Re: [yocto] PXE Boot NFS not working

2018-04-27 Thread Hussin, Mohamad Noor Alim
Regarding to your question on legacy BIOS.

1.   vesamenu.c32 or menu.32 are graphic library to display PXE menu. 
Normally if you don't provide these files, you will not able to see PXE menu.

2.   Use kernel or linux parameter is depend on your GRUB bootloader 
command. You can try to load the kernel without initrd/initramfs/rootfs to make 
sure your kernel able to load from network. After you able to load the kernel, 
you will hit kernel panic as kernel unable to find rootfs.

3.   3. "hard,tcp,intr" they are nfs parameter. If your server side use nfs 
v3 the you need to specify "nfsroot=192.168.1.2:/srv/rootfs,nfsvers=3".

4.   Make sure you only have one DHCP service running. If you use router, 
turn off the DHCP service on your router. Another way just put static IP 
address for your board in dhcpd.conf. if you want to have another DHCP server 
running then you need to use proxyDHCP on your PXE server.

a.   Example for configure static IP in DHCP server.

host myboard {

hardware ethernet 00:0A:A1:B2:C3:;

fixed-address 192.168.1.1;

}

5.   Your kernel wait for "removable media"? Are you include 
initramfs/initrd? Actually you can remove initramfs/initrd if you want to use 
NFS boot. Can you check LED on Ethernet port. If blink the your network is up. 
Try to ping to your target device to make sure your network is working.

Regards,
Alim Hussin

From: Raymond Yeung [mailto:rksye...@hotmail.com]
Sent: Friday, April 27, 2018 12:43 PM
To: Hussin, Mohamad Noor Alim ; 
yocto@yoctoproject.org
Subject: Re: PXE Boot NFS not working


Thanks a lot Alim for the detail step-by-step, for both modes.  I'd like to 
stay with legacy mode with pxelinux.0 for now.  I'm doing pretty much the same 
as what you described below, with exceptions -



  1.  I'm not using vesamenu.c32.  Instead menu.32 is used, though I don't 
think that would be an issue.
  2.  I use "kernel image/bzImage" instead of "linux image/bzImage".  Still 
this shouldn't be an issue.
  3.  With the "append" line, I've a question - what is the significance of the 
options "hard, tcp, intr"?  I currently don't use them.


Since my last email this morning, I'd made some progress -



  1.  I figured out how to reconfigure the kernel with bitbake menuconfig to 
change my Ethernet driver from .ko to part of kernel.
  2.  I now have a confusing situation, due to Avahi-daemon in the mix.  
PXEBoot would request IP address via DHCP.  Then when this NFS boot runs, it 
too uses DHCP, and allocates a different IP address.  I suppose this is fine, 
so long as I've enough IP address to spare.  However, Avahi-daemon also request 
IP address and get the board yet another IP address.  I've yet to figure out 
how to turn off Avahi-daemon.  And NFS boot still doesn't work (I don't see the 
mount point with "df -h").
  3.  Client side uses NFS v4.1 while server side uses v3.  Would this be a 
problem?  I suppose there must be backward compatibility built into NFS.


Also, in the "Append" line of pxelinux.cfg/default, I add nfsrootdebug.  What 
sort of NFS debugs should I see?  I only see two NFS logs, and 4 RPC calls.  Is 
there anyway to turn up the verbosity so I know how NFS client fails?



Until I get some more insights to above, I'd proceed to investigate the other 
issue - why my kernel initialization would need to wait for any "removable 
media" indefinitely, and see if I could fix/change this.



Thanks,

Raymond






From: Hussin, Mohamad Noor Alim 
mailto:mohamad.noor.alim.hus...@intel.com>>
Sent: Thursday, April 26, 2018 8:30 PM
To: Raymond Yeung; yocto@yoctoproject.org
Subject: RE: PXE Boot NFS not working


You are using PXE with legacy BIOS as you use pxelinux.0 . To configure PXE 
with legacy BIOS follow these instruction

Note: PXE server IP = 192.168.1.2

Target IP = 192.168.1.1



On PXE server

1.   make sure DHCP, NFS & TFTP services are up and running.

2.   change the filename "pxelinux.0"; in /etc/dhcp/dhcpd.conf. Then 
restart your DHCP service.

3.   Put your kernel to /path/to/tftpboot/image/ and extract your rootfs to 
/srv/rootfs/.

4.   Create a file in /path/to/tftpboot/pxelinux.cfg/default. The content 
should like this

include menu.cfg

default vesamenu.c32

prompt 0

timeout 5

label Manual Netboot genericx86-64

menu label Netboot genericx86-64

linux image/bzImage

append root=/dev/nfs rw nfsroot=192.168.1.2:/srv/rootfs,hard,tcp,intr ip=dhcp



if you want to use PXE with GRUB, bootx64.efi, you need to enable UEFI  instead 
of legacy BIOS in BIOS configuration. Follow these instruction.

on PXE server

1.   make sure DHCP, NFS & TFTP services are up and running.

