https://groups.google.com/d/topic/linux.debian.user/lSluQKx8g3U/discussion
In case it helps: short version:
Probably works for Ubuntu not debian
Apologies for formatting etc : from phone
Kent West wrote:
> boot/ipxe/440/uefi/BOOT/BCD... No such file or
> directory
Interesting - I use simple tftp server and no issues since set up, but this
KACE is unknown to me, however using the string above I found many similar
issues
Here for example you have couple of ideas what could cause 2
Difficulty Level: I'm ignorant.
Goal: To build a diskless "kiosk" using an NFS-shared chroot on a remote
server, booting from a non-standard tftp(?) server?
I'm on a college campus. We have a DHCP server that is standard (I guess -
I'm not the networking guy, but I have a good relationship with h
Hi,
you are correct, in /etc/network/interfaces i have interface eno1
configured with DHCP and after removing configuration system shutdown
correctly.
Thank you!
BR
2017-07-19 20:50 GMT+02:00 Christian Seiler :
> Hi,
>
> (I'm one of the maintainers of the open-iscsi package in Debian.)
>
> On 0
Hi,
(I'm one of the maintainers of the open-iscsi package in Debian.)
On 07/19/2017 07:40 AM, Franz Angeli wrote:
> i have one diskless server able to boot with ISCSI, uefi is configures
> to reach iscsi target and volume correctly;
>
> i installed Debian 9 with debian installer ad all works fin
On Wed, Jul 19, 2017 at 07:40:01AM +0200, Franz Angeli wrote:
> Hi,
>
> i have one diskless server able to boot with ISCSI, uefi is configures
> to reach iscsi target and volume correctly;
>
> i installed Debian 9 with debian installer ad all works fine, at the
> end of installation process i rem
Hi,
i have one diskless server able to boot with ISCSI, uefi is configures
to reach iscsi target and volume correctly;
i installed Debian 9 with debian installer ad all works fine, at the
end of installation process i remount root filesystem with (chroot
/target) and edit initaramfs.conf with:
I
On Thursday 21 September 2006 19:26, Frank Hart wrote:
> On Sun, Aug 06, 2006 at 10:13:08AM +0100, David Goodenough wrote:
> > Alternatively you can use some of the small comms boards that are around
> > these days. There are the WRAP boards from pcengines.ch and the
> > Routerboard boards from Mi
ope to run
openwrt in them.
If you don't fear burning your WAP, it seems you can add a
SD card to it:
http://support.warwick.net/~ryan/wrt54g-v4/v4_sd_done.html
Has anyone tried?
----
On the other hand, I've run Diskless Debian in a cluster.
I configured syslog not to save the logs i
On Sun, Aug 06, 2006 at 10:13:08AM +0100, David Goodenough wrote:
> Alternatively you can use some of the small comms boards that are around
> these days. There are the WRAP boards from pcengines.ch and the Routerboard
> boards from Microtik. The WRAP boards need CF, but the new RBs (the 500 and
Casey Tucker wrote:
Rick Reynolds wrote:
I'm doing nearly the same thing: WRT54GS router, but I'm running
the DD-WRT distro on it. It has the ability to do what you're
talking about, namely mount an NFS partition at boot time and then
read firewalling rules from a file on the NFS
Frank Hart wrote:
A couple of months ago, I switched from a normal PC router to a Linksys
WRT54G with OpenWRT. It's a good image but the problem is space. There
is barely room for an OpenVPN server and shorewall. Also, I'm somewhat
worried about timely updates. One of the big pro's is that the de
On Sun, Aug 06, 2006 at 10:13:08AM +0100, David Goodenough wrote:
> The problem with network booting is that you are then not only reliant on
> the disk on your server, but all of the rest of the server and network
> infrastructure.
True, but the risk can be reduced with a ramdisk and regular back
; worried about timely updates. One of the big pro's is that the device is
> quiet and doesn't suffer from harddisk failures.
>
> So what I would like to build is a diskless Debian router that boots
> from the network. I don't know yet if it's better to build a large
>
ce is
quiet and doesn't suffer from harddisk failures.
