Beat Rubischon wrote:

It's probably the safest way to organize some students, give them a
keyboard, a monitor and a memoy stick containing the flash files...
Having been involved in this exercise several times, ie. updating and subequently resetting BIOS settings on large clusters, I agree with Beat. The only reliable way to do it is with several people, monitors and USB floppies or memory sticks.

The problem (as you all know) isn't updating the BIOS, which can be done easily by PXE booting a DOS floppy image. It is the BIOS settings which are left afterwards - and I'm sepaking as someone who has tried capturing /dev/nvram settings and pushing them out to the updated nodes, which doesn't necessarily work.

I would advise the original poster to read up on /dev/nvram - capture the /dev/nvram of a 'good' node in a file. Update a node via PXE, then when it is rebooted into Linux use cat goodfile > /dev/nvram
A forlorn hope really.







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