li>
219
-
220
-<li>Optionally, a RAM disk contained in the loaded image. This can
221
-be the initial RAM disk if desired.</li>
222
-
223
-<li>Software tools for building the download image, and tools for
224
-debugging.</li>
225
-</ul>
226
-</blockquote>
227
-
228
-</td>
229
-<td width="12" height="56" bgcolor="#0F3161"></td>
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-</tr>
231
-</table>
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-
233
-<table summary="pad" width="95%" border="0" cellspacing="0"
234
-cellpadding="0" align="center">
235
-<tr>
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-<td height="5" bgcolor="#BFCBD9">&nbsp;</td>
237
-</tr>
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-</table>
239
-
240
-<table summary="sponsor" width="95%" border="0" cellspacing="3"
241
-cellpadding="0" align="center" bgcolor="#0F3161">
242
-<tr>
243
-<td valign="middle" width="81">
244
-<div class="c10">Hosted by</div>
245
-</td>
246
-<td valign="middle" width="610"><a href="http://developer.berlios.de"><img
247
-src=
248
-"http://developer.berlios.de/sflogo.php?group_id=190&amp;type=1"
249
-width="118" height="52" border="0" alt="BerliOS Logo"></a> </td>
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-</tr>
251
-</table>
252
-</body>
253
-</html>
254
-

