Raphaël - I was thinking about this sort of thing myself a few weeks ago,
but just was too busy with other things to play with it. Maybe I can trick
a few people to work on it with me this weekend at FUDConn ;)
Brian
2011/1/28 Raphaël De GIUSTI <raphael.degiusti(a)guardis.com>
Hi everyone,
I've been playing around with Amazon EC2, building my own Centos and Fedora
EBS backed AMI's without much trouble, following tutorials and other
practices I found on the internet.
But one thing I'd like to do, and I tried to do, is kickstarting an
installation using anaconda.
So I would have an minimal AMI that only contains a /boot directory with
vmlinuz and initrd + a /boot/grub/menu.lst file that would look like this :
default 0
timeout 3
title RH-Like-OS
root (hd0,0)
kernel /boot/vmlinuz ks=http://some.server/myks.cfg
initrd /boot/initrd.img
And it would parse my ks, start anaconda and go on with the install.
The further I managed to go is to the partioning step with Centos55. If
someone's interested, there's my unanswered thread on amazon aws' forums
https://forums.aws.amazon.com/message.jspa?messageID=216575#216575
Same process with Fedora 14 only brings me to pvgrub reading the menu.lst,
then failing on a mmu_update.
So, here come my questions:
I was wondering what, technically speaking, prevents me from doing this.
And maybe I would understand why everyone is building the system from
scratch and why I did not find anyone who tried to do the same thing.
Note that I'm not an expert at linux kernels or boot processes, but I'm
quite curious, and I would really appreciate if you could help me understand
:-)
Thank you.
raphdg
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