2004-02-23 13:11:30 +00:00
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How to netboot using ELILO
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--------------------------
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Copyright (C) 2002-2003 Hewlett-Packard Co.
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Contributed by Stephane Eranian <eranian@hpl.hp.com>
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Last updated: 03/08/11
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EFI has full support for the PXE and DHCP protocol. As such
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it is relatively easy to boot a machine from the network using EFI.
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The elilo loader has full support for both PXE and DHCP, therefore
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it is possible to download the elilo config file, the Linux kernel image
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and the initial ramdisk from a remote server. There are many ways
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netbooting can be configured but in this document we focus
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only on two very common cases:
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- netboot but use local root filesystem.
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- booting a diskless machine, i.e., use a NFS root filesystem.
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1/ How to get EFI to netboot?
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You do not need any additional software to get EFI to start a netboot session.
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Any EFI machine can be configured to start a PXE/DHCP session IF it has a network
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adapter that has support for the UNDI/PXE protocol. Most modern cards do have such
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support.
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To enable netbooting, you need to go into the EFI boot manager maintenance menu
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and 'Add a boot option'. On the screen you see the list of devices to boot from.
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At least one of them should be of the form:
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Load File [Acpi(PNP0A03,0)/Pci(5|0)/Mac(00D0B7A6FC25)]
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which represent Ethernet card (Mac address). If you don't have such option, it means that
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you either do not have a network adapter in your machine or it does not have the
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UNDI/PXE support in its option ROM.
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You need to select this option and give it a logical name such as 'netboot', for instance.
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Next, you leave the maintenance menu and go back to the main menu. You now have a new
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boot menu option. If you select 'netboot' then EFI will start the PXE/DCHP discovery
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request and look for a server to get an IP address.
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On the server side, you can use a standard DHCP server, such as the one shipped on
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Redhat7.2 (dhcpd) or a PXE server (not yet available for Linux, probably available for Windows).
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In this document we show both options. You also need a TFTP server somewhere on the network,
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it will be used to download the actual files.
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2/ Netbooting using DHCP
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There is nothing specific to EFI that needs to be set in the /etc/dhcpd.conf file.
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Clearly the filename option must contains the path to the elilo.efi binary.
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Elilo will auto-detect whether it was downloaded via PXE or DHCP and it will adapt
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the kind of requests it makes to download the other files that it needs, such as
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its config file.
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A simple dhcpd.conf file which uses fixed IP addresses could be as follows:
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subnet 192.168.2.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 {
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host test_machine {
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hardware ethernet 00:D0:B7:A6:FC:25;
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fixed-address 192.168.2.10;
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filename "elilo.efi";
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option domain-name "mydomain.com";
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option host-name "test_machine";
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option routers 192.168.2.1;
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option subnet-mask 255.255.255.0;
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}
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}
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For the tftp server, you need to make sure that it is ACTIVATED by inetd or xinetd depending
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on your distribution. In most distributions, it is disabled by default for security reasons.
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On distributions using xinetd, you need to check /etc/xinet.d/tftp. For inetd you need to
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check /etc/inetd.conf. It is typical to have the root directory for tftp be /tftpboot but it
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can be anything. In this document we will use /tftpboot as the root directory. The files
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that we need are as follows:
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- elilo.efi
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- the elilo config file
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- the kernel image
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- the initial ramdisk (optional)
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a/ Location of the files in the tftp directory tree
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For elilo version 3.3b or higher, it is possible to place the files listed above
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in any subdirectory below the tftp root. Of course the dhcpd.conf file must
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point to the location of elilo.efi and provide the path from the tftp root
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directory.
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Elilo will look for its config file, the kernel image, the initial ramdisk (optional)
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only from the directory it was loaded from. This is useful when the same tftp server
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is used to services many different kind of clients.
