Diskless netboot
Diskless server / workstation using netboot
NFS is a technology that allow you to share some files and folders over the network. So:
- All the clients will share the installation, configuration files and so on.
- Each client will run a dedicated instance of the operating system
- Logs will be centralized on the common NFS server - so we don't loose data on each reboot.
You must have a working DHCP server + NetBoot before starting this part.
Requirements:
Optional:
Contents
Aim
In order to be super effective:
- Each client distribution will have its own kernel support (vmlinuz + initrd.img files)
- All the distributions will be under the same root
- Both NFS and TFTP will share the same root folder
- The user will be able to choose the O.S to use using a PXE menu
Target folder tree:
# TFTP root
/tftpboot/
# Ubuntu installation NetBoot disk
/tftpboot/rescue/
###############
# Network bootable image(s) using NFS technology
################
/tftpboot/nfs/
#### Boot file
/tftpboot/nfs/pxelinux.0 # Initial boot file - only use to load the PXE NetBoot manager
/tftpboot/nfs/{menu.c32 || vesamenu.c32} # PXE interactive menu managers (text or graphical)
/tftpboot/nfs/pxelinux.cfg/ # PXE configuration(s)
/tftpboot/nfs/pxelinux.cfg/default # default PXE configuration
#### Kernel file
/tftpboot/nfs/kernel/vmlinuz
/tftpboot/nfs/kernel/initrd.img
#### NFS
# This is where the runnable will be. Each image will be in a dedicated folder.
/tftpboot/nfs/images/
# Debian 7.x [Wheezy]
/tftpboot/nfs/images/wheezy/
# Ubuntu 14.04 [Trusty]
/tftpboot/nfs/images/trusty/
Installation
NFS support
apt-get install nfs-kernel-server nfs-common
Debootstrap (manage netboot image)
apt-get install debootstrap
Initramfs (to manage "virtual disks")
apt-get install initramfs-tools
NFS server setup
Preparation
You have to create a dedicated folder on your server where you will host the client image.
mkdir -p /tftpboot/nfs/pxelinux.cfg
mkdir -p /tftpboot/nfs/images
mkdir -p /tftpboot/nfs/kernel
chmod -R 777 /tftpboot/nfs
Configuration
The NFS configuration is done in the /etc/exports file
vim /etc/exports
Add something like that:
/tftpboot/nfs 192.168.2.0/24(ro,no_root_squash,no_subtree_check,async,insecure)
Adjust "192.168.2.0/24" to your own network address
- rw : Allow clients to read as well as write access
- ro : Read only access
- insecure : Tells the NFS server to use unpriveledged ports (ports > 1024).
- no_subtree_check : If the entire volume (/users) is exported, disabling this check will speed up transfers.
- async : async will speed up transfers.
- no_root_squash: This phrase allows root to connect to the designated directory.
- NOTE -
It's always a good idea to use Read-Only if you plan to share this disk.
That will avoid user to mess with your image!
Security
Like TFTP, this part is insecure !
You must restrict the access to your NFS server by a firewall script and filtering BEFORE reaching the LAN !
NFS is using dynamic ports numbers because it runs over rpcbind. Making NFS using specifics port is a pain in the ass !! :(
So, instead of that you should allow your LAN communication.
IPTABLES=`which iptables`
LAN_ADDRESS="192.168.2.0/24"
# Allow LAN communication
$IPTABLES -A INPUT -s $LAN_ADDRESS -d $LAN_ADDRESS -m state ! --state INVALID -j ACCEPT
$IPTABLES -A OUTPUT -s $LAN_ADDRESS -d $LAN_ADDRESS -m state ! --state INVALID -j ACCEPT
Management
service nfs-kernel-server {status|start|stop|restart}
Test the server
Install the NFS v4 client:
apt-get install nfs-common
To mount the default path:
mount -t nfs nfs-server:/ /mnt
You'll see: "/mnt/tftpboot/nfs"
It's better to do:
mount -t nfs nfs-server:/tftpboot/nfs /mnt
NFS client image
There are different way to setup a NFS client image.
The main ones are:
- debootstrap
- copying the install from your server
- Manual install on a client, then, when the system is ready, copy everything to the NFS share
Setup client distribution
Setup distribution folder
You have to create one target for each distribution you want to serve:
mkdir -p /tftpboot/nfs/images/trusty
mkdir -p /tftpboot/nfs/images/wheezy
- NOTES -
- The folder name should match your NetBoot settings. Folder name = a LABEL in the NetBoot config.
