Reference Guide

Synopsis
racadm remoteimage -d
racadm remoteimage -s
racadm remoteimage -c [-u <username> -p <password> -l <image_path>]
Input
-c — Connect the image.
-d — Disconnect image.
-u — Username to access shared folder.
-p — Password to access shared folder.
-l — Image location on the network share; use single quotation marks around the location.
-s — Display current status.
NOTE: Use a forward slash (/) when providing the image location. If backward slash (\) is used,
override the backward slash for the command to run successfully.
For example:
racadm remoteimage -c -u user -p xxx -l /\/\192.168.0.2/\CommonShare/
\diskette
NOTE: Currently, this command does not support HTTP and HTTPS.
NOTE: The following options only apply to connect and deploy actions
-u — Username.
User name to access the network share. For domain users, you can use the following formats:
domain/user
domain\user
user@domain
-p — Password to access the network share.
Example
Configure a Remote image.
racadm remoteimage -c -u "user" -p "xxx" -l //shrloc/foo.iso
Remote Image for CIFS is now Configured
racadm remoteimage -c -u "user" -p "xxx" -l<nfs ip>:/shrloc/foo.iso
Remote Image for NFS is now Configured
Disable Remote File Sharing.
racadm remoteimage -d
Disable Remote File Started. Please check status using -s option to know
Remote File Share is ENABLED or DISABLED.
Check Remote File Share status.
racadm remoteimage -s
Remote File Share is Enabled
UserName
Password
ShareName //192.168.0/xxxx/dtk_3.3_73_Linux.iso
Deploy a remote image on iDRAC CIFS Share.
racadm remoteimage -c -u admin -p xxx -l //192.168.0/dev/floppy.img
Deploy a remote image on iDRAC NFS Share.
racadm remoteimage -c -u admin -p xxx -l '//192.168.0/dev/floppy.img'
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RACADM Subcommand Details