xref: /netbsd-src/share/man/man8/diskless.8 (revision 481fca6e59249d8ffcf24fef7cfbe7b131bfb080)
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28.Dd January 25, 1998
29.Dt DISKLESS 8
30.Os
31.Sh NAME
32.Nm diskless
33.Nd booting a system over the network
34.Sh DESCRIPTION
35The ability to boot a machine over the network is useful for
36.Xr diskless
37or
38.Xr dataless
39machines, or as a temporary measure while repairing or
40re-installing filesystems on a local disk.
41This file provides a general description of the interactions between
42a client and its server when a client is booting over the network.
43The general description is followed by specific instructions for
44configuring a server for diskless Sun clients.
45.Pp
46.Sh OPERATION
47When booting a system over the network, there are three
48phases of interaction between client and server:
49.Pp
50.Bl -tag -width 1.2 -compact
51.It 1.
52The PROM (or stage-1 bootstrap) loads a boot program.
53.It 2.
54The boot program loads a kernel.
55.It 3.
56The kernel does NFS mounts for root.
57.El
58.Pp
59Each of these phases are described in further detail below.
60.Pp
61In phase 1, the PROM loads a boot program.  PROM designs
62vary widely, so this phase is inherently machine-specific.
63Sun machines use
64.Tn RARP
65to determine the client's
66.Tn IP
67address and then use
68.Tn TFTP
69to download a boot program from whomever sent the
70.Tn RARP
71reply.  HP 300-series machines use the
72.Tn HP Remote Maintenance Protocol
73to download a boot program.
74Typical personal computers may load a
75network boot program either from diskette or
76using a special PROM on the network card.
77.Pp
78In phase 2, the boot program loads a kernel.  Operation in
79this phase depends on the design of the boot program.
80(The design described here is the one used by Sun and
81.Nx Ns Tn /hp300 Ns .)
82The boot program:
83.Pp
84.Bl -tag -width 2.2 -compact
85.It 2.1
86gets the client IP address using
87.Tn RARP .
88.It 2.2
89gets the client name and server
90.Tn IP
91address by broadcasting an
92.Tn RPC / BOOTPARAMS / WHOAMI
93request with the client IP address.
94.It 2.3
95gets the server path for this client's
96root using an
97.Tn RPC / BOOTPARAMS / GETFILE
98request with the client name.
99.It 2.4
100gets the root file handle by calling
101.Xr mountd 8
102with the server path for the client root.
103.It 2.5
104gets the kernel file handle by calling
105.Tn NFS
106lookup on the root file handle.
107.It 2.6
108loads the kernel using
109.Tn NFS
110read calls on the kernel file handle.
111.It 2.7
112transfers control to the kernel entry point.
113.El
114.Pp
115In phase 3, the kernel does NFS mounts for root.
116The kernel repeats much of the work done by the boot program
117because there is no standard way for the boot program to pass
118the information it gathered on to the kernel.
119The procedure used by the kernel is as follows:
120.Pp
121.Bl -tag -width 2.2 -compact
122.It 3.1
123The kernel finds a boot server using the same procedure
124as described in steps 2.1 and 2.2 above.
125In general, the GENERIC
126.Xr config 8
127files
128for any particular architecture will specify options to activate in
129the kernel the
130same protocol used by the boot program for that
131architecture, however, the kernel can
132be compiled to use any of BOOTP, DHCP, or BOOTPARAMS. See
133.Xr options 4 .
134.It 3.2
135The kernel gets the
136.Tn NFS
137file handle for root using the same procedure
138as described in steps 2.3 through 2.5 above.
139.It 3.3
140The kernel calls the
141.Tn NFS
142getattr function to get the last-modified time of the root
143directory, and uses it to check the system clock.
144.El
145.Sh CONFIGURATION
146Before a client can boot over the network,
147its server must be configured correctly.
148This example will demonstrate how a Sun client
149might be configured -- other clients should be similar.
150.Pp
151Assuming the client's hostname is to be
152"myclient",
153.Pp
154.Bl -tag -width 2.1 -compact
155.It 1.
156Add an entry to
157.Pa /etc/ethers
158corresponding to the client's ethernet address:
159.Bd -literal -offset indent -compact
1608:0:20:7:c5:c7          myclient
161.Ed
162This will be used by
163.Xr rarpd 8 .
164.Pp
165.It 2.
166Assign an IP address for myclient in your
167.Pa /etc/hosts
168or DNS database:
169.Bd -literal -offset indent -compact
170192.197.96.12           myclient
171.Ed
172.Pp
173.It 3.
174If booting a Sun machine, ensure that
175.Pa /etc/inetd.conf
176is configured to run
177.Xr tftpd 8
178in the directory
179.Pa /tftpboot .
180.Pp
181If booting an HP 300-series machine, ensure that
182.Pa /etc/rbootd.conf
183is configured properly to transfer the boot program to the client.
