I figured it out by studying the source.
Bottom line is, it's not worth the effort. It's all or nothing (your
machines have to have the *exact* same hardware configuration, down to the
size/number/location of drives and partitions), and a number of install
options simply aren't available from KickStart.
Instead, I added an extra package to our install set. You configure the
disks manually, do an "install everything", and this additional package
installs a boot-time script which revises the system configuration and
removes itself. (Which turned out to be horrifically ugly....)
-- brandon s. allbery [os/2][linux][solaris][japh] allbery@kf8nh.apk.net system administrator [WAY too many hats] allbery@ece.cmu.edu electrical and computer engineering KF8NH carnegie mellon university
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