2.   change the filename "bootx64.efi"; in /etc/dhcp/dhcpd.conf. Then 
restart your DHCP service.

3.   Put your kernel to /path/to/tftpboot/image/ and extract your rootfs to 
/srv/rootfs/.

4.   If you want to get into GRUB,

a.   comment the comm

Re: [yocto] PXE Boot NFS not working

2018-04-26 Thread Raymond Yeung
Thanks a lot Alim for the detail step-by-step, for both modes.  I'd like to 
stay with legacy mode with pxelinux.0 for now.  I'm doing pretty much the same 
as what you described below, with exceptions -


  1.  I'm not using vesamenu.c32.  Instead menu.32 is used, though I don't 
think that would be an issue.
  2.  I use "kernel image/bzImage" instead of "linux image/bzImage".  Still 
this shouldn't be an issue.
  3.  With the "append" line, I've a question - what is the significance of the 
options "hard, tcp, intr"?  I currently don't use them.


Since my last email this morning, I'd made some progress -


  1.  I figured out how to reconfigure the kernel with bitbake menuconfig to 
change my Ethernet driver from .ko to part of kernel.
  2.  I now have a confusing situation, due to Avahi-daemon in the mix.  
PXEBoot would request IP address via DHCP.  Then when this NFS boot runs, it 
too uses DHCP, and allocates a different IP address.  I suppose this is fine, 
so long as I've enough IP address to spare.  However, Avahi-daemon also request 
IP address and get the board yet another IP address.  I've yet to figure out 
how to turn off Avahi-daemon.  And NFS boot still doesn't work (I don't see the 
mount point with "df -h").
  3.  Client side uses NFS v4.1 while server side uses v3.  Would this be a 
problem?  I suppose there must be backward compatibility built into NFS.


Also, in the "Append" line of pxelinux.cfg/default, I add nfsrootdebug.  What 
sort of NFS debugs should I see?  I only see two NFS logs, and 4 RPC calls.  Is 
there anyway to turn up the verbosity so I know how NFS client fails?


Until I get some more insights to above, I'd proceed to investigate the other 
issue - why my kernel initialization would need to wait for any "removable 
media" indefinitely, and see if I could fix/change this.


Thanks,

Raymond




From: Hussin, Mohamad Noor Alim 
Sent: Thursday, April 26, 2018 8:30 PM
To: Raymond Yeung; yocto@yoctoproject.org
Subject: RE: PXE Boot NFS not working


You are using PXE with legacy BIOS as you use pxelinux.0 . To configure PXE 
with legacy BIOS follow these instruction

Note: PXE server IP = 192.168.1.2

Target IP = 192.168.1.1



On PXE server

1.   make sure DHCP, NFS & TFTP services are up and running.

2.   change the filename “pxelinux.0”; in /etc/dhcp/dhcpd.conf. Then 
restart your DHCP service.

3.   Put your kernel to /path/to/tftpboot/image/ and extract your rootfs to 
/srv/rootfs/.

4.   Create a file in /path/to/tftpboot/pxelinux.cfg/default. The content 
should like this

include menu.cfg

default vesamenu.c32

prompt 0

timeout 5

label Manual Netboot genericx86-64

menu label Netboot genericx86-64

linux image/bzImage

append root=/dev/nfs rw nfsroot=192.168.1.2:/srv/rootfs,hard,tcp,intr ip=dhcp



if you want to use PXE with GRUB, bootx64.efi, you need to enable UEFI  instead 
of legacy BIOS in BIOS configuration. Follow these instruction.

on PXE server

1.   make sure DHCP, NFS & TFTP services are up and running.

2.   change the filename “bootx64.efi”; in /etc/dhcp/dhcpd.conf. Then 
restart your DHCP service.

3.   Put your kernel to /path/to/tftpboot/image/ and extract your rootfs to 
/srv/rootfs/.

4.   If you want to get into GRUB,

a.   comment the commands from /path/to/tftpboot/grub/grub.cfg to avoid 
grub automatically load the kernel from network.

b.  On GRUB, press “TAB” key to list available command. Or you can try use 
this command

   i.  net_bootp

 ii.  linux 
(tftp,pxeserverip)/image/bzImage root=/dev/nfs rw 
nfsroot=192.168.1.2:/srv/rootfs,hard,tcp,intr ip=dhcp

iii.  boot

5.   if you want boot automatically to NFS, create a file called grub.cfg 
in /path/to/tftpboot/grub.cfg. your grub.cfg should look like this

Set timeout 5

menuentry " genericx86-64" {

linux image/bzImage root=/dev/nfs rw 
nfsroot=192.168.1.2:/srv/rootfs,hard,tcp,intr ip=dhcp

initrd image/initrd

}

6.   When your device boot, it will download bootx64.efi and the message 
something like this
>>Start PXE over IPv4.

Station IP address is 192.168.1.1

Server IP address is 192.168.1.2

NBP filename is bootx64.efi

NBP filesize is 1137016 Bytes

Downloading NBP file...

