/default.ipxe... Connection timed out | fog_1.0.1 | Ubuntu 14.04 LTS | Winxp32 Vbox Client
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I HAVE disabled selinux in /etc/selinux/config no change
all the passwords are the default. I’ve made no changes
Yes, all disabled services are not running, all required services are running.
TO repeat: I CAN retrieve the files using tftp on the commandline so I know tftp is working. I can netboot using the older pxe boot menus so I know that dhcp is configured correctly. This is on my home lan right now until I get the bugs worked out then I will install at work. The vbox machine and my laptop will find the dhcp server and start network boot until it gets to the /default.ixpe… stage then it’s timeout errors. -
[quote=“PaganLinuxGeek, post: 42484, member: 2226”]I HAVE disabled selinux in /etc/selinux/config no change
all the passwords are the default. I’ve made no changes
Yes, all disabled services are not running, all required services are running.
TO repeat: I CAN retrieve the files using tftp on the commandline so I know tftp is working. I can netboot using the older pxe boot menus so I know that dhcp is configured correctly. This is on my home lan right now until I get the bugs worked out then I will install at work. The vbox machine and my laptop will find the dhcp server and start network boot until it gets to the /default.ixpe… stage then it’s timeout errors.[/quote]Just trying to cover the simple stuff. I overlook little things sometimes.
You said you were running the v-machine on your laptop using 3 adapters? One is an add-on? an HP Pavilion laptop.
Is the system you’re trying to network boot with virtualized, or is it that HP Pavilion itself? Have you tried disabling the add-on interface?
Have you looked in the CMOS settings for the HP Pavilion (if that’s what you’re attempting to netboot), there are various settings on some systems for how a system attempts to net-boot. In a conversation with Tom (the senior developer), he was talking about how the current revision uses newer methods, so your CMOS settings might work with older iPXE but not the newer PXE methods… just a stab in the dark.
Because you can’t find any errors anywhere and all the services are properly configured, I’m reaching all over the place for ideas.
It’s probably something simple.
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The machine running FOG has 3 nics and is hosting FOG in the HOST OS it is not in a vm.
I have VirtualBox 4.3 installed and am using it to test fog operation.
Thinking that the issue might actually be with vbox, I connected my pavillion g7 laptop via ethernet and attempted network boot.
The laptop was able to network boot using the older (pxe) method, but encountered the same error as vbox when attempting to boot using the newer (ipxe) method. I am able to do this because my dnsmasq.conf has entries that create a menu with default being ipxe boot (new method) Do you recall what particular bios settings the devel mentioned? -
[quote=“PaganLinuxGeek, post: 42489, member: 2226”]The machine running FOG has 3 nics and is hosting FOG in the HOST OS it is not in a vm.
I have VirtualBox 4.3 installed and am using it to test fog operation.
Thinking that the issue might actually be with vbox, I connected my pavillion g7 laptop via ethernet and attempted network boot.
The laptop was able to network boot using the older (pxe) method, but encountered the same error as vbox when attempting to boot using the newer (ipxe) method. I am able to do this because my dnsmasq.conf has entries that create a menu with default being ipxe boot (new method) Do you recall what particular bios settings the devel mentioned?[/quote]Copied this stuff from some IM history.
[FONT=arial][COLOR=#222222]kkpxe is safer for buggy bios’s and should work on all working models too[/COLOR][/FONT]
[FONT=arial][COLOR=#222222]so the dhcp-boot=undionly.kpxe[/COLOR][/FONT]
[FONT=arial][COLOR=#222222]andpxe-service=X86PC, “Boot form network”, undionly[/COLOR][/FONT]
[FONT=arial][COLOR=#222222] [/COLOR][/FONT]
[FONT=arial][COLOR=#222222]you’ll likely need a copy of whatever file to undionly.0[/COLOR][/FONT]
[FONT=arial][COLOR=#222222]so[/COLOR][/FONT]
[FONT=arial][COLOR=#222222]cp undionly.kkpxe undionly.0the undionly file comes from /tftpboot[/COLOR][/FONT]
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Have you tried a standard [I][SIZE=12px]dnsmasq.conf [/SIZE][/I]configuration ?
