Re: [CentOS] Building an instant on X terminal

2010-04-16 Thread Hakan Koseoglu
On Thu, Apr 15, 2010 at 1:26 AM, Benjamin Franz jfr...@freerun.com wrote:
 If you aren't adverse to Ubuntu, 10.04 LTS (beta right now but final by
 the end of the month) boots in 10 seconds from a hard drive. I've tried
 it: It was impressively fast.
I was curious about this and installed one of these on an amd64 VM
with a standard LTSP installation and my ancient 700MHz i386 laptop
was running of it within an hour and pretty fast as well. Even sound
worked fine and stuff like youtube were tolerable. The performance and
experience was way better than the old thin-client terminals of the
same age with a cut-down Linux on the on-board CF-Card. The whole
thing took 13GB on disk and 768MB of RAM to support two clients.
Trying the CentOS one is probably the next step.
-- 
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Re: [CentOS] Building an instant on X terminal

2010-04-16 Thread Hakan Koseoglu
On Thu, Apr 15, 2010 at 1:54 AM, Stephen Harris li...@spuddy.org wrote:
 If you aren't adverse to Ubuntu, 10.04 LTS (beta right now but final by
 the end of the month) boots in 10 seconds from a hard drive. I've tried
 it: It was impressively fast.
 Will it run in 256Mb RAM and on 512Mb of disk?  'Cos that's all this
 machine has :-)
I did a quick and dirty test setup yesterday and was quite impressed.
One of the tests was running a VMWare with 128MB and a tiny empty
disk. The VM booted off the LTSP binaries merrily and was up and
running within seconds. The server was a VM on my file server with
768MB RAM and the client was a VM on my linux laptop so everything did
go through the network cable in the end. I've also tried an ancient
700MHz Pentium 3 laptop with 256MB RAM and that was way faster than
the local Linux installation on the box so I think this setup is going
to stay and will be in use instead of the local OS.
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Re: [CentOS] Building an instant on X terminal

2010-04-16 Thread Les Mikesell
Hakan Koseoglu wrote:
 On Thu, Apr 15, 2010 at 1:26 AM, Benjamin Franz jfr...@freerun.com wrote:
 If you aren't adverse to Ubuntu, 10.04 LTS (beta right now but final by
 the end of the month) boots in 10 seconds from a hard drive. I've tried
 it: It was impressively fast.
 I was curious about this and installed one of these on an amd64 VM
 with a standard LTSP installation and my ancient 700MHz i386 laptop
 was running of it within an hour and pretty fast as well. Even sound
 worked fine and stuff like youtube were tolerable. The performance and
 experience was way better than the old thin-client terminals of the
 same age with a cut-down Linux on the on-board CF-Card. The whole
 thing took 13GB on disk and 768MB of RAM to support two clients.
 Trying the CentOS one is probably the next step.

There are substantial differences in the way LTSP4 and LTSP5 work. You might 
want to try both if you haven't yet.  The k12ltspEL5 distro would have LTSP4.

-- 
   Les Mikesell
lesmikes...@gmail.com

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Re: [CentOS] Building an instant on X terminal

2010-04-15 Thread Reynolds McClatchey

 Huh.  A small version of Debian Etch.  Boots (once POST has complted)
 in under 25 seconds.

 Hmm, old versions of software, and apt-get upgrade causes the system
 to die (root disk filled out) but definitely a possibility.

I believe Synaptic is installed. I did not upgrade but used Synaptic to 
install
the packages I needed but not included - lpd, xpdf. I found an Etch repo 
somewhere.

I ran out of flash at some point. I needed serial printers for a plant label
printer and could never get the RS232 printer working.

We have 10 or so HP thin clients and fragility of the flash data has not 
been an issue.
Instant on is not an issue and I missed that in your original note.

Good Luck.
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[CentOS] Building an instant on X terminal

2010-04-14 Thread Stephen Harris
I got my hands on a HP t5720.  This was designed as a thin-client
workstation (originally Windows XPembedded, talking to a Windows terminal
server).  It's not very powerful, with an AMD Geode NX 1500 (1.0 GHz),
256Mb RAM (16MB used for video) and a 512Mb flash hard disk.

