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Revision: 1.3
Committed: 2003-06-03T12:26:28Z (21 years, 5 months ago) by nigel
Content type: text/html
Branch: MAIN
CVS Tags: nigel-build-16, nigel-build-15
Changes since 1.2: +6 -3 lines
Log Message:
Better ROM copying doco (as suggested by Sacha Mitchell)

File Contents

# Content
1 <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//IETF//DTD HTML 2.0//EN"><HTML>
2 <HEAD><TITLE>Basilisk II, Mac OS X port, HowTos</TITLE></HEAD>
3 <BODY>
4
5 <H1> Index </H1>
6
7 <UL>
8 <LI> <A HREF="#minreq"> Minimum Requirements</A> </LI>
9 <LI> <A HREF="#rom"> Macintosh ROM image </A> </LI>
10 <LI> <A HREF="#b-disk"> Creating a boot disk</A> </LI>
11 <LI> <A HREF="#mount"> Mounting Unix Files</A> </LI>
12 </UL>
13
14 <HR>
15
16 <H2> <A NAME="minreq"> Minimum Requirements </A> </H2>
17
18 To run Basilisk II, you need both:
19 <UL>
20 <LI>A Mac ROM image. Even though there is a ROM in your OS X Mac,
21 it is too new for a 68k Mac to make use of. Any Mac II ROM,
22 and most of the Quadra ROMS, will work.
23 <BR> (Quadra 660av and 840av ROMs are currently unusable.
24 I don't know about Mac LC ROMs. In the near future, Mac Plus,
25 SE or Classic ROMS may also be usable, though only for emulating
26 a monochrome Mac). </LI>
27 <LI>A copy of the MacOS, which at the moment has to either be on
28 a CD-ROM, or on a disk image </LI>
29 </UL>
30
31 <HR>
32
33 <H2> <A NAME="rom"> Macintosh ROM image </A> </H2>
34
35 <P> To run Basilisk II, you need a ROM image, which is a data file
36 containing a copy of the ROM chips from a real 68k Macintosh. </P>
37
38 <P> The best way (<I>i.e.</I> most legally acceptable) to get a ROM
39 image is to produce it from your old Mac. Take a program like CopyROM,
40 download it onto your old Mac, and use it to produce the image file,
41 which you then copy or upload to your OS X Mac.
42 A good page which describes this process is
43 <A HREF="http://mes.emuunlim.com/tips/capturing_a_mac_rom_image.htm">here</A>.
44 </P>
45
46 <P> The easiest way to get a ROM image is to get one from someone else
47 (<I>e.g.</I> another Basilisk II user, or an emulation web site).
48 Note that this probably contravenes several copyright laws. </P>
49
50 <P>Once you have your ROM image, you need to tell Basilisk II to use it:
51 <OL>
52 <LI> Open the Basilisk II application </LI>
53 <LI> Go to the 'BasiliskII' menu, then the Preferences...' menu item </LI>
54 <LI> On the Emulation tab, there is a field 'ROM file:'. Either type in the
55 path to the ROM file, or click the Browse button and Open the ROM file </LI>
56 <LI> Click the Save button, so that Basilisk II will be able to find the ROM
57 each time you boot it </LI>
58 </OL>
59 </P>
60
61 <P> If you want to test this, press the Run or Power button
62 (in the top right corner of the 'BasiliskII Emulator' window).
63 After a few moments you should see a Mac screen, with a picture of a floppy
64 disk with a flashing question mark. That is the Mac telling you that it needs
65 a disk to boot from. </P>
66
67 <HR>
68
69 <H2> <A NAME="b-disk"> Creating a boot disk </A> </H2>
70
71 <P> Basilisk II needs a copy of the MacOS to boot from. Anything from System 7
72 through to MacOS 8.1 should be usable.
