| PXELINUX |
| |
| A bootloader for Linux using the PXE network booting protocol |
| |
| Copyright 1994-2008 H. Peter Anvin - All Rights Reserved |
| Copyright 2009-2011 Intel Corporation; author: H. Peter Anvin |
| |
| This program is provided under the terms of the GNU General Public |
| License, version 2 or, at your option, any later version. There is no |
| warranty, neither expressed nor implied, to the function of this |
| program. Please see the included file COPYING for details. |
| |
| This documentation file is slightly out of date; please check the NEWS |
| file for changes. |
| |
| ---------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| PXELINUX is a Syslinux derivative, for booting Linux off a network |
| server, using a network ROM conforming to the Intel PXE (Pre-Execution |
| Environment) specification. PXELINUX is *not* a program that is |
| intended to be flashed or burned into a PROM on the network card; if |
| you want that, check out Etherboot (http://www.etherboot.org/). |
| Etherboot 5.4 or later can also be used to create a PXE-compliant boot |
| PROM for many network cards. |
| |
| |
| ++++ HOW TO CONFIGURE PXELINUX ++++ |
| |
| PXELINUX operates in many ways like SYSLINUX. If you are not familiar |
| with SYSLINUX, read syslinux.txt first, since this documentation only |
| explains the differences. |
| |
| On the TFTP server, create the directory "/tftpboot", and copy the |
| following files to it: |
| |
| pxelinux.0 - from the Syslinux distribution |
| |
| any kernel or initrd images you want to boot |
| |
| Finally, create the directory "/tftpboot/pxelinux.cfg". The |
| configuration file (equivalent of syslinux.cfg -- see syslinux.txt for |
| the options here) will live in this directory. Because more than one |
| system may be booted from the same server, the configuration file name |
| depends on the IP address of the booting machine. PXELINUX will |
| search for its config file on the boot server in the following way: |
| |
| First, it will search for the config file using the client UUID, if |
| one is provided by the PXE stack (note, some BIOSes don't have a |
| valid UUID, and you might end up with something like all 1's.) This is |
| in the standard UUID format using lower case hexadecimal digits, e.g. |
| b8945908-d6a6-41a9-611d-74a6ab80b83d. |
| |
| Next, it will search for the config file using the hardware type |
| (using its ARP type code) and address, all in lower case hexadecimal |
| with dash separators; for example, for an Ethernet (ARP type 1) |
| with address 88:99:AA:BB:CC:DD it would search for the filename |
| 01-88-99-aa-bb-cc-dd. |
| |
| Next, it will search for the config file using its own IP address |
| in upper case hexadecimal, e.g. 192.0.2.91 -> C000025B |
| (you can use the included progam "gethostip" to compute the |
| hexadecimal IP address for any host.) |
| |
| If that file is not found, it will remove one hex digit and try |
| again. Ultimately, it will try looking for a file named "default" |
| (in lower case). |
| |
| As an example, if the boot file name is /mybootdir/pxelinux.0, the |
| UUID is b8945908-d6a6-41a9-611d-74a6ab80b83d, the Ethernet MAC |
| address is 88:99:AA:BB:CC:DD and the IP address 192.0.2.91, it will |
| try: |
| |
| /mybootdir/pxelinux.cfg/b8945908-d6a6-41a9-611d-74a6ab80b83d |
| /mybootdir/pxelinux.cfg/01-88-99-aa-bb-cc-dd |
| /mybootdir/pxelinux.cfg/C000025B |
| /mybootdir/pxelinux.cfg/C000025 |
| /mybootdir/pxelinux.cfg/C00002 |
| /mybootdir/pxelinux.cfg/C0000 |
| /mybootdir/pxelinux.cfg/C000 |
| /mybootdir/pxelinux.cfg/C00 |
| /mybootdir/pxelinux.cfg/C0 |
| /mybootdir/pxelinux.cfg/C |
| /mybootdir/pxelinux.cfg/default |
| |
| ... in that order. |
| |
| Note that all filename references are relative to the directory |
| pxelinux.0 lives in. PXELINUX generally requires that filenames |
| (including any relative path) are 127 characters or shorter in length. |
| |
| Starting in release 3.20, PXELINUX will no longer apply a built-in |
| default if it cannot find any configuration file at all; instead it |
| will reboot after the timeout interval has expired. This keeps a |
| machine from getting stuck indefinitely due to a boot server failure. |
| |
| Starting in release 3.50, PXELINUX displays network information at |
| the boot prompt pressing <Ctrl-N>. |
| |
| PXELINUX does not support MTFTP, and I have no plans of doing so, as |
| MTFTP is inherently broken for files more than 65535 packets (about |
