On Mon, 11 Feb 2008 15:23:40 -0700
Craig White [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
a full explanation is on the wiki
http://wiki.ltsp.org/twiki/bin/view/Ltsp/Troubleshooting-mount-problems
Interesting. I am confused about this part:
QUOTE
If you have access to the client's /linuxrc file then you can
On Mon, 11 Feb 2008 14:32:55 -0800
Derek McKay [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
This sounds like it could be the old UDP fragmentation problem showing
up again.
Now that's highly interesting and something I've never heard about before.
Is this a common problem with any particular kind or brand of
On Mon, 11 Feb 2008 14:22:24 -0700
Craig White [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Can you disable the
fancy stuff and tell it to just be a switch?
I am uncomfortable with that type of advice.
It seems the Macintosh computers struggle with spanning-tree protocol
and by switching it off on the
On Mon, 2008-02-11 at 15:18 -0600, Frank Cox wrote:
On Mon, 11 Feb 2008 13:09:32 -0800
Jim Kusznir [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Any suggestions? I have no idea what to start tweaking on the netgear...
I know nothing at all about a Netgear GSM7224 managed gigabit switch, but it
sounds like
Hi all:
I have a very strange problem. I have a working LTSP 4.2 setup. Our
network infrastructure is built around HP Procurve switches. We have
our primary LTSP server in our machine room, and thin clients in two
buildings throughout the building. All this works fine.
Then, one of our labs
On Mon, 2008-02-11 at 16:35 -0600, Frank Cox wrote:
On Mon, 11 Feb 2008 15:23:40 -0700
Craig White [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
a full explanation is on the wiki
http://wiki.ltsp.org/twiki/bin/view/Ltsp/Troubleshooting-mount-problems
Interesting. I am confused about this part:
QUOTE
On Mon, 2008-02-11 at 16:15 -0600, Frank Cox wrote:
On Mon, 11 Feb 2008 14:32:55 -0800
Derek McKay [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
This sounds like it could be the old UDP fragmentation problem showing
up again.
Now that's highly interesting and something I've never heard about before.
Is
On Mon, 11 Feb 2008 13:09:32 -0800
Jim Kusznir [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Any suggestions? I have no idea what to start tweaking on the netgear...
I know nothing at all about a Netgear GSM7224 managed gigabit switch, but it
sounds like something is not being passed through that switch, which
This sounds like it could be the old UDP fragmentation problem showing
up again. Some switches are much better than others at handling big UDP
packets that have to be fragmented to 1500 byte ethernet packets. Used
to be a big problem with 100/10 switches/hubs where the switch storage
would drop
On Feb 12, 2008 9:52 AM, David Johnston [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Diwa,
you can add pkill -u $USER to /etc/gdm/PostSession/Default.
-David
Hi David,
Thanks for the hint.
-Diwa
-
This SF.net email is sponsored by:
Guyz,
I need suggestion about the good combination between OpenSuse and LTSP.
What is the latest version of OpenSuse (10.1 / 10.2 / 10.3) and LTSP
you've been used?
I mean the best combination ...
Thanks a lot.
--
Best Regards,
Donny Christiaan.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Mon, 2008-02-11 at 10:03 +0700, Diwakoe wrote:
Dear all,
I have Fedora 7 and LTSP 4.2 running well but some process still
active when user logout and this become additional work for me to kill
the active process one by one manually over System Monitor.
Is there any script which can
On Feb 11, 2008 4:53 AM, A J MacLeod [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Monday 11 February 2008 03:47:14 Ryan Churches wrote:
When you say 'plain old X11' do you mean running 'ssh -X foo
/path/to/gui/app/bar' from a standalone workstation or something
equivalent?
No, not really - I mean XDMCP.
On Mon, 2008-02-11 at 15:48 -0700, Craig White wrote:
On Mon, 2008-02-11 at 16:35 -0600, Frank Cox wrote:
On Mon, 11 Feb 2008 15:23:40 -0700
Craig White [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
a full explanation is on the wiki
On Monday 11 February 2008 03:47:14 Ryan Churches wrote:
When you say 'plain old X11' do you mean running 'ssh -X foo
/path/to/gui/app/bar' from a standalone workstation or something
equivalent?
No, not really - I mean XDMCP. With Linux based dedicated thin clients a
Linux server configured
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