+ 0
- 254
index.html 파일 보기

@@ -1,254 +0,0 @@
1
-<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN">
2
-<html>
3
-<head>
4
-<meta name="generator" content=
5
-"HTML Tidy for Linux/x86 (vers 1st April 2002), see www.w3.org">
6
-<title>Welcome to EtherBoot.org</title>
7
-<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content=
8
-"text/html; charset=iso-8859-1">
9
-<link rel=StyleSheet href="style.css" type="text/css"/>
10
-</head>
11
-<body>
12
-<table summary="welcome" width="95%" border="0" cellspacing="0"
13
-cellpadding="3" align="center">
14
-<tr bgcolor="#0F3161">
15
-<td width="278" bgcolor="#0F3161" valign="bottom">
16
-<h2 class="c1">Welcome to the</h2>
17
-</td>
18
-<td bgcolor="#0F3161">
19
-</td>
20
-<td></td>
21
-</tr>
22
-
23
-<tr>
24
-<td bgcolor="#BFCBD9">
25
-<div class="c2">EtherBoot Project</div>
26
-</td>
27
-<td align="middle">
28
-<div class="c2">
29
-<a href="http://osdir.com/Article198.phtml"><img src=
30
-"http://www.osdir.com/images/2003osdirwinnerbadge.gif" width=
31
-"125" height="65" border="0" alt="OSDir 2003 Winner Badge"></a>
32
-</div>
33
-</td>
34
-<td bgcolor="#BFCBD9">
35
-<div class="c4"><a href="index.html" class="c3"><img src=
36
-"doc/html/images/etherboot_logo.png" alt="Etherboot logo" width=
37
-"125" height="54" border="0"></a></div>
38
-</td>
39
-</tr>
40
-</table>
41
-
42
-<table summary="index" width="95%" border="0" cellspacing="0"
43
-cellpadding="0" align="center">
44
-<tr>
45
-<td bgcolor="#0F3161" width="165" height="56" valign="top">
46
-<table summary="index.html" width="100%" border="0" cellspacing=
47
-"10" cellpadding="0" align="right">
48
-<tr>
49
-<td height="45">
50
-<div class="c4"><a href="index.html" class=
51
-"c5"><b>Home</b></a></div>
52
-</td>
53
-</tr>
54
-
55
-<tr>
56
-<td height="45">
57
-<div class="c4"><a href="http://sourceforge.net/projects/etherboot" class=
58
-"c3">Sourceforge project home</a></div>
59
-</td>
60
-</tr>
61
-
62
-<tr>
63
-<td height="45">
64
-<div class="c4"><a href="http://developer.berlios.de/projects/etherboot" class=
65
-"c3">Berlios project mirror</a></div>
66
-</td>
67
-</tr>
68
-
69
-<tr>
70
-<td height="45">
71
-<div class="c4"><a href="http://sourceforge.net/news/?group_id=4233" class=
72
-"c3">News</a></div>
73
-</td>
74
-</tr>
75
-
76
-<tr>
77
-<td height="45">
78
-<div class="c4"><a href="doc/html/documentation.html" class=
79
-"c3">Documentation</a></div>
80
-</td>
81
-</tr>
82
-
83
-<tr>
84
-<td height="45">
85
-<div class="c4"><a href="http://wiki.etherboot.org" class=
86
-"c3">Wiki</a></div>
87
-</td>
88
-</tr>
89
-
90
-<tr>
91
-<td height="45">
92
-<div class="c4"><a href="http://rom-o-matic.net/" class=
93
-"c3">Make ROMs</a></div>
94
-</td>
95
-</tr>
96
-
97
-<tr>
98
-<td height="45">
99
-<div class="c4"><a href="http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=4233" class=
100
-"c3">Download source from Sourceforge</a></div>
101
-</td>
102
-</tr>
103
-
104
-<tr>
105
-<td height="45">
106
-<div class="c4"><a href="http://etherboot.berlios.de/dist/" class=
107
-"c3">Download source from Berlios (Germany)</a></div>
108
-</td>
109
-</tr>
110
-
111
-<tr>
112
-<td height="45">
113
-<div class="c4"><a href="doc/html/contributing.html" class=
114
-"c3">Volunteering</a></div>
115
-</td>
116
-</tr>
117
-
118
-<tr>
119
-<td height="45">
120
-<div class="c4"><a href="http://sourceforge.net/mail/?group_id=4233" class=
121
-"c3">Mailing Lists</a></div>
122
-</td>
123
-</tr>
124
-
125
-<tr>
126
-<td height="45">
127
-<div class="c4"><a href=
128
-"http://etherboot.sourceforge.net/relatedlinks.html" class=
129
-"c3">Related Links</a></div>
130
-</td>
131
-</tr>
132
-
133
-<tr>
134
-<td height="45">
135
-<div class="c4"><a href=
136
-"http://etherboot.sourceforge.net/clinks.html" class=
137
-"c3">Commercial Links</a></div>
138
-</td>
139
-</tr>
140
-</table>
141
-</td>
142
-<td width="700" height="56" bgcolor="#FFFFFF" valign="top" align=
143
-"left">
144
-<blockquote>
145
-<h2 class="c6">About EtherBoot</h2>
146
-
147
-<p class="c7">Etherboot is a software package for creating ROM
148
-images that can download code over an Ethernet network to be
149
-executed on an x86 computer. Many network adapters have a socket
150
-where a ROM chip can be installed. Etherboot is code that can be
151
-put in such a ROM. Etherboot is normally used for for booting PCs
152
-diskless. This is useful in various situations, for example:</p>
153
-
154
-<ul class="c11">
155
-<li>An X-terminal.</li>
156
-
157
-<li>Clusters of compute servers.</li>
158
-
159
-<li>Routers.</li>
160
-
161
-<li>Various kinds of remote servers, e.g. a tape drive server that
162
-can be accessed with the RMT protocol.</li>
163
-
164
-<li>Machines doing tasks in environments unfriendly to disks.</li>
165
-
166
-<li>A user platform where remote partitions are mounted over the
167
-network and you are willing to accept the lower speed compared to
168
-disk.</li>
169
-
170
-<li>Maintaining software for a cluster of equally configured
171
-workstations centrally.</li>
172
-</ul>
173
-
174
-<p class="c7">Etherboot can boot computers faster than from a disk
175
-because there are no delays in spinning up disks, etc. A moment's
176
-calculation will show that even with a 10Mbit Ethernet, sending a
177
-500kB kernel will take only a couple of seconds typically. With
178
-100Mbit Ethernet it gets even better.</p>
179
-
180
-<p class="c7">Compared to booting from solid-state devices, e.g.
181
-Flash disks, Etherboot has the advantage of centralising software
182
-adminstration, the tradeoff being the dependence on a server. This
183
-can be partly alleviated by providing redundant servers.</p>
184
-
185
-<p class="c7">Etherboot can work with RAM disks, NFS filesystems,
186
-or even local disks, if desired. It's a component technology and
187
-can be combined with other technologies to do things the way you
188
-want.</p>
189
-
190
-<p class="c7">Etherboot is usually used to load Linux, FreeBSD or
191
-DOS. However the protocol and boot file formats are general, so
192
-there is no reason why it could not be used to load arbitrary
193
-images to a PC, including other OSes.</p>
194
-
195
-<p class="c7">Etherboot is Open Source under the GNU General Public
196
-License Version 2 (GPL2).</p>
197
-
198
-<p class="c7">The components needed by Etherboot are</p>
199
-
200
-<ul class="c11">
201
-<li>A bootstrap loader, usually in an EPROM on a network card, or
202
-installed in the flash BIOS, but could be put anywhere in the
203
-address space the BIOS probes in. For testing this could be put on
204
-a floppy disk or a hard disk partition. Some configurations may
205
-even be always run from a floppy disk (e.g. temporary testing
206
-setups or pedagogic uses).</li>
207
-
208
-<li>A DHCP or bootp server, for returning an IP address and other
209
-information when sent a MAC (Ethernet card) address.</li>
210
-
211
-<li>A tftp server, for sending the kernel images and other files
212
-required in the boot process. Alternatively, Etherboot can boot
213
-from an NFS mount.</li>
214
-
215
-<li>A Linux or FreeBSD kernel.</li>
216
-
217
-<li>Optionally, a NFS server, for providing the disk partitions
218
-that will be mounted if Linux or FreeBSD is being booted.</li>
219
-
220
-<li>Optionally, a RAM disk contained in the loaded image. This can
221
-be the initial RAM disk if desired.</li>
222
-
223
-<li>Software tools for building the download image, and tools for
224
-debugging.</li>
225
-</ul>
226
-</blockquote>
227
-
228
-</td>
229
-<td width="12" height="56" bgcolor="#0F3161"></td>
230
-</tr>
231
-</table>
232
-
233
-<table summary="pad" width="95%" border="0" cellspacing="0"
234
-cellpadding="0" align="center">
235
-<tr>
236
-<td height="5" bgcolor="#BFCBD9">&nbsp;</td>
237
-</tr>
238
-</table>
239
-
240
-<table summary="sponsor" width="95%" border="0" cellspacing="3"
241
-cellpadding="0" align="center" bgcolor="#0F3161">
242
-<tr>
243
-<td valign="middle" width="81">
244
-<div class="c10">Hosted by</div>
245
-</td>
246
-<td valign="middle" width="610"><a href="http://sourceforge.net"><img src=
247
-"http://sourceforge.net/sflogo.php?group_id=4233&amp;type=1" width=
248
-"88" height="31" border="0" alt="SourceForge Logo"></a>
249
-</td>
250
-</tr>
251
-</table>
252
-</body>
253
-</html>
254
-