| 92 MB) in size. It is of course possible to use MTFTP for the initial |
| boot, if you have such a setup. MTFTP server setup is beyond the |
| scope of this document. |
| |
| |
| ++++ HTTP AND FTP DOWNLOADS ++++ |
| |
| Since version 5.10, native pxelinux.0 can support HTTP and FTP |
| transfers, greatly increasing load speed and allowing for standard |
| HTTP scripts to present PXELINUX's configuration file. To use http or |
| ftp, use standard URL syntax as filename; use the DHCP options below |
| to transmit a suitable URL prefix to the client, or use the |
| "pxelinux-options" tool provided in the utils directory to program it |
| directly into the pxelinux.0 file. |
| |
| |
| ++++ SETTING UP THE TFTP SERVER ++++ |
| |
| For best results, use a TFTP server which supports the "tsize" TFTP |
| option (RFC 1784/RFC 2349). The "tftp-hpa" TFTP server, which support |
| options, is available at: |
| |
| http://www.kernel.org/pub/software/network/tftp/ |
| ftp://www.kernel.org/pub/software/network/tftp/ |
| |
| ... and on any kernel.org mirror (see http://www.kernel.org/mirrors/). |
| |
| Another TFTP server which supports this is atftp by Jean-Pierre |
| Lefebvre: |
| |
| ftp://ftp.mamalinux.com/pub/atftp/ |
| |
| If your boot server is running Windows (and you can't fix that), try |
| tftpd32 by Philippe Jounin (you need version 2.11 or later; previous |
| versions had a bug which made it incompatible with PXELINUX): |
| |
| http://tftpd32.jounin.net/ |
| |
| |
| ++++ SETTING UP THE DHCP SERVER ++++ |
| |
| The PXE protocol uses a very complex set of extensions to DHCP or |
| BOOTP. However, most PXE implementations -- this includes all Intel |
| ones version 0.99n and later -- seem to be able to boot in a |
| "conventional" DHCP/TFTP configuration. Assuming you don't have to |
| support any very old or otherwise severely broken clients, this is |
| probably the best configuration unless you already have a PXE boot |
| server on your network. |
| |
| A sample DHCP setup, using the "conventional TFTP" configuration, |
| would look something like the following, using ISC dhcp 2.0 dhcpd.conf |
| syntax: |
| |
| allow booting; |
| allow bootp; |
| |
| # Standard configuration directives... |
| |
| option domain-name "<domain name>"; |
| option subnet-mask <subnet mask>; |
| option broadcast-address <broadcast address>; |
| option domain-name-servers <dns servers>; |
| option routers <default router>; |
| |
| # Group the PXE bootable hosts together |
| group { |
| # PXE-specific configuration directives... |
| next-server <TFTP server address>; |
| filename "/tftpboot/pxelinux.0"; |
| |
| # You need an entry like this for every host |
| # unless you're using dynamic addresses |
| host <hostname> { |
| hardware ethernet <ethernet address>; |
| fixed-address <hostname>; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| Note that if your particular TFTP daemon runs under chroot (tftp-hpa |
| will do this if you specify the -s (secure) option; this is highly |
| recommended), you almost certainly should not include the /tftpboot |
| prefix in the filename statement. |
| |
| If this does not work for your configuration, you probably should set |
| up a "PXE boot server" on port 4011 of your TFTP server; a free PXE |
| boot server is available at: |
| |
| http://www.kano.org.uk/projects/pxe/ |
| |
| With such a boot server defined, your DHCP configuration should look |
| the same except for an "option dhcp-class-identifier" ("option |
| vendor-class-identifier" if you are using DHCP 3.0): |
| |
| allow booting; |
| allow bootp; |
| |
| # Standard configuration directives... |
| |
| option domain-name "<domain name>"; |
| option subnet-mask <subnet mask>; |
| option broadcast-address <broadcast address>; |
| option domain-name-servers <dns servers>; |
| option routers <default router>; |
| |
| # Group the PXE bootable hosts together |
| group { |
| # PXE-specific configuration directives... |
| option dhcp-class-identifier "PXEClient"; |
| next-server <pxe boot server address>; |
| |
| # You need an entry like this for every host |
| # unless you're using dynamic addresses |
| host <hostname> { |
| hardware ethernet <ethernet address>; |
| fixed-address <hostname>; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| Here, the boot file name is obtained from the PXE server. |
| |
| If the "conventional TFTP" configuration doesn't work on your clients, |
| and setting up a PXE boot server is not an option, you can attempt the |
