forked from DGNum/liminix
connecting a client to hellonet
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doc/new.rst
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doc/new.rst
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@ -83,14 +83,44 @@ presented with a login prompt. You can login on the console as
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running. To kill the emulator, press ^P (Control P) then c to enter the
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running. To kill the emulator, press ^P (Control P) then c to enter the
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"QEMU Monitor", then type ``quit`` at the ``(qemu)`` prompt.
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"QEMU Monitor", then type ``quit`` at the ``(qemu)`` prompt.
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To see that it running an ssh service we need to connect to its
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To see that it's running network services we need to connect to its
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emulated network. Start the machine again, if you had stopped it,
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emulated network. Start the machine again, if you had stopped it, and
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and open up a second terminal on your build machine. We're going to
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open up a second terminal on your build machine. We're going to run
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run another virtual machine attached to the virtual network, which will
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another virtual machine attached to the virtual network, which will
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request an IP address from our Liminix system and give you a shell
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request an IP address from our Liminix system and give you a shell you
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you can run ssh from.
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can run ssh from.
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We'll use `System Rescue <https://www.system-rescue.org/>`_ in tty
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mode (no graphical output) for this purpose, but if you have some
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other favourite Linux Live CD ISO - or, for that matter, any other OS
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image that QEMU can boot - adjust the command to suit:
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.. code-block:: console
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curl https://fastly-cdn.system-rescue.org/releases/10.01/systemrescue-10.01-amd64.iso -O
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nix-shell -p qemu --run " \
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qemu-system-x86_64 \
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-echr 16 \
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-m 1024 \
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-cdrom systemrescue-10.01-amd64.iso \
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-netdev socket,mcast=230.0.0.1:1235,localaddr=127.0.0.1,id=lan \
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-device virtio-net,disable-legacy=on,disable-modern=off,netdev=lan,mac=ba:ad:3d:ea:21:01 \
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-display none -serial mon:stdio"
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System Rescue displays a boot menu at which you should select the
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"serial console" option, then after a few moments it boots to a root
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prompt. You can now try things out:
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* run :command:`ip a` and see that it's been allocated an IP address in the range 10.3.0.0/16.
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* run :command:`ping 10.3.0.1` to see that the Liminix VM responds
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* run :command:`ssh root@10.3.0.1` to try logging into it.
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Congratulations! You have installed your first Liminix system - albeit
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it has no practical use and it's not even real. The next step is to try
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running it on hardware.
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- using modules
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- using modules
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