Just for completeness - be sure you've explored the alternatives
which allow you to configure everything in a .parms file
and use DNS, or the TFTP server DHCP option. Both of these
options remove the need to configure *any* special DHCP
for Sun Ray: ISC, Sun or otherwise.
-Bob
Joshua Clulow wrote:
Blaster wrote:
I wish Sun would either overhaul their DHCP server to fix it's current
limitations, or just dump it in favor of ISC's which seems to work
better.
I suppose I should just take the time to convert my Solaris DHCP over
to ISC
and be done with it. I'd just hate having to go over everything
everytime I
upgrade Sun Ray software.
It's easy to set ISC dhcpd up just once -- a lot of people already
have it running and just need to augment their configuration with Sun
Ray options. It doesn't require reconfiguration every time you install
or upgrade the Sun Ray server software.
If you're operating on a shared LAN segment you only need to enable
LAN connections, configuring the Sun DHCP server isn't a mandatory SRS
installation/upgrade step...
Just make sure LAN connections are on (utadm -L on), push the latest
firmware into /tftpboot (utfwadm -A -V -a), update the version string
in your ISC configuration (for which there are plenty of examples on
the web) and it should all be fine.
(Disclaimer: The above works for me both at home and on the campus
network of one of my employers. Your mileage will most probably vary
considerably.)
_______________________________________________
SunRay-Users mailing list
[email protected]
http://www.filibeto.org/mailman/listinfo/sunray-users