1PXE-KEXEC(1)                       PXE-Kexec                      PXE-KEXEC(1)
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NAME

6       pxe-kexec - Read PXE configuration file and kexec entries
7

SYNOPSIS

9       pxe-kexec [options] [tftp_server]
10

DESCRIPTION

12   Overview
13       pxe-kexec is a tool that fetches PXE configuration from a TFTP server,
14       reads that PXE configuration file, prompts the user for an boot entry,
15       downloads the specified kernel and initrd and finally tries to boot the
16       kernel.
17
18       The normal process to boot with kexec(8) is that pxe-kexec loads the
19       kernel and invokes reboot(8). The shutdown script of the Linux
20       distribution then executes "kexec -e" at the very end. That is not
21       implemented everywhere.  Therefore, pxe-kexec has a whitelist of Linux
22       distributions that support reboot with kexec. If the distribution is
23       not on that whitelist, the program quits with a warning. To bypass that
24       warning, please use the "--igore-whitelist" parameter. You can also use
25       the "--force" parameter to execute "kexec -e" to immediately boot the
26       selected kernel, without invoking shutdown(8)/reboot(8).
27
28       pxe-kexec meant to be used in an environment where pre-defined PXE
29       configurations exist but the user wants to use kexec(8) instead of
30       rebooting.
31
32       Normally, the tftp_server must be specified as first argument. If
33       there's no TFTP server specified, pxe-kexec looks in the DHCP info file
34       for the DHCP server and uses this one as TFTP server. This only works
35       when the TFTP server is running on the same machine as the DHCP server.
36
37       ==> Please also read the section called "Update Info" <==
38
39   Whitelist
40       As mentioned previously, a whitelist of Linux distributions that
41       support kexec-based rebooting is maintained. Currently following
42       distributions are on the whitelist:
43
44       ·      openSUSE, starting with version 11.0
45
46       ·      Ubuntu, starting with version 9.04
47
48       ·      Red Hat Enterprise Linux and CentOS, starting with version 5.3
49
50       ·      Fedora Linux, starting with version 11
51
52       ·      ARCH Linux
53
54       Don't hesitate to send the author an email to add the distribution to
55       the whitelist. Please include the output of "pxe-kexec
56       --print-distribution" in that mail.
57

OPTIONS

59       Following options can be specified:
60
61       -h | --help
62              Prints a short help.
63
64       -v | --version
65              Prints the version number to standard output.
66
67       -f | --force
68              Immediately load the kernel without invoking reboot(8). This
69              does not execute shutdown scripts, i.e. does not terminate
70              daemons, network connections etc.
71
72       -L | --load-only
73              When that option is specified, the new kernel is only loaded. No
74              reboot is triggered and "kexec -e" is also not executed.
75
76       -w | --ignore-whitelist
77              Don't check if the detected Linux distribution is on the
78              whitelist of distributions that have kexec(8) in their shutdown
79              script. Please don't use that parameter without letting the
80              author know which distribution you use and how to detect that
81              distribution. Then the distribution can be added to the
82              whitelist and other users profit from that experience.
83
84       -l label | --label label
85              Specifies the label that should be booted. Use that option if
86              you already know which label you want to boot. This option
87              implies "--quiet".
88
89       -i | --interface netif
90              Uses netif instead of the first (non-loopback and up) interface
91              that is found. Example: "eth5".
92
93       -n | --noconfirm
94              Don't ask the user for confirmation before booting an entry. Use
95              that option with care!
96
97       -Y | --dry-run
98              Don't execute call to kexec and don't switch the virtual console
99              before running "kexec -e". Instead, print the information which
100              program would be executed with which arguments to standard
101              error.
102
103       -q | --quiet
104              Don't display the PXE messages that are added in the PXE
105              configuration with the say keyword. Also don't display messages
106              which PXE configuration files the downloader tries to fetch.
107
108       -p | --print-distribution
109              Only prints the detected Linux distribution and exits. For
110              example:
111
112                  Type        : Ubuntu
113                  Name        : Ubuntu
114                  Release     : 9.04
115                  Codename    : jaunty
116                  Description : Ubuntu 9.04
117
118              This option is very useful if your distribution is not on the
119              whitelist of Linux distributions that support kexec(8) in the
120              reboot scripts and you want to create a bugreport.
121
122              This command does not require root privileges.
123
124       -D | --debug
125              Enable debugging output. That's good for finding (and fixing!)
126              bugs.
127
128       -d | --nodelete
129              Keep downloaded files.
130
131       -F | --ftp
132              Always use FTP instead of TFTP. Useful for servers that share
133              TFTP root and FTP root. (Passive) FTP has the advantage that it
134              passes firewalls better than TFTP.
135