184An entry might look like this:
185.Bd -literal -offset indent -compact
18608:00:09:01:23:E6	SYS_UBOOT	# myclient
187.Ed
188.Pp
189See the
190.Xr rbootd 8
191manual page for more information.
192.Pp
193.It 4.
194If booting a SPARC machine, install a copy of the appropriate diskless boot
195loader (such as
196.Pa /usr/mdec/boot )
197in the
198.Pa /tftpboot
199directory.
200Make a link such that the boot program is
201accessible by a file name composed of the client's IP address
202in HEX, a dot, and the architecture name (all upper case).
203For example:
204.Bd -literal -offset indent -compact
205# cd /tftpboot
206# ln -s boot C0C5600C.SUN4
207.Ed
208.Pp
209For a Sun3 machine, the name would be just C0C5600C
210(the sun3 PROM does not append the architecture name). The name
211used is architecture dependent, it simply has to match what the
212booting client's PROM wishes to it to be.
213If the client's PROM fails to fetch the expected file,
214.Xr tcpdump 8
215can be used to discover which filename the client is trying to read.
216.Pp
217If booting an HP 300-series machine, ensure that the network boot program
218.Pa SYS_UBOOT
219(which may be called
220.Pa uboot.lif
221before installation)
222is installed in the directory
223.Pa /usr/mdec/rbootd .
224
225.It 5.
226Add myclient to the bootparams database
227.Pa /etc/bootparams :
228.Bd -literal -offset indent -compact
229myclient  root=server:/export/myclient/root \\
230	gateway=mygw:255.255.255.0
231.Ed
232.Pp
233.It 6.
234Build the swap file for myclient:
235.Bd -literal -offset indent -compact
236# cd /export/myclient/root
237# dd if=/dev/zero of=swap bs=16k count=1024
238.Ed
239This creates a 16 Megabyte swap file.
240.Pp
241.It 7.
242Populate myclient's
243.Pa /
244filesystem on the server.  How this is done depends on the
245client architecture and the version of the
246.Nx
247distribution.
248It can be as simple as copying and modifying the server's root
249filesystem, or perhaps you need to get those files out of the
250standard binary distribution.
251.Pp
252.It 8.
253Export the required filesystems in
254.Pa /etc/exports :
255.Bd -literal -offset indent -compact
256/usr -ro myclient
257# for SunOS:
258# /export/myclient -rw=myclient,root=myclient
259# for NetBSD:
260/export/myclient -maproot=root -alldirs myclient
261.Ed
262.Pp
263If the server and client are of the same architecture, then the client
264can share the server's
265.Pa /usr
266filesystem (as is done above).
267If not, you must build a properly fleshed out
268.Pa /usr
269partition for the client in some other place.
270.Pp
271If your server was a sparc, and your client a sun3,
272you might create and fill
273.Pa /export/usr.sun3
274and then use the following
275.Pa /etc/exports
276lines:
277.Bd -literal -offset indent -compact
278/export/usr.sun3 -ro myclient
279/export/myclient -rw=myclient,root=myclient
280.Ed
281.Pp
282.It 9.
283Copy and customize at least the following files in
284.Pa /export/myclient/root :
285.Bd -literal -offset indent -compact
286# cd /export/myclient/root/etc
287# cp fstab.nfs fstab
288# cp /etc/hosts hosts
289# echo myclient > myname
290# echo "inet 192.197.96.12" > ifconfig.le0
291.Ed
292.Pp
293Note that "le0" above should be replaced with the name of
294the network interface that the client will use for booting.
295.Pp
296.It 10.
297Correct the critical mount points and the swap file in the client's
298.Pa /etc/fstab
299(which will be
300.Pa /export/myclient/root/etc/fstab )
301ie.
302.Bd -literal -offset indent -compact
303myserver:/export/myclient/root / nfs rw 0 0
304myserver:/usr /usr nfs rw 0 0
305/swap none swap sw
306.Ed
307.Pp
308Note, you must specify the swap file in
309.Pa /etc/fstab
310or it will not be used!
311.El
312.Sh FILES
313.Bl -tag -width /usr/mdec/rbootd -compact
314.It Pa /etc/ethers
315Ethernet addresses of known clients
316.It Pa /etc/bootparams
317client root pathname
318.It Pa /etc/exports
319exported NFS mount points
320.It Pa /etc/rbootd.conf
321configuration file for HP Remote Boot Daemon
322.It Pa /tftpboot
323location of boot programs loaded by the Sun PROM
324.It Pa /usr/mdec/rbootd
325location of boot programs loaded by the HP Boot ROM
326.El
327.Sh SEE ALSO
328.Xr rarpd 8 ,
329.Xr ethers 5 ,
330.Xr tftpd 8 ,
331.Xr rpc.bootparamd 8 ,
332.Xr bootparams 5 ,
333.Xr mountd 8 ,
334.Xr exports 5 ,
335.Xr nfsd 8 ,
336.Xr rbootd 8 ,
337.Xr reboot 8
338