[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Tue, 29 Jun 2004, Glen Thorne wrote:
I add to modify /etc/X11/fs/config and comment out the "no-listen = tcp"
line. Otherwise it only listens on the USP port on RedHat and Fedora
Core.
Except, that wouldn't explain why some terminals could get a connection
to t
We've got a setup with about 40 terminals running LTSP. We've been
running on LTSP-3, but are now setting up a new replacement server with
LTSP-4. We've got the new one set up enough so that some of our
workstations boot and run from it just fine. However, some terminals
that work with our o
We have a rather debilitating NFS problem here that recently went from
obnoxious and sporadic to frequent and serious. I've done quite a bit of
Googling and haven't found any satisfactory solutions.
Our terminal server (Mdk9.2 w/ win4lin) is an NFS client that mounts
its /home partition (and a
Our installed user-base is increasingly nicely here, and I need to be
able to assign a default printer on a per-machine in LTSP. Many of the
PCs have a local printer attached, and most of the rest have their own
workgroup printer. The various offices are still within the same
subnet, but many
Palm Sync on terminals effort:
We're running Local Apps = Y under Mdk9.2. We used ldd to display the
libraries pi-nredir depends upon and copied them into the LTSP tree.
When we try to run pi-nredir from the terminal's promt however, it
displays the following error message:
pi-nredir: /lib/lib
Is there any known syntax in dhcpd.conf to tell new connections to boot
from one of multiple LTSP servers in a manner that does not require
hard-coding? Something my Boss calls 'Round-Robin', but I've never
really understood what that means.
Some setup wherein terminals get their boot informat
Our goal: Getting Palm Pilots to sync on LTSP terminals for our users
We've been working on setting up LTSP for quite awhile now, and we're
planning on rolling out our terminals to the users in this building and
one of the more important things that has appeared on the 'must have
list' is the a
Thank you all for your input. General consensus seems to be 3c905 for PCI NICs.
Looks like they're available for as low as $20 on PriceWatch, which is well
within our NIC budget.
--Adrian
_
Ltsp-discuss mailing list. To un-su
I'm looking for a network card to recommend to my boss. We're looking to run up
to two dozen LTSP workstation here at our agency.
The only thing we require is that the cards be commercially available, fairly
inexpensive, and works well with the floppy boot images. We're a small
2.5-person IT staf