| following configuration. It has been known to boot some |
| configurations correctly; however, there are no guarantees: |
| |
| allow booting; |
| allow bootp; |
| |
| # Standard configuration directives... |
| |
| option domain-name "<domain name>"; |
| option subnet-mask <subnet mask>; |
| option broadcast-address <broadcast address>; |
| option domain-name-servers <dns servers>; |
| option routers <default router>; |
| |
| # Group the PXE bootable hosts together |
| group { |
| # PXE-specific configuration directives... |
| option dhcp-class-identifier "PXEClient"; |
| option vendor-encapsulated-options 09:0f:80:00:0c:4e:65:74:77:6f:72:6b:20:62:6f:6f:74:0a:07:00:50:72:6f:6d:70:74:06:01:02:08:03:80:00:00:47:04:80:00:00:00:ff; |
| next-server <TFTP server>; |
| filename "/tftpboot/pxelinux.0"; |
| |
| # You need an entry like this for every host |
| # unless you're using dynamic addresses |
| host <hostname> { |
| hardware ethernet <ethernet address>; |
| fixed-address <hostname>; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| Note that this *will not* boot some clients that *will* boot with the |
| "conventional TFTP" configuration; Intel Boot Client 3.0 and later are |
| known to fall into this category. |
| |
| |
| ++++ SPECIAL DHCP OPTIONS ++++ |
| |
| PXELINUX (starting with version 1.62) supports the following |
| nonstandard DHCP options, which depending on your DHCP server you may |
| be able to use to customize the specific behaviour of PXELINUX. See |
| RFC 5071 for some additional information about these options. |
| |
| Option 208 pxelinux.magic |
| - Earlier versions of PXELINUX required this to be set to |
| F1:00:74:7E (241.0.116.126) for PXELINUX to |
| recognize any special DHCP options whatsoever. As of |
| PXELINUX 3.55, this option is deprecated and is no longer |
| required. |
| |
| Option 209 pxelinux.configfile |
| - Specifies the PXELINUX configuration file name. |
| |
| Option 210 pxelinux.pathprefix |
| - Specifies the PXELINUX common path prefix, instead of |
| deriving it from the boot file name. This almost certainly |
| needs to end in whatever character the TFTP server OS uses |
| as a pathname separator, e.g. slash (/) for Unix. |
| |
| Option 211 pxelinux.reboottime |
| - Specifies, in seconds, the time to wait before reboot in the |
| event of TFTP failure. 0 means wait "forever" (in reality, |
| it waits approximately 136 years.) |
| |
| ISC dhcp 3.0 supports a rather nice syntax for specifying custom |
| options; you can use the following syntax in dhcpd.conf if you are |
| running this version of dhcpd: |
| |
| option space pxelinux; |
| option pxelinux.magic code 208 = string; |
| option pxelinux.configfile code 209 = text; |
| option pxelinux.pathprefix code 210 = text; |
| option pxelinux.reboottime code 211 = unsigned integer 32; |
| |
| NOTE: In earlier versions of PXELINUX, this would only work as a |
| "site-option-space". Since PXELINUX 2.07, this will work both as a |
| "site-option-space" (unencapsulated) and as a "vendor-option-space" |
| (type 43 encapsulated.) This may avoid messing with the |
| dhcp-parameter-request-list, as detailed below. |
| |
| Then, inside your PXELINUX-booting group or class (whereever you have |
| the PXELINUX-related options, such as the filename option), you can |
| add, for example: |
| |
| # Always include the following lines for all PXELINUX clients |
| site-option-space "pxelinux"; |
| option pxelinux.magic f1:00:74:7e; |
| if exists dhcp-parameter-request-list { |
| # Always send the PXELINUX options (specified in hexadecimal) |
| option dhcp-parameter-request-list = concat(option dhcp-parameter-request-list,d0,d1,d2,d3); |
| } |
| # These lines should be customized to your setup |
| option pxelinux.configfile "configs/common"; |
| option pxelinux.pathprefix "/tftpboot/pxelinux/files/"; |
| option pxelinux.reboottime 30; |
| filename "/tftpboot/pxelinux/pxelinux.bin"; |
| |
| Note that the configfile is relative to the pathprefix: this will look |
| for a config file called /tftpboot/pxelinux/files/configs/common on |
| the TFTP server. |
| |
| The "option dhcp-parameter-request-list" statement forces the DHCP |
| server to send the PXELINUX-specific options, even though they are not |
| explicitly requested. Since the DHCP request is done before PXELINUX |
| is loaded, the PXE client won't know to request them. |
| |
| Using ISC dhcp 3.0 you can create a lot of these strings on the fly. |
