@ThePapanoob Well, I've done it with dd-wrt, but I doubt that the average home router has the DHCP scope options available. You really need something enterprise such as Cisco, SonicWALL, or Windows Server 2008. Not everyone has that option, so they give you the option to use the fog server as the DHCP server. It made it a bit more difficult to do so, but it can work. I built a different network so it could get updates and install DHCP. Two network cards would pay off then.
@technoblogical but i dont want to let the server run the hole day and i found something interesting on the wiki called Using FOG with an unmodifiable DHCP server/ Using FOG with no DHCP server i will try that first but thanks for reply!
@ThePapanoob I would just install a second network card on the server and then run fog and dhcp off eth1. Leave eth0 for connecting to the internet so you can get updates. As for power, only turn the fog server on when you need to image something. That's probably going to be the easiest solution.
Good job but can i setup this with the dhcp server running from an router?
ThePapanoob 2 months ago
@ThePapanoob Well, I've done it with dd-wrt, but I doubt that the average home router has the DHCP scope options available. You really need something enterprise such as Cisco, SonicWALL, or Windows Server 2008. Not everyone has that option, so they give you the option to use the fog server as the DHCP server. It made it a bit more difficult to do so, but it can work. I built a different network so it could get updates and install DHCP. Two network cards would pay off then.
technoblogical 2 months ago
@technoblogical but i dont want to let the server run the hole day and i found something interesting on the wiki called Using FOG with an unmodifiable DHCP server/ Using FOG with no DHCP server i will try that first but thanks for reply!
ThePapanoob 2 months ago in playlist Favorite videos
@technoblogical i tested the post from the wiki but i couldn't pxeboot it says no filename any solution?
ThePapanoob 2 months ago in playlist Favorite videos
@ThePapanoob I would just install a second network card on the server and then run fog and dhcp off eth1. Leave eth0 for connecting to the internet so you can get updates. As for power, only turn the fog server on when you need to image something. That's probably going to be the easiest solution.
technoblogical 2 months ago
Doesn't work on my CentOS 6 :(
Yorick1989 4 months ago
Great tutorial. Been using FOG for a while now. Great for mass imaging.
angelln25 4 months ago