On Friday, January 10, 2014 1:49:28 AM UTC-6, Mike Christie wrote:
>
> On 1/9/14 9:17 PM, Fred Smit wrote: 
> > I notice that Ubuntu has an installation option to install directly to 
> an 
> > iScsi target . 
> > 
> > I assume this means that the intelligence to boot a kernel with the 
> proper 
> > bootags passed in using the default initrd.gz can be px(bootp) e booted 
> > into a iscsi diskless environment? 
> > 
> > I recall trying iscsi booting years ago and the amount of work / 
> > infrastructure to get it working was overwhelming. 
> > 
> > 
> > ps. this is powerpc platform. not Intel. 
> > 
> > 
>
> I don't know the implementation details but it is either pxe boot or 
> some nics and systems have mini iscsi initiators that are used instead. 
> They use iscsi to bring in the kernel and initrd, then the initrd runs 
> iscsiadm/iscsistart which reads the iscsi settings the mini initiator 
> used and then uses that info to create a iscsi session for the rest of 
> the boot process. 
>
> RHEL/OEL and SLES has supported this for a while. 
>
> Is this IBM ppc box? If so then does your system have a mini iscsi 
> initiator on the system? In the open firmware is there some iscsi boot 
> setup stuff? There is some iscsiadm/iscsistart code for some IBM ppc 
> boxes, where you do not need to use pxe because it has a mini iscsi 
> initiator. It loads the initrd and kernel and from there the iscsi tools 
> read the iscsi settings/target from that open firmware tree and then use 
> that info to do the rest of the boot. 
>
>

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