Re: upgrade problem
On Wed, 2 Nov 2005 22:21:57 -0500 (EST), Faheem Mitha [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hi, I'm having a weird problem with the apache security upgrades. Does anyone have a clue what might be going on here? Apt keeps having me download the same version over and over. I'm seeing this on both of my AMD64 servers. The only thing I've done that is at all out of the ordinary is that I have a locally compiled (backported) version of subversion, which includes the libapache2-svn, but I don't see that it has any bearing on this. Apparently apt for some reason considers the version of apache it just downloaded to be different from what is on the server. theda:/home/faheem# apt-cache policy apache2 apache2: Installed: 2.0.54-5 Candidate: 2.0.54-5 Version Table: 2.0.55-3 0 50 http://debian.csail.mit.edu unstable/main Packages 2.0.54-5 0 50 http://debian.csail.mit.edu testing/main Packages 2.0.54-5 0 500 http://security.debian.org stable/updates/main Packages *** 2.0.54-5 0 100 /var/lib/dpkg/status 2.0.54-4 0 500 http://debian.csail.mit.edu stable/main Packages Any enlightenment appreciated. This is getting to be a rather annoying problem. Hmm. This problem, mercifully, appears to have fixed itself. Faheem. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: upgrade problem
On Wed, 2 Nov 2005 22:21:57 -0500 (EST), Faheem Mitha [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hi, I'm having a weird problem with the apache security upgrades. Does anyone have a clue what might be going on here? Apt keeps having me download the same version over and over. I'm seeing this on both of my AMD64 servers. The only thing I've done that is at all out of the ordinary is that I have a locally compiled (backported) version of subversion, which includes the libapache2-svn, but I don't see that it has any bearing on this. Apparently apt for some reason considers the version of apache it just downloaded to be different from what is on the server. theda:/home/faheem# apt-cache policy apache2 apache2: Installed: 2.0.54-5 Candidate: 2.0.54-5 Version Table: 2.0.55-3 0 50 http://debian.csail.mit.edu unstable/main Packages 2.0.54-5 0 50 http://debian.csail.mit.edu testing/main Packages 2.0.54-5 0 500 http://security.debian.org stable/updates/main Packages *** 2.0.54-5 0 100 /var/lib/dpkg/status 2.0.54-4 0 500 http://debian.csail.mit.edu stable/main Packages Any enlightenment appreciated. This is getting to be a rather annoying problem. Hi, I never got any replies to this query. This makes me think that I am the only person experiencing the problem, which is a little worrying, since I can't see anything I am doing that is causing it. Any clarification would be helpful, even if is just that I am the only one experiencing the problem. Thanks. Faheem. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
upgrade problem
Hi, I'm having a weird problem with the apache security upgrades. Does anyone have a clue what might be going on here? Apt keeps having me download the same version over and over. I'm seeing this on both of my AMD64 servers. The only thing I've done that is at all out of the ordinary is that I have a locally compiled (backported) version of subversion, which includes the libapache2-svn, but I don't see that it has any bearing on this. Apparently apt for some reason considers the version of apache it just downloaded to be different from what is on the server. theda:/home/faheem# apt-cache policy apache2 apache2: Installed: 2.0.54-5 Candidate: 2.0.54-5 Version Table: 2.0.55-3 0 50 http://debian.csail.mit.edu unstable/main Packages 2.0.54-5 0 50 http://debian.csail.mit.edu testing/main Packages 2.0.54-5 0 500 http://security.debian.org stable/updates/main Packages *** 2.0.54-5 0 100 /var/lib/dpkg/status 2.0.54-4 0 500 http://debian.csail.mit.edu stable/main Packages Any enlightenment appreciated. This is getting to be a rather annoying problem. Please cc me; I'm not subscribed. Thanks. Faheem. * apt-get upgrade Reading Package Lists... Done Building Dependency Tree... Done The following packages will be upgraded: apache2 apache2-common apache2-mpm-worker apache2-threaded-dev apache2-utils libapr0 libapr0-dev 7 upgraded, 0 newly installed, 0 to remove and 0 not upgraded. Need to get 1757kB of archives. After unpacking 0B of additional disk space will be used. Do you want to continue? [Y/n] Get:1 http://security.debian.org stable/updates/main libapr0 2.0.54-5 [137kB] Get:2 http://security.debian.org stable/updates/main apache2-utils 2.0.54-5 [92.6kB] Get:3 http://security.debian.org stable/updates/main apache2-common 2.0.54-5 [827kB] Get:4 http://security.debian.org stable/updates/main apache2-mpm-worker 2.0.54-5 [220kB] Get:5 http://security.debian.org stable/updates/main apache2 2.0.54-5 [33.4kB] Get:6 http://security.debian.org stable/updates/main libapr0-dev 2.0.54-5 [279kB] Get:7 http://security.debian.org stable/updates/main apache2-threaded-dev 2.0.54-5 [168kB] Fetched 1757kB in 3s (523kB/s) (Reading database ... 