verytrivial 28 minutes ago

I know it was just a convenient pretext for a learning journey, but do not come away from this thinking llama.cpp needs to be compiled on Windows before use. The GitHib project has a cornucopia of pre-built artifacts to use.

https://github.com/ggml-org/llama.cpp/releases

guenthert 29 minutes ago

"I didn’t want to get into the hassle of repartitioning everything that the boot loader works with both Linux & Windows."

Hmmh? I haven't done so in years, but configuring multi-boot used to be considerably easier than disk-less operation.

  • jeroenhd 5 minutes ago

    The Debian installer is less than optimal for repartitioning.

    The Linux NTFS resizing code also has a tendency to trigger data corruption. Not really Linux' fault, but it's a good reason to do partitioning from inside of Windows, which can be a pain already.

    Another issue I've run into is Windows creating a very small (~300MiB) EFI partition that barely fits the Windows bootloader, let alone a Linux bootloader and kernel. You can resize and recreate the partition of course, but reconfiguring Windows to use a different boot partition is a special kind of hell I try to avoid.

  • pbhjpbhj 11 minutes ago

    SecureBoot is a PITA.

    • jeroenhd 7 minutes ago

      For Debian and most other distros, secure boot isn't a problem. Installers are all using a signed, trusted-by-default bootloader.

      There are some exceptions (some hardware from Microsoft doesn't trust the third party certificate used, for instance, and Red Hat Enterprise has their own root of trust if you opt into that), but they're very rarely ever an issue.

yjftsjthsd-h 3 hours ago

Nice. I'm extra fond of ZFS backed network root filesystem, because it lets you put an OS on ZFS without needing to deal with ZFS support in that OS. (One of these days I want to try OpenBSD with its root on NFS on ZFS, either from Linux or FreeBSD.)

Does anyone have an opinion on iSCSI vs NBD?

deathanatos 2 hours ago

> UEFI fixes that to some extent, but it’s a pain to maintain the UEFI entries manually and change them every time the kernel updates.

… you don't have to update the UEFI entries every time the kernel updates. (I guess you might if you do like a kernel w/ CONFIG_EFI_STUB, and you place the new kernel under a different filename than what the UEFI boot entry point to then you might … but I was under the impression that that'd be kind of an unusual setup, and I thought most of us booting w/ EFI were doing so with Grub.)

  • yjftsjthsd-h 2 hours ago

    Even if you do CONFIG_EFI_STUB, there should be a post-update hook to automatically call efibootmgr.

  • nicman23 2 hours ago

    or just copy the latest kernel to something like /vmlinux and /initramfs

Tepix an hour ago

This could be an interesting setup for booting off a NAS like Synology or QNAP. I haven't really used iSCSI, it's intimidating how much prep this takes...

  • burner420042 an hour ago

    The 'target' moves slow so once you learn it, it all stays relevant forever.

    ... And it's very, very fun.

anonymousiam 3 hours ago

I've done a lot of headless/diskless stuff. I haven't done much for years, because my NAS only has gigabit Ethernet ports. I can cascade them and get four Gbps downstream, but it's still painful.

I have recently upgraded my house to 10Gbps Ethernet, with only one room still stuck at gigabit, and unfortunately, it's my main office. I'm working on getting the drop there now (literally, just taking a break here).

Even once I'm done, accessing an iSCSI drive over 10GbE will be 4-8 times slower than a local NVMe drive, but it will sure be a lot better than it was!

Ideally, I could run VMs on the NAS and have great performance, but that's another hardware upgrade...

  • olavgg a minute ago

    Using a proper NIC (Chelsio) with their iSCSI accelerator will boost your iSCSI performance significantly. Another alternative is Mellanox with RDMA. You need CX4+ for optimal performance over TCP/IP, while the cheap CX3 is excellent with IPoIB. If you have a lot of packet drops and retransmissions, another option for boosting iSCSI performance is getting a network switch with a lot of memory for packet buffering. This helps with incast congestion. There are special switches with gigabytes of memory built for this.

    NVMe-oF is the best protocol with least overhead for network drives, with a proper setup you lose only 10-20% latency compared to local disk even with Intel Optane. Throughput should be almost similar.

  • ReDress 2 hours ago

    Really I wonder how this turns out to be diskless while you're clearly accessing a disk/drive over the network. Shouldn't we refer to this as network boot?

    • pdpi an hour ago

      It's diskless from the point of view of the device being booted.

dhash 3 hours ago

something worth mentioning here is that iSCSI is quite unhappy on congested networks or packet loss caused by incast traffic.

to make this actually work well, consider modifying your switches QoS settings to carve out a priority VLAN for iSCSI traffic

  • fragmede 3 hours ago

    or a north-south/east-west architecture, so there's an entirely separate network just for iSCSI. Control plane vs data plane.

protoman3000 3 hours ago

Pretty cool! You could also boot into an ephemeral minimal initrd that displays a selection menu instead of doing it in iPXE. That would grab the new kernel and initrd from the network and kexecs it without reboot.

tehlike 3 hours ago

I used similar ipxe setup for robotic cluster - every robot booted from the same thing, then kubernetes managed the containe orchestration. it was fun.

ggm 3 hours ago

NFS diskless is the more common approach I've used but this is very cool.

  • KaiserPro 2 hours ago

    NFS diskless was easier for me to setup when I was doing it.

    THe caveat was, you needed readonly root, so that meant freezing the OS, anything that needed changing was either stored in a ram disk (that you need to setup) or a per host nfs area (kinda like overlayfs, but not)

    • yjftsjthsd-h an hour ago

      Why would you need a read-only root? Do you mean to share across multiple machines?

  • ahepp 3 hours ago

    When I tried root-on-nfs I had a lot of issues. The Redhat and Arch package managers don't seem to like it (presumably a sqlite thing?).

    • contingencies 3 hours ago

      You can download the rootfs, extract it to a ramdisk, and just run in memory. This is fast for everything. Unfortunately, memory just got super expensive. Fortunately, Linux requires ~no memory to do many useful things.

ahepp 3 hours ago

You might find it worth upgrading to 10gbps if you continue to go down this road. The Mikrotik CRS-309 has served me well, and a couple Intel X520-DA2s. I believe those NICs can do iSCSI natively, and pass the session to the operating system with iBFT.

SFP28 might be cheap enough now too, I'm not sure...

nicman23 2 hours ago

what i want to play with is rdma and having a bcache block device with the remote as a backing and a small local nvme as a write-through cache

louwrentius 3 hours ago

I would probably recommend to look into NVMe over TCP over iSCSI, especially for fast NVMe drives.