I played a bit more with the TCP trace and as far as I can see, iPXE tries to talk to just about every machine on my network except the iSCSI server.
I found a copy of gPXE somewhere on the net this afternoon and tried that. I gets much further, even to the point of starting the Windows boot sequence from the iSCSI volume. Looks like iSCSI in the current version of iPXE is broken. I haven't been able to find the previous iPXE version, or the current gPXE to try. Lee. -----Original Message----- From: Michael Brown [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: Friday, 28 January 2011 10:15 PM To: [email protected] Cc: Lee Bradshaw Subject: Re: [ipxe-devel] Connection reset (0f0a6039) On Friday 28 Jan 2011 08:25:02 Lee Bradshaw wrote: > I'm trying to set up a diskless Windows 7 workstation. > > I've set up FreeNas in a VM on a windows 2008 machine; I've set up the > TFTP server & DHCP entries on the DHCP server (a Windows 2003 machine). > > I then created a volume in FreeNas, connected to it from a Windows 7 > machine, and cloned the system disk to it; then disconnected the iScsi > drive. > > In order to test it, I created a second VM machine on the Windows 2008 > machine, with no operating system; the DHCP entries are set up to > point this to iPXE then the iSCSI drive I created on FreeNas. > > It loads undionly as expected, then tries to boot the iSCSI volume, > but I > get: > > Root path: iscsi:10.10.10.245::::iqn.2011-01.au.id.witsend:GrSyst > > Could not open SAN device: connection reset (http://ipxe.org/0f0a6039) Kudos for already trying the latest version of iPXE; I can tell from the output that you're using a version less than 12 hours old! :) > The FreeNas logs don't show anything happening at all. > > Any help would be appreciated. I assume you've already seen the advice on http://ipxe.org/0f0a6039? This sounds like a firewall issue. If you look at a packet capture you should see that iPXE is sending a SYN and the target is responding immediately with a RST. That would explain why nothing shows up in the FreeNas logs; the connection is rejected by the firewall before it reaches FreeNas. Try disabling the firewall on the Windows 2008 VM hosting FreeNas. If this doesn't help, try capturing a packet trace (http://ipxe.org/howto/pcap) on that VM; that might show what's happening. Michael _______________________________________________ ipxe-devel mailing list [email protected] https://lists.ipxe.org/mailman/listinfo/ipxe-devel