NBP file downloaded successfully.



Please note that I did not use initramfs or initrd as my kernel already have 
network module build-in. To build your kernel with network module, you need to 
know which module need to build-in into your kernel. Simply boot your device 
using *.hhdimg from USB stick. Then check loaded kernel module from your device.

$ lsmod

Find the module something with network. Yes it is a little bit tricky.



Build your kernel in host machine.

$ bitbake virtual/kernel –c menuconfig

A menu will popup and

Re: [yocto] PXE Boot NFS not working

2018-04-26 Thread Hussin, Mohamad Noor Alim
You are using PXE with legacy BIOS as you use pxelinux.0 . To configure PXE 
with legacy BIOS follow these instruction
Note: PXE server IP = 192.168.1.2
Target IP = 192.168.1.1

On PXE server

1.   make sure DHCP, NFS & TFTP services are up and running.

2.   change the filename "pxelinux.0"; in /etc/dhcp/dhcpd.conf. Then 
restart your DHCP service.

3.   Put your kernel to /path/to/tftpboot/image/ and extract your rootfs to 
/srv/rootfs/.

4.   Create a file in /path/to/tftpboot/pxelinux.cfg/default. The content 
should like this

include menu.cfg

default vesamenu.c32

prompt 0

timeout 5

label Manual Netboot genericx86-64

menu label Netboot genericx86-64

linux image/bzImage

append root=/dev/nfs rw nfsroot=192.168.1.2:/srv/rootfs,hard,tcp,intr ip=dhcp

if you want to use PXE with GRUB, bootx64.efi, you need to enable UEFI  instead 
of legacy BIOS in BIOS configuration. Follow these instruction.
on PXE server

1.   make sure DHCP, NFS & TFTP services are up and running.

2.   change the filename "bootx64.efi"; in /etc/dhcp/dhcpd.conf. Then 
restart your DHCP service.

3.   Put your kernel to /path/to/tftpboot/image/ and extract your rootfs to 
/srv/rootfs/.

4.   If you want to get into GRUB,

a.   comment the commands from /path/to/tftpboot/grub/grub.cfg to avoid 
grub automatically load the kernel from network.

b.  On GRUB, press "TAB" key to list available command. Or you can try use 
this command

   i.  net_bootp

 ii.  linux 
(tftp,pxeserverip)/image/bzImage root=/dev/nfs rw 
nfsroot=192.168.1.2:/srv/rootfs,hard,tcp,intr ip=dhcp

iii.  boot

5.   if you want boot automatically to NFS, create a file called grub.cfg 
in /path/to/tftpboot/grub.cfg. your grub.cfg should look like this

Set timeout 5

menuentry " genericx86-64" {

linux image/bzImage root=/dev/nfs rw 
nfsroot=192.168.1.2:/srv/rootfs,hard,tcp,intr ip=dhcp

initrd image/initrd

}

6.   When your device boot, it will download bootx64.efi and the message 
something like this
>>Start PXE over IPv4.

Station IP address is 192.168.1.1

Server IP address is 192.168.1.2

NBP filename is bootx64.efi

NBP filesize is 1137016 Bytes

Downloading NBP file...

NBP file downloaded successfully.

Please note that I did not use initramfs or initrd as my kernel already have 
network module build-in. To build your kernel with network module, you need to 
know which module need to build-in into your kernel. Simply boot your device 
using *.hhdimg from USB stick. Then check loaded kernel module from your device.
$ lsmod
Find the module something with network. Yes it is a little bit tricky.

Build your kernel in host machine.
$ bitbake virtual/kernel -c menuconfig
A menu will popup and search your kernel module using key "/". Make sure symbol 
module [*] indicate build-in.
$ bitbake virtual/kernel

You also can create a kernel bundle with initramfs.  Read this 
https://www.yoctoproject.org/docs/2.5/mega-manual/mega-manual.html#building-an-initramfs-image.
Maybe need to ask someone who are expert on kernel development on how to enable 
build-in kernel module.


