In this setup, we configure one PXE server and two different servers' farms. Setting up one PXE server to provision different servers' farms located in different networks is beneficial, especially if you are going to automate the provisioning later on. Setting up a PXE boot environment isn't particularly difficult but does require multiple critical steps and each step contains a lot of detail. In this article, I take you through the process of designing and setting up a Preboot Execute Environment (PXE) that includes setting up a PXE server, configuring a DHCP server, and installing a TFTP server. It is particularly handy to automate the process when there are slight differences between different hosts in the same network. Having Red Hat Virtualization (RHV) implemented in different networks requires some sort of automation to install new RHV hosts.
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