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Issues Installing Red Hat Enterprise Linux on HPE ProLiant Servers

 
leoarthur
Occasional Contributor

Issues Installing Red Hat Enterprise Linux on HPE ProLiant Servers

Hi everyone,

I'm reaching out to see if anyone else has experienced issues while installing Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) on HPE ProLiant servers. I've been facing some challenges during the installation process and would love to hear if others have encountered similar problems and how they resolved them.

Here are a few specifics:

  • The installation hangs at a certain point without any error message.
  • Some hardware components aren't recognized by the installer.
  • Post-installation, there are issues with network connectivity and storage.

Any tips or advice on troubleshooting these issues would be greatly appreciated. Also, if you have any recommended configurations or best practices for a smooth installation, please share.

Thanks in advance!

 

[Moderator edit: Removed the external links.]

1 REPLY 1
Steven Schweda
Honored Contributor

Re: Issues Installing Red Hat Enterprise Linux on HPE ProLiant Servers

> Here are a few specifics: [...]

   Regarding the word "specifics", I do not think it means what you
think it means.  I know approximately nothing about this topic, but if I
did know anything useful, your "specifics" would still leave me
mystified.

> o The installation hangs at a certain point without any error message.

   _Which_ "a certain point" is that?

> o Some hardware components aren't recognized by the installer.

   _Which_ "Some hardware components" are those?  Actual error messages?

> o Post-installation, there are issues with network connectivity and
>   storage.

   _Which_ "issues" are those?  What kind of "storage"?

   Similarly:

> [...] Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) on HPE ProLiant servers. [...]

   Which version of RHEL?  Which "HPE ProLiant servers"?  Are you
following some published set of instructions?  As usual, showing
actual actions (commands) with their actual results (error messages,
...) can be more helpful than vague descriptions or interpretations.
Copy+paste is your friend.