> On Tue, 4 May 1999, Cary O'Brien wrote:
>
> > I wouldn't give up on a 4MB machine. I've run X, ethernet, and diald on
> > a 4MB laptop (But quickly bought more ram!). For a diald server with
> > all the other stuff turned off this may well be enough. All you need
> > running are inetd, syslogd, a mingetty for 4 virtual consoles, diald and
> > pppd. It might fit. The worst that will happen is it will swap itself
> > to death when you try to connect.
>
> I have run all that stuff on a 4MB machine happily.
>
> One more trick you can use: you don't have to run a getty on the console.
> Just set up ALT-Uparrow to be the KBrequest (it is by default in the
> default keymap) and edit inittab to run open which starts up a getty on
> the next free terminal. When no one is logged in to the console, no
> getty.
>
> Of course, another critical factor is the size of the kernel. Every
> little extraneous bit of code should be stripped out of the kernel.
> You should compile a custom kernel on a big, fast machine and transfer it
> to the router on a floppy disk.
>
> You might even be able to get by with less than 4MB. You can run some
> benchmarks on another machine to see what your maximum memory requirements
> are for various configurations.
>
> Ed
>
>
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