- The folder name should match a Linux (Debian like) distribution name
Populate the content
Debian 7.x
cd /tftpboot/nfs/images/wheezy
debootstrap wheezy /tftpboot/nfs/images/wheezy
Ubuntu 14.04
cd /tftpboot/nfs/images/trusty
debootstrap trusty /tftpboot/nfs/images/trusty
Configure client distribution
- Manual configuration: Diskless image configuration - manual setup
- Automatic [Puppet || Chef] configuration: Diskless image configuration - script setup
Backup distribution
You can create an archive of your current distribution for later restore / re-use.
Compression
cd /tftpboot/nfs/images
tar cvpjf trusty.tar.bz2 ./trusty
Restoration
cd /tftpboot/nfs/images
tar -xvjf trusty.tar.bz2
Adjust TFTP root
You must adjust the TFTP root to match the NFS root !!
vim /etc/default/tftpd-hpa
Adjust the file like that:
RUN_DAEMON="yes"
OPTIONS="--secure"
TFTP_ADDRESS="0.0.0.0:69"
TFTP_USERNAME="tftp"
TFTP_DIRECTORY="/tftpboot/nfs"
Notice the RUN_DAEMON instruction + the new TFTP_DIRECTORY
Custom NetBoot configuration
Basic configuration
You can setup your own netboot configuration.
To do so, you can re-use one of the syslinux templates:
# Create folders
mkdir /tftpboot/nfs/pxelinux.cfg/
# Create configuration files
cp /usr/lib/syslinux/pxelinux.0 /pxe-boot/
The pxelinux.cfg folder is mandatory. Inside you can provide:
- configuration for a specific IP @ or hostname
- configuration for a group
- default configuration (required)
Create the default configuration file:
vim /pxe-boot/pxelinux.cfg/default
Put the following:
# Ubuntu 14.04
LABEL TRUSTY
kernel images/trusty/vmlinuz
# Set NFS share as default root
append boot=nfs root=/dev/nfs initrd=images/trusty/initrd.img nfsroot=192.168.2.2:/pxe-boot/images/trusty
# Prompt user for selection
PROMPT 0
TIMEOUT 30
- Each LABEL is a specific configuration that will displayed on the NetBoot menu.
- PROMPT 1 = enable user prompt so you can choose the configuration
- TIMEOUT 30 = timeout (in seconds) before the default option is choosen
Note that I used a reference to "trusty/", that's a folder I need to create later on.
Text menu:
cp /usr/lib/syslinux/menu.c32 /pxe-boot/
Graphic menu:
cp /usr/lib/syslinux/vesamenu.c32 /pxe-boot/
cp /mySuperPicture/logo.png /pxe-boot/pxelinux.cfg/
The associate picture must be a PNG 800x600 picture.
Configure boot options
Then edit the PXE boot file:
vim /pxe-boot/pxelinux.cfg/default
Put:
#### GENERIC OPTIONS #####
# Enable text menu
#DEFAULT menu.c32
# Enable graphical menu
DEFAULT vesamenu.c32
# Prompt for user input? (0 = choose from menu, 1 = you can type anything)
PROMPT 0
# Allow or not the user to left the menu (1 = user is locked to the menu)
NOESCAPE 1
# Time before using default option
TIMEOUT 50
#### Menu settings #####
MENU TITLE my super netboot menu
MENU BACKGROUND pxelinux.cfg/logo.png
MENU WIDTH 80
MENU ROWS 14
MENU MARGIN 10
#### Distributions #####
# Ubuntu 14.04
LABEL trusty
MENU LABEL Ubuntu 14.04 (trusty)
MENU DEFAULT
# Kernel and boot files
KERNEL images/trusty/vmlinuz
### Boot options
# Set NFS share as default root
append boot=nfs root=/dev/nfs initrd=images/trusty/initrd.img nfsroot=192.168.2.2:/pxe-boot/images/trusty
# Debian wheezy
MENU LABEL Debian Wheezy
# Kernel and boot files
KERNEL images/wheezy/vmlinuz
append boot=nfs root=/dev/nfs initrd=images/wheezy/initrd.img nfsroot=192.168.2.2:/pxe-boot/images/wheezy
Note all the "MENU" commands + PROMPT 0
Security notes
in order to work you must adjust the rights of your "/var/lib/tftpboot/".
chmod 777 /pxe-boot/*
chmod 777 /pxe-boot/pxelinux.cfg/*
DHCP note
Don't forget to adjust your DHCP configuration if you plan to serve a specific file for a client!
vim /etc/dhcp/dhcp.conf
References
Ubuntu diskless how-to: https://help.ubuntu.com/community/DisklessUbuntuHowto Super video tutorials: