Le jeudi 28 janvier 2010 12:19:16, Michael George a écrit : > On Wed, Jan 27, 2010 at 06:07:19PM -0500, Eric Thibodeau wrote: > > > For the most part, LTSP does a very good job of detecting what > > > hardware???s on your thin client. However, it???s possible that you may > > > want to manually specify a kernel module to load after boot. > > > > ...._after boot_ ...which implies you got past the NFSroot > > mounting...which he can't since he doesn't have the correct NIC driver > > from what I can read. > > Correct. PXE and DHCP get the kernel and initramfs to the system. From > there it tries to detect hardware and then loads modules from initramfs. > But since it (appears to -- I could be wrong) pick the tg3 driver over > the 3Com driver, it's halted at the network mount of /.
Did you checked the content of your (chroot)/etc/initramfs-tools/ directory ? You can try to configure mkinitramfs (see man initramfs.conf) You can pass boot options to the kernel on the fly, boot options apply to network card, using the MAC adress. See http://sourceforge.net/apps/mediawiki/ltsp/index.php?title=Ltsp_KernelOptions It can also be a bug in your current running kernel (try another one). Xavier [email protected] - 09 54 06 16 26 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ The Planet: dedicated and managed hosting, cloud storage, colocation Stay online with enterprise data centers and the best network in the business Choose flexible plans and management services without long-term contracts Personal 24x7 support from experience hosting pros just a phone call away. http://p.sf.net/sfu/theplanet-com _____________________________________________________________________ Ltsp-discuss mailing list. To un-subscribe, or change prefs, goto: https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/ltsp-discuss For additional LTSP help, try #ltsp channel on irc.freenode.net
