Two issues I'm having
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@BrendoJohnso You have FOG 1.2.0 running on Ubuntu 14.04 right?
If so that part is setup, all you need to do is setup / change your dhcp settings. If you are doing this test setup in a home lab then there are a few other things we could setup. Home dhcp servers (typically your ISP router) doesn’t have the options needed to pxe boot computers. This isn’t a problem either, we just need to know a bit more of your setup.
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@george1421 Thank you very much makes it a lot better I’m going to see like you said about updating the Fog version quickly to 1.3.4
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@Tom-Elliott It is working perfectly with the imports now thank you so much just saved me from manually entering 600 hosts
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@BrendoJohnso That is find if you want to upgrade. Its not a bad idea.
I can tell you the normal work flow for fog is this.
(new computer)->PXE boot into FOG->Select Registration Menu->Register->Image deployment.
You don’t need to pre-register computers as you are doing with your spreadsheet. You can do it that way, its just extra work for little value.
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@george1421 My higher-ups would like to have them all on file beforehand or i would do it that way but thank you
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@george1421 I managed to get the settings and everything changed for the DHCP server but when i Pxe boot now it says that TFTP has “open timeout” and still does not get to Fog
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@BrendoJohnso Have you checked firewalls on the FOG Server?
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@BrendoJohnso There are 2 things you need to do to the FOG host server when FOG is installed.
- Disable the firewall (iptables)
- Change selinux config to permissive.
beyond that.
On the fog server linux console, if you key in the following commandsudo netstat -an|grep 69
that should give you an output that looks like this:# sudo netstat -an|grep 69 udp 0 0 0.0.0.0:69 0.0.0.0:*
That tells us the tftp server is running (what the client needs to pick up the undionly.kpxe file)
If you are unsure if the firewall is disabled, post the output of this command
sudo iptables -L
If your output looks like this then your firewall is off
# sudo iptables -L Chain INPUT (policy ACCEPT) target prot opt source destination Chain FORWARD (policy ACCEPT) target prot opt source destination Chain OUTPUT (policy ACCEPT) target prot opt source destination
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@george1421 The firewall one looks the same so its off
However the tftp one says this
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@BrendoJohnso What’s output with:
sudo systemctl status tftpd-hpa
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@Tom-Elliott its saying that’s an unknown command
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@BrendoJohnso Maybe:
service tftpd-hpa status
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@Tom-Elliott tftpd-hpa start/running
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@BrendoJohnso So looking at the picture of the
netstat -an | grep 69
command, I don’t see anything showing “network” outgoing stuff.Maybe:
ifconfig
Might help us out?
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@BrendoJohnso can you edit the
/etc/default/tftpd-hpa
Change the line that reads as “:69”
Make it read as: “0.0.0.0:69”
Then restart the tftpd-hpa service with:
sudo service tftpd-hpa restart
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@Tom-Elliott i restarted the service and now its booting correctly and im creating our first test image thank you very much saved my life
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I think that’s a bit “extreme”. I would certainly hope FOG is not a “life or death” situation.
(At least I would hope people aren’t threatening other’s lives over it).
Glad we could help though.