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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]Re: tlug: Fw: Linux Web Server
- To: tlug@example.com
- Subject: Re: tlug: Fw: Linux Web Server
- From: jq@example.com
- Date: Sat, 21 Aug 1999 01:09:02 +0900 (JST)
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- In-Reply-To: <00b301beeb11$34195780$823cd8cb@example.com>
- Reply-To: tlug@example.com
- Sender: owner-tlug@example.com
On Fri, 20 Aug 1999, Jack Morgan wrote: >a sound card. I am planning to buy an ATX box with an ABIT BP6 duel CPU with >two Celron 433mhz, (hopefully interlocked), 10GB HDD, a FDD, and two Interlocked?? Not sure what you mean, but the important thing here is to get two identical Celerons - ones with the same lot number. Chip makers make small running changes to their chips, and while these changes don't matter on single-CPU systems, they matter if you want to do SMP, so make sure those chips are the same. When you buy them, make sure they know that you need matched Celerons, and why. Getting the board and Celerons in the same place wouldn't hurt, since they will be more likely to understand the need for this (but make sure to tell them anyway). As far as hardware that works with Linux, the answer these days is "almost everything." The most radical new video and sound cards usually suffer from a support lag, and USB isn't there yet, but most other stuff is fine. In Ethernet cards, 3Com and Intel work very well, but so do some really cheap ones like Planex and (I'm told) Corega. Bus Logic and Adaptec SCSI cards are good. Yeah, I know some people will tell me they've had tons of them go belly-up, but we have dozens of them at work and have never had a failure, so I like the Adaptec 2940UW quite well. A bulk version will cost you about 22,000 yen. A boxed one will cost a good bit more, so get the bulk one. It's all you need. Of course, if you don't plan on going with SCSI, never mind :-) In video cards, Matrox are very nice and work quite well. The G200 is fast, nice, reasonably priced. I haven't checked whether the newer and nicer G400 is supported by X yet or not, but it probably is. However, do check the compatibility list for yourself rather than take my word for it before buying one. Unless you make an Ethernet crossover cable, you'll also need a hub to plug both machines into if you want to network them. > As for software I am planning to keep my Windows 98 (for my wife), and >install Redhat 6.0, Cladera 2.2 (which I got from the last TLUG meeting- >Thanks), and Turbo Linux as my Japanese software. I am hopping to convert my >wife. Three different Linux flavors? I would cut that down to two, I think. After all, you don't want to be dual-booting a Linux box between Linux flavors - you'll never set any uptime records that way :-) If you need a Japanese system on your workstation, just put TurboLinux on it rather than Red Hat, I think. Or you could, alternatively, put in Red Hat and install some of the Japanese packages from TurboLinux. I guess that depends on how much Japanese you need in your Linux distro. Finally, file system lay out. I recommend partitoning your disk like this: / /usr /usr/local /var /var/spool /home /var/log OK, the last one is optional, and less important on a machine that isn't a production server. Leave it out if you want, and just let your logs go into /var. If you will be using multiple disk drives, two smaller swap partitions on different drives can give better performance than a larger one on a single drive. This is, however, going to be rather academic on a dual-Celeron machine with the light load it will be under as a workstation. With enough memory (e.g., 256 meg), you'll probably never use the swap space anyway. The benefit of having /usr/local, /home, and /var/spool as separate file systems is that it makes upgrading very seamless. I use this layout, and I switched from a Red Hat 6 install to a TurboLinux-J 4.0 install just by installing TurboLinux over the Red Hat system and rebooting. Almost no adjustments at all were required. Although Red Hat and TL are pretty similar, I think you could change between most/all current Linux distributions with similar ease. Compare this to the "One Big C Drive" approach taken by some other operating systems - and the attendant difficulty of upgrading them - and you'll have one more reason to like Linux a lot. Last but not least, when you have that fire-breathing BP6 machine up and running, your participation on the TLUG RC5-64 team will be most welcome indeed :-) Cheers, Jonathan ------------------------------------------------------------------- Next Nomikai: September 17 (Fri), 19:30 Tengu TokyoEkiMae 03-3275-3691 Next Technical Meeting: October 9 (Sat), 13:00 place: Temple Univ. ------------------------------------------------------------------- more info: http://www.tlug.gr.jp Sponsor: Global Online Japan
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