XS Community Edition/Features/Kickstart: Difference between revisions

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The install.ks files are designed to be introduced into Fedora's or CentOS's installer environment. The anaconda installer uses a method known as kickstart and we use that method to provide our information for the automated install. In a nutshell we need to get install.ks into the installer. Please refer to the kickstart documentation from your distro for full details. One way is to place install.ks on a flashdrive and know the device's label. Hint with the key mounted:
The install.ks files are designed to be introduced into Fedora's or CentOS's installer environment. The anaconda installer uses a method known as kickstart and we use that method to provide our information for the automated install.
In a nutshell we need to get install.ks into the installer. Please refer to the kickstart documentation from your distro for full details.

One way is to place install.ks on a flashdrive and know the device's label.
Hint with the key mounted:


<blockquote>
<blockquote>
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</blockquote>
</blockquote>


Now boot the install iso with the key inserted hit tab at the splash screen and append after quite:
Now boot the install iso with the usbkey inserted, hit tab at the splash screen and append after quite:
<blockquote>
<blockquote>
inst.ks=hd:LABEL=<lablel>:/install.ks
inst.ks=hd:LABEL=<lablel>:/install.ks

Revision as of 02:12, 22 November 2015

The install.ks files are designed to be introduced into Fedora's or CentOS's installer environment. The anaconda installer uses a method known as kickstart and we use that method to provide our information for the automated install. In a nutshell we need to get install.ks into the installer. Please refer to the kickstart documentation from your distro for full details.

One way is to place install.ks on a flashdrive and know the device's label. Hint with the key mounted:

ls /dev/disk/by-label/

Now boot the install iso with the usbkey inserted, hit tab at the splash screen and append after quite:

inst.ks=hd:LABEL=<lablel>:/install.ks

replacing <label> with your device's label

There are other options that could be set but are left # out that could be enabled for a fully automated install. Note that there are different files for 32-bit machines. Not supported on CentOS-i386 until further testing occurs.

If you're after a bootable usbkey use alter.sh with the net-install iso for your distro.

Feedback welcome