> MAC addresses could be faked. > > > The PXE protocol, as far as I can see, has no concept of authorisation > > - although its certainly possible to introduce it after PXE has done > > its bit (but before imaging or whatever). > > > > You may be better off with authenticating the DHCP using RADIUS, but > > it's a complex process which, by its very nature, requires some form of > > non-authenticated network access. > > So the solution might have to be not to use PXE-boot anymore. That would > be a pity because it´s so convenient. > PXE booting is nothing to do with installing or imaging machines. That process is done *after* PXE booting. All the PXE does is to tell the ethernet chip where to retrieve the PXE information from and what to retrieve, which is then downloaded by TFTP. A prerequisite for PXE is DHCP - by the time your device does anything with PXE it's already accessed the network and got an IP address and so on. There is absolutely no way to prohibit access to your network without first allowing the device some access to your network in order to authenticate. The normal way around this is to use VLANs to segregate "dirty" unauthenticated machines - once it's authenticated it is moved onto a different VLAN and a new DHCP request initiated. There's lots of information on this on the net - Google for something like 'PXE RADIUS' or 'PXE 802.1x' (hint: everyone uses VLANs). P. _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos