Στις 12-01-2010, ημέρα Τρι, και ώρα 19:46 +0100, ο/η Verner Kjærsgaard έγραψε: > - thank you for your answers! > > - just to clarify... > > - I've got 4 24-port switches that connects to all the clients. 100Mbit > ports to the clients, 1000Mbit to the server. As of now they are just > connected to each other, leaving three of them in a poor state as they > are not even properly uplinked (not my fault, they didn't buy swithes > with 1000Mbit uplink ports...). > > - my idea is to connect each switch to its own netcard on the server... > > - is this a correct approach?
So, you have one server for 4x24 = about 100 clients? Well yeah with 4 switches, and if you rewire them properly to be on different physical subnets, bonding won't help you. I think the best way to handle this it to pretend that you have 4 different servers: assign 4 different IPs to your NICs, 4 different ranges in dhcpd.conf etc. e.g. eth0 = 192.168.0.1/24, eth1 = 192.168.1.1/24 etc. See also https://help.ubuntu.com/community/UbuntuLTSP/FlowControl for a possible problem with mixed-speed networks that may gravely affect perfomance. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ This SF.Net email is sponsored by the Verizon Developer Community Take advantage of Verizon's best-in-class app development support A streamlined, 14 day to market process makes app distribution fast and easy Join now and get one step closer to millions of Verizon customers http://p.sf.net/sfu/verizon-dev2dev _____________________________________________________________________ Ltsp-discuss mailing list. To un-subscribe, or change prefs, goto: https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/ltsp-discuss For additional LTSP help, try #ltsp channel on irc.freenode.net