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Here is a simple example, suppose the dhcpd.conf file contains the following definition:
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subnet 192.168.2.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 {
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host test_machine {
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hardware ethernet 00:D0:B7:A6:FC:25;
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fixed-address 192.168.2.10;
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filename "/rx6000/elilo.efi";
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option domain-name "mydomain.com";
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option host-name "test_machine";
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option routers 192.168.2.1;
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option subnet-mask 255.255.255.0;
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}
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}
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Elilo will be downloaded from /tftpboot/rx6000. Then elilo will look
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for all the other files it needs in /tftpboot/rx6000. This rule is
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applied to all files, including the all the variation of the config
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file.
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b/ Getting the config file
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With DHCP, elilo will first try to download its configuration file. It will try
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several file names and they are as follows:
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1) AABBCCDD.conf
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where AABBCCDD is the hexadecimal representation of the IP address assigned to
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the machine by DHCP. The hexadecimal string (AABBCCDD) MUST use upper case
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characters.
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This filename is an opportunity to specify a machine specific configuration file.
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2004-02-24 13:17:30 +00:00
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2) AA[BB[CC]][-ia32|ia64].conf
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As of version 3.5, elilo will also look for IPv4 class A,B,C
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subnet-specific versions of the config file. This is useful when you
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want to have a common config file for all machines connected to a
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particular subnet.
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For example, if your IP address is 10.0.0.1 (0A000001 in hex), elilo
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will look first for 0A000001.conf, then 0A0000.conf, then 0A00.conf,
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and finally 0A.conf.
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Elilo will also try architecture-specific versions of subnet-specific
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config files first (So for example, on an Itanium system,
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"0A0000-ia64.conf" will be tried before "0A0000.conf")
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3) elilo-ia32.config or elilo-ia64.conf
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2004-02-23 13:11:30 +00:00
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Depending on the machine (client side) architecture elilo will try the IA-32 or
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IA-64 file.
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This filename is an opportunity to specify a architecture specific configuration file.
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This distinction between the architectures is useful when the same TFTP server services
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the two types of clients : IA32- and IA-64 machines.
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2004-02-24 13:17:30 +00:00
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4) elilo.conf
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2004-02-23 13:11:30 +00:00
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All files use the same format. Elilo will stop at the first match. In case no file is found,
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it will try to download a default kernel file name (vmlinux).
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c/ Getting the kernel
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The second request from elilo is typically the kernel image. The filename is based on what
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is in the elilo config file. The path name depends on how the TFTP server is configured.
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For security reasons it is customary to have the server do a change root in /tftpboot.
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Hence filenames are relative to /tftpboot and therefore you don't need to specify it.
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For instance if elilo.conf contains:
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image=vmlinuz.249
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label=linux-up
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root=/dev/sdb2
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and the user selects linux-up, then elilo will request a filename of 'vmlinux.249'
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which must therefore be in /tftpboot. Check the configuration of your TFTP server for
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more on this.
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d/ Getting the initial ramdisk
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This step is optional. It follows exactly the same naming rules explained for the kernel image.
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The initial ramdisk file must therefore be somewhere under /tftpboot.
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For instance if elilo.conf contains:
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image=vmlinuz.249
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label=linux-up
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root=/dev/sdb2
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initrd=ramdisk/initrd.249
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and the user selects linux-up, then elilo will request a filename of 'ramdisk/initrd.249'
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which must therefore be under /tftpboot.
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e/ Getting IP address information
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When elilo is netbooted, the network filesystem module initializes some elilo variables
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with the information it received from the DHCP server. At a minimum, it received the
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IP address.
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The following information is stored in the elilo variables indicated below:
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- assigned IP address -> %I
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- assigned netmask -> %M
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- assigned domainname -> %D
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- assigned gateway -> %G
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These variables can be used to dynamically adjust the command line arguments passed to the kernel.
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See section 5/ below for an example.
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3/ Netbooting using PXE
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EFI has builtin support for PXE. In fact it first tries PXE and then default to DHCP
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when it does not find a valid PXE server.
