After owning and using the Lumos Matrix for a few years, I was looking for a spare/backup helmet that wasn't heavy and with lights. The Lumos kickstart is an excellent product. It is very light and the lights front and back are visible and bright. I recommend this helmet for those that are looking for protection in a lightweight helmet that comes with lights.

When creating or customizing your Kickstart file, it is useful to verify that it is valid before attempting to use it in an installation. CentOS 7 includes the ksvalidator command line utility which can be used to do this. This tool is a part of the pykickstart package. To install this package, execute the following command as root:


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When using the liveimg installation mode with a driver disk, drivers on the disk will not automatically be included in the installed system. If necessary, these drivers should be installed manually, or in the %post section of a kickstart script.

I have a teacher with a computer lab that he uses ARD multiple times a day. As we all know ARD isn't perfect, but with the kickstart command we have discovered that we are able to successfully restart and usually resolve the issues with remote desktop on those computer. (IE. computers show as offline even though they are on and then will show up shortly after the restart).

That's why I was thinking about running the kickstart command as a shell script from the JSS, which could SSH into those machines run as admin, and it wouldn't be concerned whether or not ARD shows the machines are offline. I am a very capable ACMT, and a neophyte script writer.

In most shops we add an alias to the kickstart command to make it easier to find (since they frown upon editing /etc/paths or /etc/paths.d/ stuff). Moot if you're setting up a Self Service policy, but FWIW...

With the recent announcement of the removal of Back to My Mac and Apple's recommendation to use ARD as a replacement, I was hoping to see some love tossed ARDs way. However, I am hearing rumblings that the kickstart command may also be in the crosshairs for removal/nerfing in the near future. As of Beta 8, I am seeing an ominous cloud on the horizon.

At this time, Beta 8 is allowing the use of the kickstart command but the command and the System Preferences user interface are not aligning. Nor do I have full control from kickstart. For example, the command above should have checked all the options in the Options... UI. However, when working directly on the machine (including after a reboot), no options are enabled. Yet I can observe the machine. Yes, kickstart started the service and granted me observe rights but not control. Likewise, I can run UNIX commands, copy files, and likely use every other feature of ARD other than control, or let users know when I am observing.

For those of us doing fleet deployments, the kickstart command is heavily leveraged during initial device setup to enable and configure the service, commonly through a script delivered by the management tool. Sure the command's syntax is weird and funky, but it is what gives it its charm and it works and has worked for years. To have that function removed would be very impactful. Forcing the physical touching of devices to enable the full function of the service is not an option. This is as bad as the start of 3rd party kernel extensions.

I have seen improvements in at least one relatively recent ARD update. I also hope that it continues to be configurable via the "kickstart" tool or something better, but the way things are going, everything seems to need user approval. And then mostly through the GUI.

So this brings up a new thought. Maybe we should be asking for new features in ARD instead of begging for continuation of previous function(s)? For example, allow admins to still use kickstart (or another method) to configure and enable the service. But build in a true authorization framework that prompts a console operator when a remote user is about to control/observe the screen. If the goal here is to protect the privacy of the user's active session, then enhance ARD so a tech can request view/control of an active session while allowing institutions to still centrally manage the configuration of the service. This would allow the service to be enabled and controlled, allow the admin to login and control an independent session, and protect the provacy of the user's experience by notifying the user that someone is attempting to view/control, giving the active console user the ability to decide if they want to allow the operation to continue.

It's been a long time (excluding the recent secure token chaos) since I've needed to make excusses and craft workarounds for things that should just work. I don't want to go back to those days. kickstart might seem like a strang hill to die on, but as you said, "everything seems to need user approval" and that is what is keeping me up at night worrying about future mass deployments. I don't want to go back to touching every device during a deployment. I've become to lazy, ah... efficient, in the DEP/VPP/MDM model.

5. Went over to a different Mac with the latest ARD admin installed and was successfully able to control the machine that kickstart was run on as both users. Same if I quit ARD and use vnc:// from Go --> Connect to Server

Starting today and for the next five weeks, I\u2019m going to share a six-part playbook that I\u2019ve been developing that guides you through the six fundamental steps of kickstarting and scaling your consumer business. Later this year, I\u2019ll share a similar playbook for B2B businesses.

In my case above this is the user kickstart export so each row is a user. We only have one custom form we use for all users which is that 611.... number under the CategoryID. The CategoryID is the custom form we need to add to each user when we upload them. So I went under System->Import Kickstart->User and then downloaded that spreadsheet. Then filled out data under the fields I needed populated, like the custom form info I noted. Hope this provides a bit more clarity for you.

Here's an example I had using the User kickstart template when we needed to add some users. We have a custom form we needed to attach to each user profile with some custom fields we needed to have filled out. You need to have the ID of your custom form under the setCategoryID and you can simply add your custom field names at the end of the column with the answer data you need. See the attached pic.

The kickstart file is a collection of one or more API keys and a list of API requests. You can call POST, PUT or PATCH on any API that you like and each request will be executed in order using the primary API key defined in the bootstrap file.

To use a variable, define the key and value in the variables section of the kickstart file and then access that value anywhere outside of the variables section using the #{foo} notation where foo is the name of the variable.

It is reasonable to think you may not want to hard code a password or API key in the kickstart file which could get checked into version control. You can use environment variables which should make this a bit easier for you.

You may modify the default Tenant Id in your kickstart file by setting a special variable: defaultTenantId. In this example the default Tenant Id is 30663132-6464-6665-3032-326466613934. This value must be a valid UUID.

To include a text file in your kickstart definition, use the @{fileName} syntax where the fileName is a relative path from your kickstart file. For this type of include, Kickstart handles all line returns and properly JSON escapes them for use in a JSON request body.

Newlines are preserved in included text files, whereas they are not in the kickstart file. If you are, for example, including a lambda function definition, it may lead to better readability if you include the body from a text file.

Kickstart runs a set of API calls, just as if you were running them. You may want to know when Kickstart completes, especially if you are running in a CI/CD environment and want to wait until it is finished to begin your tests. To this end, please review the kickstart success webhook documentation.

Anaconda will produce an anaconda-ks.cfg configuration file at the end of any manual installation. This file can be used to automatically reproduce the same installation or edited (manually or with system-config-kickstart).

Kickstart Online (KSO) is a series of MCC courses that are scheduled for college-ready high school students to kickstart their college degree. These online college courses are provided in a 15-week format, count toward most MCC degrees, are transferable to many four-year institutions and are offered by NDE certified MCC instructors.

3) When doing code upgrade, both kickstart and system image must be compatible. If the kickstart and system image are not compatible, ISSU will fail. To make it simple, I would just upgrade both kickstart and system image to the same version. For example, if I want to upgrade a N7K to 5.1(1) with ISSU, the CLI will be similar as follow:

I had trouble deploying vSphere 8 with PXE in the first place but now I'm facing another issue: the second part of my kickstart is apparently not taken into consideration (mentioned as "Stage 02 - Post installation") e24fc04721

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