UPDATE INFO

137   Updating from 0.1.x to 0.2
138       Compared to version 0.1.x, the syntax has changed:
139
140       ·      The default label must now be set with the -l label option
141              instead of the 2nd argument. Example:
142
143                % pxe-kexec mydhcp.mydomain.com SLES10-install-auto
144
145              is now
146
147                % pxe-kexec -l SLES10-install-auto mydhcp.mydomain.com
148
149       ·      pxe-kexec now uses the reboot mechanism by default: The kernel
150              is loaded, then the reboot is triggered and the reboot script of
151              the Linux distribution finally boots the kernel. This has the
152              advantage of a clear shutdown.
153
154              The program keeps a database of Linux distributions that support
155              kexec-based reboot. If the currently active distribution is not
156              on the whitelist, an error is printed. (That whitelist can be
157              ignored with "--ignore-whitelist".)
158
159       ·      To use the previous behaviour, i.e. just execute "kexec -e" in
160              pxe-kexec at the end, you can still use the "--force" parameter.
161              Example:
162
163                % pxe-kexec mydhcp.mydomain.com
164
165              is now
166
167                % pxe-kexec --force mydhcp.mydomain.com
168
169       ·      If you want to have the old "dry-run" behaviour back, which in
170              fact only missed the last "kexec -e" step, you can use the
171              option "--load-only".  Example:
172
173                % pxe-kexec --dry-run mydhcp.mydomain.com
174
175              is now
176
177               % pxe-kexec --load-only mydhcp.mydomain.com
178

EXAMPLES

180       pxe-kexec mydhcp.mydomain.com
181              Try to fetch the PXE configuration from mydhcp.mydomain.com,
182              display the say messages from that configuration, prompt for an
183              entry, letting the user confirm that entry and finally load that
184              entry via kexec(8) and reboot via reboot(8).
185
186              This only works if you distribution supports kexec-based
187              rebooting, i.e.  it is in the internal whitelist.
188
189       pxe-kexec -n mydhcp.mydomain.com
190              Same as the previous example, but omit the final confirmation
191              step.
192
193       pxe-kexec -l SLES10-install-auto mydhcp.mydomain.com
194              Same as the first example, but don't prompt the user for the
195              label to boot.  Directly boot the SLES10-install-auto label, but
196              letting the user confirm that he really wants to boot this!
197
198       pxe-kexec -n -l SLES10-install-auto mydhcp.mydomain.com
199              Same as the previous example, but without confirmation.
200
201       pxe-kexec -f mydhcp.mydomain.com
202              Same as the first example, but execute "kexec -e" at the end
203              instead of invoking reboot(8).
204
205       pxe-kexec -l mydhcp.mydomain.com
206              Same as the first example, but don't trigger a reboot. Instead,
207              the kernel is just loaded. If your distribution supports kexec-
208              based rebooting, the kernel will be loaded on next reboot. You
209              can also run "kexec -e" manually at any time.
210

AUTHOR

212       The pxe-kexec program and documentation has been written by Bernhard
213       Walle <bernhard@bwalle.de>.
214

BUGS

216       This program has no bugs. If you find a feature that should be removed,
217       please report to <bernhard@bwalle.de> if you don't want to create an
218       account.
219

SEE ALSO

221       kexec(8)
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2250.2.3                             2009-10-10                      PXE-KEXEC(1)
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