Yes Gerhard,
The second part is definetly helpfull as I am also using KDE. But the sheer concern
today is calculating the load.
Means, how come or how did Jam calculated the load.
I think, a special posting needs to be there in contrib of LTSP ( Is Jam listening) of
calculating load.
Because LTSP clients varies depending upon the type of application.
Best regards,
Saurav
On Thu, 19 Jun 2003 Gerhard Damerau wrote :
>Saurav Gohain schrieb:
>>Dear Friends ( Kind Attention Mr Jam)
>>How do we calculate the load average of a LTSP network. In the .pdf written by Mr
>>Jam, in the first page itself, it's been written that 40 workstations running dual p
>>3 650, 1 gb ram has an load average of 1.0 .
>>How do we calculate this ?
>>2. How do i change the LTSP welcome screen ( as seen when a workstation boots). or
>>how can I add our school name in it.
>>
>>Suggestions , help... please .
>>Regards
>>Saurav
>
>Hello Suarav,
>(similar answer posted a few days ago. The following might help you with your second
>issue.)
>I suppose you use kdm for login.
>You have to find your kdmrc. Mine is in
>/etc/opt/kd3/share/config/kdm.
>
>There is something like
>
># Greeter config for all displays
>[X-*-Greeter]
># Widget Style of the greeter:
># Default, Windows, Platinum, Motif, MotifPlus, CDE, SGI, and any styles you
># may have installed, e.g., HighColor; Default is "Default"
>GUIStyle=Keramik
># Widget Colors of the greeter:
># Default, and any color schemes you may have installed. Default is "Default"
>ColorScheme=SuSE
># What should be shown righthand of the input lines:
># "Logo" - the image specified by LogoPixmap (Default)
># "Clock" - a neat analog clock
># "None" - nothing
>LogoArea=Clock
># The image to show when LogoArea=Logo. Default is kdelogo.png
>#LogoPixmap=
># Normally, the greeter is centered on the screen. Use this, if you want
># it to appear elsewhere on the screen. Default is false
>#GreeterPosFixed=true
>#GreeterPosX=200
>#GreeterPosY=100
># The headline in the greeter.
># The following character pairs are replaced:
># - %d -> current display
># - %h -> host name, possibly with domain name
># - %n -> node name, most probably the host name without domain name
># - %s -> the operating system
># - %r -> the operating system's version
># - %m -> the machine (hardware) type
># - %% -> a single %
># Default is "Welcome to %s at %n"
># GreetString=SuSE Linux 8.1 (%h)
>GreetString=Terminalserver %s %r %n
>
>I hope it helps
>Kind regards
>Gerhard Damerau
>
>