Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!rutgers!bellcore!mbr From: mbr@flash.bellcore.com (Mark Rosenstein) Newsgroups: comp.sys.sgi Subject: Installing system software from a remote file: help. Message-ID: Date: 29 Dec 90 14:00:50 GMT Sender: usenet@bellcore.bellcore.com (Poster of News) Reply-To: mbr@breeze.bellcore.com (Mark Rosenstein) Distribution: comp.sys.sgi Organization: Bellcore, Morristown, NJ Lines: 31 A novice (me) writes: Does someone have a sufficient set of tests that one can run from Unix, to see if installing system software from a file on a remote system will work. For instance: it seems one needs tftp access to the directory. So I munged in inetd.conf, and then from the machine I was going to do the installation on, from unix, I could tftp one of the files in the directory. I haven't figured out how to test if bootp is working correctly from Unix. I don't know if other condtions must be true for this to work, but I know that the monitor's little message "No server for {the machine with the files}" is not helping me debug this problem. I have tried n variations on the machine name/internet address/with-a-following-slash/without-a-following-slash etc. other possibly confounding info: The machine with the files is a 340 which I put the installation and maintance files on using distcp, the machine I want to install stuff on are 4D/25s. I tried using the tape drive on the 340 instead of the files (adding /dev/tape and /dev/nrtape to inetd.conf) and got the same message. Any help, especially hints on how to systematically debug this would make my New Year. I feel like Jacob Marley dragging the bleepin' tape drive from machine to machine. The reason I'd like to do this from Unix is that this problem could be something trivial or subtle and the monitor is just not the place. Thanks. Mark Rosenstein