Gulp, what do I do now?
You have several tasks ahead of you, regardless of whether you are using the install disks or boot strapping a new disk by hand.
#ncr0 targ 0 lun 0:SCSI2 0/direct fixed #sd0 at scsibus0sd0(ncr0:0:0): FAST SCSI-2 100ns (10 Mb/sec) offset 8. #: 1010MB, 2756 cyl, 8 head, 93 sec, 512 bytes/sec Conner: \ :dt=SCSI:ty=winchester:se#512:nt#8:ns#93:nc#2756:rm#5400: \ :pa#40920:oa#0:ba#8192:fa#1024:ta=4.2BSD: \ :pb#130944:ob#40920:tb=swap: \ :pc#2050464:oc#0: \ :pd#2050464:od#0: \ :pe#245520:oe#171864:be#8192:fe#1024:te=4.2BSD: \ :pf#614544:of#417384:bf#8192:ff#1024:tf=4.2BSD: \ :pg#1018536:og#1031928:bg#8192:fg#1024:tg=4.2BSD:
fsck /dev/rsd?a..N
/dev/sd0a / ffs rw 1 1 /dev/sd1a /altroot ffs rw 1 2 kernfs /kern kernfs rw 0 0 procfs /proc procfs rw 0 0 /dev/sd1b none swap sw 0 0 /dev/sd1b /tmp mfs rw,-s=16000 0 0 /dev/sd1e /usr ffs rw 1 2 /dev/sd0e /usr/local ffs rw 1 2 /dev/sd1g /usr/people ffs rw 1 2 #atrium:/usr/people /home/atrium.people nfs rw,-bisqTkl,-r4096,-w4096 0 0 /dev/sd0f /usr/obj ffs rw 1 2 /dev/sd1f /usr/src ffs rw 1 2 /dev/sd0g /mnt ffs rw 1 2