Dave wrote:
Hi,
Thanks for your reply. Yah i do have apache running, your idea
certainly would make things easier. How did you set up the http
area? And where in it do you put the kickstart? I'd like this area
to be accessible to my local network only, internet users shouldn't
be able to access it or better yet even know it's there.
Thanks.
Dave
i downloaded the centos5 iso, then;
mount /path/to/CentOS-5.0-i386-bin-DVD.iso var/www/html/cd/0 -o loop,ro
This gives you access to the install stuff at
http://your.server.ip/cd/0 (i have centos4 at /cd/1 and other isos
at /cd/2 and /cd/3 - keep your paths short to save typing!)
Then you have to host the kickstart file too - i put mine at the
root (/var/www/html ) but you may find it tidier to put it at
/var/www/html/ks or similar.
Then (bc you want to limit access) in your httpd.conf you will need
a section like this (someone please correct this if it's wrong)
<Location /ks>
order deny,allow
deny from all
allow from 127.0.0.1 192.168.0.0/255.255.255.0
</Location>
<Location /cd>
allow from 127.0.0.1 192.168.0.0/255.255.255.0
order deny,allow
deny from all
</Location>
Then you're ready to boot from any bootable v5 cd - i use cd 1 of 6
from the CentOS5 set of CD isos
At the prompt i think it is
#linux ks=http://your.ip/ks/whatever.cfg
whatever.cfg would look like this;
Note: Edit a least the following lines;
url, rootpw, timezone
You may want to grab anaconda.cfg from the root folder of your most
recently installed CentOS5 installation and compare the lines (esp
rootpw and timezone to get the spelling right)
You may also want to comment out rootpw and the partition lines so
that you are prompted to fill these in by hand.
Regards,
MrKiwi
#========================================================
# Kickstart file automatically generated by anaconda.
install
url --url http://your.ip/cd/0
lang en_US.UTF-8
keyboard us
network --device eth0 --bootproto dhcp
rootpw --iscrypted blahblahblah
firewall --enabled --port=22:tcp
authconfig --enableshadow --enablemd5
selinux --disabled
timezone Pacific/Auckland
bootloader --location=mbr --driveorder=sda
# The following is the partition information you requested
# Note that any partitions you deleted are not expressed
# here so unless you clear all partitions first, this is
# not guaranteed to work
clearpart --linux --drives=sda
part /boot --fstype ext3 --size=100 --ondisk=sda
part pv.9 --size=0 --grow --ondisk=sda
volgroup VolGroup00 --pesize=32768 pv.9
logvol / --fstype ext3 --name=LogVol00 --vgname=VolGroup00
--size=1024 --grow
logvol swap --fstype swap --name=LogVol01 --vgname=VolGroup00
--size=1000 --grow --maxsize=1984
%packages
@base
@core
@editors
#========================================================
Dave wrote:
Hi,
Thanks for your informative reply. I'll definitely go for that.
One thing, my web server area doesn't have 4+gb of room on it for
this dvd. What i'd like to do is have the mount point in
/var/www/html/cd/0 like you do, but 0 is a symlink to another drive
in this case /mnt/dvd-centos5, that's where the dvd will be mounted.
But i don't think apache will follow symlinks in this case, have you
ever tried this?
Thanks.
Dave.
If the section <location /cd> contains the directive
Options FollowSymLinks
then it will (provided the perms allow this)
There may be a simpler way - quicker too;
Just setup as i mentioned but rather than mount the iso on /cd/0 ,
mount like this;
mount /mnt/dvd-centos5 /var/www/html/cd/0
You can mount the centos stuff in multiple places too - i think maybe
"options ro" may make this faster? as the webserver will only ever be
reading the rpms etc from the centos5 area.
Even simpler;
If the centos data is its own partition/drive, just mount it right in
the html folder from the get-go;
mount /dev/hdb1 /var/www/html/cd/0
Regards,
MrKiwi
ps - pls make sure you reply to the list so everyone can benefit from
the solution, and bottom post too.
Dave wrote:
> Hi,
> What version of centos do you have? I'm trying to find
the single dvd
> image of either 4.5 or 5, what's the difference btw? I'd
rather not have
> to mount 6 different isos when i could just get the dvd, but
> mirror.atlantic.net doesn't seem to have it. do you know
where i can get
> the dvd iso image?
> Thanks.
> Dave.
>
I use both 4.5 and 5.
4.5 is the equiv of RHEL4 - but updates bring it up to RHEL 4.5
5.x is the equiv of RHEL5 - the latest offering from a
fantastic north american company.
Features; 4.5 is rock solid, but doesnt have the latest
clustering, file system and virtualization - v5 does. There
are lots of other differences, but if you have to ask what
the difference is, you most likely dont need to worry about
compatibility so just get the latest (v5)
In terms of what is best to use - for production machines i
always wait ~2 years to install the most current distro from
microsoft, about 3 months for ubuntu/suse/fedora (not that
they are ever on prod boxes) or about 2-6 weeks for the most
current CentOS distro - so go for 5 if you can get it.
The best way to get it - download the bit torrent file
(~280kb) from the centos.org site and leave it running
overnight to get the v5 DVD
ps - Dont reply to me - reply to the list.
MrKiwi
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