85869 files and directories currently installed.) Preparing to replace libapr0 2.0.54-5 (using .../libapr0_2.0.54-5_amd64.deb) ... Unpacking replacement libapr0 ... Preparing to replace apache2-utils 2.0.54-5 (using .../apache2-utils_2.0.54-5_amd64.deb) ... Unpacking replacement apache2-utils ... Preparing to replace apache2-common 2.0.54-5 (using .../apache2-common_2.0.54-5_amd64.deb) ... Unpacking replacement apache2-common ... Preparing to replace apache2-mpm-worker 2.0.54-5 (using .../apache2-mpm-worker_2.0.54-5_amd64.deb) ... Stopping web server: Apache2. Unpacking replacement apache2-mpm-worker ... Preparing to replace apache2 2.0.54-5 (using .../apache2_2.0.54-5_amd64.deb) ... Unpacking replacement apache2 ... Preparing to replace libapr0-dev 2.0.54-5 (using .../libapr0-dev_2.0.54-5_amd64.deb) ... Unpacking replacement libapr0-dev ... Preparing to replace apache2-threaded-dev 2.0.54-5 (using .../apache2-threaded-dev_2.0.54-5_amd64.deb) ... Unpacking replacement apache2-threaded-dev ... Setting up libapr0 (2.0.54-5) ... Setting up apache2-utils (2.0.54-5) ... Setting up apache2-common (2.0.54-5) ... Setting up apache2-mpm-worker (2.0.54-5) ... Starting web server: Apache2. Setting up apache2 (2.0.54-5) ... Setting up libapr0-dev (2.0.54-5) ... Setting up apache2-threaded-dev (2.0.54-5) ... followed by apt-get upgrade Reading Package Lists... Done Building Dependency Tree... Done The following packages will be upgraded: apache2 apache2-common apache2-mpm-worker apache2-threaded-dev apache2-utils libapr0 libapr0-dev 7 upgraded, 0 newly installed, 0 to remove and 0 not upgraded. Need to get 0B/1757kB of archives. After unpacking 0B of additional disk space will be used. Do you want to continue? [Y/n] [...] -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: installing Oracle on Debian AMD64
On Tue, 25 Oct 2005 14:41:19 +0100, Adam Stiles [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On Sunday 23 October 2005 18:42, Faheem Mitha wrote: Dear People, I am (unfortunately) trying to install Oracle Database 10g on Debian AMD64. I know this is routinely done on i386, but I'm having some problems. The errors I get appear below, when I try to bring up the installer screen (using ./runInstaller), which I believe uses Java. The proper way to fix it would be to recompile the whole package from source so it works with your existing installation. But that probably is not an option for you ;) So let's ask a different question instead. What do you need Oracle for that you can't do using PostgreSQL or MySQL? Uh, you're preaching to the choir. I don't want to install Oracle. My boss does. I'm not too enthusiastic about talking him out of it, so installing Oracle seemed to be the path of least resistance. I'd rather use PostgreSQL too. Faheem. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
installing Oracle on Debian AMD64
Dear People, I am (unfortunately) trying to install Oracle Database 10g on Debian AMD64. I know this is routinely done on i386, but I'm having some problems. The errors I get appear below, when I try to bring up the installer screen (using ./runInstaller), which I believe uses Java. I have found discussions of this problems in Ubuntu forums, but nothing for Debian. Eg. http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=40392highlight=locale+set+CX I installed the 64 bit versions of Java 1.5 using javapackage. ii sun-j2sdk1.5 1.5.0+update05 Java(TM) 2 SDK, Standard Edition, Sun Micros One significant difference between Ubuntu and Debian is that 64 bit Ubuntu, like other commercial distributions, has some 32 bit libraries included in it, including the X one. All the discussions I've found pertaining to Ubuntu reference the 32 bit X libraries in some way. I'm not clear what the problem here is. Can anyone clarify, and/or suggest a workaround? This is probably wishful thinking, but is it possible that this error arises because I am doing X forwarding from a 64 bit machine to a 32 bit machine over ssh, and would go away at the console? At the moment I don't have access to the machine in question, but will try then when I do. As a fallback position, does anyone know whether installing a 32 version of Oracle Database 10g in a chroot in a 64 bit system would be workable? Thanks in advance, and apologies for posting a message about proprietary