Chapter 24. Setting Up A Remote Diskless System
The Network Booting Service (provided by
system-config-netboot
) is no longer available in Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6. Deploying diskless systems is now possible in this release without the use of system-config-netboot
.
To set up a basic remote diskless system booted over PXE, you need the following packages:
tftp-server
xinetd
dhcp
syslinux
dracut-network
Remote diskless system booting requires both a
tftp
service (provided by tftp-server
) and a DHCP service (provided by dhcp
). The tftp
service is used to retrieve kernel image and initrd
over the network via the PXE loader.
The following sections outline the necessary procedures for deploying remote diskless systems in a network environment.
24.1. Configuring a tftp Service for Diskless Clients
The
tftp
service is disabled by default. To enable it and allow PXE booting via the network, set the Disabled
option in /etc/xinetd.d/tftp
to no
. To configure tftp
, perform the following steps:
Procedure 24.1. To configure tftp
- The
tftp
root directory (chroot
) is located in/var/lib/tftpboot
. Copy/usr/share/syslinux/pxelinux.0
to/var/lib/tftpboot/
, as in:cp /usr/share/syslinux/pxelinux.0 /var/lib/tftpboot/
- Create a
pxelinux.cfg
directory inside thetftp
root directory:mkdir -p /var/lib/tftpboot/pxelinux.cfg/
You will also need to configure firewall rules properly to allow
tftp
traffic; as tftp
supports TCP wrappers, you can configure host access to tftp
via /etc/hosts.allow
. For more information on configuring TCP wrappers and the /etc/hosts.allow
configuration file, refer to the Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 Security Guide; man hosts_access
also provides information about /etc/hosts.allow
.
After configuring
tftp
for diskless clients, configure DHCP, NFS, and the exported file system accordingly. Refer to Section 24.2, “Configuring DHCP for Diskless Clients” and Section 24.3, “Configuring an Exported File System for Diskless Clients” for instructions on how to do so.