XS Installing Software 0.6: Difference between revisions
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=Installing the Software= |
=Installing the Software= |
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The install from USB key will eventually be automatic upon |
The install from a CD or USB key will eventually be automatic upon booting. While the install is currently mostly automated (not interactive), it is not performed automatically upon boot. |
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# Boot from the USB Key or CD-ROM -- Getting an older system to boot from a USB key can be difficult, but most will do it. |
# Boot from the USB Key or CD-ROM -- Getting an older system to boot from a USB key can be difficult, but most will do it. |
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# When it has finished booting, login as root (no password is required) and type: |
# When it has finished booting, login as root (no password is required) and type: |
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./olpc-install |
./olpc-install |
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# You will be prompted for the root password |
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# When it has finished installing, you will need to reboot. Remove the CD-ROM or USB key after power-down, but before the boot process begins. |
# When it has finished installing, you will need to reboot. Remove the CD-ROM or USB key after power-down, but before the boot process begins. |
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Revision as of 03:15, 25 August 2007
This page describes how to obtain a copy of the school server software, load it onto media, and install it onto a system. For a more complete description of the software repositories, see XS Software Repositories.
This page is very much under construction.
Downloading the System Image
You can obtain the latest image from:
wget http://xs-dev.laptop.org/xs/OLPC_XS_LATEST.iso
This can be copied onto a CD or DVD using your favorite toaster software.
It may also be copied onto a USB key, using the livecd-tools provided by Fedora 7:
livecd-iso-to-disk OLPC_XS_LATEST.iso /dev/sdb1
where /dev/sdb1 represents the USB key being copied onto.
Installing the Software
The install from a CD or USB key will eventually be automatic upon booting. While the install is currently mostly automated (not interactive), it is not performed automatically upon boot.
- Boot from the USB Key or CD-ROM -- Getting an older system to boot from a USB key can be difficult, but most will do it.
- Select "Run from Image" at the initial boot screen.
- When it has finished booting, login as root (no password is required) and type:
./olpc-install
- You will be prompted for the root password
- When it has finished installing, you will need to reboot. Remove the CD-ROM or USB key after power-down, but before the boot process begins.
You should now have a machine which somewhat resembles a school server.
Release Notes
OLPC_XS_125
This release has basic network functionality. It supports laptops on the mesh.
It does NOT autoinstall automatically. You will need to login as root (no password), then run /root/olpc-install. You will be prompted for a root password, otherwise the installation is automatic.
Missing:
- Registration
- Web services
- Presence service
- A configuration interface
Known Problems:
- /etc/named.conf isn't being installed correctly from the xs-config RPM. The fix is:
cp /etc/named.conf.olpcnew /etc/named.conf
- Hotplug of the mesh interfaces doesn't trigger a restart of the olpc-mesh-config, which is needed for the mesh to work.
- SELinux is left in permissive mode, instead of completely disabled. Edit /etc/selinux/config and set SELINUX=disabled
- The channel on the mesh interface isn't being set correctly. This causes problems with XO builds later than 542. Set the channel manually using iwconfig for now. A fix is forthcoming.
The most common problem with the mesh is due to a hardware problem with the Marvell wireless modules. They frequently do not reset properly, and need to be power cycled. The symptom is that you will get a message: "libertas: Unable to init firmware" on the console, and ifconfig won't show a mesh interface. A reboot will not fix the situation, you need to actually power cycle the USB adapter by unplugging it and plugging it back in.
Manual Configuration
There are some site-specific configuration which will need to be manually administered until we have a configuration interface in place. Specifically, these are setting up the WAN interface and assigning a domain name.
WAN Connection
The file which configures this interface is /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-eth0.
Domain Name
This name currently set to random.xs.laptop.org is unfortunately embedded in a number of files:
/etc/named.conf /var/named/school.zone.inaddr.db /var/named/school.zone.16.inaddr.db /var/named/school.zone.32.inaddr.db /var/named/school.zone.48.inaddr.db