- Mark as New
- Bookmark
- Subscribe
- Mute
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Permalink
- Report Inappropriate Content
Ricardo,
First let me ask:
Are you running the DHCP, TFTP & PXE from the UDA?
If so, log into the web interface:
IP Address: 10.0.0.104
Netmask: 255.0.0.0
Gateway: 10.0.0.1
You will need to change your local IP address on your computer to be on the same subnet if it is not set for DHCP (automatic configuration) so that it can talk to the UDA server.
If you are using the UDA for DHCP, you should change the IP address of the UDA appliance to be on your local LAN and set the DHCP settings to provide DHCP to all your workstations. You may want to do this if you are only doing basic DHCP on a small LAN. On a larger LAN, you will want to modify your main DHCP server to allow it to point to your UDA for PXE services.
Once your IP is set, you will need to make a share on a local workstation to keep the ISO files in. A workstation works better than a server because it allows guest access which the UDA requires. Copy your ISO file into that share (ISO's should have no spaces in the names to work properly).
Configure the settings on the web interface to point to your computer share that you just setup, and let it mount. If it doesn't mount, check your rights on the workstation.
Next go to the OS section and connect your OS to the ISO you copied into your share. That should parse it and do it's magic. If this doesn't work, your ISO file may be damaged. Daemon Tools, or VCD Tool (both allow you to mount ISO files) can verify that your ISO is damaged or OK.
Next create a template under the template section for your default installation. This will create the PXE boot image. Go back to the Template and edit it to make the answer file match what you want it to do.
There are lots of options here, but that's the basics.... thedude_ has done an awesome job on this.
Thanks,
T|-|R@K