software to a Debian forum. Faheem. * ERROR: Unable to convert from UTF-8 to ISO-8859-1 for NLS! redhat-3, SuSE-9, SuSE-8 or UnitedLinux-1.0 /tmp/OraInstall2005-10-23_12-41-19PM. Oracle Universal Installer, Version 10.1.0.3.0 Production Copyright (C) 1999, 2004, Oracle. All rights reserved. current locale is not supported in X11, locale is set to CX locale modifiers are not supported, using defaultException java.lang.InternalError: Current locale is not supported occurred.. java.lang.InternalError: Current locale is not supported at sun.awt.motif.MWindowPeer.pSetTitle(Native Method) at sun.awt.motif.MWindowPeer.init(MWindowPeer.java:97) at sun.awt.motif.MFramePeer.init(MFramePeer.java:58) at sun.awt.motif.MToolkit.createFrame(MToolkit.java:209) at java.awt.Frame.addNotify(Frame.java:472) at java.awt.Window.addNotify(Window.java:413) at java.awt.Window.show(Window.java:459) at java.awt.Component.show(Component.java:1133) at java.awt.Component.setVisible(Component.java:1088) at oracle.sysman.oii.oiif.oiifm.OiifmGraphicInterfaceManager.init(OiifmGraphicInterfaceManager.java:227) at oracle.sysman.oii.oiic.OiicSessionInterfaceManager.createInterfaceManager(OiicSessionInterfaceManager.java:173) at oracle.sysman.oii.oiic.OiicSessionInterfaceManager.getInterfaceManager(OiicSessionInterfaceManager.java:182) at oracle.sysman.oii.oiic.OiicInstaller.init(OiicInstaller.java:278) at oracle.sysman.oii.oiic.OiicInstaller.runInstaller(OiicInstaller.java:714) at oracle.sysman.oii.oiic.OiicInstaller.main(OiicInstaller.java:628) Exception in thread main java.lang.InternalError: Current locale is not supported at sun.awt.motif.MWindowPeer.pSetTitle(Native Method) at sun.awt.motif.MWindowPeer.init(MWindowPeer.java:97) at sun.awt.motif.MFramePeer.init(MFramePeer.java:58) at sun.awt.motif.MToolkit.createFrame(MToolkit.java:209) at java.awt.Frame.addNotify(Frame.java:472) at java.awt.Window.addNotify(Window.java:413) at java.awt.Window.show(Window.java:459) at java.awt.Component.show(Component.java:1133) at java.awt.Component.setVisible(Component.java:1088) at oracle.sysman.oii.oiif.oiifm.OiifmGraphicInterfaceManager.init(OiifmGraphicInterfaceManager.java:227) at oracle.sysman.oii.oiic.OiicSessionInterfaceManager.createInterfaceManager(OiicSessionInterfaceManager.java:173) at oracle.sysman.oii.oiic.OiicSessionInterfaceManager.getInterfaceManager(OiicSessionInterfaceManager.java:182) at oracle.sysman.oii.oiif.oiifm.OiifmAlert.clinit(OiifmAlert.java:112) at oracle.sysman.oii.oiic.OiicInstaller.runInstaller(OiicInstaller.java:772) at oracle.sysman.oii.oiic.OiicInstaller.main(OiicInstaller.java:628) -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: About Oracle 10 on AMD 64 Debian server
On Sun, 23 Oct 2005, LENHOF Jean-Yves wrote: Hi, I've just read your problem on the debian list. I'm not on the list, this is why I send this email right to you. You could cc the list. But the last time I've installed Oracle on Linux, I've had similar trouble with the java installer until I use LANG=C before launching the installation process. I tried this, but it doesn't seem to make any difference. Thanks for the suggestion, though. I'm Bccing in case you don't want your address made public. Faheem. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: perspectives on 32 bit vs 64 bit
On Mon, 3 Oct 2005 17:49:06 +1000, Hamish Moffatt [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On Mon, Oct 03, 2005 at 02:04:43AM -0400, Faheem Mitha wrote: I don't understand why so much of the memory is taken by the kernel. If each application is 4GB, then why is the kernel taking as much as 2GB? Does that mean that the application only gets 1/2 the memory that the operating system has allocated to it? What is the other half being used for? The kernel is taking 2Gb of address space, not memory. You can have multiple applications using 2Gb each. An application can only have 2Gb allocated to it. The kernel uses its space for PCI devices etc. Hmm. Thanks, that's very informative. That makes it much less likely we will be switching back to 32 bit. One option is to run a 64 system with a 32 bit chroot. I think there should be no problem with this. However, I was wondering if people has any idea whether it was possible to use the regular /home from inside the chroot. Also, is it possible to have X forwarding working from inside the chroot (assuming one is logging into the regular system)? Yes and yes. You can use a bind mount to make /home available in the chroot. Yes, I thought that might be possible. X works if you keep $DISPLAY and have access to $HOME/.Xauthority. If you use dchroot, then the -d switch keeps the environment and X just works. Can you point me to a good reference to this kind of stuff? There is lots of info on the net, but I don't know what is the best. One more question is whether there is any problem sharing a home directory between a 32 and 64 bit Debian system on an amd64 (assuming one is dual-booting)? I'm just talking about ascii here, I know that binaries would need to be recompiled. No, that is fine. Thanks. That's very helpful. Faheem. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