Maybe there is a typo in there? You were saying you customized it to allow use of the older method.
This is what mine looks like:
[CODE]port=0
log-dhcp
tftp-root=/tftpboot
dhcp-boot=undionly.kpxe
dhcp-option=17,/images
dhcp-option=vendor:PXEClient,6,2b
dhcp-no-override
pxe-prompt=“Press F8 for boot menu”, 3
pxe-service=X86PC, “Boot from network” undionly
pxe-service=X86PC, “Boot from local hard disk”, 0
dhcp-range=x.x.x.x,proxy[/CODE]and that’s actually located here:/etc/dnsmasq.d/ltsp.conf
You said it works in the dnsmasq.conf file though. -
I tried the undionly.kkpxe file to the same results…
I HAVE tried the standard FOG 1.2.0 configuration for dnsmasq as well as the older style (fog 0.32)
The dnsmasq.conf shown below has a menu that alllows me to choose which
My gut feeling is that something is preventing the connection to tftp when the client computer loads undionly, and follows the scripted instructions… However since I dont have the beta versions or the source I am at a loss to see what the potential causes are…my machine has three NICS:
eno1 = 192.168.1.116
enp4s0 = 192.168.1.115
enp7s0 = 192.168.1.107-----my current /etc/dnsmasq.conf file…-----
tftp-root=/tftpboot
#enable-tftp
#dhcp-boot=pxelinux.0
dhcp-option=vendor:PXEClient,6,2b
dhcp-no-override
#pxe-prompt=“Press F8 for boot menu…”, 3
#pxe-service=X86PC, “Boot from network”, pxelinux
#pxe-service=X86PC, “Boot from local hard disk”, 0
dhcp-range=192.168.1.116,proxy#port=0
log-dhcp
dhcp-boot=undionly.kpxe,192.168.1.116
dhcp-option=17,/images
dhcp-option=pxe,66,192.168.1.116
pxe-prompt=“Press F8 for boot menu”, 15
pxe-service=X86PC,“iPXE Boot (Newer for Secure Boots)”, undionly
pxe-service=X86PC,“PXE Boot (Older machines)”, pxelinux
pxe-service=X86PC,“Boot from local hard disk”, 0
interface=eno1,enp7s0,enp4s0,loI have verified that the httpd, xinetd, and dnsmasq services are started, and firewalld is NOT.
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Bump.
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Still working on it, with no success.
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[quote=“PaganLinuxGeek, post: 42573, member: 2226”]Still working on it, with no success.[/quote]
So, out of curiosity (and some valid reason to bump this thread), I checked the Wiki’s Working device & Problematic Device list. The pavillion g7 is not listed in either.
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Well I wouldn’t want to list it as NOT WORKING until I can test it on a known functional FOG setup…
Anyone have one running in the panhandle of Florida? -
Where I’m more confused, is this still based on 1.0.1? If so, can you, at the least, try more updated ipxe files?
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It is the latest stable release 1.2.0 running on Fedora Workstation 21 it was NOT an upgrade but a new installation as I had recently formatted and installed fedora 21.
I am using dnsmasq to proxy the dhcp options needed to network boot clients.
I HAVE check httpd logs and the clients do NOT progress to the point of requesting files via http
I did have logging enabled on dnsmasq to verify proper operation but have since disabled it again.
This setup is running on the HOST OS and NOT in a vm. I have been attempting to use a vbox vm to test this as well as my personal laptop a pavillion g7
Please let me know what other information you need and I will endeavor to provide it. I can ssh into this machine running at home and manipulate a virtualbox vm via x over ssh. -
[CODE][root@jezebelle ~]# cat /var/log/foginstall.log
Script started on Tue 17 Feb 2015 02:22:34 PM CST
Fedora..#######:. ..,#,.. .::##::.
