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Diskless Nodes HOW-TO document for Linux

Robert Nemkin buci@math.klte.hu , Al Dev (Alavoor Vasudevan) - Maintainer of this HOWTO alavoor@yahoo.com , Markus Gutschke markus+etherboot@gutschke.com , Ken Yap ken.yap@acm.org , Gero Kuhlmann gero@gkminix.han.de

v9.0, 21 April 2000


This document describes how to set up a diskless Linux box. As technology is advancing rapidly, network-cards are becoming cheaper and much faster - 100 MBits ethernet is standard now and in about 1 to 2 years 1000 MBits i.e. 1GigBits ethernet cards will become a industry standard. With high-speed network cards, remote access will become as fast as the local disk access which will make diskless nodes a viable alternative to workstations in local LAN. Also diskless nodes eliminates the cost of software upgrades and system administration costs like backup, recovery which will be centralized on the server side. Diskless nodes also enable "sharing/optimization" of centralised server CPU, memory, hard-disk, tape and cdrom resources. Diskless nodes provides mobility for the users i.e., users can log on from any one of diskless nodes and are not tied to one workstation. Diskless Linux box completely eliminates the need for local floppy disk, cdrom drive, tape drive and hard-disk. Diskless nodes JUST has a network card, 8MB RAM, a low-end cpu and a very simple mother-board which does not have any interface sockets/slots for harddisks, modem, cdrom, floppy etc.. With Diskless linux nodes you can run programs on remote Linux 64 CPU SMP box or even on Linux super-computer! Diskless nodes lowers the "Total Cost of Ownership" of the computer system. This document is copy­righted by Robert Nemkin and other authors as listed above. Copyright policy is GPL. Thanks to Bela Kis bkis@cartan.math.klte.hu for translating this initial document v0.0.3 (which was a mini-howto) to English.

1. Buying is cheaper than building!

2. Diskless Computer for Microsoft Windows 95/NT !!

3. Advantages of Diskless Computer

4. Linux Terminal Server Project - LTSP

5. EPROM Burners and Memory chips

6. Introduction to Network Booting and Etherboot

7. Redhat Linux configuration

8. LanWorks BootWare PROMs

9. Etherboot

10. Netboot

11. Related URLs

12. Copyright Notice

13. Appendix A - Install Instructions

14. Appendix B - Troubleshoot Problems

15. Appendix C - RFC 951

16. Appendix D - RFC 1533

17. Appendix E - RFC 1350

18. Other Formats of this Document


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