perspectives on 32 bit vs 64 bit
Dear People, I have an Opteron server, on which I am running the AMD64 Debian port. For various reasons, I'm contemplating going back to 32 bit. The major reason is that aside from the packages in the AMD64 Debian archive, it is not always easy to find Debian packages for AMD64, since i386 is still very much the default. Also, not all software compiles with AMD64. I am aware that 64 bit computing has considerable advantages as well. I'm looking for perspectives from people who have experience with both, and what their feelings about this are. Specifically, I was looking for clarifications about memory issues. I have looked at stuff on the web, but am still confused. What is the 4 Gig limit for 32 bit processors that people talk about? Does this mean that each process/thread can only get a limit of 4 Gig? Is there any workaround for this? What are the other limits? I read elsewhere that a 32 bit Linux system has an effective limit of 16 Gig usable memory total. Thoughts appreciated. Please cc me; I'm not subscribed, though I will be checking via Gmane occasionally. Thanks. Faheem. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
strange error messages on bootup
Hi, I just did a new installation on a server with dual Opterons and 8 250 G disks using RAID 10, with a total of 1 Tb usable storage space. I can give more specs detailed if necessary. I'm seeing lots of lines like the following scroll by at bootup scsi: host 4 channel 0 id 0 lun 0x642e6b6f3a202f6c has a LUN larger than currently supported. All these lines are similar, in that only the string after the word 'lun' differs, and there must be hundreds of them at least. This is with both of the stock Debian kernels kernel-image-2.6.8-11-amd64-generic and kernel-image-2.6.8-11-amd64-k8. The machine seems to be working completely normally as far as I can tell. However, I'm wondering if anyone has an idea what these mesages mean, what problem it indicates, if any, and what would be needed to fix it. Thanks in advance. Faheem. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: strange error messages on bootup
On Fri, 2 Sep 2005 22:51:35 + (UTC), Faheem Mitha [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hi, I just did a new installation on a server with dual Opterons and 8 250 G disks using RAID 10, with a total of 1 Tb usable storage space. I can give more specs detailed if necessary. I'm seeing lots of lines like the following scroll by at bootup scsi: host 4 channel 0 id 0 lun 0x642e6b6f3a202f6c has a LUN larger than currently supported. All these lines are similar, in that only the string after the word 'lun' differs, and there must be hundreds of them at least. This is with both of the stock Debian kernels kernel-image-2.6.8-11-amd64-generic and kernel-image-2.6.8-11-amd64-k8. The machine seems to be working completely normally as far as I can tell. However, I'm wondering if anyone has an idea what these mesages mean, what problem it indicates, if any, and what would be needed to fix it. I should not have been in such a hurry to send out this message. It appears this message appears because I was using a non-SMP kernel on a SMP system, though I still don't know what it means. Sorry about the noise. Faheem. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: amd64 sarge installation cds with 2.6.12
On Mon, 25 Jul 2005, Lennart Sorensen wrote: On Thu, Jul 21, 2005 at 11:27:57PM +0200, Frederik Schueler wrote: It was accepted into unstable today, should be autobuilt tonight, and become available tomorrow during the day as mirrors sync. New unofficial image is now online. http://www.tinyplanet.ca/~lsorense/amd64/ [snip] Great! It would be super nice, as I said earlier, if you could ship the sources for the CD so I could make tweaks. If that is impracticable, please don't worry about it. Thanks for your efforts. We've ordered two machines, one with dual Opterons, the other with dual dual-core Operons (over objections on my part). Your CD will be one of the first things I'll try with the dual-core machine, and I'll report back to these lists, since info about dual-cores on Debian seems a bit scarce. Take care. Faheem (reluctant early adopter). -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: amd64 sarge installation cds with 2.6.12
