:Seems like diskless clients would have to have separate kernels with :the "option BOOTP" while any servers must omit this option. : :How do you keep them separate? or am I missing something fundamental? : :Thanks.
You can compile pxeboot with the LOADER_TFTP_SUPPORT=YES option. Add LOADER_TFTP_SUPPORT=YES to your /etc/make.conf and recompile /usr/src/sys/boot (make clean; make obj; make; make install from within /usr/src/sys/boot). If you do this pxeboot will attempt to load the kernel via TFTP instead of via NFS. You then put your kernel in /tftpboot right along side a copy of pxeboot. This allows you to netboot a different kernel then the one in the server's root directory. :PS: could you show me your dhcpd.conf so I can see how you're : specifying your root filesystem? Mine's currently: : option root-path "192.168.255.185:/"; subnet 216.240.41.0 netmask 255.255.255.192 { range ...; server-name "apollo.backplane.com"; option subnet-mask 255.255.255.192; option domain-name-servers 216.240.41.2; option domain-name "backplane.com"; option broadcast-address 216.240.41.63; option routers 216.240.41.15; group { filename "pxeboot"; option root-path "216.240.41.2:/"; host net1 { # Alternative server to boot -current # option root-path "216.240.41.12:/"; # next-server 216.240.41.12; hardware ethernet ...; } host net2 { hardware ethernet ...; } ... } } -Matt Matthew Dillon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To Unsubscribe: send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with "unsubscribe freebsd-current" in the body of the message