ipxe.org timeout error 4c126035
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So I upgraded to ubuntu 14.04 lts and I thought everything was good until this morning when I start receive the same error. I can’t figure out what is going on.
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Sorry Tom I am not getting exactly what you are suggesting that I do.
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Check that TFTP is indeed running. You can look at: https://wiki.fogproject.org/wiki/index.php/Troubleshoot_TFTP
I’m showing the link because this is presented to you (the ipxe.org link.) This leads to helping in the “figuring out stage”.
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@Uncle-Frank said:
@Wayne-Workman I just added this to your wiki todo list… https://wiki.fogproject.org/wiki/index.php/WiKi_To-Do_list#Merge_this and I really wonder why we still have those two pages floating around
Oh my word…
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@Wolfbane8653 if you look at these two articles, the one thing that the one you created has that the one I created does not is getting pxelinux.0 via tftp as a test. I have merged that into my article, and we can then redirect the one you wrote to the one I wrote?
I just wanted to formally run that by you. I know a lot of work goes into writing these.
https://wiki.fogproject.org/wiki/index.php/Tftp_timeout
https://wiki.fogproject.org/wiki/index.php/Troubleshoot_TFTP -
I went through and tried the TFTP troubleshooting and everything seems to be good. I was able to pull undionly.kpxe from windows machine and all. This is a fresh install of Ubuntu and a new clean install of Fog Server 1.2.0. Thanks for the help but this is not making any sense why it will work for a minute to register it then timeout the next.
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@Anson-Washington make sure the firewall is off, make sure Apache is running. Restart apache.
Does the web interface work for you at all?
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I have the web interface. I have the firewall disabled. When I try to restart Apache I get and 127.0.1.1 error. I followed the step to correct that message but it still pops up
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Well, there is a lot of guesswork involved as we are not sitting in front of the machine. But you could help us to help you by capturing a packet dump on your FOG server. Fire up this on your server
tcpdump -i eth0 -w pxeboot.pcap udp
and let it sit there while you are getting up that machine causing the issue. As soon as you see the error hit CTRL+C to stop tcpdump and upload the PCAP-file to the forum here.