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authorrtk0c <[email protected]>2025-03-05 22:39:35 -0800
committerrtk0c <[email protected]>2025-03-05 22:39:35 -0800
commit3432f70e6bd78123664f751f803f1003b46e93eb (patch)
tree3a5ff4f3d26df8bafd42e35d52f7e396ffa88025 /content/blog
parent62bffb53ab361a0c6a8815b79d15ada97eba3e9e (diff)
Revise adventures-on-monitorless-server
Diffstat (limited to 'content/blog')
-rw-r--r--content/blog/adventures-on-monitorless-server.md29
1 files changed, 17 insertions, 12 deletions
diff --git a/content/blog/adventures-on-monitorless-server.md b/content/blog/adventures-on-monitorless-server.md
index 524c600..47b61db 100644
--- a/content/blog/adventures-on-monitorless-server.md
+++ b/content/blog/adventures-on-monitorless-server.md
@@ -5,16 +5,15 @@ tags: ["networking"]
ShowToc: false
---
-# TL;DR
-What happens when you forget to statically assign an IP address to a server running `NetworkManager` or `systemd-netword` or even Debian's default networking setup?
-It won't have network connection until IP assigned (because the subnet doesn't have a DHCP in router for example), so no SSH.
-But you also don't have access to video output.
+A story of frantically rescuing a deployed headless server, where I forget to statically assign an IP address.
+It just won't have network connection. No SSH. No fixie.
-Instead of typing into the TTY hoping for the best, all 3 of the aforementioned systems default to DHCP, and _there is nothing saying a DHCP server has to be running on the router or gateway_.
+Except _there is nothing saying a DHCP server has to be running on the router or gateway_.
So, just install and configure `kea` (or a DHCP server of your choice) on any other computer on the network, reboot the server in question, and voilĂ !
SSH to your hearts content.
-# The story
+---
+
So the story goes like this.
I recently got hands on a nice little old desktop tower, plenty of RAM and a good number of SATA ports for selfhosting: Seafile, Immich and what not.
Now it _is_ rather old machine, with only VGA and DVI on the motherboard. This means my little trusty HDMI to USB video capture dongle won't be helpful!
@@ -23,17 +22,23 @@ I need to bring a monitor that has a VGA port on it.
So I at the comfort of my home, I took some time to install Debian, as well as all other packages I could possibly need. Also configured a SSH key.
-## Uh oh
-And as all good stories go, the _one thing_ I was supposed to do was not done: no monitor, no way to see what's happening on screen to configure its WiFi connection properly.
-No network, no SSH-ing either.
-For reasons beyond the topic of this story, my parents' router does not have an DHCP server running if connected to the ethernet ports.
-I _have_ to connect WiFi or manually set a static IP on the `eth0` interface.
+And as all good stories go, the _one thing_ I was supposed to do was not done. I didn't assign a static IP to `eth0` beforehand.
+
+_Uh. oh._
+
+There is no proper DHCP in the lan, I had everything else setup with static IPs. I don't know its MAC, so no calculating SLAAC by hand to get a link local IPv6 either. In fact, if I remember correctly I don't even think the gateway was properly setup with IPv6 at all.
+
+No network, no SSH.
+
+No monitor, no way to see what's happening on screen to configure its WiFi connection properly.
Quickly, I thought "what if I could just type out all the commands without a monitor?"
Trying to open vim on `/etc/network/interfaces` and blindly modifying a complex configuration file obviously did not work so well.
Although I did figure out one helpful tidbit: since this machine has a beeper, I can run things like `foobar && tput bel` in TTY to get an audio confirmation that something succeeded.
After ten minutes of desparately trying various commands and questioning if I had been making typos all along, an enlightenment suddenly found its way into my mind: nothing is stopping me from running an ad-hoc DHCP server just for this purpose!
-[Kea](https://www.isc.org/kea/) is apparently the recommended implementation, so I installed it on my laptop, and after some fiddling of configs per https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Kea (because ArchWiki is the one wiki to rule them all), it did work. The server allocates the first address in the pool, so I just picked `192.168.233.1/16` and successfully SSH-ed in.
+As far as I know, all of the networking implementations shipped by various Linux distros default to DHCP. This includes `NetworkManager`, `systemd-networkd`, or even Debian's default networking setup.
+
+[Kea](https://www.isc.org/kea/) is apparently the recommended implementation, so I installed it on my laptop, and after some fiddling of configs per the [ArchWiki](https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Kea) (because ArchWiki is the one wiki to rule them all), it did work. The server allocates the first address in the pool, so I just picked `192.168.233.1/16` and successfully SSH-ed in.
No need to drive 30 minutes round trip to get my VGA monitor!