| For example, to use the hexadecimal form of the hardware address as |
| the configuration file name, you could do something like: |
| |
| site-option-space "pxelinux"; |
| option pxelinux.magic f1:00:74:7e; |
| if exists dhcp-parameter-request-list { |
| # Always send the PXELINUX options (specified in hexadecimal) |
| option dhcp-parameter-request-list = concat(option dhcp-parameter-request-list,d0,d1,d2,d3); |
| } |
| option pxelinux.configfile = |
| concat("pxelinux.cfg/", binary-to-ascii(16, 8, ":", hardware)); |
| filename "/tftpboot/pxelinux.bin"; |
| |
| If you used this from a client whose Ethernet address was |
| 58:FA:84:CF:55:0E, this would look for a configuration file named |
| "/tftpboot/pxelinux.cfg/1:58:fa:84:cf:55:e". |
| |
| |
| ++++ HARDCODED OPTIONS ++++ |
| |
| Since version 3.83, the program "pxelinux-options" can be used to |
| hard-code DHCP options into the pxelinux.0 image file; this is |
| sometimes useful when the DHCP server is under different |
| administrative control. |
| |
| |
| ++++ ALTERNATE TFTP SERVERS AND URL SYNTAX ++++ |
| |
| PXELINUX supports the following special pathname conventions: |
| |
| ::filename |
| |
| Suppresses the common filename prefix, i.e. passes the string |
| "filename" unmodified to the server. |
| |
| IP address::filename (e.g. 192.0.2.1::filename) |
| |
| Suppresses the common filename prefix, *and* sends a request |
| to an alternate TFTP server. Instead of an IP address, a |
| DNS name can be used. It will be assumed to be fully |
| qualified if it contains dots; otherwise the local domain as |
| reported by the DHCP server (option 15) will be added. |
| |
| :: was chosen because it is unlikely to conflict with operating system |
| usage. However, if you happen to have an environment for which the |
| special treatment of :: is a problem, please contact the Syslinux |
| mailing list. |
| |
| Since version 4.00, PXELINUX also supports standard URL syntax. |
| |
| |
| ++++ SOME NOTES ++++ |
| |
| If the boot fails, PXELINUX (unlike SYSLINUX) will not wait forever; |
| rather, if it has not received any input for approximately five |
| minutes after displaying an error message, it will reset the machine. |
| This allows an unattended machine to recover in case it had bad enough |
| luck of trying to boot at the same time the TFTP server goes down. |
| |
| Lots of PXE stacks, especially old ones, have various problems of |
| varying degrees of severity. Please see: |
| |
| http://syslinux.zytor.com/hardware.php |
| |
| ... for a list of currently known hardware problems, with workarounds |
| if known. |
| |
| |
| ++++ KEEPING THE PXE STACK AROUND ++++ |
| |
| Normally, PXELINUX will unload the PXE and UNDI stacks before invoking |
| the kernel. In special circumstances (for example, when using MEMDISK |
| to boot an operating system with an UNDI network driver) it might be |
| desirable to keep the PXE stack in memory. If the option "keeppxe" |
| is given on the kernel command line, PXELINUX will keep the PXE and |
| UNDI stacks in memory. (If you don't know what this means, you |
| probably don't need it.) |
| |
| |
| ++++ PROBLEMS WITH YOUR PXE STACK ++++ |
| |
| There are a number of extremely broken PXE stacks in the field. The |
| gPXE project (formerly known as Etherboot) provides an open-source PXE |
| stack that works with a number of cards, and which can be loaded from |
| a CD-ROM, USB key, or floppy if desired. |
| |
| Information on gPXE is available from: |
| |
| http://www.etherboot.org/ |
| |
| ... and ready-to-use ROM or disk images from: |
| |
| http://www.rom-o-matic.net/ |
| |
| Some cards, like may systems with the SiS 900, has a PXE stack which |
| works just barely well enough to load a single file, but doesn't |
| handle the more advanced items required by PXELINUX. If so, it is |
| possible to use the built-in PXE stack to load gPXE, which can then |
| load PXELINUX. See: |
| |
| http://www.etherboot.org/wiki/pxechaining |
| |
| |
| ++++ CURRENTLY KNOWN PROBLEMS ++++ |
| |
| The following problems are known with PXELINUX, so far: |
| |
| + The error recovery routine doesn't work quite right. For right now, |
| it just does a hard reset - seems good enough. |
| + We should probably call the UDP receive function in the keyboard |
| entry loop, so that we answer ARP requests. |
| + Boot sectors/disk images are not supported yet. |
| |
| If you have additional problems, please contact the Syslinux mailing |
| list (see syslinux.txt for the address.) |