I plugged in a USB DVD drive and was able to boot linux rescue from
a C5.4 32bit disk, and it basically looks like pretty generic PC hardware.

So I thought this would be a great device to build as an instant on
type device.  Well, as close to instant-on as possible :-)  This probably
means a standard C5 build is not suitable (too many processes running;
would take a while to start up).  So an X terminal, maybe.

I look at the LTSP code base, but this looks like it wants to run as it's
own OS; I already have a C5 server in my house, I don't want to build
another one (not even as a virtual image).

Acting as an X terminal, I'd guess the 256Mb RAM should be sufficient;
it won't be processing much beyond the display locally (although I might
want to enable ssh and add a locally connected printer).  The root disk
could be local (512Mb flash) or by NFS.

What do people recommend for building this?  What would have the quickest
power-on-to-ready time? 

-- 

rgds
Stephen
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Re: [CentOS] Building an instant on X terminal

2010-04-14 Thread Joseph L. Casale
What do people recommend for building this?  What would have the quickest
power-on-to-ready time? 

Well, you could use thin station, I have used it in the past and its pretty
slick...
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Re: [CentOS] Building an instant on X terminal

2010-04-14 Thread Les Mikesell
On 4/14/2010 2:38 PM, Stephen Harris wrote:
 I got my hands on a HP t5720.  This was designed as a thin-client
 workstation (originally Windows XPembedded, talking to a Windows terminal
 server).  It's not very powerful, with an AMD Geode NX 1500 (1.0 GHz),
 256Mb RAM (16MB used for video) and a 512Mb flash hard disk.

 I plugged in a USB DVD drive and was able to boot linux rescue from
 a C5.4 32bit disk, and it basically looks like pretty generic PC hardware.

 So I thought this would be a great device to build as an instant on
 type device.  Well, as close to instant-on as possible :-)  This probably
 means a standard C5 build is not suitable (too many processes running;
 would take a while to start up).  So an X terminal, maybe.

 I look at the LTSP code base, but this looks like it wants to run as it's
 own OS; I already have a C5 server in my house, I don't want to build
 another one (not even as a virtual image).

LTSP doesn't install another OS on the server - it PXE-boots one to 
client devices with just enough to run X as a thin client.  That would 
probably work for you - or whatever local install you can do that 
doesn't start X and once it is up, do 'X -query server'.

 Acting as an X terminal, I'd guess the 256Mb RAM should be sufficient;
 it won't be processing much beyond the display locally (although I might
 want to enable ssh and add a locally connected printer).  The root disk
 could be local (512Mb flash) or by NFS.

 What do people recommend for building this?  What would have the quickest
 power-on-to-ready time?

This probably isn't what you want, but my favorite for quick access is a 
windows or mac laptop that handles sleep mode gracefully and let it 
sleep instead of powering off.  Then when it wakes up and gets a network 
connection (in a few seconds), fire up the NX client from 
www.nomachine.com to connect to a freenx session on your server - which 
you can disconnect and re-connect as needed with everything on the 
desktop still running.  Some of the more current linux distributions 
might handle sleep mode but you'd either have to install a local window 
manager or work to get it to run the nx client in a bare X session.

-- 
   Les Mikesell
lesmikes...@gmail.com

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Re: [CentOS] Building an instant on X terminal

2010-04-14 Thread Stephen Harris
On Wed, Apr 14, 2010 at 03:04:26PM -0500, Les Mikesell wrote:
 On 4/14/2010 2:38 PM, Stephen Harris wrote:
  I look at the LTSP code base, but this looks like it wants to run as it's
  own OS; I already have a C5 server in my house, I don't want to build
 
 LTSP doesn't install another OS on the server - it PXE-boots one to 
 client devices with just enough to run X as a thin client.  That would 
 probably work for you - or whatever local install you can do that 
 doesn't start X and once it is up, do 'X -query server'.

My reading of the ltsp pages is that they prefer to distribute it as
an OS image, with the ltsp components already integrated and that it's
hard work to do the integration yourself.
  http://sourceforge.net/apps/mediawiki/ltsp/index.php?title=Ltsp5Status
  http://sourceforge.net/apps/mediawiki/ltsp/index.php?title=IntegratingLtsp

Has this changed?