+ 0
- 83
index.xhtml 파일 보기

@@ -1,83 +0,0 @@
1
-<blockquote>
2
-<h2 class="c6">About EtherBoot</h2>
3
-
4
-<p class="c7">Etherboot is a software package for creating ROM
5
-images that can download code over an Ethernet network to be
6
-executed on an x86 computer. Many network adapters have a socket
7
-where a ROM chip can be installed. Etherboot is code that can be
8
-put in such a ROM. Etherboot is normally used for for booting PCs
9
-diskless. This is useful in various situations, for example:</p>
10
-
11
-<ul class="c11">
12
-<li>An X-terminal.</li>
13
-
14
-<li>Clusters of compute servers.</li>
15
-
16
-<li>Routers.</li>
17
-
18
-<li>Various kinds of remote servers, e.g. a tape drive server that
19
-can be accessed with the RMT protocol.</li>
20
-
21
-<li>Machines doing tasks in environments unfriendly to disks.</li>
22
-
23
-<li>A user platform where remote partitions are mounted over the
24
-network and you are willing to accept the lower speed compared to
25
-disk.</li>
26
-
27
-<li>Maintaining software for a cluster of equally configured
28
-workstations centrally.</li>
29
-</ul>
30
-
31
-<p class="c7">Etherboot can boot computers faster than from a disk
32
-because there are no delays in spinning up disks, etc. A moment's
33
-calculation will show that even with a 10Mbit Ethernet, sending a
34
-500kB kernel will take only a couple of seconds typically. With
35
-100Mbit Ethernet it gets even better.</p>
36
-
37
-<p class="c7">Compared to booting from solid-state devices, e.g.
38
-Flash disks, Etherboot has the advantage of centralising software
39
-adminstration, the tradeoff being the dependence on a server. This
40
-can be partly alleviated by providing redundant servers.</p>
41
-
42
-<p class="c7">Etherboot can work with RAM disks, NFS filesystems,
43
-or even local disks, if desired. It's a component technology and
44
-can be combined with other technologies to do things the way you
45
-want.</p>
46
-
47
-<p class="c7">Etherboot is usually used to load Linux, FreeBSD or
48
-DOS. However the protocol and boot file formats are general, so
49
-there is no reason why it could not be used to load arbitrary
50
-images to a PC, including other OSes.</p>
51
-
52
-<p class="c7">Etherboot is Open Source under the GNU General Public
53
-License Version 2 (GPL2).</p>
54
-
55
-<p class="c7">The components needed by Etherboot are</p>
56
-
57
-<ul class="c11">
58
-<li>A bootstrap loader, usually in an EPROM on a network card, or
59
-installed in the flash BIOS, but could be put anywhere in the
60
-address space the BIOS probes in. For testing this could be put on
61
-a floppy disk or a hard disk partition. Some configurations may
62
-even be always run from a floppy disk (e.g. temporary testing
63
-setups or pedagogic uses).</li>
64
-
65
-<li>A DHCP or bootp server, for returning an IP address and other
66
-information when sent a MAC (Ethernet card) address.</li>
67
-
68
-<li>A tftp server, for sending the kernel images and other files
69
-required in the boot process. Alternatively, Etherboot can boot
70
-from an NFS mount.</li>
71
-
72
-<li>A Linux or FreeBSD kernel.</li>
73
-
74
-<li>Optionally, a NFS server, for providing the disk partitions
75
-that will be mounted if Linux or FreeBSD is being booted.</li>
76
-
77
-<li>Optionally, a RAM disk contained in the loaded image. This can
78
-be the initial RAM disk if desired.</li>
79
-
80
-<li>Software tools for building the download image, and tools for
81
-debugging.</li>
82
-</ul>
83
-</blockquote>

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