.:###### .:;####:…;#;…
…##… …##;,;##::::.##…
,# …##…##:::## …::
## .::###,##. . ##.::#.:######::.
…##:::###::…#. … .#…#. #…#:::.
…:####:… …##…##::## … #
# . …##:,;##;:::#: … ##…
.# . .:;####;::::.##:::;#:…
# …:;###…###########################################
FOG
Free Computer Imaging Solution
http://www.fogproject.org/
Developers:
Chuck Syperski
Jian Zhang
Peter Gilchrist
Tom Elliott
GNU GPL Version 3
###########################################
Version: 1.2.0 Installer/Updater
What version of Linux would you like to run the installation for?
1) Redhat Based Linux (Redhat, CentOS, Mageia) 2) Debian Based Linux (Debian, Ubuntu, Kubuntu, Edubuntu)
Choice: [1]
Staring Redhat / CentOS Installation.
…/lib/redhat/functions.sh: line 1: n#: command not foundFOG Server installation modes:
* Normal Server: (Choice N)
This is the typical installation type and
will install all FOG components for you on this
machine. Pick this option if you are unsure what to pick.* Storage Node: (Choice S) This install mode will only install the software required to make this server act as a node in a storage group
More information:
http://www.fogproject.org/wiki/index.php?title=InstallationModesWhat type of installation would you like to do? [N]
What is the IP address to be used by this FOG Server? [192.168.1.116]
Would you like to setup a router address for the DHCP server? [Y/n] n
Would you like to setup a DNS address for the DHCP server and client boot image? [Y/n] n
Would you like to change the default network interface from eth0?
If you are not sure, select No. [y/N]nWould you like to use the FOG server for DHCP service? [Y/n] n
This version of FOG has internationalization support, would
you like to install the additional language packs? [y/N] nWould you like to donate computer resources to the FOG Project
to mine cryptocurrency? This will only take place during active
tasks and should NOT have any impact on performance of your
imaging or other tasks. The currency will be used to pay for
FOG Project expenses and to support the core developers working
on the project. For more information see:http://fogproject.org/?q=cryptocurrency
Would you like to donate computer resources to the FOG Project? [y/N] n
#####################################################################
FOG now has everything it needs to setup your server, but please
understand that this script will overwrite any setting you may
have setup for services like DHCP, apache, pxe, tftp, and NFS.It is not recommended that you install this on a production system
as this script modifies many of your system settings.This script should be run by the root user on Redhat or with sudo on Ubuntu.
** Notice ** Redhat users will need to disable SELinux and iptables in
order to use FOG
Please see our wiki for more information at http://www.fogproject.org/wikiHere are the settings FOG will use:
Base Linux: Redhat
Detected Linux Distribution: Fedora
Installation Type: Normal Server
Server IP Address: 192.168.1.116
DHCP router Address:
DHCP DNS Address:
Interface: eth0
Using FOG DHCP: 0
Internationalization: 0
Donate: 0DHCP will NOT be setup but you must setup your current DHCP server to use FOG for PXE services. On a Linux DHCP server you must set: next-server On a Windows DHCP server you must set: option 066 & 067 Option 066 is the IP of the FOG Server: (e.g. 192.168.1.116) Option 067 is the undionly.kpxe file: (e.g. undionly.kpxe)
Are you sure you wish to continue (Y/N) y
Installation Started…
Installing required packages, if this fails
make sure you have an active internet connection.-
Packages to be installed: httpd php php-cli php-common php-gd php-mysql mysql mysql-server tftp-server nfs-utils vsftpd net-tools wget xinetd tar gzip make m4 gcc gcc-c++ lftp
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Skipping package: httpd (Already installed)
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Installing package: php
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Skipping package: php-cli (Already installed)
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Skipping package: php-common (Already installed)
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Installing package: php-gd
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Installing package: php-mysql
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Skipping package: mariadb (Already installed)
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Skipping package: mariadb-server (Already installed)
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Skipping package: tftp-server (Already installed)
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Skipping package: nfs-utils (Already installed)
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Installing package: vsftpd
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Skipping package: net-tools (Already installed)
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Skipping package: wget (Already installed)
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Installing package: xinetd
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Skipping package: tar (Already installed)
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Skipping package: gzip (Already installed)
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Skipping package: make (Already installed)
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Skipping package: m4 (Already installed)
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Skipping package: gcc (Already installed)
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Installing package: gcc-c++
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Skipping package: lftp (Already installed)
Confirming package installation.