-- 

rgds
Stephen
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Re: [CentOS] Building an instant on X terminal

2010-04-14 Thread Stephen Harris
On Wed, Apr 14, 2010 at 07:50:42PM +, Joseph L. Casale wrote:
 What do people recommend for building this?  What would have the quickest
 power-on-to-ready time? 
 
 Well, you could use thin station, I have used it in the past and its pretty
 slick...

Hmm... I'll take a look at that.

Thanks!

-- 

rgds
Stephen
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[CentOS] Building an instant on X terminal

2010-04-14 Thread R P Herrold
On Wed, 14 Apr 2010, Stephen Harris wrote:

 My reading of the ltsp pages is that they prefer to distribute it as
 an OS image, with the ltsp components already integrated and that it's
 hard work to do the integration yourself.
  http://sourceforge.net/apps/mediawiki/ltsp/index.php?title=Ltsp5Status
  http://sourceforge.net/apps/mediawiki/ltsp/index.php?title=IntegratingLtsp

It is distribution integration, and as to the PXE image a bit 
of kernel/library stabilization.  Over time has lived from 
many sources.  Laborious and picky, particularly when multiple 
targets are maintained, but not superhuman to do

-- Russ herrold
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Re: [CentOS] Building an instant on X terminal

2010-04-14 Thread Reynolds McClatchey
Install the image for a t5725 from a USB stick. Very cool.

http://h2.www2.hp.com/bizsupport/TechSupport/DriverDownload.jsp?lang=encc=usprodNameId=3221864taskId=135prodTypeId=12454prodSeriesId=3221863lang=encc=ussubmit=Go%20%BB
-- 
M Reynolds McClatchey JrVP Engineering and Inventory
Southern Aluminum Finishing Co Inc  404-355-1560 x222 Voice
1581 Huber St NW404-350-0581 Fax
Atlanta GA 30318


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Re: [CentOS] Building an instant on X terminal

2010-04-14 Thread Les Mikesell
On 4/14/2010 3:26 PM, Stephen Harris wrote:
 On Wed, Apr 14, 2010 at 03:04:26PM -0500, Les Mikesell wrote:
 On 4/14/2010 2:38 PM, Stephen Harris wrote:
 I look at the LTSP code base, but this looks like it wants to run as it's
 own OS; I already have a C5 server in my house, I don't want to build

 LTSP doesn't install another OS on the server - it PXE-boots one to
 client devices with just enough to run X as a thin client.  That would
 probably work for you - or whatever local install you can do that
 doesn't start X and once it is up, do 'X -query server'.

 My reading of the ltsp pages is that they prefer to distribute it as
 an OS image, with the ltsp components already integrated and that it's
 hard work to do the integration yourself.
http://sourceforge.net/apps/mediawiki/ltsp/index.php?title=Ltsp5Status
http://sourceforge.net/apps/mediawiki/ltsp/index.php?title=IntegratingLtsp

 Has this changed?

Sort-of... In recent Fedora versions ltsp5 is a packaged rpm.  For a 
Centos base the easiest approach might be to re-install the k12ltsp EL5 
distribution which is basically a stock Centos plus ltsp4, plus some 
other education-related stuff.  A few years ago I would have recommended 
it highly, but it seems on it's way out now.  You might be able to pick 
out the rpms and setup scripts that you'd need to back into an existing 
distribution but it's probably not worth the trouble for one terminal. 
More info here:
http://k12ltsp.org/mediawiki/index.php/Main_Page

-- 
   Les Mikesell
lesmikes...@gmail.com
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Re: [CentOS] Building an instant on X terminal

2010-04-14 Thread Robert Heller
At Wed, 14 Apr 2010 15:38:20 -0400 CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org 
wrote:

 
 I got my hands on a HP t5720.  This was designed as a thin-client
 workstation (originally Windows XPembedded, talking to a Windows terminal
 server).  It's not very powerful, with an AMD Geode NX 1500 (1.0 GHz),
 256Mb RAM (16MB used for video) and a 512Mb flash hard disk.
 
 I plugged in a USB DVD drive and was able to boot linux rescue from
 a C5.4 32bit disk, and it basically looks like pretty generic PC hardware.
 
