sundry/kickstart/sample_rhel6.32.cfg

244 lines
8.7 KiB
INI

# Begin preparation directions
#-----------------------------
# 1. Prepare RHEL6 yum repositories by copying the entire contents of the RHEL6
# install media (DVD, CD, or mounted ISO files) to NFS or HTTP accessible
# directories on an install server. An example directory structure would be
# /var/www/html/rhel/6.1/i386
# 2. Copy the v7-server package, the v7 package, and its unique dependencies
# (dt, lmbench and stress) to a new HTTP accessible directory on your
# server. The files can be found in the “RHEL Hardware Certification” RHN
# channel. An example directory name for your files would be
# /var/www/html/v7-rhel6-i386. The v7 and v7-server packages are not
# architecture dependent but the dt, lmbench and stress files are, which
# explains the need for i386 in the directory name.
# 3. Create a yum repository from the v7 files by changing into the directory
# where you copied the files and running the command “createrepo -p .”. You
# must run the command from a RHEL6 system. Do not forget the single period
# after createrepo as it tells the command where to create the new yum
# metadata files (in the current directory). This directory should only be
# used to store v7, its dependencies and the repo metadata files created by
# the createrepo command.
# 4. Repeat the previous two steps, if necessary, to copy the required v7 and
# dependency files to your web server and create v7 repositories in unique
# directories for all the architectures you will be certifying on.
# 5. Obtain the kernel-debuginfo and kernel-debuginfo-common-i686 files that
# match the version of the kernel you will be certifying on from RHN,
# and copy them to a new HTTP accessible directory on your server. An
# example directory would be /var/www/html/rhel6.1-i386-debug
# 6. Create a yum repository from the debug files by changing into the
# directory where you copied the files and running the command
# “createrepo -p .”, as you did in step three.
# 7. Repeat the previous two steps, if necessary, to create additional debug
# package repositories for any different variants (RHEL 6.0, 6.1 etc.) and
# architectures of RHEL that you will be certifying on.
# 8. Save the kickstart script you are reading now in an HTTP accessible
# directory on your server. We recommend an obvious directory like
# /var/www/html/ks.
# 9. Edit the kickstart script and:
# * Uncomment one of the two install method lines (either URL or NFS
# depending on your environment, but not both) and replace the example
# server information with your own.
# * Replace the example server information on the various server lines
# with your own server information.
# * Uncomment the v7-server line if you will be installing a server.
#10. Start the NFS (if applicable) and/or HTTP services on your server and
# configure them to load on boot. Test that you can browse the install
# tree(s) and the v7 repo(s) and confirm that you can view the kickstart
# file.
#11. Now that you have a working server, repeat steps five and six, if
# necessary, to create kickstart files for all the architectures you
# will be certifying on. Red Hat provides example i386 and x86_64 files.
# Don't forget to give each kickstart file a unique name that incorporates
# the release of RHEL and its architecture and also indicates that the
# file is for v7 installation.
#12. Boot a test system with install media and at the boot prompt, enter the
# following information:
#
# boot: linux ksdevice=bootif ks=http://myserver.mydomain.com/ks/v7-6.1-i386.cfg
#
# (Replace the server and kickstart file example text with the location and
# name of your kickstart file. You only need the 'ksdevice=bootif' if your
# system has multiple NICs.)
#13. The system will install, reboot and end at the graphical login.
#14. Log in as certuser with a password of redhat (root cannot log in at the GUI
# for security reasons). You now have a fully configured test system ready
# to run v7.
# End preparation directions
# Begin v7 kickstart file for RHEL6 i386
install
# Remove the comment “#” from ONE of the two lines below to choose your install
# method and change the server information to match your own environment.
#url --url http://myserver.mydomain.com/path/to/rhel6-i386/bits
#nfs --server=myserver.mydomain.com --dir=/path/to/rhel6-i386/bits
lang en_US.UTF-8
keyboard us
# The --device=eth0 is required here to prevent the system from asking
# which NIC to kickstart from. You should also use 'ksdevice=bootif'
# on the boot line if you only have one NIC connected.
network --device eth0 --bootproto dhcp
rootpw redhat
user --name=certuser --password=redhat
firewall --disabled
authconfig --enableshadow --passalgo=sha512 --enablefingerprint
selinux --enforcing
timezone --utc America/New_York
bootloader --location=mbr --driveorder=sda --append="rhgb quiet"
