Hello Anas, On zondag 12 mei 2002 20:21, Anas Nashif wrote:
According to your problem description i understand that you need this to boot and auto-install a machine by specifying the network information on the command line rather than using a DHCP server which you cant change.
The information specified in the documentation is enough to accomplish this. You can specify IP, Nameserver, Netmask etc. and this is enough to drive the installation. Regarding the hostname it has to be set using the networking resource (See: http://www.suse.de/~nashif/autoinstall/autoyast2/createprofile.network.html #Configuration.Network.Devices) or use the configuration system (/sbin/yast2 autoyast) to specify any information regarding final network settings that the host has to get.
I agree with you that the network information to get the autoinstall going is available. I don't need the hostname to get the boot going but to finish the auto-installation without human intervention. I don't see the possibility to specify the hostname by using the configuration system (/sbin/yast2 autoyast), can you provide an example? This is my point: as the hostname is unique (like the ip number) to each system installed it has to be specified each installation. It looks cumbersome to write a floppy or to put up a webpage for each system to be configured, while none of the settings change, but the hostname. Because the hostname (and the ip address) is the only variable changing it would be nice to be able to provide it on the boot prompt as well (just as the ip number). -- Richard Bos Democracy cost a fortune