Very slow boot.php and bzImage during pxe boot
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@rodluz said in Very slow boot.php and bzImage during pxe boot:
I originally had the kernel version using 4.19.64. Updated it last week to 5.10.34. Just updated it to 5.10.50 today and still having the same issue.
At this stage it’s definitely not the FOS Linux kernel causing the slowness. So swapping that out does not make a difference.
You need to swap out the iPXE binaries (manual download from github) or update to the latest dev-branch version as we see you colleague’s FOG server.
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@sebastian-roth Thanks for the help. I prefer to swap out the iPXE binaries first and see if that helps.
Do I just copy those linked files into
/tftpboot
then change ownership tofogproject:root
andchmod 655
the files, or is there something else I need to do? -
@rodluz said in Very slow boot.php and bzImage during pxe boot:
Do I just copy those linked files into /tftpboot then change ownership to fogproject:root and chmod 655 the files, or is there something else I need to do?
Yeah, that should do. Though I’d do
chmod 644
as they don’t need execution. But would work either way. -
@sebastian-roth Okay so I did that and it’s still acting the same way.
I guess the next step would be to update to the dev-branch?
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@rodluz No, from the description of the issue I am pretty sure dev-branch won’t help you because you’ve already used the iPXE binaries from dev-branch.
First let’s make sure they are in place. When you PXE boot the machine take a close look at the iPXE header printed on screen. In does print a version number in between braces, like this:
iPXE ... (g....) ...
- always starts with the letter ‘g’. Note that down and post that here or take a picture of you are not sure what to look at.Second ask your colleague what kind of DHCP server she’s using and what options for filename (DHCP option 67) is set.
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@sebastian-roth Okay so this is the whole output
>>>Start PXE over IPv4. Station IP address is 10.28.68.52 Server IP address is 10.27.70.100 NBP filename is ipxe.efi NBP filesize is 1060352 Bytes Downloading NBP file... Succeed to download NBP file. iPXE initializing devices...ok iPXE 1.21.1+ (gc64d) -- Open source Network Boot Firmware -- http://ipxe.org Features: DNS FTP HTTP HTTPS iSCSI NFS TFTP SRP VLAN AoE EFI Menu Configuring (net0 30:24:A9:...)..... ok Received DHCP answer on interface net0 tftp://10.27.70.100/default.ipxe... ok http://10.27.70.100/fog/service/ipxe/boot.php... ok Booting... (Press ESC to access the menu)
The iPXE version is newer, because it used to be
1.20.1+
before the change.I was the one that set up the DHCP setting for my colleague’s and my VLANs so they are both
ipxe.efi
.
I checked to make sure that nothing is broken between VLANs and switches and that everything is Gigabit.
I also tried disabling theADVANCE MENU LOGIN
&PXE MENU HIDDEN
just to check and still same issue. I went into the FOG Configuration and updated the MAC addresses too but no luck. -
@rodluz said in Very slow boot.php and bzImage during pxe boot:
(gc64d)
OK that’s definitely the current iPXE version I pushed to dev-branch not long ago.
Thought that you might have different DHCP options set that might explain the issue. But doesn’t look like it.
Hmm, you can try updating to dev-branch but I can’t think of a change we pushed since 1.5.9 that would explain what you describe. Anyhow, give it a go.
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@sebastian-roth I will have to wait until late next month to update. I have to image around 200 computers in the coming weeks so I’ll leave those laptops as the last devices to image in case something breaks with the update.
Thanks for all your help, I will reply to the thread after I update the server. -
Yo!
DId you find any solution for this!
I am fogging a batch of laptop , everything going fine so far
But I’m stuck on 2 dynabook, I’ve fogged 3 so far no problem , but now I have 2 dynabook side by side , 1 has completed fog deploy image and the other one at each time I boot for PXE it stuck at bzimage going up verrrryyy slow and cant reach 100%
Any idea?
Thanks
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@Warsonix I really needed to get those laptops imaged asap, so I just used a USB-C to Ethernet adapter on those and it worked. I haven’t touched those laptops since then.
Funnily enough, I have to re-image them next week, so I’ll let you know what happens.
I have done a lot of changes to my FOG server since then, so it’s really going to depend on your setup too.