Adding computer to FOG
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@george1421 I did it again. I see it shows 5.6.18 as version but I only see the loopback address when running IP a s Screenshot
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@JimmyJ0516 Ok I did find something in bugzilla (ref in previous post) that the fix will be in 5.9. So here is bzImage593RT kernel. Please do the same as in the past.
uname -r
should give you 5.9.3https://drive.google.com/file/d/1cUIzafHmLfqyBf1KxF_M-qF00SsArx0N/view?usp=sharing
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@george1421 If this doesn’t work, do you have an add on network card you can temp install in this workstation? if so insert it and then still pxe boot from the onboard nic but have this secondary nic connected. when it starts up in debug mode then
ip a
and see if you can see the secondary nic. If you can, then give root a password like hello usingpasswd
. This password will be reset when rebooted. Then connect to the target computer with user root and hello with winscp. Copy out /var/log/messages and then upload that to a file share site and post the link here. I want to look through that because there has to be a clue of why even on 5.9.3 -
@george1421 You’re the man lol. Here I can see that 5.9.3 and I see both the loopback and the NIC.
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@JimmyJ0516 Well that is good news. You can use this kernel for all systems by leaving it in the global setting, or if we discover strangeness you can reset the global setting back to bzImage and then set the kernel property in the host definition for each of these MSI boards. We have absolutely no experience with this kernel so I can’t tell you if its going to work or fail miserably. YMMV
Just remember when you walk the bleeding edge, sometimes you get a little bloody.
Let us know how imaging goes with the 5.9.x kernel. I heard that 5.10.x will be a LTS kernel soon so then FOG will make that as an add on option once it has been tested out.
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@george1421 it worked flawlessly I have all of them up and running now thanks again.
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@Developers to get this one-off kernel I started with the kernel config file for 1.5.9 and copied it into the linux 5.9.3 build tree. I updated CONFIG_EXTRA_FIRMWARE field to include the firmware for the rt8125 nic card and built the kernel
rtl_nic/rtl8125b-1.fw rtl_nic/rtl8125b-2.fw rtl_nic/rtl8125a-3.fw
No other modifications were made to settings. I did open the .config file and then save it right away so the menuconfig program would do a sanity check on the .config settings. We needed to use 5.9.x series to support the B version of this network adapter. While the previous kernels supported this adapter it was only the A version.
One thing is if you need to compile 5.8.x kernels or later you will need gcc 4.9, which meant I need to spin up a new centos 8.2 system to build the kernel.
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@george1421 said in Adding computer to FOG:
to get this one-off kernel I started with the kernel config file for 1.5.9 and copied it into the linux 5.9.3 build tree. I updated CONFIG_EXTRA_FIRMWARE field to include the firmware for the rt8125 nic card and built the kernel
Thanks for working this out! As far as I see we can add those three firmware blobs to our official kernel - be it 4.19 based or later.
Update: Just added.
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@Sebastian-Roth said in Adding computer to FOG:
official kernel - be it 4.19 based or later
Yes you can but its not necessary in this case because it was the combination of the firmware blobs AND 5.9.x to get support for the 8125B version.
See the RHEL Bugzilla report here: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1854314 that is what sent me down the 5.9 path, because 5.8.x didn’t work even with the firmware. The OP found this in his syslog in FOS
unknown chip XID 641
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@george1421 Ahhh, missed that part. But nonetheless I think it doesn’t hurt to have it added even now so we don’t forget as soon as we update the kernel to 5.9 and later.