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There is a PXE server package available from Linux/ia32 however this package does not
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have the necessary extensions to talk to the EFI side, at least on IA-64 platforms.
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There is no need for special options or compile time flags to get elilo to work
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with PXE instead of standard DHCP. When netbooted, elilo will automatically detect
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if it has been downloaded via PXE or DHCP and it will adujst how subsequent files
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are requested.
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You need a special version of the DHCPD server developed by the Internet Software Consortium
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(http://www.isc.org) with a special patch to add the PXE extensions. Unfortunately as of
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version 3.0xx, the patch has not yet made it into the official tree. It is supposed to show
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up in version 3.1 of the dhcpd server.
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In any case, the elilo package contains a simple example of how you can configure the
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/etc/dhcpd.conf file for a PXE-aware DHCP server using the extensions provided in the
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patch. You can look in examples/dhcpd-pxe.conf. The syntax is very different from
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a standard dhcpd server.
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The key elements to keep in mind are the PXE layers used by elilo to request the different
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files:
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Layer 0 : to get the name of the boot loader (elilo.efi)
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Layer 1 : to get the name of the elilo config file
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Layer 2 : to get the name of the kernel image
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There is an IMPORTANT distinction between those layers. The first two (0,1) and requested
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systematically whereas the last one is used only when the configuration file is not found, i.e.,
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what is the default kernel to boot. The actual files are STILL downloaded via TFTP. Therefore
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the TFTP server must also be configured (see previous section for more on this).
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a/ Getting the config file
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In this mode, elilo use the PXE layer 1 to get the config file to use. Therefore this must
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be set on the server side. Elilo will use the following sequence when
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looking for a config file:
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- use the name provide by the PXE server Layer 1 or
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- elilo-ia64.conf/elilo-ia32.conf or
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- elilo.conf
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Elilo stops at the first match. With PXE, elilo does not try to download a config file named after
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the assigned IP address as it does for DHCP because there is enough flexibility in the PXE server
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configuration to do this.
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b/ Getting the kernel image
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When there is no config file, elilo will use the kernel name returned by
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PXE layer 2. If it is not specified there, then it default to 'vmlinux'.
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c/ Getting the initial ramdisk
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The filename for the ramdisk MUST come from the config file. Elilo does not use a PXE layer
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to ask for a default name.
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d/ Getting IP address information
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When elilo is netbooted, the network filesystem module initializes some elilo variables
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with the information it received from the DHCP server. At a minimum, it received the
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IP address.
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The following information is stored in the variables indicated below:
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- assigned IP address -> %I
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- assigned netmask -> %M
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- assigned domainname -> %D
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- assigned gateway -> %G
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These variables can be used to dynamically adjust the command line arguments passed to the kernel.
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See section 5/ below for an example of how to use the variable.
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4/ Netbooting and using a local root filesystem
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This is the simplest configuration where the boot loader, its config file, the kernel
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and its optional initial ramdisk are downloaded from the network BUT the kernel uses
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the local disk for its root filesystem.
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For such configuration there is no special option necessary in the elilo config file.
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You simply need to specify which partition is the root partition. A typical elilo.conf
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would look as follows:
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image=vmlinuz.249
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label=linux-up
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root=/dev/sdb2
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initrd=ramdisk/initrd.249
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5/ Netbooting a diskless machine
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In this configuration we do not use the local machine's disks but instead rely on
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a remote server to provide the root filesystem via NFS.
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a/ Prerequisites
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By default most kernels shipped by distributors do not have the support
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compiled in for such configuration. This means that you need to recompile
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your own kernel. For instance, vmlinuz-2.4.9 as shipped in Redhat7.2 on
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both ia32 and ia64 platforms does not have the support builtin.
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To get this configuration to work, you need to have a kernel compiled
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such that it accepts a root filesystem over NFS (CONFIG_ROOT_NFS). This
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necessitates that the network stack be configured with the, so called,
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IP plug-and-play support (CONFIG_IP_PNP).
