Lee,

Yes, LTSP has been used to setup 'Thin Servers'.  It has even been
used to serve web pages.

A couple of weeks ago, a guy in Australia used it to setup a whole
bunch of webservers to serve up some kind of images of a special
anual event, where they get pounded with hits 1 day a year.

I don't remember the guys name who set it up, but Robert Stanford
helped him, you might try sending email to Robbie at [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Robbie also frequents the #ltsp IRC channel on irc.openprojects.net.
Keep in mind that Robbie is from Australia, so he's typically sleeping
when we're all awake.

Hope that helps,

Jim McQuillan
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


On Wed, 13 Feb 2002, Lee Bolding wrote:

> I'm new to all this, so please forgive me if this has been asked many times
> before... (a quick browse through the archives revealed nothing).
> 
> I'm trying to find a way of creating a "lite" web server, and wondered if
> LTSP was suitable for this task?
> 
> Ideally, I want to boot my diskless server (with 1GB+ RAM) via TFTP, placing
> the (much stripped down, minimal) OS into a RAM disk, and then operating
> (Apache) from there - so no more interaction with the boot server will be
> required.
> 
> Is this possible with LTSP? (how?) or if not, is this even *technically*
> possible?
> 
> Thanks in advance
> 
> 
> _____________________________________________________________________
> Ltsp-discuss mailing list.   To un-subscribe, or change prefs, goto:
>       https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/ltsp-discuss
> For additional LTSP help,   try #ltsp channel on irc.openprojects.net
> 


_____________________________________________________________________
Ltsp-discuss mailing list.   To un-subscribe, or change prefs, goto:
      https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/ltsp-discuss
For additional LTSP help,   try #ltsp channel on irc.openprojects.net

Reply via email to