2002-02-20 08:43:44

by nimeesh

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: network booting

hello sir,

I'm new to linux.I'm trying network booting of linux
system.System Conf.(intel 815 chipset ,PXE
bios,3com905c-ethernet card)

In that i'm facing problem with kernel image and it's
file system.

It gives me error as
kernel panic : unable to mount root fs on 01:00

Is it necessary to use NFS or is it possible without
that? Any special specification while creating kernel
image and filesystem?
If any body can tell me any doc available on net,i'll
be very thankful.

Thanks in Advance..
nimeesh patel



=====
nimeesh patel
Development Engg.
DiviNet Access Tech Ltd.
Pune.
Ph.No. 91(20)5284696

________________________________________________________________________
Looking for a job? Visit Yahoo! India Careers
Visit http://in.careers.yahoo.com


2002-02-20 11:20:24

by Chris Chabot

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: network booting

Yes, a NFS root is (as far as i know!) the only networked drive type
linux can boot of.
(ofcource any variation of local storage can be used, but then PXE is
not realy needed ;-)

For PXE documentation, check out /usr/share/doc/pxe-.... (atleast thats
on a redhat box), and for NFS-ROOT documentation check out
/usr/src/linux/Documentation/nfsroot.txt ;-)

What i found to work well for testing is to build a nfs-root kernel,
which i booted from HD for testing, with the nfsroot/dhcp command's
appended on the lilo line.. when that works, try to move it to PXE
boot-strapping.

Also, be carefull with pxe / dhcpd.. the order in which you start up
those servers will determine if it works or not (start dhcpd first, else
pxe will try to take the dhcp port).

Last, get your self a good boot-strapper. The one provided by intel in
the pxe package gave me more headaches then confort, so i switched to
BPBatch.

For more info on config files etc, check out this piece JMZ wrote:
http://www.dnalounge.com/backstage/src/kiosk/

-- Chris

nimeesh wrote:

>hello sir,
>
>I'm new to linux.I'm trying network booting of linux
>system.System Conf.(intel 815 chipset ,PXE
>bios,3com905c-ethernet card)
>
>In that i'm facing problem with kernel image and it's
>file system.
>
>It gives me error as
>kernel panic : unable to mount root fs on 01:00
>
>Is it necessary to use NFS or is it possible without
>that? Any special specification while creating kernel
>image and filesystem?
>If any body can tell me any doc available on net,i'll
>be very thankful.
>
>Thanks in Advance..
>nimeesh patel
>
>
>
>=====
>nimeesh patel
>Development Engg.
>DiviNet Access Tech Ltd.
>Pune.
>Ph.No. 91(20)5284696
>
>________________________________________________________________________
>Looking for a job? Visit Yahoo! India Careers
> Visit http://in.careers.yahoo.com
>-
>To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
>the body of a message to [email protected]
>More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
>Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/
>



2002-02-20 11:30:14

by Wakko Warner

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: network booting

> Yes, a NFS root is (as far as i know!) the only networked drive type
> linux can boot of.
> (ofcource any variation of local storage can be used, but then PXE is
> not realy needed ;-)
>
> For PXE documentation, check out /usr/share/doc/pxe-.... (atleast thats
> on a redhat box), and for NFS-ROOT documentation check out
> /usr/src/linux/Documentation/nfsroot.txt ;-)
>
> What i found to work well for testing is to build a nfs-root kernel,
> which i booted from HD for testing, with the nfsroot/dhcp command's
> appended on the lilo line.. when that works, try to move it to PXE
> boot-strapping.
>
> Also, be carefull with pxe / dhcpd.. the order in which you start up
> those servers will determine if it works or not (start dhcpd first, else
> pxe will try to take the dhcp port).
>
> Last, get your self a good boot-strapper. The one provided by intel in
> the pxe package gave me more headaches then confort, so i switched to
> BPBatch.
>
> For more info on config files etc, check out this piece JMZ wrote:
> http://www.dnalounge.com/backstage/src/kiosk/

I've been wanting to know about this. I'm running a machine right now with
an intel 10/100 management adapter. My server is running a very old copy of
debian. It has a modded tftp server from HPA. It downloads the pxelinux
(same as syslinux, but for network).