 So I thought this would be a great device to build as an instant on
 type device.  Well, as close to instant-on as possible :-)  This probably
 means a standard C5 build is not suitable (too many processes running;
 would take a while to start up).  So an X terminal, maybe.
 
 I look at the LTSP code base, but this looks like it wants to run as it's
 own OS; I already have a C5 server in my house, I don't want to build
 another one (not even as a virtual image).
 
 Acting as an X terminal, I'd guess the 256Mb RAM should be sufficient;
 it won't be processing much beyond the display locally (although I might
 want to enable ssh and add a locally connected printer).  The root disk
 could be local (512Mb flash) or by NFS.
 
 What do people recommend for building this?  What would have the quickest
 power-on-to-ready time? 

You will *probably* find LTSP's performance disapointing, depending on
how beefy your server box is (and what else it is doing) and/or how
many of these little boxes you plan to use.

See 

http://www.deepsoft.com/2009/08/setting-up-thin-clients-at-the-wendell-free-library-part-1/

for a detailed look at what I set up at the Wendell Free Library.  The
machines come up pretty fast.


-- 
Robert Heller -- 978-544-6933
Deepwoods Software-- Download the Model Railroad System
http://www.deepsoft.com/  -- Binaries for Linux and MS-Windows
hel...@deepsoft.com   -- http://www.deepsoft.com/ModelRailroadSystem/
 
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Re: [CentOS] Building an instant on X terminal

2010-04-14 Thread Stephen Harris
On Wed, Apr 14, 2010 at 04:37:21PM -0400, Reynolds McClatchey wrote:
 Install the image for a t5725 from a USB stick. Very cool.

Huh.  A small version of Debian Etch.  Boots (once POST has complted)
in under 25 seconds.

Hmm, old versions of software, and apt-get upgrade causes the system
to die (root disk filled out) but definitely a possibility.

Thanks!

-- 

rgds
Stephen
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Re: [CentOS] Building an instant on X terminal

2010-04-14 Thread Stephen Harris
On Wed, Apr 14, 2010 at 05:11:12PM -0400, Robert Heller wrote:
  I got my hands on a HP t5720.  This was designed as a thin-client

  What do people recommend for building this?  What would have the quickest
  power-on-to-ready time? 
 
 You will *probably* find LTSP's performance disapointing, depending on
 how beefy your server box is (and what else it is doing) and/or how
 many of these little boxes you plan to use.

The server is a Q6600 which is mostly idle; I hope it's fast enough :-)

 http://www.deepsoft.com/2009/08/setting-up-thin-clients-at-the-wendell-free-library-part-1/

Interesting.  Thanks!

-- 

rgds
Stephen
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Re: [CentOS] Building an instant on X terminal

2010-04-14 Thread Benjamin Franz
Stephen Harris wrote:
 On Wed, Apr 14, 2010 at 04:37:21PM -0400, Reynolds McClatchey wrote:
 Huh.  A small version of Debian Etch.  Boots (once POST has complted)
 in under 25 seconds.

 Hmm, old versions of software, and apt-get upgrade causes the system
 to die (root disk filled out) but definitely a possibility.
   

If you aren't adverse to Ubuntu, 10.04 LTS (beta right now but final by 
the end of the month) boots in 10 seconds from a hard drive. I've tried 
it: It was impressively fast.

-- 
Benjamin Franz
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Re: [CentOS] Building an instant on X terminal

2010-04-14 Thread Les Mikesell
Stephen Harris wrote:
 On Wed, Apr 14, 2010 at 04:37:21PM -0400, Reynolds McClatchey wrote:
 Install the image for a t5725 from a USB stick. Very cool.
 
 Huh.  A small version of Debian Etch.  Boots (once POST has complted)
 in under 25 seconds.
 
 Hmm, old versions of software, and apt-get upgrade causes the system
 to die (root disk filled out) but definitely a possibility.

If it gets you to a point where you can 'X -query server', the software 
versions 
  probably don't matter much.  You really run everything from the server anyway.

I thought there used to be several projects to boot into a thin client. 
Thinstation, tcos, pxes, etc. but I haven't followed them since starting to use 
NX/freenx.