Regards,
Alim Hussin

From: Raymond Yeung [mailto:rksye...@hotmail.com]
Sent: Friday, April 27, 2018 1:12 AM
To: Hussin, Mohamad Noor Alim ; 
yocto@yoctoproject.org
Subject: Re: PXE Boot NFS not working


Follow-up to my previous post, after seeing the reply below suggesting me not 
to use initramfs (but initrd is usable, right?).  BTW, I don't use bootx64.efi. 
 Instead, I use pxelinux.0 along with the other lib***.c32 files.



  1.  Is there a way to verify if GRUB (that I'm using) supports networking or 
not?  It seems to have very limited user commands available.
  2.  How do I get into GRUB?  I'd been into GRUB, more like accidentally.  The 
reply below refers to grub.cfg.  Is this cfg file stored on target, or on host 
(like pxelinux.cfg)?
  3.  How do I configure my build (and what yocto tool to use, if any) in order 
to get my network driver part of kernel, instead of being a LKM that isn't 
there when I need it for NFS boot?


From: Hussin, Mohamad Noor Alim 
mailto:mohamad.noor.alim.hus...@intel.com>>
Sent: Thursday, April 26, 2018 12:26 AM
To: Raymond Yeung; yocto@yoctoproject.org
Subject: RE: PXE Boot NFS not working


Refer to my post here 
https://lists.yoctoproject.org/pipermail/yocto/2018-April/040860.html



Don't use initramfs/initrd as it not working.





Regards,

Alim Hussin




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Re: [yocto] PXE Boot NFS not working

2018-04-26 Thread Raymond Yeung
Follow-up to my previous post, after seeing the reply below suggesting me not 
to use initramfs (but initrd is usable, right?).  BTW, I don't use bootx64.efi. 
 Instead, I use pxelinux.0 along with the other lib***.c32 files.


  1.  Is there a way to verify if GRUB (that I'm using) supports networking or 
not?  It seems to have very limited user commands available.
  2.  How do I get into GRUB?  I'd been into GRUB, more like accidentally.  The 
reply below refers to grub.cfg.  Is this cfg file stored on target, or on host 
(like pxelinux.cfg)?
  3.  How do I configure my build (and what yocto tool to use, if any) in order 
to get my network driver part of kernel, instead of being a LKM that isn't 
there when I need it for NFS boot?



From: Hussin, Mohamad Noor Alim 
Sent: Thursday, April 26, 2018 12:26 AM
To: Raymond Yeung; yocto@yoctoproject.org
Subject: RE: PXE Boot NFS not working


Refer to my post here 
https://lists.yoctoproject.org/pipermail/yocto/2018-April/040860.html



Don’t use initramfs/initrd as it not working.





Regards,

Alim Hussin



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Re: [yocto] PXE Boot NFS not working

2018-04-26 Thread Hussin, Mohamad Noor Alim
Refer to my post here 
https://lists.yoctoproject.org/pipermail/yocto/2018-April/040860.html

Don't use initramfs/initrd as it not working.


Regards,
Alim Hussin

From: yocto-boun...@yoctoproject.org [mailto:yocto-boun...@yoctoproject.org] On 
Behalf Of Raymond Yeung
Sent: Thursday, April 26, 2018 12:46 PM
To: yocto@yoctoproject.org
Subject: [yocto] PXE Boot NFS not working


I've an Intel Xeon-D board.  I could boot up the board with PXE booting.  
However, this seems to be always looking for "removable media"; if there is 
none, it would hang (in a .sh file).  I want to explore NFS approach.  So far, 
I've read up, experimented on NFS setup via pxelinux.cfg/default file.  I'm 
able to manually perform nfs mount from client side, but doing it via 
configuration file doesn't seem to work.



Now, I'm wondering if my bzImage and initrd files are built correct.  According 
to this article here:



https://wiki.yoctoproject.org/wiki/Poky_NFS_Root



Two requirements must be met.  First one is that the network driver must be 
built into the kernel rather than being a module.  Second one is to disable 
network init script.



Does anyone know how to do the above two items?  What recipe file(s) should I 
modify?



Thanks,

Raymond
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[yocto] PXE Boot NFS not working

2018-04-26 Thread Raymond Yeung
I've an Intel Xeon-D board.  I could boot up the board with PXE booting.  
However, this seems to be always looking for "removable media"; if there is 
none, it would hang (in a .sh file).  I want to explore NFS approach.  So far, 
I've read up, experimented on NFS setup via pxelinux.cfg/default file.  I'm 
able to manually perform nfs mount from client side, but doing it via 
configuration file doesn't seem to work.


Now, I'm wondering if my bzImage and initrd files are built correct.  According 
to this article here:


https://wiki.yoctoproject.org/wiki/Poky_NFS_Root


Two requirements must be met.  First one is that the network driver must be 
built into the kernel rather than being a module.  Second one is to disable 
network init script.


Does anyone know how to do the above two items?  What recipe file(s) should I 
modify?


Thanks,

Raymond
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