Do I have to initialize the network or grub does it self? I suppose that calling *net_ls_cards* something should be printed out but this is not true in my case. *FOR_NET_CARDS* macro doesn't output any cards. In the source code, I've found that there is a function *grub_net_card_register *and for what I have understood, this should be called somewhere. I think that this is done by the modules: *efinet, emunet, ofnet, ubootnet *and* pxe*. I'm trying to insmod-ding *ofnet* but with no fortune. If I'm doing something stupid, please tell me. I don't want to waste your time.
Thanks. On Wed Dec 03 2014 at 7:03:19 PM Alan Perry <ape...@snowmoose.com> wrote: > > > > On Dec 3, 2014, at 9:00 AM, Brugnara Daniele <dani...@brugnara.me> > wrote: > > > > source (http,http://192.168.1.70:1273)/ > > source (http:http://192.168.1.70:1273)/ > > source (http,192.168.1.70,1273)/ > > source (http:192.168.1.70:1273:/) > > [...] > > > > > > The syntax for a net device is (<protocol>, <server>). <protocol> in your > case would be 'http'. <server> would be 192.168.1.170. The http module is > hard-coded to use port 80. > > I am in the process of extending the syntax to allow the port to be > specified (with syntax (<protocol>, <server>, <port>)). Working through a > bug in my code. > > alan > >
_______________________________________________ Grub-devel mailing list Grub-devel@gnu.org https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/grub-devel