Hi,

2014-02-03 Franklin Weng <[email protected]>:

> Hi Nigel,
>
>
> Thanks for your reply.
>
>
> 2014-02-03 nigel barker <[email protected]>:
>>
>>  It depends on the school. Of course, with thin (or fat) clients, there
>> is no installation necessary, apart from the ltsp servers. Schools who
>> use full workstations can install them via pxe boot from the main
>> server. Ltsp servers can also be installed that way. The standalone
>> profile is for machines that will move out of the skolelinux network,
>> and is like a normal debian installation.
>>
>>
>> There are no user accounts on the machines, not even the full
>> workstations. All accounts exist in LDAP on the main server. (except
>> the standalone profile). No-one can log in anywhere if something
>> happens to the main server (which it doesn't in my 10 year experience,
>> fingers crossed)
>>
>>
>> There is backup of the main server. Other maintenance isn't catered
>> for. Personally I use parallel-ssh to keep workstations updated. I
>> also have clonezilla images of key machines.
>>
>> Perhaps someone else will fill in some more technical details for you,
>> or maybe you have more questions now?
>>
>> cheers
>> Nigel
>>
>
> So can I conclude that, for *every* school you administrate, there would be
>  - a main server, running
>     * LDAP service, for user account management
>     * X server so that thin client can connect to
>     * And anything else?
>  - an LTSP server, so that you can diagnose and solve issues remotely
>
> And many thin client machines which would get remote X desktop
>
> Is that true?  Please correct me if anything wrong.
>
> For the main server, how powerful would it need to be?
>
> In Taiwan, we use DRBL and Clonezilla (http://drbl.sourceforge.net/) but
> we use it to deploy a *real* system to remote PCs instead of just a thin
> client.
>
> Furthermore, do you have any documentations describing how LDAP server
> needs to be set, and how clients needs to be set so that user accounts
> management can be done this way?
>
>
>
> Thanks for any reply.  I hope that one day our team can visit you to
> exchange our experiences promoting FOSS systems in schools.
>
>
> Regards,
> Franklin
>
>
I read some more about LTSP (though I can't connect to www.ltsp.org now).
 You seemed to use thin client to connect to LTSP server.  LTSP is not used
to diagnose.  So how did you diagnose and solve the issues remotely?



Franklin

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