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b/ On the server side
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You need to have:
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- a NFS file server to provide the root filesystem.
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- a DHCP/PXE server to get the IP address and download the boot loader.
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Note that both do not need to be on the same machine. There is no special
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DHCP/PXE configuration option required to get this working. All you need
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is a kernel compiled with the options mentioned in a/. You also need to
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make sure that the permission on the NFS server are set appropriately
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to allow root access from the client machine (no_root_squash), see
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man 'exports' for more on this.
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c/ The elilo configuration file
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To boot successfully, the kernel needs to:
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- get an IP address and related networking parameters
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- contact the NFS server to get its root filesystem
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The 2.4.x kernel series provides several options to get the IP address:
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- it can do an internal DHCP request (CONFIG_IP_PNP_DHCP)
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- it can do an internal RARP request (CONFIG_IP_PNP_RARP)
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- it can do an internal BOOTP request (CONFIG_IP_PNP_BOOTP)
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- it can get the IP address from the command line
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The choice is up to you but it is a little bit stupid to go through a
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DHCP/BOOTP/RARP phase again when this is already done by the EFI firmware.
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So in this document, we describe how you can pass the information provided
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by EFI on the command line of the kernel.
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The syntax used to pass IP information on the command line is described in
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the kernel source tree in Documentation/nfsroot.txt. The option is called
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"ip=" and has the following syntax:
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ip=<client-ip>:<server-ip>:<gw-ip>:<netmask>:<hostname>:<device>:<autoconf>
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To designate the NFS server, you must use the "nfsroot=" option. It has the
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following syntax:
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nfsroot=[<server-ip>:]<root-dir>[,<nfs-options>]
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Depending on how you want your system configured you can hardcode the
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values of the parameters in the elilo configuration file. For instance:
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image=/vmlinuz
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label=nfsroot
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description="kernel with NFS root"
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append="root=/dev/nfs nfsroot=192.168.2.22:/ia64_rootfs ip=192.168.2.5::192.168.2.1:255.255.255.0:test_machine:eth0:on"
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Note the root=/dev/nfs indicates that the root filesystem is over NFS.
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This example works fine however, it is not very flexible because the IP
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address, the gateway, netmask and hostname are fixed and do not used the
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values EFI used to download the boot loader and the kernel.
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Elilo provides a way to dynamically customize the parameters passed on the
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command line using substitution variables. We describe those variables in
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elilovar.txt. The basic idea is to allow the parameters to use the dynamic
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information obtained by the DHCP/PXE phase.
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The network support in elilo defines several variables which contained
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network related information produced by the DHCP/PXE phase. The set of
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variable is:
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%I -> the IP address obtained by DHCP/PXE
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%M -> the netmask obtained by DHCP/PXE
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%G -> the gateway obtained by DHCP/PXE
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%H -> the hostname obtained by DHCP/PXE
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%D -> the domain name obtained by DHCP/PXE
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So, the configuration file can then be customized as follows:
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image=/vmlinuz
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label=nfsroot
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description="kernel with NFS root"
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append="root=/dev/nfs nfsroot=192.168.2.22:/ia64_rootfs ip=%I::%G:%M:%H:eth0:on"
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Not all parameters are necessary or even used by the kernel or the user level
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configuration scripts. There is no variable to substitute the NFS server or
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the mount point on that server.
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In the case of a DHCP boot, this type of customization makes sense only for
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the shared configuration file, elilo-ia64.conf/elilo-ia32.conf or elilo.conf.
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The configuration file based on the IP address (such as C0A80205.conf in this
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case) would provide another way of customizing parameters for a specific
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client (IP address). The same thing holds if the name of the config file
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returned by the PXE server is specific to a client.
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6/ References
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More information on the PXE protocol can be found at the following web site:
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http://developer.intel.com/ial/wfm/
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The source code for the standard and (possibly) PXE-enhanced DHCPD can be
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downloaded from:
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http://www.isc.org/
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