I am using CentOS 6.x as the server OS and customize the client build to be CentOS 6.x also. LTSP 5.2 is the software from k12linux at fedorahostedI don't think that affects the directions below in any way, however. And if this looks like part of a script, you would be correct.
Change the LTS_HOME variable to your own LTSP client build location on the server as required:
export LTS_HOME="/opt/ltsp/i386"
Check to make sure rsh is allowed in securetty for the client:
grep -q "^rsh" $LTS_HOME/etc/securetty && echo rsh >> $LTS_HOME/etc/securetty
Get rsh-server installed into you chroot'd environment:
Option 1 (re)creates the client build to have rsh-server instaled and includes future builds:
edit the "/etc/ltsp/kickstart/Fedora/common/release/el6.ks" and add "rsh-server" *before* the "%end" line. Then (re)run the ltsp-build-client and ltsp-server-tweaks as if a new install:
ltsp-build-client 2>&1 |tee /tmp/ltsp-build-client.out-`date +%Y%m%d%H%M`cd $LTS_HOMEsetarch i386 chroot .chkconfig rsh onltsp-server-tweaks
Option 2 install and setup the rsh-server for this client build only:
cd $LTS_HOMEsetarch i386 chroot .mount -t proc proc /proc#set proxy if neededyum install rsh-serverchkconfig rsh onumount /proc
Get the clients /root to be based on the $LTS_HOME/root from the server and not a tmpfs by commenting the "/root" line of k12linux.rwtab:
sed -i 's/^empty[[:space:]]\/root/#empty\t\/root/'$LTS_HOME/etc/rwtab.d/k12linux.rwtab
OR for you perl peeps
perl -p -i -e "s/^empty\t\/root/\#empty\t\/root/g" $LTS_HOME/etc/rwtab.d/k12linux.rwtab
Note: To safeguard your custom options from accidental rpm update overwrites, please consider creating your own blah.ks file to be referenced in /etc/ltsp/ltsp-build-client.conf.
Properly create a .rhosts file for the clients root user. This script chunk assumes the primary (eth0) interface is the interface that communicates with the clients. If your primary server interface is not the interface for client connection, you will need to add/modify the client's .rhosts file accordingly:
echo "server-`hostname --ip` root" >> $LTS_HOME/root/.rhosts echo "rsh" >> $LTS_HOME/etc/securetty chmod 600 $LTS_HOME/root/.rhosts
Now boot the client and test an rsh command from the server to the client. If you have issues, you will want to add a "shell" option for the client in the correct lts.conf then reboot the client. For i386 arch, the file is "/var/lib/tftpboot/ltsp/i386/lts.conf". This will give you a chance to see the /var/log/messages file if you have not setup remote logging for the client.
To make a custom PXE boot logo change, create/modify a theme run the following command from within the chroot:
ltsp-rewrap-latest-kernel
To apply a new theme
Create a new plymouth theme. You can do this by making simple variations on the stock theme by taking a copy of the default theme using the procedure below. You can replace "newtheme" in the commands below with whatever name you want to give the new theme. This procedure assumes the chroot is in the /opt/ltsp/i386 directory.
To make a custom PXE boot logo change, create/modify a theme run the following command from within the chroot:
ltsp-rewrap-latest-kernel
To apply a new theme
Create a new plymouth theme. You can do this by making simple variations on the stock theme by taking a copy of the default theme using the procedure below. You can replace "newtheme" in the commands below with whatever name you want to give the new theme. This procedure assumes the chroot is in the /opt/ltsp/i386 directory.
Start by copying the folder with this command:cp -a /opt/ltsp/i386/usr/share/plymouth/themes/solar /opt/ltsp/i386/usr/share/plymouth/themes/newtheme Now modify "newtheme" as appropriate. First go into the new theme directory by typing:
cd /opt/ltsp/i386/usr/share/plymouth/themes/newtheme Then rename the .plymouth file by running: mv rings.plymouth newtheme.plymouth Edit the .plymouth file and change: Name=Rings to: Name=Newtheme and change: ImageDir=/usr/share/plymouth/themes/rings to ImageDir=/usr/share/plymouth/themes/newthemeYou may also want to change the background colors. BackgroundStartColor is the color at the top of the screen and BackgroundEndColor is the color at the bottom of the screen. Plymouth will make a gradient of these colors across the screen. For example to make the background change from white to black change the lines:
BackgroundStartColor=0x080808 BackgroundEndColor=0x080808 to: BackgroundStartColor=0xffffff BackgroundEndColor=0x000000 When finished making changes save the file.Next replace the image file named header-image.png with the desired replacement. Do not change the name of this file! The exact size does not seem to matter as the plymouth will center it in the screen above the animated "rings".
You can also get fancy and replace all the other progress images also. Chroot to the client directory by running: chroot /opt/ltsp/i386 Activate the new theme with this command: plymouth-set-default-theme newthemeNote: you may get an error from sed (ex: sed: warning: failed to set default file creation context to unconfined_u:object_r:usr_t:s0: No such file or directory). This does not seem to cause problems.
Build a new initramfs file with the new theme: ltsp-rewrap-latest-kernel Exit the chroot by typing: exit and update the tftp directory with the new initramfs by typing: ltsp-update-kernels If you use NBD you will also need to run: ltsp-update-image Now fire up a client and enjoy the new theme!