Carl Karsten wrote:> <Docs>
>
> LOCALBOOT type [ISOLINUX, PXELINUX]
>
> On PXELINUX, specifying "LOCALBOOT 0" instead of a
"KERNEL" option
> means invoking this particular label will cause a local disk boot
> instead of booting a kernel.
>
> The argument 0 means perform a normal boot. The argument 4 will
> perform a local boot with the Universal Network Driver Interface (UNDI)
> driver still resident in memory. Finally, the argument 5 will perform a
> local boot with the entire PXE stack, including the UNDI driver, still
> resident in memory. All other values are undefined. If you don't know
> what the UNDI or PXE stacks are, don't worry -- you don't want
them,
> just specify 0.
>
> On ISOLINUX, the "type" specifies the local drive number to
boot
> from; 0x00 is the primary floppy drive and 0x80 is the primary hard
> drive. The special value -1 causes ISOLINUX to report failure to the
> BIOS, which, on recent BIOSes, should mean that the next boot device in
> the boot sequence should be activated.
> </Docs>
>
> I think I want the bios to figure out what to boot next, as if pxe had
> not happened. What I get from the docs is when using pxelinux, I have
> to specify what device to boot.
>
I'm not sure how you get that for the docs, unless you're reading the
paragraph which explicitly starts with "On ISOLINUX..." You want
"localboot 0" for PXELINUX.
-hpa