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2.5 KiB
2.5 KiB
Some random and useful recipes
Disabling authorization
Edit the file /etc/kvmd/override.yaml
:
kvmd:
auth:
enabled: false
then restart kvmd
:
[root@pikvm ~]# systemctl restart kvmd
Disabling ATX and hiding the menu
If you don't need ATX power control you can disable the relevant Web-UI menu in /etc/kvmd/override.yaml
:
kvmd:
atx:
type: disabled
then restart kvmd
:
[root@pikvm ~]# systemctl restart kvmd
Disabling webterm
[root@pikvm ~]# systemctl disable --now kvmd-webterm
Take a HDMI screenshot via console on Pi-KVM
# curl --unix-socket /run/kvmd/ustreamer.sock http://localhost/snapshot -o screen.jpg
Get installed KVMD version via console
# pacman -Q | grep kvmd
Enable Serial-over-USB connection
Specifically to v2. This can be used for terminal access from the managed server to the Pi-KVM, or for any other purpose that requires a serial connection. In the last case, you only need to perform step 1 and reboot.
- Edit
/etc/kvmd/override.yaml
(remove{}
if this your first configuration entry) and add these lines:otg: devices: serial: enabled: true
- Run the following command:
# echo ttyGS0 >> /etc/securetty
- Create the directory
/etc/systemd/system/getty@ttyGS0.service.d
and add a file file namedttyGS0.override
into it. Afterwards edit the file and copy this into it:[Service] TTYReset=no TTYVHangup=no TTYVTDisallocate=no
- Run these comands:
# systemctl enable getty@ttyGS0.service # reboot
- Once Pi-KVM is rebooted you will have access to a virtual serial port on the server that the USB is connected to. Use mingetty, screen, putty, or something like this to access the kvm from the server. The port is called
/dev/ttyAMA0
.
Enable Ethernet-over-USB network
See here.
Using Ethernet wiznet w5500 with ZeroW
See here.
Disable mass storage emulation
See here.
Upload .ISO images manually
See here.
Mass Storage Drives
See here.
Create a Microsoft Windows based Flash disk image
See here.
Create a drive image on macOS
See here.