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To say it frankly, almost everything. The underlying
concepts are the same, but the software part has been
completly redesigned to overcome the limitations of
previous versions and to make it easier to use. An
highlight of the new features :
- All functions (bpmenu, bpclean, bpunzip) are
encompassed in a single program.
- The program can run not only from the boot rom,
but also under DOS, Windows 95 and Linux.
- The program can now restore images of FAT16,
FAT32 and EXT2FS partitions. If someone want to
write NTFS support, let me know... For now, NT
users still have to stick to FAT16.
- The program can not only restore disk images but
also add and patch individual files in order to
customize the client behaviour.
- Disk images are not any more bound to 87 MB. They
are now file-system independant archives.
- We provide a mean for automatically downloading a
disk image to an arbitrary big number of clients
at the same time (broadcast).
- You can now write your own secure boot script,
that will determine the behaviour of the machine
before the real boot.
- You can now boot any Linux kernel, without
applying any patch. Its is also possible to
provide a command line and a ramdisk image.
- You can authenticate users at boot time using a
Unix, NT or Radius server and deny them any
access to the machine.
- Full national language support is included.
- And many, many other new features...
- Is there a program for converting old archives
to the new format ?
- No, because the internal format is radically
different. But you can easily do the conversion
by yourself:
- Boot an old image (unzip it to your disk)
- Remove calls to the old
unzipreg
utility and replace them by the adequate patch
commands (it is very easy, see the
detailed instructions below)
- Run the new
mrzip program to
create a new-style disk image
Version 3.0 was the beta-release. A dozen of sites
around the world have tested it during a month and given
much of their time to help us finding bugs and to suggest
enhancements. Thanks to all of them for their patience,
and in particular to Maciek Uhlig, Dick Velders and Jeff
Teeters.
A few minor features have been added since 3.01, such
as support for diskless Linux boot (by disabling the
cache).
Version 3.10 introduced compatibility with Intel's Wired
for Management 1.1a NetPC standard. The tools now
work with any PXE-compliant boot ROM (as are most
on-board boot ROMs) available today. Thanks to InCom GmbH for giving us
the PXE bootprom that permitted this developpment. We
also succesfully tested the tools with the PXE Boot ROM
that I found incidentally in my Dell computer with
onboard network card (called LanDesk Service Agent).
Version 3.11 to 3.12 added UNIX server-side tools (a
PXE Proxy DHCP server for Solaris and Linux, and an
enhanced TFTP server for Linux), as well as detailled
informations on server-side setup and the PXE booting
process.
Version 3.13 added Advanced Power Management support
(PowerOff command).
Version 3.14 added minor enhancements and some
corrections. We fixed a problem with the terminal under
RedHat 5.1, and another problem in the syntax of the
"if" command. We added some features suggested
by the Laboratori de Cālcul de la Facultat
d'Informātica de Barcelona (LCFIB) :
- A new APM variable let you know if your system
support the Advanced Power Management (i.e it
supports the poweroff command).
- A "beep" command.
- A new parameter to DrawWindow, to include a title
at the window creation. You can now do DrawWindow
200 200 400 200 "Title".
Version 3.15 added full VESA support. BpBatch now
support several video modes, to accomodate old computers
not being able to display 800x600 graphics. A new
parameter has been added to InitGraph to specify the
video mode, and a list of detected video mode can be
retrieved from the new VESA-Modes variable.
Version 3.16 fixes the following bugs:
- "Malloc failed" during the Fullunzip
process of a multiple fragments image. Many
thanks to Christian Meyer for his collaboration.
- A bug which prevented the linux version of
MrBatch to properly fullunzip images. This bug
was located in the low-level functions of
MrBatch, so it may fix other problems encountered
in the linux version of MrBatch. Many
thanks to Jeff Teeters for his collaboration.
- An error in the codepage translation tables. This
bug was found by the Laboratori de Cālcul de la
Facultat d'Informātica de Barcelona (LCFIB). You
can find the bug report in the BpBatch forum.
Version 3.17 adds some minor features and fixes bugs:
- Fullunzip was turning Extended Memory off
- Booting on the RedHat boot disk now works
- When extracting images with a large number of
directories, the resulting FAT file system was
corrupted.
- We added retries to text TFTP transfers. BpBatch
will now retry three times before saying
"Could not transfer the file".
- Timestamps are now correctly updated in FAT.
(thank to Francis Chan)
Version 3.18 fixes a bug with the IncrUnzip function.
Thanks to Gary Pike for its collaboration.
Version 3.19 fixed a bug in the error handling of the delete
command on ext2fs, as well as the inappropriate handling
of names starting with A: under Linux. The following new
features were also added:
- A new
if valid disk:partition syntax
can be used to check if a partition has been
formatted
- FAT32 disk images are now fully functional (they
now boot properly)
- Linux EXT2 partitions bigger than 2 GB are now
supported
- Linux Swap partitions bigger than 128 MB are now
supported (this feature needs a recent kernel, at
least 2.1.x)
- FullUnzip is now also possible without a cache
partition, by setting
CacheNever to "ON".
This might be usefull for a unique installation,
but is not recommended in general is it results
in a high network load.
Thanks to Ruben Schattevoy for its help and
contributions to this release.
Version 3.20 : we added a link to Peter Schmitt's
documentation.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
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