Newbe Fog installation issue
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@george1421 The pcap has been created, but where would the default location be and how can I easily copy it to a USB drive to post here?
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@mstumpo the file is created in the directory you were in when you ran the tcpdump command. If you still have that session open to the FOG server linux console then
ls -la
should show you the output file andpwd
will show you the path.To copy, since you are a windows person, get winscp and connect to your fog server using winscp. That will give you a windows file browser like experience to copy files.
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@george1421 pwd shows root@fogserver. I can’t find that folder via Winscp. When I go to root via Winscp I get permissions denied. Sorry for the slow reponse but not a Linux user.
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@mstumpo so with winscp, you logged in with the user root? if so you should be able to change to /root directory
If you can’t get it then try this from the console you ran the tcpdump command:
cp /root/output.pcap /tmp chmod 777 /tmp/output.pcap
That will copy that output file to the /tmp directory and then make it world readable. From there you should be able to pick it up with winscp in the /tmp directory.
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@george1421 While I am doing that, is there a utility that will allow me to RDP to the fogserver (it’s a physical PC) so I don’t have to go to the server room when dealing with issues?
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@mstumpo It depends on your OS if it has a linux gui or not. But at the very least you can get the free program called putty that will allow you to connect via a console to the FOG server.
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@george1421 I am using Windows 10 and was looking for a way to work like I would on a Windows server using whatever variant of Remote Desktop would work to connect to a Linux box. Putty is good for some command line things, but I like being lazy…
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@george1421 Here is the pcap file. Let me know when you have it so I can delete it from my end. https://www.dropbox.com/s/id6b7r5tscboni0/output.pcap?dl=0
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@mstumpo Look at the forum chat bubble in the upper right corner for a few more questions.
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The root of the issue was the OP missed both prerequisites (disable firewall and set selinux to permissive). Once that was done he was able to get the iPXE menu to appear.
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@george1421 Great you’ve been helping out so much here and figured it all out.
@mstumpo Marking this solved as I think the initial question(s) is/are solved. Please feel free to open new topics as you run into new issues. Good to keep topics clean so other people can find this and profit from the answers as well (details not lost in a 5 page topic).