Configure a PXE Boot Server¶
You can optionally set up a PXE Boot Server to support controller-0 initialization.
About this task
StarlingX includes a setup script to simplify configuring a PXE boot server. If you prefer, you can manually apply a custom configuration; for more information, see Access PXE Boot Server Files for a Custom Configuration.
The StarlingX setup script accepts a path to the root TFTP directory as a parameter, and copies all required files for BIOS and UEFI clients into this directory.
The PXE boot server serves a boot loader file to the requesting client from a specified path on the server. The path depends on whether the client uses BIOS or UEFI. The appropriate path is selected by conditional logic in the DHCP configuration file.
The boot loader runs on the client, and reads boot parameters, including the location of the kernel and initial ramdisk image files, from a boot file contained on the server. To find the boot file, the boot loader searches a known directory on the server. This search directory can contain more than one entry, supporting the use of separate boot files for different clients.
The file names and locations depend on the BIOS or UEFI implementation.
Resource |
BIOS |
UEFI |
---|---|---|
boot loader |
./pxelinux.0 |
./EFI/grubx64.efi |
boot file search directory |
./pxelinux.cfg |
./ or ./EFI (system-dependent) |
boot file and path |
./pxelinux.cfg/default |
./grub.cfg and ./EFI/grub.cfg |
(./ indicates the root TFTP directory) |
Prerequisites
Use a Linux workstation as the PXE Boot server.
On the workstation, install the packages required to support DHCP, TFTP, and Apache.
Configure DHCP, TFTP, and Apache according to your system requirements. For details, refer to the documentation included with the packages.
Additionally, configure DHCP to support both BIOS and UEFI client architectures. For example:
option arch code 93 = unsigned integer 16; # ref RFC4578 # ... subnet 192.168.1.0 netmask 255.255.255.0 { if option arch = 00:07 { filename "EFI/grubx64.efi"; # NOTE: substitute the full tftp-boot-dir specified in the setup script } else { filename "pxelinux.0"; } # ... }
Start the DHCP, TFTP, and Apache services.
Connect the PXE boot server to the StarlingX management or PXE boot network.
Procedure
Copy the ISO image from the source (product DVD, USB device, or a StarlingX mirror to a temporary location on the PXE boot server.
This example assumes that the copied image file is
tmp/TS-host-installer-1.0.iso
.Mount the ISO image and make it executable.
$ mount -o loop /tmp/TS-host-installer-1.0.iso /media/iso $ mount -o remount,exec,dev /media/iso
Set up the PXE boot configuration.
The ISO image includes a setup script, which you can run to complete the configuration.
$ /media/iso/pxeboot_setup.sh -u http://<ip-addr>/<symlink> \ -t <tftp-boot-dir>
where
ip-addr
is the Apache listening address.
symlink
is the name of a user-created symbolic link under the Apache document root directory, pointing to the directory specified by <tftp-boot-dir>.
tftp-boot-dir
is the path from which the boot loader is served (the TFTP root directory).
The script creates the directory specified by <tftp-boot-dir>.
For example:
$ /media/iso/pxeboot_setup.sh -u http://192.168.100.100/BIOS-client -t /export/pxeboot
To serve a specific boot file to a specific controller, assign a special name to the file.
The boot loader searches for a file name that uses a string based on the client interface MAC address. The string uses lower case, substitutes dashes for colons, and includes the prefix “01-“.
For a BIOS client, use the MAC address string as the file name:
$ cd <tftp-boot-dir>/pxelinux.cfg/ $ cp pxeboot.cfg <mac-address-string>
where:
<tftp-boot-dir>
is the path from which the boot loader is served.
<mac-address-string>
is a lower-case string formed from the MAC address of the client PXE boot interface, using dashes instead of colons, and prefixed by “01-“.
For example, to represent the MAC address
08:00:27:dl:63:c9
, use the string01-08-00-27-d1-63-c9
in the file name.
For example:
$ cd /export/pxeboot/pxelinux.cfg/ $ cp pxeboot.cfg 01-08-00-27-d1-63-c9
If the boot loader does not find a file named using this convention, it looks for a file with the name default.
For a UEFI client, use the MAC address string prefixed by “grub.cfg-”. To ensure the file is found, copy it to both search directories used by the UEFI convention.
$ cd <tftp-boot-dir> $ cp grub.cfg grub.cfg-<mac-address-string> $ cp grub.cfg ./EFI/grub.cfg-<mac-address-string>
For example:
$ cd /export/pxeboot $ cp grub.cfg grub.cfg-01-08-00-27-d1-63-c9 $ cp grub.cfg ./EFI/grub.cfg-01-08-00-27-d1-63-c9
Note
Alternatively, you can use symlinks in the search directories to ensure the file is found.