- Checking package: httpd…OK
- Checking package: php…OK
- Checking package: php-cli…OK
- Checking package: php-common…OK
- Checking package: php-gd…OK
- Checking package: php-mysql…OK
- Checking package: mysql…OK
- Checking package: mysql-server…OK
- Checking package: tftp-server…OK
- Checking package: nfs-utils…OK
- Checking package: vsftpd…OK
- Checking package: net-tools…OK
- Checking package: wget…OK
- Checking package: xinetd…OK
- Checking package: tar…OK
- Checking package: gzip…OK
- Checking package: make…OK
- Checking package: m4…OK
- Checking package: gcc…OK
- Checking package: gcc-c++…OK
- Checking package: lftp…OK
Configuring services.
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Setting up fog user…OK
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Setting up and starting MySQL…Note: Forwarding request to ‘systemctl enable mysqld.service’.
Created symlink from /etc/systemd/system/multi-user.target.wants/mysqld.service to /usr/lib/systemd/system/mysqld.service.
Created symlink from /etc/systemd/system/multi-user.target.wants/mariadb.service to /usr/lib/systemd/system/mariadb.service.
OK -
Backing up user reports…OK
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Did you leave the mysql password blank during install? (Y/n) y
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Setting up and starting Apache Web Server…Note: Forwarding request to ‘systemctl enable httpd.service’.
Created symlink from /etc/systemd/system/multi-user.target.wants/httpd.service to /usr/lib/systemd/system/httpd.service.
OK
You still need to install/update your database schema.
This can be done by opening a web browser and going to:
Press [Enter] key when database is updated/installed.
- Configuring Fresh Clam…Skipped (See wiki for installation instructions)
- Setting up storage…OK
- Setting up and starting NFS Server…Note: Forwarding request to ‘systemctl enable rpcbind.service’.
Note: Forwarding request to ‘systemctl enable nfs.service’.
Failed to execute operation: No such file or directory
OK - Setting up and starting DHCP Server…Skipped
- Setting up and starting TFTP and PXE Servers…Note: Forwarding request to ‘systemctl enable xinetd.service’.
OK - Setting up and starting VSFTP Server…Note: Forwarding request to ‘systemctl enable vsftpd.service’.
Created symlink from /etc/systemd/system/multi-user.target.wants/vsftpd.service to /usr/lib/systemd/system/vsftpd.service.
OK - Setting up sudo settings…OK
- Setting up FOG Snapins…OK
- Setting up and building UDPCast…OK
- Installing init scripts…OK
- Setting up FOG Services…OK
- Starting FOG Multicast Management Server…OK
- Starting FOG Image Replicator Server…OK
- Starting FOG Task Scheduler Server…OK
- Setting up FOG Utils…OK
Would you like to notify the FOG group about this installation?
* This information is only used to help the FOG group determine
if FOG is being used. This information helps to let us know
if we should keep improving this product.Send notification? (Y/N)y
- Thank you, sending notification…Done
Setup complete!
You can now login to the FOG Management Portal using
the information listed below. The login information
is only if this is the first install.This can be done by opening a web browser and going to:
http://192.168.1.116/fog/management Default User: Username: fog Password: password
Script done on Tue 17 Feb 2015 02:53:15 PM CST
[/CODE] -
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Note: Forwarding request to ‘systemctl enable nfs.service’.
