On Mon, 17 Jan 2005, Verner [iso-8859-1] Kj�rsgaard wrote:

> Mandag 17 januar 2005 15:15 skrev Jesper Berth:
> > s�n, 16 01 2005 kl. 17:47 +0000, skrev John McCreesh:
> > > Jesper Berth wrote:
> > > > Hi i have tried to set up an application server for my ltsp server at
> > > > home, just for some testing :-) I have used ssh -X and it works but
> > > > it's too slow, all menues in OpenOffice are really slow and i am only
> > > > running one session from the app-server, don't think that it will
> > > > perform better with 10~15 open sessions. Can i do it with out using ssh
> > > > ??
> > >
> > > Yes, this is the default with ltsp.
> > >
> > > John
> >
> > I know i have an ltsp server. What i want is a server for a single
> > application like openoffice or firefox. To spread the load from my ltsp
> > server
> >
> > something like this:
> >
> >   ltsp-server
> >
> >     |-----app-server1
> >     |-----app-server2
> >
> >      clients
> >
> > Jesper
> >
> Hi list,
>
> - could this not be done utterly simple by establishing an NFS shared
> directory on the app-server(1&2) to the ltsp-server. Then, when a client is
> asking the ltsp-server for, say OpenOffice, it will pull it via NFS and
> deliver...
> - or am I totally way out here :-)


That way, you would be running all the apps on the LTSP server.  I think
what he's trying to do is spread the load across multiple machines.  not
just disk access.

Jim McQuillan
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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