I found out this method doesn't work on 3com adapters. the tftpserver and
pxelinux are the newest things on that machine (which is about 2 years old
now)

Where can I find the pxe thing you mentioned above?

> >hello sir,
> >
> >I'm new to linux.I'm trying network booting of linux
> >system.System Conf.(intel 815 chipset ,PXE
> >bios,3com905c-ethernet card)
> >
> >In that i'm facing problem with kernel image and it's
> >file system.
> >
> >It gives me error as
> >kernel panic : unable to mount root fs on 01:00
> >
> >Is it necessary to use NFS or is it possible without
> >that? Any special specification while creating kernel
> >image and filesystem?
> >If any body can tell me any doc available on net,i'll
> >be very thankful.
> >
> >Thanks in Advance..
> >nimeesh patel
> >
> >
> >
> >=====
> >nimeesh patel
> >Development Engg.
> >DiviNet Access Tech Ltd.
> >Pune.
> >Ph.No. 91(20)5284696
> >
> >________________________________________________________________________
> >Looking for a job? Visit Yahoo! India Careers
> > Visit http://in.careers.yahoo.com
> >-
> >To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
> >the body of a message to [email protected]
> >More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
> >Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/
> >
>
>
>
> -
> To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
> the body of a message to [email protected]
> More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
> Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/
--
Lab tests show that use of micro$oft causes cancer in lab animals

2002-02-20 13:54:40

by Chris Chabot

[permalink] [raw]
Subject: Re: network booting

Preboot Execution Environment (PXE) README


When the PXE daemons are installed and configured, you will be able to remote
boot and install Linux.

This README provides specific instructions for configuring a remote boot
network install of Linux on your system. However, you can modify the procedure
to build Linux boot images for a variety of purposes (e.g. Remote boot Linux as your native OS, Beowulf configurations, etc.)


PXE Background Information
==========================

PXE defines an industry standard method of remote booting.

PXE remote boot client support is a required by PC98 and PC99 for all Office
PCs (<http://www.pcdesguide.com/pc99>) and by the Wired for Management
Initiative sponsored by Intel Corp. (<http://developer.intel.com/ial/wfm>)
As a result, most PC OEMs offer PXE support for LAN on motherboard platforms
and for business platforms containing a PXE enabled NIC.

In addition, to upgrade existing PC platforms, PXE compliant NICs are offered
by Intel (<http://www.intel.com/network/products/pro100mgmt.htm>)
and 3Com (<http://www.3comnicfinder.com/Product.asp?ProductID=49>), and
possibly other NIC vendors.

Finally, many NICs with boot ROM sockets or flash chips can be upgraded to PXE
compliance. PXE compliant boot ROMs are available from
- Bootix Inc (<http://www.bootix.com>),
- 3Com/Lanworks (<http://www.3com.com/products/dsheets/400350.html>), and
- Elisa Research. (<http://www.elisaresearch.com/>).

The PXE 2.1 specification can be found at:
(<ftp://download.intel.com/ial/wfm/pxespec.pdf>)


Required Equipment
==================

To create a remote boot network environment you will need the following
equipment:

- One DHCP Server (DHCP or BOOTP daemon required)

- One or (optionally) two PXE Servers (PXE daemon and TFTP/MTFTP daemon
required on each)

- One or more PXE PC clients


DHCP Server Considerations
--------------------------

The DHCP server can be located anywhere on your network as long as it is
reachable by the booting client(s). The DHCP server provides the PXE client(s)
with the following information: a client IP address, subnet mask, and optional
gateway IP address. Without this information the client cannot remote boot.

The PXE daemon cannot be used on this server because the DHCP daemon will not
allow sending back a class-identifier (option 60) in the DHCP offer. PXE
clients must see the class-identifier (option 60) set to "PXEClient".
Therefore this option (among others) must be provided by proxyDHCP (see next
section).


PXE Server Considerations
-------------------------

The following information provides an overview for a basic setup, but does not
cover all the possible options available. For more information on extending
these capabilities you should refer to the PXE 2.1 specification.

