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As I have not used such a beast myself yet, I can give you only the
following tips (courtesy of Christian Leutloff
<leutloff@sundancer.tng.oche.de> ):
- You can't use ``normal'' boot ROMs.
- There is a
netboot packet by Gero Kuhlmann, that provides
for boot ROMs for Linux, and further information. netboot is
available from the local Linux mirror, or as a Debian package
(netboot-0.4 ).
- Read the documentation coming with your boot ROM carefully.
- You probably will have to enable the tftpd on the server, but
this depends upon your boot ROM's way of loading the kernel.
- Any information on boot-ROM vendors of these Linux variety,
mentioned above, as not everybody has access to PROM burner :(
(especially in Europe, as I'm located there.) welcome, I'll include
them then here.
If you have exported the root filesystem with the correct name for the
default naming and your NFS server is also the RARP server
(which implies that the boxes are on the same subnet.), than you can
just boot the kernel by cat ing it to a disk. (You have to set the
root device in the kernel to 0:255.) This assumes, that the root
directory on the server is /tftpboot/ IP Address
(this value can be changed when compiling the kernel.)
Give the kernel all needed parameters when booting, and add
nfsroot=<server-ip-addr>:</path/to/mount>
where server-ip-addr is the IP address of your NFS-server, and
/path/to/mount is the path to the root directory.
Tips:
- When using LILO consider using the ``
lock '' feature: Simply
type in once all the correct parameters and add
``lock ''. Next time when booting let LILO timeout.
- When generating a workstation specific boot disk, you can
also use the
append= feature in lilo.conf .
The ip and nfsroot kernel parameters (which can be hardcoded
into the kernel, interactively entered at some bootloader prompts, or
included in lilo.conf via the append= parameter; see the next
subsection) provide all
of the information necessary for the client to set up its ethernet interface
and to contact the NFS server, respectively. The parameters are fully
documented in Documentation/nfsroot.txt , which is included in
the kernel sources (usually found under /usr/src/linux ). Here's
the format for a machine with a static (pre-assigned) IP address:
-
nfsroot=<NFS-server-IP-number>:/path/on/server/to/nfs_root
ip=<client-IP-number>::<gateway-IP-number>:<netmask>:<client-hostname>:eth0:off
DHCP is much simpler:
-
nfsroot=<NFS-server-IP-number>:/path/on/server/to/nfs_root
ip=dhcp
Here's an example of a complete kernel command line such as you might
include in lilo.conf or equivalent; only the IP numbers and NFS
path are bogus:
-
root=/dev/nfs rw nfsroot=12.345.67.89:/path/on/server/to/nfs_root
ip=dhcp console=ttyS1
That uses DHCP to assign an IP address to the machine and puts its boot
messages (console) on the second serial port. The following is the
corresponding example using a static IP address; it also explicitly
specifies Busybox's (non-standard) location for init:
-
root=/dev/nfs rw nfsroot=12.345.67.89:/path/on/server/to/nfs_root
ip=12.345.67.88::12.345.67.1:255.255.255.0:embed-o-matic:eth0:off
console=ttyS1 init=/bin/init
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