Setup Guide

Table Of Contents
ONIE service discovery
ONIE attempts to locate the installer through a number of discovery methods, as shown. To download and run an installer, the
ONIE Service Discovery feature uses the first successful method found.
1. Passed from the boot loader.
2. Search locally attached storage devices for one of the ONIE default installer filenames (for example, USB).
3. Exact URLs from DHCPv4.
4. Inexact URLs based on DHCPv4 responses.
5. Query to IPv6 link-local neighbors using HTTP for an installer.
6. TFTP waterfall from DHCPv4 option 66
If none of the ONIE Service Discovery methods are successful, you can disable this using the onie-discovery-stop
command.
You can install an operating system manually from HTTP, FTP, or TFTP using the onie-nos-install <URL> command.
The ONIE Install environment uses DHCP to assign an IP address to the management interface (eth0). If that fails, it uses the
default IP address 192.168.3.10/255.255.255.0.
To display the IP address, use the ifconfig eth0 command.
The following is an example of the ifconfig eth0 command.
ONIE:/ # ifconfig eth0
eth0 Link encap:Ethernet HWaddr 90:B1:1C:F4:9C:76
inet addr:10.11.53.33 Bcast:10.255.255.255 Mask:255.0.0.0
inet6 addr: fe80::92b1:1cff:fef4:9c76/64 Scope:Link
UP BROADCAST RUNNING MULTICAST MTU:1500 Metric:1
RX packets:18 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 frame:0
TX packets:24 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 carrier:0 collisions:0 txqueuelen:1000
RX bytes:1152 (1.1 KiB) TX bytes:6864 (6.7 KiB)
Interrupt:21 Memory:ff300000-ff320000
To assign an IP address to the management interface (eth0) and verify the network connectivity, use the ifconfig eth0
<ip address> command, as shown in the following example.
ONIE:/ # ifconfig eth0 10.11.53.33/16
Verify the network connection with ping.
ONIE:/ # ping 10.11.8.12
PING 10.11.8.12 (10.11.8.12): 56 data bytes
64 bytes from 10.11.8.12: seq=0 ttl=62 time=1.357 ms
64 bytes from 10.11.8.12: seq=1 ttl=62 time=0.577 ms
^C
Management ports
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