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Date:      Thu, 28 Feb 2002 00:11:02 -0800
From:      Danny Howard <dannyman@toldme.com>
To:        "Thomas P. Holmes [ Systems ]" <tholmes@thebiz.net>
Cc:        Koroush Saraf <koroush.saraf@lmco.com>, freebsd-cluster@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: Mass Upgrade and Maintenance questions
Message-ID:  <20020228001102.K3896@pianosa.catch22.org>
In-Reply-To: <Pine.BSF.4.21.0202272233350.11349-100000@staff.noc.thebiz.net>; from tholmes@thebiz.net on Wed, Feb 27, 2002 at 10:45:00PM -0500
References:  <20020227095221.F3896@pianosa.catch22.org> <Pine.BSF.4.21.0202272233350.11349-100000@staff.noc.thebiz.net>

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On Wed, Feb 27, 2002 at 10:45:00PM -0500, Thomas P. Holmes [ Systems ] wrote:
> > NFS?  I'd mount 4.5-RELEASE /usr/src on all these machines, make
> > buildworld and buildkernel, then write a script that goes to each in
> > turn installs both.  Maybe put the procedure in an install.sh and do
> > like this:
> 
> Are you saying to buildworld on each seperate machine with having just
> the src code nfs mounted?  Or build on 1 machine and then installworld
> on each machine?  If it is the latter, I've had problems the 2 times
> I've tried that.  It could be differences in the machines I guess.  It
> always seems to bomb with something like "command install not found"
> halfway through.

Sh!t happens.  Measure twice, cut once.  I'd have a couple of boxes
reserved for guinea pig testing, myself.  I've found that installworld
from multiple machines over NFS works, but there's danger any time
you're upgrading the OS.

> In our production work environment we have a set of master servers and
> everything else are diskless clients of the masterservers.  Services
> are "sandboxed" so that too makes life easier :)

Yes, network booting is da bomb, and that is how I'd prefer to maintain
34 workstations. :)

-danny

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