The PXE server runs the PXE daemon and the TFTP and/or MTFTP daemons. The PXE
daemon provides two capabilities: "proxyDHCP" and "PXE Bootserver". The PXE
daemon can be set up to provide either or both of the capabilities. Both
capabilities are required. Normally you will enable both capabilities on a
single machine, however you may wish to provide multiple "PXE Bootserver"
capabilities across several machines to provide load balancing and redundancy
in a large installation.

Specific setup information is provided in the "Installing and Building PXE"
section below.


proxyDHCP
---------

proxyDHCP is a capability provided by the PXE daemon. As the name implies,
proxyDHCP works in parallel with DHCP and provides the booting client with
remote boot configuration options. ProxyDHCP provides the PXE client(s) with
the following information: remote boot prompt with optional timeout, remote
boot menu and PXE Bootserver discovery options.

To insure that the server providing proxyDHCP is reachable by the PXE client,
do one of the following:

1. Wherever you have a DHCP server on your network, place a proxyDHCP
server on the same subnet. If you use routers to forward DHCP packets
to your DHCP server(s), you must reconfigure the routers to also
forward DHCP packets to the server providing proxyDHCP.

or

2. Place a server providing proxyDHCP on each subnet where you have PXE
clients that you want/need to remote boot.

Whether you choose #1 or #2, is up to you. The important thing is that the
DHCP discover packet sent by the PXE client reaches both the DHCP and the
proxyDHCP servers.

ProxyDHCP also serves up an initial NBP (network bootstrap program) to older
(WfM-1.1a compliant) PXE boot ROMs. These ROMs usually identify themselves
with a version numbers from 0.97 to 0.99n. To insure support for these boot
ROMs, you must have a TFTP/MTFTP daemon installed on your proxyDHCP server and
you must include the initial bootstrap file:

/tftpboot/X86PC/UNDI/BStrap/bstrap.0

At this point, the booting client now has enough information to discover the
PXE Bootserver. Configuration of the PXE Bootserver is described in the next
section.


PXE Bootserver
--------------

The PXE Bootserver is a capability provided by the PXE daemon. The PXE
Bootserver is the capability that provides the booting client with boot images
for a particular boot environment. In this case, you are setting up the PXE
Bootserver to serve Linux remote installation boot images.

A PXE Bootserver serves up requested NBPs to PXE clients. PXE Clients locate
PXE Bootservers using discovery information provided to the client by
proxyDHCP. The discovery method used by the PXE client (multicast, broadcast
or unicast) and the list of available bootserver types is controlled by
proxyDHCP. PXE Bootservers always listen for all three types of discovery
requests and will respond to all valid requests.

Mulicast discovery: If multicast discovery is used, all the PXE Bootservers
must be configured to listen for the same multicast session. If there are
routers between your PXE Bootservers and your PXE clients, the routers must be
configured to forward multicast IP packets. When a PXE client tries to
discover a PXE Bootserver using multicast discovery, the client writes a PXE
Bootserver request packet to the PXE Bootserver multicast IP address and waits
for a matching broadcast or unicast PXE Bootserver reply packet.

Broadcast discovery: If broadcast discovery is used, all of the PXE
Bootservers must be configured to listen for broadcast packets. If there are
routers between your PXE Bootservers and your PXE clients, the routers must be
configured to forward DHCP broadcast packets to the PXE Bootservers.

Unicast discovery: If a list of PXE Bootserver types and IP addresses is
included in the proxyDHCP offer packet, the PXE client will unicast a PXE
Bootserver request packet to each PXE Bootserver in the list until it gets a
matching PXE Bootserver reply packet.


PXE Client
----------

Almost any Pentium-class machine with PXE support either built into the BIOS or
included as an option ROM on an add-in NIC can be a PXE client.

There are two classes of PXE capable clients: those that comply with the
"Wired for Management Baseline Version 1.1a" (WfM-1.1a) specification and those
that comply with the "Preboot Execution Environment Version 2.0" (PXE-2.0)
specification. The PXE for WfM-1.1a capability is a subset of PXE-2.0.
Clients written to the WfM-1.1a specification require an additional bootstrap
program to be downloaded from the proxyDHCP server. This is discussed earlier
in the "proxyDHCP" section.

