I believe Ezequiel is referring to the old LTSP4 "ltspinfo" command that
queried an ltspinfod daemon running on the client for info and allowed
for remote shutdown/reboot of the client.
That tool was dropped from LTSP5 because it was a huge security hole.
The UbuntuWiki has some ways to manually i
Am 29/04/10 12:15, schrieb Chris Roberts:
> On Thursday 29 Apr 2010, Wim De Geeter wrote:
>> No we use nfs,
>>
>> But it is still really not clear to me when to use ltsp-update-image
>> So I thought that every time you add some packages in the chroot you
>> need to update your ltsp-update-image
>
On Thursday 29 Apr 2010, Wim De Geeter wrote:
> No we use nfs,
>
> But it is still really not clear to me when to use ltsp-update-image
> So I thought that every time you add some packages in the chroot you
> need to update your ltsp-update-image
No, with Debian and NFS you never use this command
No we use nfs,
But it is still really not clear to me when to use ltsp-update-image
So I thought that every time you add some packages in the chroot you
need to update your ltsp-update-image
But now it start to be clear
Thanks
Chris Roberts wrote:
> On Monday 26 Apr 2010, Wim De Geeter wrot
hi,
Am Mittwoch, den 28.04.2010, 23:35 +0200 schrieb JF Straeten:
> On Wed, Apr 28, 2010 at 10:24:31AM -0700, Vagrant Cascadian wrote:
>
> > > If anybody has any more ideas I would love to hear them.
>
> [...]
>
> > then all you need to do is figure out how to network boot...
>
> Do we know w