FOG DHCP problems with possible printer interference?
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@afriedman Nope, the program will simulate a computer booting up requesting PXE information and capture who responds and with what.
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@Joe-Schmitt Ahhhhhh okay. I’ll let you know the results very soon!
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@Joe-Schmitt Side note: it will need to capture at least two if not more offers from dhcp servers. If we are running dnsmasq you will get two offers right away one from the dhcp server and one from the dhcpProxy server.
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The bottom image is the first half, and the top image is the second half.
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@Joe-Schmitt You weren’t expecting that outcome? Lol interesting.
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@Joe-Schmitt Oh alright. Well it’s a pretty neat program.
@george1421 I’m going to try to talk to Cisco Technical Support either today or tomorrow about having them remote into our switch and turn on one of the fast STP protocols. I’ll let you know the results, unless you’d prefer I do something else before talking to Cisco.
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@afriedman As I said, if you place the dumbest switch you can find (that’s still functional) between your cisco switch and the target computer. Then pxe boot the target computer, if you can get to the fog menu where you couldn’t without the dumb switch, then its most likely a spanning tree issue.
I can say typically they would turn on one of the fast STP protocols by default (just for this reason). There have been documented cases of target computers not getting dhcp addresses because of this.
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@afriedman We’ll just taking with Joe through chat. What he’s seeing and what I thought I say was too different things.
It would be helpful if you can capture a pcap of the pxe booting process.
Please do the following (assuming your fog server, dhcp server, and pxe booting clinet are on the same subnet).
- Install tcpdump on your fog server
- Launch the tcpdump program with this command
tcpdump -w output.pcap port 67 or port 68 or port 69 or port 4011
- PXE boot the target computer until you get the error
- Press ctrl-c to exit out of the tcpdump program
- Upload the pcap file here for review.
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Amazing!! I just used a dumb switch in between that trouble computer, and it booted to FOG INSTANTLY, no hesitation.
Still want me to install tcpdump and follow your instructions for it?
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@afriedman Yes please that would help understand the data that joe’s script is spitting out.
But you know you need to talk with your network group about the switch configuration too, we kind of have two threads running inside this one.
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Sounds good. I’ll try to run that when I do some work from home tonight.
Yeah I’m waiting on some responses from her. I believe I’ve narrowed it down to 1 specific cluster of computers (about 24-28 of them) in our building. All other 90% of computers see the FOG server with no problems.
I’ll post an update when I can.
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Sorry about the delayed response, I was out sick yesterday.
Do you want me to PXE boot a computer that isn’t booting to FOG with the tcpdump program? Or PXE boot a computer that is working with FOG?
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@afriedman Thinking about it a bit more, lets hold off on the tcpdump. I think you have a path forward there. Collecting a pcap would be nice to know but not need to know.
IF you are still having issues after you get the spanning tree issues resolved then we can go down that path.
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Sounds good. I’ll update when I have more information.