So what I would like to build is a diskless Debian router that boots
from the network. I don't know yet if it's better to build a large
initrd image that contains the whole system as a ramdisk or that I
should add a NFS share on an
Salman Haq wrote:
I've gotten so far as actually getting a client to boot by using
PXELinux.
Since the client is actually diskless, the boot process stops when the
kernel tries to mount a filesystem - that results in a kernel panic as
expected.
I'm considering using a RAM disk image or NFS to
I've gotten so far as actually getting a client to boot by using
PXELinux.
Since the client is actually diskless, the boot process stops when the
kernel tries to mount a filesystem - that results in a kernel panic as
expected.
I'm considering using a RAM disk image or NFS to remotely mount the
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi All,
I am trying to build a network of Debian PCs which must be diskless.
The idea is that every once in a while the clients can be booted (may
be remotely?) to download an upgraded kernel. Previously, we have used
removable hard drives - very time consuming.
From br
On Mon, 2004-07-12 at 10:48, Salman Haq wrote:
> Hi All,
>
> I am trying to build a network of Debian PCs which must be diskless.
> The idea is that every once in a while the clients can be booted (may
> be remotely?) to download an upgraded kernel. Previously, we have used
> removable hard dri
Hi All,
I am trying to build a network of Debian PCs which must be diskless.
The idea is that every once in a while the clients can be booted (may
be remotely?) to download an upgraded kernel. Previously, we have used
removable hard drives - very time consuming.
From browsing around, I've come
> I've used apt-get to install the diskless packages,
> however I've not had much luck getting it to work.
> Evidently there was supposed to be a script that ran
> upon the installation of the diskless however this
> didn't happen. Has anyone had any success getting this
> to work?
Well; I got it
I've used apt-get to install the diskless packages,
however I've not had much luck getting it to work.
Evidently there was supposed to be a script that ran
upon the installation of the diskless however this
didn't happen. Has anyone had any success getting this
to work?
___
On Sat, Dec 23, 2000 at 04:18:43PM +0100, Dietmar Schultz wrote:
:I'm happy with Etherboot (http://etherboot.sourceforge.net/), which
:you can use to create a ROM-Image loaded via BootROM, bootdisk or
:LiLo. The image receives the kernel as NetBootImage using tftp or nfs.
:Configure the netbootima
On Fri, Dec 22, 2000 at 07:26:38AM -0500, Jonathan D. Proulx wrote:
> I'm trying to boot from a LILO based floppy with root=/dev/nfsroot
> (the pseodo device 0,255 named in the docs, tried it as both a block
> and char device), and the kernel fails on trying to mount the rootfs
> with a device fa
--- "Jonathan D. Proulx" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I enabled kernel level auto config, and all the
> NFS stuff I could find
> in the kernel build (serveral iterations using
> xconfig, menuconfig,
> config and finally hand hacking the .config
> file) couldn't find the
> NFS_ROOT option anywhere,
Hi,
I read the howto's, but I'm still having kernel trouble.
I'm trying to boot from a LILO based floppy with root=/dev/nfsroot
(the pseodo device 0,255 named in the docs, tried it as both a block
and char device), and the kernel fails on trying to mount the rootfs
with a device failure.
I enabl
In www.debianplanet.org or in www.debianhelp.org there was a document that
treated this issue.
Hope that helps,
Ignasi
__
Do You Yahoo!?
Talk to your friends online with Yahoo! Messenger.
http://im.yahoo.com
High,
take a look at www.ltsp.org if you only want to run xwindows (or their
output).
Greetz,
Sebastiaan
> > Hi!
> > May I ask where you found the HOWTO documents? I
> > have a friend who want to install a diskless
> > workstation but we can't seem to find any
> > information.
> > thanks!
> >
> "Knud" == Knud Sørensen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Knud> Hi I am about to start installing some diskless
Knud> workstations.
Knud> I have found this documentation Diskless-root-NFS-HOWTO
Knud> Diskless-HOWTO NFS-Root mini-HOWTO
Knud> NFS-Root-Client-mini-HOWTO
Knud
> May I ask where you found the HOWTO documents? I
> have a friend who want to install a diskless
> workstation but we can't seem to find any
> information.
