On 3/16/06, Tom Brown tom.brown@goodtechnology.com wrote:
On Thu, 16 Mar 2006, Joshua Baker-LePain wrote:
http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/enterprise/RHEL-4-Manual/sysadmin-guide/c...
IMO, the 2 best options are PXE or take boot.iso and modify the 'ks' entry to point at a ks.cfg file on a web server.
Or, use the boot.iso and
- Do "linux ks=http://your.config.server/ks/ks.cfg" at boot prompt
- Drink morning coffee, read RSS feeds, or chat at water cooler
- Reboot new server
If you've got a fully patched installation tree and decent configuration-management setup, it often takes less than 30 minutes from booting the boot.iso image to putting a machine into full-bore testing or even production.
thanks all thats _exactly_ what i'm after
We also had good luck with NFS mounted installation trees, but our security gurus have NFS phobia, so we've switched to the http method as well, and it works like a champ. The only drawback is that we do a fair amount of customization (desktops, not servers), and with http you can't just mount a directory and execute scripts. So, I create a tarball of the %post scripts and untar it to run the %post customization steps. Once I have all the customization steps down for the ....4 release, I won't have to recreate the tarball on an hourly/daily basis <grin>.
This is RHEL4, of course, but it works the same for CentOS.
-- Collins Richey The agnostic dyslexic insomniac lies awake wondering if there is a dog.