Did you change the DHCP settings to reflect the new PXE boot IP?
Latest posts made by Zumochi
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RE: WARNING: Extreme n00b configuration error (I think)
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RE: Windows 7 (x64) - problems creating and deploying image
Bump because nobody cares
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RE: New to Fog
FOG uses an SQL database to keep track of clients as well as images and nodes. Thus it isn’t currently possible to ‘drag and drop’ images, sadly.
Now you want to use FOG as an ISO server, as in one that will just put ISO files in a directory available through HTTP? You don’t need FOG for that, hell, that’s way easier to do, just install a webserver and make a soft symbolic link to the directory with the ISO files in the root dir of the webserver.
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RE: Problem trying to add capacity to the /images directory
I don’t think that works like that… You’ll probably have to create a new storage node.
Maybe you can move the images you already had to the new drive instead. I think there’s a few articles about that. -
RE: Enabling DHCP service after FOG installation
For Debian-based systems (eg. Ubuntu): [CODE]sudo apt-get install isc-dhcp-server[/CODE]
For RedHat-based systems (eg. CentOS): [CODE]sudo yum install dhcp[/CODE]
And then configure PXE with the DHCP.conf file. You can always google for something like “<distribution> <version> dhcp server pxe” or similar. -
Windows 7 (x64) - problems creating and deploying image
Good day,
I’m in the progress of setting up a FOG Server with all the bells and whistles. This, of course, includes creating and testing an image.
This has taken a long time already (over two weeks now) due to various problems (storage, networking, but also things that weren’t documented properly or at all on the Wiki).Anyway, the stadium I’m in now is to create an image.
The FOG server is a virtual machine, the clients to be imaged are all physical (VLANs etc, hence “network problems”). See more info below.What I’m trying to do:
Succesfully create an image of a Windows 7 (x64) installation and put it on another machine. Simple. Or so I thought…What I’ve tried:
Already existing installation of Windows 7 (with just FOG service), had to remove the factory recovery partition. Ran FOGprep.
[INDENT=1]With this, I successfully [I]created[/I] an image, but deploying failed with missing MBR. This is acceptable for one or two PC’s, but not if you want to image 50+ computers.[/INDENT]
A fresh installation of Windows 7, drivers installed, FOG service installed, FOGprep and sysprep run.
[INDENT=1]Same problem as previous.[/INDENT]
A fresh installation of Windows 7 using IDE mode instead of AHCI mode. This because I keep reading you need to put IDE mode instead of SCSI mode (AHCI is definitely not IDE).
[INDENT=1]Same problem.[/INDENT]
A fresh installation of Windows 7 using default AHCI on just ONE partition with a hack/workaround during setup.
[INDENT=1]FOG successfully starts imaging, resizing the partition fails, however. And thus it starts imaging the [I]entire disk, [/I]which I try to avoid due to space limits on the host.[/INDENT]
[INDENT=1]When I try it again with a new image in FOG (changed configuration might have some issues, I thought) without changing the physical computer, FOG is saying there is no partition table found (unable to mount/umount /dev/sda1 /ntfs).[/INDENT]More information:
I AM able to PXE boot the clients just fine, I can make an inventory of them just fine as well.
I also updated the kernel to 3.3.3 saved it to fog/kernel/bzImage_3.3.3, and managed to get that working without any problems. Thus, I made this the default kernel clients boot with.
FOG Host:
Running on a ESXi 4.1 host
Debian Squeeze with kernel 2.6.32-5-686
Using a folder on an iSCSI storage node as FOG node (there are some problems with this as well, but I’m pretty certain those are unrelated to FOG. Heck, this took about 24 hours to set up.)
Two network devices:
[INDENT=1]eth0 = vLAN 14 -> 172.21.2.11 | this connects to the clients (located in network 172.21.7)[/INDENT]
[INDENT=1]eth1 = vLAN 16 -> 172.21.3.24 | this connects to the iSCSI (same network)[/INDENT]
1 GB RAM
16 GB virtual HDD
Plenty CPUIf any one of you could assist me in this matter, it would be greatly appreciated.
See attached my Unattend.xml file in txt format because .xml isn’t allowed it seems (FYI: the productkey is a public KMS key).
Status update:
I’ve made a new Windows 7 installation with default settings (+100 MB system recovery partition) and I tried to image it straight after the main installation (Copying, extracting, installing, updating, finalizing…)
It starts off good, resize test, resizing (all done pretty fast too), then it starts imaging.
System partition took a few seconds (less than 10).
Main partition started, just fine. I go back to my seat, and about two minutes later as I go to check, it’s seemingly finished (computer shut down after job)… But it can’t be THAT fast, can it? (Approximate size was 8-9 GB.) So I go to check on the iSCSI:
[CODE]ghost@DPO-GHOST:/iscsi/fog/CompaqElite8200$ ls -lah
total 191M
drwxrwxrwx 1 root root 256 Oct 31 16:30 .
drwxrwxrwx 1 root root 352 Oct 31 16:30 …
-rwxrwxrwx 1 root root 8.5M Oct 31 16:30 rec.img.000
-rwxrwxrwx 1 root root 182M Oct 31 16:30 sys.img.000
[/CODE]
So yeah, failed. How is that possible? This is the second time this has happened now.
I’d love to peek in the logs… If I knew where those logs areRestarted imaging, works now. Put it back to different client, worked. But I still get “Unable to load \windows\system32\winload.exe” (something like that… it’s a known issue it seems).
The source client (WST279) boots just fine.
The target client (WST281) gives that error.ANOTHER UPDATE!
So I tried installing Windows 7 Pro 32-bit instead of Windows 7 Pro 64-bit. Right after the installation, I imaged it and restored to a different client… And it just works!
Well, that’s a rather interesting development: restoring a 64-bit Windows 7 install does not work for me.
This is a problem though, as several programs that are going to be deployed are 64-bit applications. Deploying 32-bit Windows is a definite no go.Well, that was a ‘it works once’ thing… Everything still fails at this point. I’ve decided I’m going to try out WDS instead of FOG.
EDIT: added kernel info.
EDIT2: Mods, please move topic to proper section if it should be under “Windows Problems”
EDIT3: sitrep
EDIT4: 32 bit
EDIT5: thanks for the help (not).[url=“/_imported_xf_attachments/0/183_Unattend.txt?:”]Unattend.txt[/url]