[Casper] disk identifiers

Steve Wood swood at integerdallas.com
Fri Dec 19 14:21:14 PST 2008


Wow, that’s a pretty cool idea there.  I wish I had thought of it.  Of
course, I have 4 servers to worry about and they are all 10 feet from my
office.

I’m not sure if you need to be a Self Servicing account, or a service
provider (i.e. GSX access) to see this URL, but this is how you can set the
drive on an Xserve G5:

http://support.apple.com/kb/TA26930?locale=en_US

And, I wasn’t able to find the same thing for Intel, but I did find this
link in a TUAW article (
http://www.tuaw.com/2008/11/24/apple-xserve-field-guide/):

http://help.apple.com/server/guide/desktop.html

Cool thing is, that guide is also available on the iPhone (look at the TUAW
article for info).

Using the guide, go to Startup then Other Methods and it explains how to set
the startup method.  You could use this to tell the server to ignore the
normal boot up procedures.

I also found this article on AFP548 about setting up headless:

http://www.afp548.com/articles/system/headlessg5.html


Steve Wood
Director of IT
swood at integerdallas.com

The Integer Group | 1999 Bryan St. | Ste. 1700 | Dallas, TX 75201
T 214.758.6813 | F 214.758.6901 | C 940.312.2475




From: Miles Leacy <miles.leacy at themacadmin.com>
Date: Fri, 19 Dec 2008 16:26:20 -0500
To: Thomas Larkin <tlarki at kckps.org>
Cc: "casper at list.jamfsoftware.com" <casper at list.jamfsoftware.com>
Subject: Re: [Casper] disk identifiers

Ok, here's the scenario...

All Xserves are purchased with three 80GB SATA drives.  I want to have
zero-touch server deployment.  The boot drive is to be a RAID 1 called
"Server HD".

In order to make this happen, I plan to:
1. Set up a prestage
2. Boot from a USB flash drive containing a restore image that runs Casper
Imaging automatically.
3. Deploy a configuration with a "before" script that uses diskutil to
create a RAID 1 from two of the three internal drives.

The script uses the command:
diskutil createRAID mirror Server\ HD JHFS+ disk0 disk1

In order for this to work, I need to know that I can count on the USB drive
never being assigned the disk identifiers "disk0" or "disk1".  Or at least
know what the rules governing disk identifier assignment are so I can adjust
the script accordingly.  I know what drives will be attached at first boot,
so once I know those rules, I can have a reliable script.

In case you're saying to yourself "He said there are three drives.  What's
he doing with the third one?", I'm keeping that as a hot spare to rebuild
the mirror in case one of the other disks fail.

I'm considering how to automate that too.  The basic logic so far is:
1. On every15, a policy runs a script that checks for a degraded mirror.
2. If a degraded mirror is found, the script issues a custom trigger which
runs a policy that deploys an empty receipt that is the criteria for
membership in a "Failed Mirror" smart group.  The same policy includes a
"diskutil repairMirror" script that checks itself for success.  If
successful, a third policy is triggered by custom trigger.
3. The third policy deploys an empty receipt which is criteria for
membership in a "Repaired Mirror" smart group.
4. Notification is sent on joining either of the two smart groups above.

This way, I don't get woken up at 2AM for a degraded mirror.  I get an email
the next day and I have the bad drive replaced, which becomes the new hot
spare.  None of this has been tested yet,  I've just sketched the logic on a
legal pad so far.

One other hitch I've found in the zero-touch scenario is getting the
machines to boot from USB rather than the factory-installed OS.  I suppose I
could have my reseller erase the internal drives before shipping.  I don't
have a better idea on that.  Even using netboot requires attaching a
keyboard and holding the "N" key.  With blank hard drives and a bootable USB
key, you're truly zero-touch (other than having part of the rackmount
procedure be "insert USB drive").  I'll leave the USB drives attached as
restore & diagnostics boot drives.

----------
Miles A. Leacy IV

 Certified System Administrator 10.4
 Certified Technical Coordinator 10.5
 Certified Trainer
Certified Casper Administrator
----------
voice: 1-347-277-7321
miles.leacy at themacadmin.com
www.themacadmin.com <http://www.themacadmin.com>




On Fri, Dec 19, 2008 at 3:34 PM, Thomas Larkin <tlarki at kckps.org> wrote:
>      
>  
> 
>  I would assume it reads it from EFI (firmware) and then by bus for internals
> and externals just get the next available when plugged in.  You could always
> try looping your scripts
> 
>        
> 
>  like    
> 
>        
> 
>  for i in /usr/sbin/diskutil list
> 
>        
> 
>  if $i = something
>  
> 
>  then do something
>  
> 
>  else exit    
>  
> 
>  fi    
> 
>        
> 
>  to give a really rough example...
> 
> 
> ___________________________
> Thomas Larkin
> TIS Department
> KCKPS USD500
> tlarki at kckps.org
> blackberry:  913-449-7589
> office:  913-627-0351
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
>>>> >>> "Miles Leacy" <miles.leacy at themacadmin.com> 12/19/08 11:33 AM >>>
> Hey all,    
> 
>  
>  
> 
>  
>  
>  
>  
>  
> 
>  I know that disk identifiers (disk0, disk1, etc) are assigned in the order in
> which the disks were attached.  For example, if you boot a Mac with a single
> internal drive, that drive will be disk0.  Once booted, you can insert an
> optical disk, and the optical disk will be called disk1.  If you later plug in
> a USB disk, the USB disk will be disk2.
>  
>  
>  
> 
>  
>  
>  
>  
>  
> 
>  I'm trying to find out the order in which disk identifiers are assigned at
> boot time.      
>  
>  
>  
> 
>  
>  
>  
>  
>  
> 
>  For example, if you have an Xserve with three internal hard disks, an optical
> disk inserted, and a USB drive attached, can you count on the internal disks
> having the disk0, disk1, and disk2 identifiers?  What identifiers would the
> optical and USB disks get?
>  
>  
>  
> 
>  
>  
>  
>  
>  
> 
>  I'm guessing there's an order of precedence by bus, but is this documented
> somewhere?  I've been flipping through Mac OS X Internals by Amit Singh and
> haven't found the answer yet.  most of the comments I've found by googling
> assume that disk identifier assignment is a form of voodoo.  This is a
> computer, not a witches' brew, so there has to be a set of rules that govern
> disk identifier assignment, and I'm hoping someone on the list knows what
> those rules are. 
>  
>  
>  
> 
>  
>  
>  
>  
>  
> 
>  I ask because I want to implement some diskutil scripts, but I need to know
> whether my assumption that SATA (or at least internal hard) disks always get
> the lowest disk identifiers at boot is true.
>  
>  
>  
> 
>  
>  ----------
> Miles A. Leacy IV
> 
>  Certified System Administrator 10.4
>  Certified Technical Coordinator 10.5
>  Certified Trainer
> Certified Casper Administrator
> ----------
> voice: 1-347-277-7321
> miles.leacy at themacadmin.com
> www.themacadmin.com <http://www.themacadmin.com>
> 
> 
>  
>  
>  



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