Anyway, If you find some solutions with 16 MB Ram, I
would be
happy to know it, since I can't use my old laptop
for now.
twm? hehehe.
Initially the old laptop was for a friend of mine, who doesn't
know much about computer, so I thought that perverting one more
to FreeBSD was a great
What does the CPU utilization look like on each machine ?
On the server side, CPU never goes up to 3%
On the client side, I don't know since I don't have top compiled
on Windows (to able to execute it in X). But the computer is
really fast.
How
much of that is the SSH process ?
sshd is
What does your switch say ?
switch says 100 full.
I have a (NetBSD) box here which, for some
reason, refuses to go into full duplex mode, though it claims it is in
full duplex.
And there is no way to know about reality ? I just can't trust
ifconfig ?
By the way I've set
Using compression flag on the ssh client ?
Hmm, I seem to have missed this. Are you on an open network ?
Yes my network is open to Internet, I have an Apple Airport
Station which handles my pppoe connection, with portmapping
enabled. Rules of portmapping is :
- we don't serve anything here
One common problem is when your NIC is set to half-duplex operation
and everything else is set to full duplex.
I've done an ifconfig as mentioned in the handbook, and it says
that my card (rl0) :
media: Ethernet autoselect (100baseTX full-duplex)
and of course it is active.
I check on the PC
Using compression flag on the ssh client ?
No. But I've just tried. It slows down a little, but not much. I
would say that pictures do not takes 2 seconds but 2.5 seconds.
Well. But it's quite far from 1/4 ;)
processing power of either station getting overwhelmed by the bursty
graphics
I've the following configuration :
- an ASUS mini-pc with FreeBSD on it, 900 MHz, 256 MBytes,
connected on an ethernet local network.
- 2 PC running Windows with X server via cygwin (each with
1,4GHz Athlon CPU, 256 MBytes RAM)
- All of them are connected with a 100 Mbits switch.
Basically in
Hi everyone,
I've the following configuration :
- an ASUS mini-pc with FreeBSD on it, 900 MHz, 256 MBytes,
connected on an ethernet local network.
- 2 PC running Windows with X server via cygwin (each with
1,4GHz Athlon CPU, 256 MBytes RAM)
- All of them are connected with a 100 Mbits switch.