draheim
@informatik.hu-berlin.de
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2006-11-07
(C) Guido Draheim
guidod@gmx.de
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Making Root for a Boot via Network
While having a last job for Tektronix, I was working on an imageserver
project to save away client partitions to a central server. It did turn
out that there are quite some projects around but none of them would
quite fit into the requirements model assumed so far. In the end I was
looking over the linux grub netboot documents and the various software
parts like partimage trying to be somewhat similar to norton ghost.
- Grub Netboot - Next Try For A Howto
-
I was checking how to make a grub boot floppy. Background: most of the
netboot installations are assuming a dhcp (or bootp) protocol that
would assign an IP to a client and inform it about the server
to draw it images from. However, I wanted to have a static IP and/or
specifying a server being fully different than the information in the
dhcp cache. (work in progress)
- Grub Install - For Common Users
-
The grub-install does not quite tell us howto make a boot floppy
with a grub boot record that can grab its boot files from a network
server. Everyone says it can do it - but most docs ask the user
to recompile gnu grub. I have developped some python scripts that
can help in building even a Gtk GUI for making grub boot floppies.
- Partition Cloning - Freshmeat Entries
-
There are lots of tools that shall help with saving/restoring partitions
but it does turn out most of them are (a) just hacks (b) developped for
cluster computing (c) with no documentation to customize the boot
floppy (d) because everything is configured on the central dhcp server.
- Partimage - links
-
It seems that partimage does have the least number of weirdo dependencies
so that there is a good chance to customize by programming the source
code. However, partimage is inherintly buggy being a hunch of c++ source
code that will not compile with every c++ compiler around. The partimage
preconfigured bootfloppy is broken actually. The g4u looks to be a lot
more stable - but that one is really just "ftp" and "dd" wrapped in a
hunch of poorly documented shell scripts.
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