When a client has completed its DHCP sequence and has received its proxyDHCP
offer packet, it then does the following:

- If the offer packet includes a boot prompt, it is displayed on the
screen.

- If the offer packet includes a boot prompt timeout, the client waits
until the timeout expires. If the timeout expires, the first item in
the remote boot menu is automatically selected.

- If the user presses F8, the timer stops and the remote boot menu is
displayed. The user then selects the desired remote boot option. As
set up here, the two options are "Local Boot" and "Install Linux"

- The selected boot menu item is executed. This may be 'local boot',
which will cause PXE to unload and return control to the system BIOS,
which is normally followed by an attempt to boot from either the floppy
or hard drive.

- If "Install Linux" is selected, the client tries to discover a PXE
Bootserver that serves Linux install NBPs.

- If a matching PXE Bootserver is not found, the client will timeout and
return control to the system BIOS.

- If a matching PXE Bootserver is found, the client downloads the initial
bootstrap from the boot server and transfers control to the downloaded
program.


Installing and Building PXE
===========================

Install the PXE package:

rpm -ihv /PATH-TO-RPM-FILE/pxe-#.#-#.src.rpm

If you want to rebuild the PXE network bootstrap programs (NBPs), you must
install the dev86 package:

rpm -ihv /PATH-TO-RPM-FILE/dev86-#.#.#-#.i386.rpm

After the PXE package is installed, the following files are created in your
SOURCES directory ( /usr/src/redhat/SOURCES/ ):

pxe-README (this file)
pxe-linux.tar.gz (PXE daemon, MTFTP daemon and NBP source files)
pxe-linux-config.patch (RedHat specific changes/enhancements)
pxe.init (PXE daemon start/stop script)

Expand the PXE tar file. This will create a pxe-linux/ directory with the PXE
daemon and NBP source files.

cd /usr/src/redhat/SOURCES
tar xvofz pxe-linux.tar.gz

Apply the patch:

patch -p0 <pxe-linux-config.patch

Copy the PXE daemon start/stop script:

cp pxe.init /etc/rc.d/init.d/pxe

Build and install the PXE daemon:

cd pxe-linux/server
make
make install

After running 'make install' the following files are installed:

/usr/sbin/pxe
/usr/sbin/in.mtftpd
/etc/pxe.conf
/etc/mtftp.conf
/tftpboot/X86PC/UNDI/BStrap/bstrap.0
/tftpboot/X86PC/UNDI/linux-install/linux.0

You must add the following line to your /etc/inetd.conf file to enable the
TFTP daemon:

tftp dgram udp wait root /usr/sbin/tcpd in.tftpd /tftpboot

If you want to use the PXE MTFTP daemon, then also add this line to your
/etc/inetd.conf file:

mtftp dgrap udp wait root /usr/sbin/tcpd in.mtftpd /tftpboot

If you want to use the PXE MTFTP daemon, add the following line to your
/etc/services file:

mtftp 1759/udp

You must also add the following lines to your /etc/services file:

pxe 67/udp
pxe 4011/udp

You now must edit the /etc/pxe.conf and /etc/mtftpd.conf files so they match
your existing/desired network configuration. For simple testing the existing
/etc/pxe.conf and /etc/mtftpd.conf files are adequate. For improved performance
and complex network configurations, these files must be changed. These changes
are covered later in this document in the "Configuring the PXE Daemon" section
and in the "Configuring the MTFTP Daemon" section.

To enable the remote Linux installation, you must add two more files to the
/tftpboot/X86PC/UNDI/linux-install/ directory. These files are:

linux.1 (The Linux kernel)

and

linux.2 (The Linux installation initrd image)

You will find the kernel and initial RAMDisk (initrd) image on the CD or FTP
site:

Kernel = misc/src/trees/boot/vmlinux

Initrd = misc/src/trees/initrd-network.img



Copy the vmlinux file to /tftpboot/X86PC/UNDI/linux-install/linux.1 and the
initrd file to /tftpboot/X86PC/UNDI/linux-install/linux.2

Now start your PXE services. You do this by restarting your Linux server or by
running the following commands:

/etc/rc.d/init.d/pxe start
/etc/rc.d/init.d/inet restart


Now boot a PXE client. When "Press F8 to view menu..." is displayed on the
booting client, press the <F8> key. Select "Install Linux" from the remote
boot menu.

