PXE-E53: No boot filename recieved
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Because I cannot control the DHCP, so I did what it says in the article.
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@weidongyan Please run
sudo systemctl status dnsmasq
and post output here. As well I may ask you to post the full content of your dnsmasq configuration file. -
@Sebastian-Roth Status of dnsmasq:
● dnsmasq.service - LSB: DHCP and DNS server Loaded: loaded (/etc/init.d/dnsmasq; generated) Active: active (exited) since Tue 2019-07-30 16:02:47 EDT; 9min ago Docs: man:systemd-sysv-generator(8) Process: 4654 ExecStop=/etc/init.d/dnsmasq stop (code=exited, status=0/SUCCESS Process: 4655 ExecStart=/etc/init.d/dnsmasq start (code=exited, status=0/SUCCE Jul 30 16:02:47 genesicadmin-PowerEdge-840 systemd[1]: Starting LSB: DHCP and DN Jul 30 16:02:47 genesicadmin-PowerEdge-840 systemd[1]: Started LSB: DHCP and DNS
The content of the configuration:
# Don't function as a DNS server: port=0 # Log lots of extra information about DHCP transactions. log-dhcp # Set the root directory for files available via FTP. tftp-root=/tftpboot # The boot filename, Server name, Server Ip Address dhcp-boot=undionly.kpxe,,<192.168.88.40> # Disable re-use of the DHCP servername and filename fields as extra # option space. That's to avoid confusing some old or broken DHCP clients. dhcp-no-override # inspect the vendor class string and match the text to set the tag dhcp-vendorclass=BIOS,PXEClient:Arch:00000 dhcp-vendorclass=UEFI32,PXEClient:Arch:00006 dhcp-vendorclass=UEFI,PXEClient:Arch:00007 dhcp-vendorclass=UEFI64,PXEClient:Arch:00009 # Set the boot file name based on the matching tag from the vendor class (above) dhcp-boot=net:UEFI32,i386-efi/ipxe.efi,,<192.168.88.40> dhcp-boot=net:UEFI,ipxe.efi,,<192.168.88.40> dhcp-boot=net:UEFI64,ipxe.efi,,<192.168.88.40> # PXE menu. The first part is the text displayed to the user. The second is the timeout, in seconds. pxe-prompt="Booting FOG Client", 1 # The known types are x86PC, PC98, IA64_EFI, Alpha, Arc_x86, # Intel_Lean_Client, IA32_EFI, BC_EFI, Xscale_EFI and X86-64_EFI # This option is first and will be the default if there is no input from the user. pxe-service=X86PC, "Boot to FOG", undionly.kpxe pxe-service=X86-64_EFI, "Boot to FOG UEFI", ipxe.efi pxe-service=BC_EFI, "Boot to FOG UEFI PXE-BC", ipxe.efi dhcp-range=<192.168.88.40>,proxy
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@Sebastian-Roth I was having trouble with starting dnsmasq service, saying bad dhcp-range which pointed to the end of the configuration was something wrong. I tried to reinstall dnsmasq service and now it is working now. I am not sure if there is some connection between these two problem.
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@weidongyan said in PXE-E53: No boot filename recieved:
dhcp-range=<192.168.88.40>,proxy
Please check your config again. All the places where you have
<192.168.88.40>
should actually be192.168.88.40
without the tag characters!! -
@Sebastian-Roth said in PXE-E53: No boot filename recieved:
Please check your config again. All the places where you have <192.168.88.40> should actually be 192.168.88.40 without the tag characters!!
+1 That’s exactly the problem.
There is another tutorial on how to install dnsmasq service here: https://forums.fogproject.org/topic/12796/installing-dnsmasq-on-your-fog-server
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@george1421 Hi, George. Unfortunately, I still got the same problem here with that issue fixed. My configuration is like this
# Don't function as a DNS server: port=0 # Log lots of extra information about DHCP transactions. log-dhcp # Set the root directory for files available via FTP. tftp-root=/tftpboot # The boot filename, Server name, Server Ip Address dhcp-boot=undionly.kpxe,,192.168.88.40 # Disable re-use of the DHCP servername and filename fields as extra # option space. That's to avoid confusing some old or broken DHCP clients. dhcp-no-override # inspect the vendor class string and match the text to set the tag dhcp-vendorclass=BIOS,PXEClient:Arch:00000 dhcp-vendorclass=UEFI32,PXEClient:Arch:00006 dhcp-vendorclass=UEFI,PXEClient:Arch:00007 dhcp-vendorclass=UEFI64,PXEClient:Arch:00009 # Set the boot file name based on the matching tag from the vendor class (above) dhcp-boot=net:UEFI32,i386-efi/ipxe.efi,,192.168.88.40 dhcp-boot=net:UEFI,ipxe.efi,,192.168.88.40 dhcp-boot=net:UEFI64,ipxe.efi,,192.168.88.40 # PXE menu. The first part is the text displayed to the user. The second is the timeout, in seconds. pxe-prompt="Booting FOG Client", 1 # The known types are x86PC, PC98, IA64_EFI, Alpha, Arc_x86, # Intel_Lean_Client, IA32_EFI, BC_EFI, Xscale_EFI and X86-64_EFI # This option is first and will be the default if there is no input from the user. pxe-service=X86PC, "Boot to FOG", undionly.kpxe pxe-service=X86-64_EFI, "Boot to FOG UEFI", ipxe.efi pxe-service=BC_EFI, "Boot to FOG UEFI PXE-BC", ipxe.efi dhcp-range=192.168.88.40,proxy
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@george1421 Hi George, it worked!!! After I made update for dnsmasq. I was thinking about that dnsmasq did not use the configuration that I created to run. So I was updating it and it worked. Thank you.
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@weidongyan And you have confirmed that dnsmasq is running on the fog server
ps aux|grep dnsmasq
AND the pxe booting client are on the same subnet? -
@Sebastian-Roth Thank you Sebastian. I got it worked. Thank you so much for your patient help. I really appreciate.
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@george1421 I got some tricky ways to find if dnsmasq is using the configuration that we created. In the directory /etc/dnsmasq.d/, we created the configuration file, but if there is no other file called README, I think dnsmasq did not use the configuration file. But after I updated dnsmasq, there is a new file called README. And it works!!! I am not sure if my thoughts was right. But it got working in my case.