[Beowulf] kickstart install using NFS
Erik Paulson
epaulson at cs.wisc.edu
Tue Jan 18 12:09:27 PST 2005
On Tue, Jan 18, 2005 at 12:30:57AM -0500, Robert G. Brown wrote:
>
> This is even MORE useful than floppies in so many ways. I have a nice
> little list of what I can boot on a node. A kickstart install. A
> "redhat install" where I can select packages. In principle, a "rescue"
> kernel and image, although the interactive install kernel and image can
> be used for most rescue purposes if you know what you are doing. A
> choice of architectures and revisions. A DOS floppy boot image for
> doing certain chores. memtest86. All via PXE.
>
> Most of how to do this is in HOWTOs on the web.
>
Can you give a pointer to a good memtest86/PXE setup? What I would love
to have is a memtest86 (or something similar - maybe PC Doctor) that
I could periodically have some of my nodes boot and go into diagonstic
mode for a while. I've even got everything on serial console, so I
could screen scrape and watch for results. memtest spits out so much
ANSI crap that it's kind of a mess to do, so I was hoping someone
out there has already done it. Are there good alternatives to memtest -
maybe something with an easier-to-parse output?
It'd also be nice if there was a way to say "Run for an hour", but if
need be we've got Baytech PDUs with remote-control power, so I can
script a hard reboot if need be.
Right now we periodically run a set of scripts that reads and writes files
in /dev/shm to "test" memory - we've been able to find nodes with bad memory
by using 'cmp' on those files.
Thanks,
-Erik
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