On Mon, 25 Jul 2005, Vincent Hanquez wrote: On Thu, Jul 21, 2005 at 04:55:36PM -0400, Faheem Mitha wrote: It seems likely I will soon be needing a Sarge installation CD with 2.6.12. This is because I will want to install Debian (AMD64 port) at work on a machine with two of the new dual core Opteron processors. Apparently 2.6.12 supports this architecture properly, while earlier versions of the kernel do not. So, I was wondering if anyone had made (or knew of) official or unofficial Sarge AMD64 installation cds with 2.6.12? If not, I guess I'll have to try rolling my own. dual core opterons are supported by all kernels. my quad dual core works on 2.6.5 and 2.6.11 out of the box. dual core are exactly like dual cpu. the only 2.6.12 support is to show them correctly in /proc/cpuinfo as part of the same die. kernels 2.6.12 will show each core as different cpus. no big deal. Wow. Finally someone who can give definite info! You are running AMD64 Debian Sarge, right? So, no kernel hangs or lockups with dual-core processors, then? My vendor informed me that they has problems with Fedora Core (all versions) so couldn't ship with Fedora preinstalled on the dual-core opteron machine we ordered. So we had to go with SuSE instead. Any idea what kind of problems they might have had? Faheem. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: amd64 sarge installation cds with 2.6.12
On Sun, 24 Jul 2005, Otavio Salvador wrote: Hmm, that's a pretty good question. I guess another good question is: Do you _need_ udev at all? If you want to use gnome-volume-manager, yes! How about just for normal, default, basic use of the system? All I know about udev is that it manages device nodes, but does it do so by default in the 2.6 Debian stock kernels, or do you need to enable it? Faheem. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: amd64 sarge installation cds with 2.6.12
On Fri, 22 Jul 2005, Goswin von Brederlow wrote: apt-get install debian-cd I configure the CONF.sh for normal CD builds, setting the path and such and then override a few things for netinst (see below): Building is then done with export CF=./CONF-netinst.sh ./build.sh You probably have to build for etch and change the D-I task file for the new kernel though. MfG Goswin [snip] Is there anything else that I would need to pull from testing/unstable for the new kernel? For example, would I need the latest udev? Thanks. Faheem. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: comments about hardware
On Thu, 21 Jul 2005, Lennart Sorensen wrote: One dual core opteron compared to two single core opterons: Each opteron has a memory controller built in that does dual channel memory support. A dual core opteron still only has one memory controller and hypertransport to the chipset. The two cores share it, so two single cores have theoretically twice the memory bandwidth of a single dual core. Of course they also require a dual socket board rather than a single socket board, and you could put two dual core opterons in a dual board and get to use 4 cores total without having to pay for a much more expensive 4 socket board. Two cores in one package may on the other hand have faster access to each other's caches which may be an advantage in some situations, while in others sharing the memory bandwidth could hurt. At the same time the dual core would always have it's memory local, while two single cores half the ram is likely connected to the other cpu so access would have a 1 cycle penalty for access. A decent OS would try to make sure applications are running on the cpu whos ram they are currently in whenever possible. Hi, Thanks for the information. If you have experience of using dual core processors with Debian, I'd be glad to hear of the details. Best regards, Faheem. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
amd64 sarge installation cds with 2.6.12
Hi, It seems likely I will soon be needing a Sarge installation CD with 2.6.12. This is because I will want to install Debian (AMD64 port) at work on a machine with two of the new dual core Opteron processors. Apparently 2.6.12 supports this architecture properly, while earlier versions of the kernel do not. So, I was wondering if anyone had made (or knew of) official or unofficial Sarge AMD64 installation cds with 2.6.12? If not, I guess I'll have to try rolling my own. Please cc me on any reply. Thanks. Faheem. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: amd64 sarge installation cds with 2.6.12
