Fog .032 and HP8000 elite
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@Troye-Johnson Just so I’m clear you are running dnsmasq (proxyDHCP) on your switch?
Is the fog server in the same subnet as the target computers?
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dnsmasq (proxyDHCP) is installed on the fog server. The switch is using IP-helper-Addresses to delver and ip address for pre-boot. dnsmasq only serves as a proxydhcp server not the actual dhcp server it is the switch that actually gives out the preboot ipaddress. no they are not on the same subnet, but in dnsmasq config i placed the x.x.x.x,proxy,255.255.0.0 in order for it to work across subnets.
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@Troye-Johnson Since the target system and proxyDHCP server are not on the same subnet, the proxyDHCP server will never hear the dhcp request since it is broadcast based within the broadcast domain. Since you are using a dhcp-helper/dhcp-relay service the easy fix is to add the proxyDHCP server as the last dhcp server in the dhcp-helper service. You don’t want the proxyDHCP server to answer an address, but you want it to be aware of the dhcp request and where to send the proxy reply.
It sounds complicated, and it is a little. But you also have a bit of a complicated setup too.
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@george1421 the thing is it is the only server that is used currently for pre-boot dhcp (the only one turned on in the list). Maybe if I give more details the fog server is on the .1 subnet so 192.168.1.x and the client pc is on the 192.168.11.x subnet the dnsmasq proxy dhcp is configured to allow it to work across any 192.168.x.x subnet so the machine gets an ipaddress then loads the to Ipxe and after it gets to ipxe it configures the nix and says ok and then ask to enter the tftp server.
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@Troye-Johnson How ever it is setup, what the issue is… the target computer is not getting dhcp option 66. How you get that value to the target is up to you. Once dhcp option 66 (and 67) are sent to the client it should boot into the iPXE FOG menu.
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@Troye-Johnson said in Fog .032 and HP8000 elite:
When trying preboot into fog it starts to ask me to input the tftp server.
This is typically caused by having two or more DHCP servers serving that broadcast domain, and one or more of them not being configured correctly for fog.
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So i figured out that ipxe.krn was causing my “enter tftpboot” issues for some reason with the old ipxe.krn the issue did not happen but also did not contain the drivers I needed for the nic of the HP8000 Elite desktops I was working on. The new ipxe.krn had the correct drivers but refused to pass the tftpboot server information.So I tried the ipxe.krn from ipxe.iso located on the site http://ipxe.org/download and it worked for me. I no longer need to enter the address and i was able to inventory the pc.
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@Troye-Johnson I’m glad you have it worked out.
It would be in your best interest, when you have time, to spin up a new fog 1.3.0 server if you plan on supporting new hardware/operating systems. 0.3X is past end of life for support from the developers and others who use fog. You can do what you like, but just know you will be better served with the latest enhancements in FOG / hardware / and Operating Systems by using FOG 1.3.0.
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@george1421 I did have to upgrade to the latest version of fog for this all to work. i am currently on Running Version 1.3.0-RC-1
SVN Revision: 5936. Thanks you all for your help. -
@Troye-Johnson Two points then.
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You might want to refresh you svn/git and then install 1.3.0-rc4 (or 5). There was about 20 things that where fixed in RC3 alone.
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If you are on 1.3.0-rc1we should not be talking about pxe.krn at all. For bios you should have undionly.kpxe or undionly.kkpxe and for uefi systems ipxe.efi. If you are using some legacy iPXE driver or iPXE that doesn’t come from FOG you WILL have issues sooner or later.
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@george1421 said in Fog .032 and HP8000 elite:
you are on 1.3.0-rc1we should not be talking about pxe.krn at all. For bios you should have undionly.kpxe or undionly.kkpxe and for uefi systems ipxe.efi.
+1,000
That’s what I was thinking since it was first mentioned.