Hi Adam,
On Wed, 2008-02-20 at 23:08 +, Adam Retter wrote:
[...]
CLIENT MAC ADDR: 00 00 24 C4 2C 6C
CLIENT IP: 172.16.16.252 MASK: 255.255.255.240 DHCP IP: 172.16.16.245
GATEWAY IP: 172.16.16.254
172.16.16.245
172.16.16.254
Maybe the first IP is what you meant, but it might as well
Hi Voipcrazy,
http://www.modemsite.com/56k/x2-hyperterm.asp
Search characters twice.
It's called a manual;).
Bill
On Wed, 2008-02-20 at 17:12 +0100, voip crazy wrote:
Thanks for your answers, but my problem persists,
I think PXE boot works on my soekris, look thos tftpd log:
Feb 20
On 2008/02/21 14:47, Bernd Walter wrote:
On Wed, Feb 20, 2008 at 11:30:30PM +, Adam Retter wrote:
On Wed, Feb 20, 2008 at 11:18 PM, Stuart Henderson [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
On 2008/02/20 23:08, Adam Retter wrote:
The console output over COM0 from the net4801 is below, but
Hi Brian,
On Thu, 2008-02-21 at 13:43 +, Brian Candler wrote:
On Thu, Feb 21, 2008 at 10:50:00AM +0100, Bill Maas wrote:
Hi Voipcrazy,
http://www.modemsite.com/56k/x2-hyperterm.asp
Search characters twice.
It's called a manual;).
It's nothing to do with hyperterminal or
voip crazy schrieb:
Thanks for your answers, but my problem persists,
I think PXE boot works on my soekris, look thos tftpd log:
Feb 20 16:51:17 localhost dhcpd: DHCPDISCOVER from 00:00:24:c9:5a:14
via eth1
Feb 20 16:51:17 localhost dhcpd: DHCPOFFER on 192.168.30.63
http://192.168.30.63
Hi Adam,
[apologies for off-list reply, Reply To All is only a Shift away here]
On Thu, 2008-02-21 at 10:51 +, Adam Retter wrote:
On Thu, Feb 21, 2008 at 9:28 AM, Bill Maas [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi Adam,
On Wed, 2008-02-20 at 23:08 +, Adam Retter wrote:
[...]
Erm sorry im a bit confused now! Where does NFS come into this?
If I understand the process then pxeboot is sent by TFTP which then
request bsd.rd from the same TFTP source and then bootstraps bsd.rd
once it is downloaded...
Or am I missing something? pretty sure NFS is not involved.
On Thu,
Hi Adam,
From http://www.onlamp.com/pub/a/bsd/2003/06/05/FreeBSD_Basics.html:
You'll note that FreeBSD supports both IPv4 and IPv6, so its inetd is
capable of listening for both types of requests. Also note that TFTP
uses UDP as its transport. This means it is not as reliable as FTP
(which uses
On Thu, Feb 21, 2008 at 03:28:52PM +, Adam Retter wrote:
Erm sorry im a bit confused now! Where does NFS come into this?
I was under the impression that OpenBSD is using NFS as FreeBSD does.
FreeBSD uses TFTP to fetch the loader and the loader is using NFS for
loading the FORTH scripts,
Bill,
Thanks very very much :-)
All it needed was the next-server option, then it booted up perfectly
- im now sending this via. my new OpenBSD 4.2 net4801 router/firewall.
I guess something must have changed on either the OpenBSD or FreeBSD
side, I think FreeBSD switched to isc-dhcpd-3 and im
On Thu, Feb 21, 2008 at 04:00:17PM +0100, Bill Maas wrote:
OpenBSD/i386 PXEBOOT 2.02
booting tftp:bsd.rd: |
booting tftp:bsd.rd: 4733076read text: Unknown error: code 60
failed(60). will try /bsd
Try a tcpdump on the server, e.g.
tcpdump -i XXX -s1500 -n -X host x.x.x.x
On Thu, 2008-02-21 at 19:22 +, Adam Retter wrote:
Bill,
Thanks very very much :-)
All it needed was the next-server option, then it booted up perfectly
- im now sending this via. my new OpenBSD 4.2 net4801 router/firewall.
I guess something must have changed on either the OpenBSD or
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