On Thu, 21 Jul 2005, Lennart Sorensen wrote: On Thu, Jul 21, 2005 at 11:27:57PM +0200, Frederik Schueler wrote: It was accepted into unstable today, should be autobuilt tonight, and become available tomorrow during the day as mirrors sync. I will try to build a new netinst image with that tomorrow then. Must remember to add back tg3 I guess which disappeared after 2.6.8 sometime. Unless it didn't make it in I guess. :) Thanks. That's very helpful. If you could make the source for the netinst build publicly available so people could do tweaks if necessary, that would be even more helpful. Thanks. Faheem. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
comments about hardware
Dear People, My bioinformatics research group at Duke is buying a server, which will mostly be used as a server, particularly for web based services. The idea here is that a user will submit a request for some bioinformatics calculation via a web interface (often using Python or R or similar), the server does the calculation, and returns it as a web page. None of us are experts about recent hardware, so would appreciate any feedback about hardware specs. The following quote is from Monarch Computers. We plan to run Linux on this. It has not yet been decided yet what, but it seems most likely that it will be either some Red Hat variant (Fedora Core, CentOS), or Debian (possibly Ubuntu). Ok, so here are some specific questions. 1) Dual core Opterons first came on the market in April. The sales rep said that AMD Dual Core Opterons did not work with Fedora Core. Since they only install Fedora and SuSE, they had no info about Debian. Any idea what the status is here? How well are they supported, and how stably do they run under Linux? Also, I was told that a dual core Opteron, which is somewhat more than twice the cost two regular Opterons of similar speed, is not equivalent to two regular Opterons in functionality. Can anyone point me to information about this, or offer a comment? 2) I'm wondering if the listed motherboard is the best choice. I see it listed in http://alioth.debian.org/docman/view.php/30192/27/mainboards.html We are looking for the motherboard that has the least known issues. Preferably something that will work right out of the box. Google found me http://lists.debian.org/debian-amd64/2004/09/msg00443.html but would be interested in other reports. The specs are here http://www.tyan.com/products/html/thunderk8spro_spec.html It looks like both the graphics card and the ethernet cards are onboard. Looks like the graphics card is ATI RAGE XL PCI, which supposedly works with the 'ati' driver. Is this under XFree 4.3? The ethernet cards are an Intel Ethernet Pro 100, which supposedly works with the e100 driver and a Gigabit Broadcom which works with the tg3 driver. There seem to be two cards here. Is that correct? I'm kinda allergic to onboard cards. They are often trouble. Has anyone had experience with Debian Sarge installation with this? Does anyone have a board to suggest that they prefer to this? 3) I'm also wondering if peple have thoughts about the RAID setup. The rep said he would be using RAID 1, but I see RAID 10 is listed. I'll have to check on this. Anyway, assuming this corresponds to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Redundant_array_of_independent_disks#RAID_10 with each RAID 1 set as two drives, and 4 RAID 1 sets striped together, does this seem reasonable? Thanks.Faheem. *** ITEM NUM PRICE PER ITEM TOT Monarch Empro Custom 2U Rack S 1.0075.00 75.00 RMC2K2-9I-XPSS,2U,8 Bays,SATA, 1.00 725.00 725.00 AIC 2U Riser Card/Rear Window1.00 112.00 112.00 Tyan S2882G3NR-D Dual Socket94 1.00 394.00 394.00 Amd OSA265FAA6CB Dual Core Opt 2.00 851.00 1,702.00 Thermal Grease, Shin-Etsu G675 2.0014.0028.00 THERMALTAKE A1838 AMD Opteron2.0025.0050.00 WESTERN DIGITAL 250 GB 2500JD1.00 115.00 115.00 3WARE Escalade 9500S-8 - 8-por 1.00 485.00 485.00 RAID 10 Setup1.0025.0025.00 WESTERN DIGITAL 250 GB 2500JD8.00115.00 920.00 SONY DWD-56A 8X4X2.4 DVD RW+/- 1.00129.00 129.00 SUSE Linux 9.3 Professional Ed 1.00 92.00 92.00 24/7 TECH SUPPORT+ONSITE 3 YR. 1.00199.00 199.00 Net Order: 5,051.00 Freight: 75.00 5,126.00 -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: comments about hardware
On Mon, 18 Jul 2005, Ed Tomlinson wrote: Hi, Dual core support is not distro specific. It depends on the kernel used. I believe that debian, with a recent (2.6.12.3+) kernel should be fine. Do you have any personal experience in using this? I'm concerned about stability issues. Also, would there not be some practical difficulty in getting this installed, seeing as with an earlier kernel it probably won't boot, and the official Debian installers all use 2.6.8? Faheem. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]