-- 
   Les Mikesell
lesmikes...@gmail.com


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Re: [CentOS] Building an instant on X terminal

2010-04-14 Thread Stephen Harris
On Wed, Apr 14, 2010 at 05:26:44PM -0700, Benjamin Franz wrote:

 If you aren't adverse to Ubuntu, 10.04 LTS (beta right now but final by 
 the end of the month) boots in 10 seconds from a hard drive. I've tried 
 it: It was impressively fast.

Will it run in 256Mb RAM and on 512Mb of disk?  'Cos that's all this
machine has :-)

-- 

rgds
Stephen
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Re: [CentOS] Building an instant on X terminal

2010-04-14 Thread Stephen Harris
On Wed, Apr 14, 2010 at 07:41:40PM -0500, Les Mikesell wrote:
 Stephen Harris wrote:
  On Wed, Apr 14, 2010 at 04:37:21PM -0400, Reynolds McClatchey wrote:
  Install the image for a t5725 from a USB stick. Very cool.
  
  Huh.  A small version of Debian Etch.  Boots (once POST has complted)
  in under 25 seconds.
  
  Hmm, old versions of software, and apt-get upgrade causes the system
  to die (root disk filled out) but definitely a possibility.
 
 If it gets you to a point where you can 'X -query server', the software 
 versions 
   probably don't matter much.  You really run everything from the server 
 anyway.

The out of the box build for the HP software does local display, which
has it's benefits, primary being that I've never configured XDM on my
server...  indeed it doesn't even start any XDM server 'cos it boots into
runlevel 3 :-) I might look into it, though, as part of my experiments.

One downside... I think I managed to corrupt the OS disk by doing a
hard powerdown.  so I'm reflashing it again.  I do need the system to
be more stable and handle unclean shutdowns; a netbooted system handles
this nicely.

 I thought there used to be several projects to boot into a thin client. 
 Thinstation, tcos, pxes, etc. but I haven't followed them since starting to 
 use 
 NX/freenx.

Based off another post, I'm also playing with thinstation.  This works
(netboot took 54 seconds) but currently appears to be stuck at 800x600
resolution.  The display should be able to do 1280x1024x32 but trying to
force that causes it to die.  Hmmph :-(  More playing needed!

-- 

rgds
Stephen
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Re: [CentOS] Building an instant on X terminal

2010-04-14 Thread Benjamin Franz
Stephen Harris wrote:
 On Wed, Apr 14, 2010 at 05:26:44PM -0700, Benjamin Franz wrote:

   
 If you aren't adverse to Ubuntu, 10.04 LTS (beta right now but final by 
 the end of the month) boots in 10 seconds from a hard drive. I've tried 
 it: It was impressively fast.
 

 Will it run in 256Mb RAM and on 512Mb of disk?  'Cos that's all this
 machine has :-)
   

I don't know.

9.10 claims that the server version requires 64MB of RAM and 500MB of 
disk. But that is *without* X installed, so...

-- 
Benjamin Franz
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Re: [CentOS] Building an instant on X terminal

2010-04-14 Thread Ross Walker
On Wed, Apr 14, 2010 at 8:54 PM, Stephen Harris li...@spuddy.org wrote:
 On Wed, Apr 14, 2010 at 05:26:44PM -0700, Benjamin Franz wrote:

 If you aren't adverse to Ubuntu, 10.04 LTS (beta right now but final by
 the end of the month) boots in 10 seconds from a hard drive. I've tried
 it: It was impressively fast.

 Will it run in 256Mb RAM and on 512Mb of disk?  'Cos that's all this
 machine has :-)

thinstation will, if tuned to just the essential utils.

I boot and run it completely in a 8MB initrd image off PXE.

-Ross
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Re: [CentOS] Building an instant on X terminal

2010-04-14 Thread John R Pierce
Stephen Harris wrote:
 So I thought this would be a great device to build as an instant on
 type device.  Well, as close to instant-on as possible :-)  This probably
 means a standard C5 build is not suitable (too many processes running;
 would take a while to start up).  So an X terminal, maybe.
   

check out DSL, Damn Small Linux.  entire system fits on a 50MB flash or 
credit card sized miniCD.   runs X and everything.   uses busybox and 
uClinux userspace utils, TWMN is the window manager, it should be able 
to run as an X terminal, rdesktop, etc.


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