Failed to execute operation: No such file or directoryOk, Fedora 21 support wasn’t formally added to FOG till SVN 2920(ish), Which isn’t part of 1.2.0
I’d highly recommend trying SVN 2920, 2922, or the latest SVN
I’d do a fresh install, (OS and the whole 9 yards) and follow along with those Fedora 21 instructions.
The commands to install a specific SVN are in the instructions.
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personally, i recommend 2948. I’ve had no problems with it. the latest svn is bleeding edge and might be a bit glitchy at the moment.
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[COLOR=#ffffff]Mostly cause I’m an idiot or something…apparently[/COLOR]
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[root@jezebelle ~]# systemctl status nfs.service
● nfs-server.service - NFS server and services
Loaded: loaded (/usr/lib/systemd/system/nfs-server.service; enabled)
Active: active (exited) since Tue 2015-02-24 08:53:22 CST; 27min ago
Process: 1217 ExecStart=/usr/sbin/rpc.nfsd $RPCNFSDARGS (code=exited, status=0/SUCCESS)
Process: 1215 ExecStartPre=/usr/sbin/exportfs -r (code=exited, status=0/SUCCESS)
Main PID: 1217 (code=exited, status=0/SUCCESS)
CGroup: /system.slice/nfs-server.service
[root@jezebelle ~]# showmount -e 192.168.1.116
Export list for 192.168.1.116:
/images/dev *
/images *
[root@jezebelle ~]# -
[quote=“Wayne Workman, post: 42679, member: 28155”]Note: Forwarding request to ‘systemctl enable nfs.service’.
Failed to execute operation: No such file or directoryOk, Fedora 21 support wasn’t formally added to FOG till SVN 2920(ish), Which isn’t part of 1.2.0
I’d highly recommend trying SVN 2920, 2922, or the latest SVN
I’d do a fresh install, (OS and the whole 9 yards) and follow along with those Fedora 21 instructions.
The commands to install a specific SVN are in the instructions.[/quote]
You are recommending a format and fresh install of the OS? then install a development version of the software? I just want to make sure I understand you correctly. Before you respond please see my post just prior to this showing that nfs is active and exporting the images and dev directories
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[quote=“PaganLinuxGeek, post: 42686, member: 2226”]You are recommending a format and fresh install of the OS? then install a development version of the software? I just want to make sure I understand you correctly. Before you respond please see my post just prior to this showing that nfs is active and exporting the images and dev directories[/quote]
Because everything else that was tried hasn’t worked & because you don’t have a functioning 1.2.0 FOG machine, I think that re-installing the OS and going with SVN 2922 (or 2948) is very safe and probably the best next-step.
The installation script alone in 2922 does so much small tweaking for Fedora 21, it really vastly cut down on the things that had to be done to get FOG working on Fedora 21. As you did, I tried putting 1.2.0 on Fedora 21 originally; I documented what I did. My instructions were a mile long, consisted of over a dozen web page links, several dozen commands, notes, etc. I didn’t even know exactly what commands were making it work… But I did get uni-cast working on my own. Tom got me straightened out further with multicasting, and other issues. We worked together so he could fine tune the installation script for Fedora 21.
After SVN 2920, my instructions dropped from 12(ish) pages to six simple, uncomplicated pages.
We know beyond doubt that SVN 2922 works on Fedora 21, and have instructions written specifically for this.
If you don’t want to do a re-install or use the SVN, maybe Tom will help.
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Ugh. this machine doubles as my workstation. Lots of work to re-install this beast… Where can I get svn 2922? Perhaps I can round up a older alower machine to install 21 on and then this developmental version.
If I knew what the failed actions were I could likely ammend or perform them manually. I had to do that with 0.32 on fedora 19, and 20…