> thanks!
There is also a project called LTSP, Linux Terminal Server Project, at
http://www.ltsp.org. The developers use Red Hat, but I kn
On 19/12/2000 at 06:36 -0800, Xucaen wrote:
> Hi!
> May I ask where you found the HOWTO documents? I
> have a friend who want to install a diskless
> workstation but we can't seem to find any
> information.
> thanks!
>
You can find them at many more at your local Linux Documentation Project
mirror
Hi!
May I ask where you found the HOWTO documents? I
have a friend who want to install a diskless
workstation but we can't seem to find any
information.
thanks!
xucaen
--- Knud Sørensen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi
>
>
> I am about to start installing
> some diskless workstations.
>
> I
I've just done it a couple of weeks ago, and it's working great. Read
the stuff, because mostly it works the same for Debian :)
Anyway there are different configurations for a diskless machine, and
each one requires different steps. Just as an overview:
* kernel for DL (diskless machine): may be
Hi
I am about to start installing
some diskless workstations.
I have found this documentation
Diskless-root-NFS-HOWTO
Diskless-HOWTO
NFS-Root mini-HOWTO
NFS-Root-Client-mini-HOWTO
But they seams to be based on rethat linux.
Is the any advises or documentation specific for debian ?
On Thu, May 07, 1998 at 03:10:57PM -0600, Marcelo E. Magallon wrote:
> On Sun, May 03, 1998 at 09:13:58PM -0500, Jeff Noxon wrote:
>
> > Thanks -- that was an excellent idea. I had to massage nfsroot into
> > working with libc6, but it was a great starting point. My client is
> > now taking up 2
On Sun, May 03, 1998 at 09:13:58PM -0500, Jeff Noxon wrote:
> Thanks -- that was an excellent idea. I had to massage nfsroot into
> working with libc6, but it was a great starting point. My client is
> now taking up 2100K -- not bad.
Could you plubish the patched nfsroot somewhere? It would be
Hamish Moffatt wrote:
> This sounds nice, but would it support say /etc/init.d#HOST=foo#?
Yes, that works too.
> Also, what about /tmp and /var -- those howtos seem to suggest that
> each machine should have its own.
You can use /tmp#HOST=foo#, etc. I kept /var shared, except /var/tmp,
/var/spoo
On Sat, May 02, 1998 at 10:57:39AM -0700, Jim Pick wrote:
> I use Joost's nfsroot package, which sets most of the stuff up. It's
> a good start - but You still need to do a fair amount of hacking to
> get it to work.
>
> I think the package got wiped out by the latest freeze, so you need to
> fet
On Sun, May 03, 1998 at 12:56:06AM -0700, Joey Hess wrote:
> Hamish Moffatt wrote:
> > I suggest the NFS-Root and NFS-Root-Client mini-howtos. What I have
> > ended up doing is creating a tree with just enough of /bin, /sbin/,
> > /etc, /var and /tmp to boot up in it, then the client will mount
> >
Hamish Moffatt wrote:
> I've been playing with this recently; I have a whole lot of motherboards
> and net cards which I want to use to get some parallel processing happening.
>
> I suggest the NFS-Root and NFS-Root-Client mini-howtos. What I have
> ended up doing is creating a tree with just enou
Jeff Noxon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I'm about to set up a diskless Debian workstation. It's going to be
> booting over NFS using 2Mbps Wavelan... I know, not fast, but it's just
> going to be dishing out .MP3's to my stereo system -- so quietness and
On Fri, May 01, 1998 at 08:13:29PM -0500, Jeff Noxon wrote:
> I'm about to set up a diskless Debian workstation. It's going to be
> booting over NFS using 2Mbps Wavelan... I know, not fast, but it's just
> going to be dishing out .MP3's to my stereo system -- so
I'm about to set up a diskless Debian workstation. It's going to be
booting over NFS using 2Mbps Wavelan... I know, not fast, but it's just
going to be dishing out .MP3's to my stereo system -- so quietness and
heat are the major concerns here.
I know I can just do a
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