group {
host trb033 {
hardware ethernet 02:00:be:d9:21:90;
- fixed-address 10.0.0.33;
+ fixed-address trb033;
}
}
}
\end{lstlisting}
+This assumes that trb033 is defined in /etc/hosts.
+
Now we can start your DHCP server. How to do this ask AYA (it is different
for different LINUX distributions). You should also configure your RPCBIND (it
has nothing to do with HADES RPC) to run with option \verb+-i+ $\to$ AYA.
-\subsection{How to set up SUSE 12.2 (64bit) on a GSI machine}
+\subsection{How to set up SUSE 12.3 (64bit) on a GSI machine}
-This is a short overview how you set up SUSE 12.2 (64bit). You
+This is a short overview how you set up SUSE 12.3 (64bit). You
can skip this when your are not at GSI, but maybe some steps could be
interesting for you.
GSI PC (with registered MAC adress)
2 network cards (one for TRB3 communication and one for GSI-Network)
2 HDD with the same size for RAID-1 (mirroring)
-SUSE 12.2 bootable USB stick for network installation
+SUSE 12.3 bootable USB stick for network installation
\end{lstlisting}
Now you can start with the installation of SUSE. Connect the registered
Tel/Tk Development
\end{lstlisting}
-Now you can press \textbf{INSTALL}. After some time there a some self-explanatory steps again. After that you have successfully installed an SUSE 12.2 on a GSI machine.
+Now you can press \textbf{INSTALL}. After some time there a some self-explanatory steps again. After that you have successfully installed an SUSE 12.3 on a GSI machine.
Some additional packages you need:
\begin{lstlisting}[label=,caption=Additional Packages]
sudo zypper ar
-http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/devel:/languages:/perl/openSUSE_12.1/
+http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/devel:/languages:/perl/openSUSE_12.3/
"download.opensuse.org-perl"
sudo zypper ref