lørdag 17 september 2005, 14:45, skrev Matt Price: > THe tuxlabs documentation suggests: > - 2 gig ram
Gives support for ~40 thin clients with ICEwm with OpenOffice and Firefox. http://www.icewm.org/ Using GNOME or KDE 4 GB RAM is recommended for 48 thin client (then you meet the bandwidth limitation where every thin client uses around 2 Gbit/s). Our rule of thumb for memory is 320 GB with one client on the thin client server, and 64 MB for every client after that for using OpenOffice and FireFox. There is OK to use a dual-core |Opteron chip, or a HT Xeon cpu with 20-25 thin clients and 2 GB RAM. It's working extremely well with dual Xeon - if you got the money. With 20-25 thin clients you ned 2 GB RAM. > - SCSI drives It depends on what kind of architecture you want to install. If you gonna store all the user-files on the server, then a mirrored disk is recommended (RAID 1). When connecting the thin client server to a file server, as many do in large installations with 500-800 thin clients, the they usually sell the thin client server with one fast SATA-disk with 5 years warranty. Then the fileserver has 4 disks (3 disks in RAID 5 and 1 extra if one of the RAID-disk fails). Many schools in Norway connects many thin client servers to a Skolelinux-file-server: http://developer.skolelinux.no/arkitektur/arkitektur.html.en In primary schools pupils seldom use more than 50-100 MB for every user. When usring a 73 GB scsi the system takes ~8 GB (3 GB for the installed programs, and free space to swap, var, ...) Then you have 65 GB / 100 MB = 650 users ... > - gigabit Ethernet (also gigabit Ethernet on the switch, which I don't > have -- we only have donated 3Com 3300 switches, which are nice but > all 10/100 (far as I know, anyway). It depends on how many thin clients you wanna support. When splitting a 1 Gbit/s net into switches with 100 Mbit/s, then you could expand your net with more thin clients than the 48-50 client limit with 100 Mbit/s. Then the RAM-limit decides how many clients you run (the 320 in the bottom + 64 MB for each thin client with the GNOME or KDE alternative). When using 10 Mbit/s you just get 5 thin clients up running. When using 100 Mbit/s you get 48-50 thin clients up running. When using 1 Gbit/s over 400 thin clients are possible :-). An other option: In Norway 15 schools already have installed half thick clients with Skolelinux, and you can limit the server to one CPU, 512MB-1GB RAM, and the amount of disks you need. Recommendation for the clients are > 700 MHz processor, 256 MB RAM and + 0,5 GB local swap-disk. Then you can connect >100 half thick clients to the server on a 100 Mbit/s backbone ... - Knut Yrvin -- edubuntu-devel mailing list [email protected] http://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/edubuntu-devel