The client should download the kernel and initrd image, boot the kernel and
bring up a Linux network installation screen. If this does not happen, go back
and double check your configuration files and insure your PXE and TFTP/MTFTP
daemons are running.


Configuring the PXE Daemon
==========================

The following information provides an overview for a basic setup, but does not
cover all the possible options available. For more information on extending
these capabilities you should refer to the PXE 2.1 specification.

The PXE daemon configuration file, /etc/pxe.conf, will work correctly for the
'Network #1' setup defined later in this section. If you need to add other
proxyDHCP or Bootservers to your network, you will need to change some of the
settings in this file.

Most of the fields in the configuration file are not described in this document
because they do not affect the Linux remote boot installation. Inside the
configuration file you will find that all of the fields, and their settings,
are documented.


Common Fields to Check
----------------------

[Discovery_MCast_Disabled]: If you have routers on your network between your
PXE Bootservers and your PXE clients and these routers are not configured to
forward multicast IP packets, you will need to this field from '0' to '1'. You
will also want to disable MTFTP (see the next section on how to configure the
MTFTP daemon).

[Discovery_BCast_Disabled]: If you have routers on your network between your
PXE Bootservers and your PXE clients and these routers are not configured to
forward broadcast IP packets, you will need to change this field from '0' to
'1'.

[Discovery_List]: If you disable both multicast and broadcast discovery
mechanisms, you MUST enable unicast discovery by filling in this field with the
IP addresses and types of your PXE Bootservers.


Network #1 - using a single PXE Server
----------

- A DHCP server

- One PXE server (proxyDHCP and PXE Bootserver both enabled)

- One or more PXE clients

- The defaults in your PXE daemon configuration file support this
configuration.


Network #2 ? using multiple PXE Servers
----------

- A DHCP server

- One PXE Server with proxyDHCP enabled

- One or more PXE Servers with PXE Bootserver enabled

- One or more PXE clients

For this configuration, you must make the following changes to your PXE daemon
configuration file (/etc/pxe.conf):

- On the PXE Server with proxyDHCP enabled, remove "13,linux-install"
from the list of supported [Service_Types].

- On the PXE Server() with PXE Bootserver enabled, change [StartProxy]
from '1' to '0' and remove "0,BStrap" from the list of supported
[Service_Types].


Configuring the MTFTP Daemon
============================

The MTFTP daemon configuration file, /etc/mtftpd.conf, will not need to be
changed. It is already configured to remote boot a Linux installation
using MTFTP.

If you do not, or cannot, use MTFTP on your network; change
[IsMulticastEnabled] from '1' to '0'.

You should not need to change the MTFTP port numbers [ServerPort] and
[ClientPort]. All MTFTP servers and client on the same network can use the
same initial port numbers. Like TFTP, a MTFTP session switches to a different
port number after the first packet exchange.

The [OpenTimeout] and [ReopenDelay] fields are good for most situations. If
you find that you are multicasting large files you might want to increase the
timeout/delay fields a little. Please note that these fields affect all
multicasted files. If you make these fields larger than 5 seconds, you should
probably remove the smaller files from the [Multicast_ip_addresses] section.

If you look at the last section, [Multicast_ip_addresses] in the configuration
file, you will see that both NBPs (bstrap.0 and linux.0), the kernel (linux.1)
and the initial RAMDisk image (linux.2) have been assigned multicast IP
addresses. Any file that is not listed in this section will NOT be
multicasted. Any file that is listed MUST have a unique multicast IP address
assigned to it.

If you change the name or location of your /tftpboot directory, you will have
to edit the filenames in the /etc/mtftpd.conf file and the directory names in
the /etc/pxe.conf file.


Attachments:
README (15.82 kB)