# Blank all disks and write disk labels, then install to disk /dev/sda ONLY.
# DO NOT RUN THIS KICKSTART ON A SYSTEM WITH DATA YOU WISH TO KEEP
zerombr
clearpart --all --initlabel
ignoredisk --only-use=sda
part /boot --fstype=ext4 --size=500 --ondisk=sda
part swap --size=2048 --ondisk=sda
part / --fstype=ext4 --size=1024 --grow --ondisk=sda
reboot
# Yum repository for v7, lmbench and stress dependencies.
# Change the next line to match your environment.
repo --name=v7 --baseurl=http://myserver.mydomain.com/v7-rhel6-i386
# Yum repository for kernel debuginfo dependencies.
# Change the next line to match your environment.
repo --name=rhel6.1-i386-debug --baseurl=http://myserver.mydomain.com/rhel6.1-i386-debug
# Yum repository for fence agent package. Change the next line to point
# to the HighAvailability directory in your install tree
repo --name=HighAvailability --baseurl=http://myserver.mydomain.com/path/to/rhel6-i386/bits/os/HighAvailability/
%packages
@additional-devel
@base
@core
@debugging
@basic-desktop
@desktop-debugging
@desktop-platform
@desktop-platform-devel
@development
@emacs
@fonts
@general-desktop
@graphical-admin-tools
@graphics
@input-methods
@internet-browser
@legacy-x
@network-file-system-client
@performance
@perl-runtime
@server-platform
@server-platform-devel
@server-policy
@virtualization
@virtualization-client
@virtualization-platform
@x11
libXinerama-devel
xorg-x11-proto-devel
startup-notification-devel
libgnomeui-devel
libbonobo-devel
junit
libXau-devel
libgcrypt-devel
popt-devel
libdrm-devel
libXrandr-devel
libxslt-devel
libglade2-devel
gnutls-devel
mtools
pax
python-dmidecode
python-lxml
oddjob
sgpio
genisoimage
wodim
abrt-gui
desktop-file-utils
ant
rpmdevtools
jpackage-utils
rpmlint
certmonger
pam_krb5
krb5-workstation
nscd
pam_ldap
nss-pam-ldapd
netpbm-progs
libXmu
perl-DBD-SQLite
libvirt-java
dvd+rw-tools
xorg-x11-apps
sox
kabi-whitelists
createrepo
mt-st
# Required for fencing test
fence-agents
# Screen utility is helpful for running tests over an SSH session.
screen
# Midnight Commander utility is helpful for debugging test results
# in a non-GUI environment.
mc
# Install v7 and dependencies from our custom repository.
v7
# Uncomment this package only if you are setting up a v7 test server.
#v7-server
# Install the kernel debuginfo packages required for the v7 kdump test
# in v7-1.3-43 and newer from our custom repository
kernel-debuginfo
kernel-debuginfo-common-i686
%post
# Set DHCP for all interfaces during %post if left unconfigured during install.
if [ `ls -1 /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-eth* | wc -l` -ge 1 ]
then
for i in /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-eth*
do
if ! grep -i "bootproto" $i
then
echo "BOOTPROTO=dhcp" >> $i
fi
done
fi
if [ `ls /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-wlan* | wc -l` -ge 1 ]
then
for i in /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-wlan*
do
if ! grep -i "bootproto" $i
then
echo "BOOTPROTO=dhcp" >> $i
fi
done
fi
# Force default kernel selection. You'll need to specify EXACTLY which
# kernel you want to boot from. This gets around the problem of the debug
# kernel being set as the default if it's installed.
#
# 1. If installing RHEL 6.0, uncomment next line to add add workaround for
# no /dev/root in %post from BZ 657257. This is fixed in RHEL 6.1 and later
#ln -s `awk '{ if ($2 == "/") print $1; }' /etc/fstab` /dev/root
#
# 2. Use grubby to set the proper boot kernel by uncommenting the line that's
# correct for the version of RHEL you're using.
# RHEL 6.0
#grubby --set-default /boot/vmlinuz-2.6.32-71.el6.i386
# RHEL 6.1
#grubby --set-default /boot/vmlinuz-2.6.32-131.0.15.el6.i386
# RHEL 6.2
#grubby --set-default /boot/vmlinuz-2.6.32-220.el6.i386
# RHEL 6.3
grubby --set-default /boot/vmlinuz-2.6.32-279.el6.i386
%end
# End v7 kickstart file for RHEL6 i386