73 <BR> (Felix Eng and I have only tested System 7.0.1, 7.1, 7.5.3 and 7.6,
74 although Felix also got System 6.0.8 to work with SE/30 Roms) </P>
75
76 <P> It is possible to use Basilisk II with a CD-ROM, but because most bootable
77 CDs have a minimal System Folder, it is better if you use a disk image with the
78 MacOS installed on it. </P>
79
80 <P> There are two options: either grab an image that someone else has made,
81 or create one yourself. If you have some time, and access to a MacOS install CD,
82 then these instructions will help you do the latter. </P>
83
84 <P> Note that there is currently no Install CD image on Apple's Web site -
85 they only seem to have MacOS 7.5.3 floppy disk images (all 19 of them).
86 If you do not have a friend with an install CD, you can possibly make one
87 by copying the System Folder from a bootable OS 7 or 8 CD, and burning that
88 onto a CD with the floppy disk images.
89 <BR>Thanks to Attilio Farina for this tip! </P>
90
91
92 <H3> Create a new BasiliskII disk </H3>
93
94 <P> Before you can install the MacOS onto a disk volume,
95 you need to create a disk to install onto: </P>
96
97 <OL>
98 <LI> Start up the Basilisk application.<BR>
99 (If it is already running, skip this step)</LI>
100 <LI> Open the preferences. </LI>
101 <LI> Go to the Disk Volumes tab. </LI>
102 <LI> Press the 'Create...' button
103 (go with the defaults, unless you think you will need a huge disk). </LI>
104 </OL>
105
106 <P> If you want to have more than one hard disk available to Basilisk II,
107 you could create additional volumes here. </P>
108
109
110 <H3> Installing the MacOS </H3>
111
112 <P> Insert your MacOS install CD-ROM, and wait a few moments for
113 the Finder to mount the disk. While still in your preferences: </P>
114
115 <OL>
116 <LI> Go to the Emulation tab and check that your emulation is appropriate
117 for your install image
118 <BR>(<I>e.g.</I> I had to change from Quadra900 to IIci,
119 because my generic 7.1 install CD didn't support the Quadra),
120 and that you have the RAM size set appropriately
121 <BR>(<I>e.g.</I> 8MB RAM may not be enough for a 7.5.3 install). </LI>
122 <LI> Click the save button. </LI>
123 <LI> In the BasiliskII Emulator window, click Run. <BR>
124 (If it is already running, but showing the floppy with the question mark,
125 press the restart button - the triangle in the bottom right hand corner) <BR>
126 You should get a HappyMac, and the emulator will start to boot from the CD.
127 You should then a dialog asking you to format a disk. </LI>
128 <LI> Click Initialize, then Erase, give the disk an appropriate name
129 (<I>e.g.</I> Hard Disk), then click OK. </LI>
130 <LI> Find the OS installer (in my case the CD booted into At Ease, and one of
131 the first buttons was 'Install System'), and go with the defaults. </LI>
132 </OL>
133
134 <P> After the installer finishes it may try to reboot (or you may need to
135 force a reboot). When it reboots, BasiliskII may exit. Start it again,
136 and you should boot into your installed OS. </P>
137
138 <HR>
139
140 <H2> <A NAME="mount">Mounting Unix Files</A> </H2>
141
142 <P> If Basilisk II is running MacOS 7.5.3 or newer, you can easily access some
143 of the files from your OS X disks. Just set the 'Unix directory to mount' in the
144 Volumes tab of the Preferences. Next time the Emulator starts up, a new disk will
145 appear on its Desktop (called Unix). </P>
146
147 <P> To prevent clashes with the OS X desktop files, I suggest that the directory
148 you select is not a whole disk (<I>e.g.</I> '/' or '/Volumes/disk'). Mount a
149 sub-folder instead (like '/Applications (Mac OS 9)'). </P>
150
151 <HR>
152
153 $Id: HowTo.html,v 1.2 2003/04/01 03:17:47 nigel Exp $
154 <BR>
155 Written by Nigel Pearson on 26th March, 2003.
156
157 </BODY>
158
159 </HTML>