On Mon, 2012-11-12 at 21:57 -0500, Neal Murphy wrote: > Does your box have a serial port? No. USB and LAN ports. I investigated SOL, serial over LAN, and IPMI, but can't get access to it; apparently it ordinarily must be enabled on the target machine as a first step (if it's there at all, which I suspect it is since an Intel mobo DH77DF). > Can it be configured to display the BIOS > screen on the serial port? Can Debian be installed using a serial port? That > is, connect a null-modem serial cable between the box to be installed and some > other computer and use minicom (Linux) or Hyperterm (Win). > > Or put the hard drive into another regular computer, The system is diskless. Also, I have no other amd64 computers. > install there, then move > the drive back to the target box. And (1) enable a getty on /dev/ttyS0 and (2) > add 'console=ttys0,115200' to grub. The only oddity you should encounter here > is that the target box's NIC won't be eth0; this results from how udev works, > but it can be changed if desired. > > Grub0 can be configured to poll both the VESA console and a serial port, then > use whichever gets the first keystroke (or time out and use the selected > default). I don't know how (or if) Grub2 handles this situation. So if the box > has no drive and no VESA console and you cannot redirect the BIOS to a serial > port, you'll be blind until grub starts. > > Another possibility. Check if the system has a compact flash socket. Since it has USB I believe I could boot from that. But there again, it would expect me to control it from the local computer . > If so, > you could effectively install a /boot to it with a custom initramfs that > contains enough command line tools (and libs) to run a fairly minimal 'live' > system in RAM; this might take a 100-300 MiB. As it boots, it can mount the > rest of what it needs over the net. My firewall has a smallish initramfs > (30MiB compressed CPIO, about 100MiB in RAM). It's a fairly fully usable > environment with a real init and a few real tools with busybox handling > others; I made it to ease debugging the install process. It works well on > standard computers and works well on headless systems like the Lanner 7530 and > 7539 network appliances using a serial console. > > You *can* do what you want, but it requires you to roll up your sleeves and > get up to your elbows in slimy bits. But then, Debian might have something for > this already. The hard part will be to redirect the install session to a > serial port.
I've gotten a little further, though still no joy. I took the terminal-based testing netboot material for amd64 (only used the linux and pxelinux.0 files) and created a config file with the magic name including the UUID of the new client. It has label install menu label ^Install menu default kernel linux append vga=788 root=/dev/nfs nfsroot=192.168.40.2:/mnt/amd64 timeout 50 totaltimeout 300 This effectively bypasses most of the other files (and their screwy paths) /mnt/amd64 has the results of running debootstrap --arch=amd64 --foreign --include openssh-server --variant=minbase testing amd64 http://debian.betterworld.us:\ 3142/mainline from my testing chroot. It's exported via NFS. The idea was to create enough of a system that it would start and run the ssh server so I could ssh in. On reflection, since none of the packages are fully installed, that probably won't work even if I get further. The the client shows the early linux kernel load but fails with No Filesystem could mount root, tried: Kernel panic - not syncing: VFS: Unable to mount root fs on unknown-block(0,255) Possibilities: 1. The installer kernel does not support NFS. 2. I needed to load an NFS-related package as part of deboostrap. (Also, the man page says --include= is the syntax; I'm not sure if omitting the "=" is a problem). 3. Skipping the initrd suppliedd with the installer messed things up. (I was worried using it would take me into the installer). 4. The result of deboostrap --foreign is radically incomplete. /boot is empty; several other key system files have stubs, including fstab. I've been unable to discover exactly what one is supposed to do with the material created by deboostrap --foreign. It seems the idea is to run debootstrap --second-stage on the target system, but how to get to that point is unclear. Ross -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/1352827174.23973.23.ca...@corn.betterworld.us