Re: Config a laptop network

2003-02-22 Thread David A. Bandel
On Fri, 21 Feb 2003 21:18:27 -0600
Alan Jackson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Here's a sys-admin question for you experts.
 
 A fellow at work has 10 Linux laptops he uses for portable training
 classes for Geophysical software. Right now he and a clerk are
 configuring and loading each one manually, one at a time. What would
 be the recommended simple, low-cost solution to both network them and
 then to image them down the wire? We'd like them all to be identical.

There is a tool specifically designed to do exactly this.  The tool is
called systemimager.  It requires a systemimager server, a golden
client, then uses rsync to make all the rest of the systems identical
(except for, obviously, the IP address).

http://www.systemimager.org/

And remember, freshmeat is your friend.

Ciao,

David A. Bandel
-- 
Focus on the dream, not the competition.
Nemesis Racing Team motto


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Config a laptop network

2003-02-21 Thread Alan Jackson
Here's a sys-admin question for you experts.

A fellow at work has 10 Linux laptops he uses for portable training classes
for Geophysical software. Right now he and a clerk are configuring and
loading each one manually, one at a time. What would be the recommended
simple, low-cost solution to both network them and then to image them
down the wire? We'd like them all to be identical.

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| Alan K. Jackson| To see a World in a Grain of Sand  |
| [EMAIL PROTECTED]  | And a Heaven in a Wild Flower, |
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Re: Config a laptop network

2003-02-21 Thread Andrew Mathews
Alan Jackson wrote:
Here's a sys-admin question for you experts.

A fellow at work has 10 Linux laptops he uses for portable training classes
for Geophysical software. Right now he and a clerk are configuring and
loading each one manually, one at a time. What would be the recommended
simple, low-cost solution to both network them and then to image them
down the wire? We'd like them all to be identical.
You didn't mention which distro, but one good method is Red Hat's 
Kickstart tool. You simply have a bootable floppy disk with an 
anaconda-ks.cfg file which specifies the nfs server, packages, 
partitioning, and every other configuration requirement needed to build 
a complete system across the wire. Your networking options are quite 
variable, from docking station ethernet, to pcmcia network card, to 
wireless. Just depends on what is already owned, or can be afforded.
ot
I'd recommend wireless if your existing facilities are not cabled well. 
The Lucent Orinoco cards can be quite inexpensive. I'm looking forward 
to 802.11a supported cards for linux to achieve the (theoretical) 54Mbps 
speeds.
/ot
For example, a system built by one of my fellow admins today took a 
total of 15 minutes to go from blank disks to a fully functional system 
across a 10Mbps cat5 network. We have 45 new systems to build in the 
next 2 months and it's going to save us a vast amount of time this way.
--
Andrew Mathews
-
  8:42pm  up 12 days,  2:51, 11 users,  load average: 1.05, 1.01, 1.00
-
Virginia law forbids bathtubs in the house; tubs must be kept in the yard.

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Re: Config a laptop network

2003-02-21 Thread Net Llama!
You didn't say which distro, but Redhat's kickstart will do the job 
nicely.  There's also SystemImager http://www.systemimager.org/

On 02/21/03 19:18, Alan Jackson wrote:
Here's a sys-admin question for you experts.

A fellow at work has 10 Linux laptops he uses for portable training classes
for Geophysical software. Right now he and a clerk are configuring and
loading each one manually, one at a time. What would be the recommended
simple, low-cost solution to both network them and then to image them
down the wire? We'd like them all to be identical.
--
~
L. Friedman[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Linux Step-by-step  TyGeMo:http://netllama.ipfox.com
  7:55pm  up 39 days,  3:21,  1 user,  load average: 0.10, 0.14, 0.31

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