It fills the hard drive,
looking quite dumb and clunky.
Thought you were done? Ha!
So you have OpenBSD installed, you've ejected the install floppy, and you've hit a key to reboot the machine and bring up the operating system for the first time. A bare-bones UNIX system is actually pretty boring; while powerful, it doesn't actually do much of anything. Here are some of the basic steps you should take after an install to establish a firm platform for later work. Any experienced system administrator will want to jump right into things such as correct the system time zone, set a default gateway, install basic mail aliases, and so on. If you know what these basic things are and just want to get your system up and on your network in a hurry, this is for you.
OpenBSD has a general configuration file that controls which of its integrated programs run and how they function. We'll discuss this system, /etc/rc.conf, in some detail.