During the make process I receive the following message: cc1: warnings brunt treated as errors drivers/infiniband/hermon.c: In function 'hermon_probe': drivers/infiniband/hermon.c:2609:14: error: array subscript is above array bounds make: *** [bin/hermon.o] Error 1
I am running on openSuse 64bit on VMWare Player. I am very much a Windows person and making the transition away to either ChromeOS or Suse. Thanks for the assist. Albert Sent from my Android phone using TouchDown (www.nitrodesk.com) -----Original Message----- From: Michael Brown [[email protected]] Received: Monday, 20 Dec 2010, 1:04pm To: [email protected] [[email protected]] CC: Albert Hernandez [[email protected]] Subject: Re: [ipxe-devel] iPXE without DHCP 66/67 Settings On Monday 20 Dec 2010 19:43:57 Albert Hernandez wrote: > We are not in control of our DHCP servers and we want to use iPXE to push > out software distributions to our servers. We want to create a single > bootable ISO so we can use to deploy the image to the systems. > > I have been able to press CTRL-B and been able to set the minimum variable > FILENAME and NEXT-SERVER then issue the AUTBOOT command and the imaging > process begins. Although this is acceptable in a lab configuration, it is > not for a production environment. > > Also we have to have a list of NEXT-SERVERS and have the boot process try > each one until the list is exhausted. Once the list is exhausted then > fail. This list is would be sequentially process and if the connection > returns any error, then skip that server and proceed to the next. I would suggest using an embedded script. You can do this using make bin/ipxe.iso EMBEDDED_IMAGE=stjoe.ipxe where stjoe.ipxe is a text file containing: #!ipxe dhcp chain tftp://my-server1/my-filename || chain tftp://my-server2/my-filename || chain tftp://my-server3/my-filename || echo Boot failed exit 1 This will try each server in turn, falling through to the next entry in the list if it fails for any reason. Note the trailing "||", which is required to prevent the script from immediately aborting if the "chain" command fails. Note that this method will *not* set the "next-server" and "filename" variables. It is possible that your PXE NBP may require these variables to be set. If this is the case, you can use a slightly longer version of the above script: #!ipxe dhcp set filename my-filename set next-server my-server1 chain ${next-server}/${filename} || set next-server my-server2 chain ${next-server}/${filename} || set next-server my-server3 chain ${next-server}/${filename} || echo Boot failed exit 1 Michael Notice from St. Joseph Health System: Please note that the information contained in this message may be privileged and confidential and protected from disclosure. _______________________________________________ ipxe-devel mailing list [email protected] https://lists.ipxe.org/mailman/listinfo/ipxe-devel

