On 2013-03-01 07:07, Jerry Kemp wrote:
You tried the latest version - 4.2.6, right?
I'm sure you meant the latest version - 4.2.8 . :)
Uh, those people... You don't track them for a few weeks - and here
they pop out with a new release! ;)
But, really, at the time of OPs question, 4.2.8 was
I'm sure you meant the latest version - 4.2.8 . :)
>>
>> You tried the latest version - 4.2.6, right?
>
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On Friday, March 01, 2013 01:19 AM, dormitionsk...@hotmail.com wrote:
If you go this route, this might help:
http://wiki.openindiana.org/oi/Samba+File+Sharing+with+NMBD+Improvement
Er...that page needs correcting. nmbd is started by enabling the
/network/wins service.
/network/winbind sta
On Friday, March 01, 2013 08:30 AM, Jim Klimov wrote:
On 2013-03-01 01:14, Heinrich van Riel wrote:
After close to 1TB of data added and 20+ virtual machine installs over
iSCSI, it is still running and performs better than expected at this
point.
(the server was running windows storage server
On Thu, Feb 28, 2013 at 8:06 PM, Jim Klimov wrote:
> On 2013-03-01 02:40, Peter Wood wrote:
>>
>> Any reason not to install OI on USB sticks? Anything I should be careful
>> about?
>>
>
> We did have a box with USB sticks in it "forever", written rather
> intensively. Every few months they wore o
On 2013-03-01 02:40, Peter Wood wrote:
I'm planning to install OI on an USB stick and then mirror rpool to another
USB stick. This will free up the 2 HDD that were used for the OS to be used
for storage.
The USB sticks will be plugged in to two USB ports and stay there forever.
No unplugging or
In my case, it's a pure storage server, went through ~5 days of
intensive fio testing, then another month of zfs replication testing,
and it has been stable (using SATA disks) except for a HW LED indicating
temperature problems, which is supposed to be a supermicro firmware issue.
So I haven't
I'm planning to install OI on an USB stick and then mirror rpool to another
USB stick. This will free up the 2 HDD that were used for the OS to be used
for storage.
The USB sticks will be plugged in to two USB ports and stay there forever.
No unplugging or swapping ports.
The system will be a pro
On 2013-03-01 01:14, Heinrich van Riel wrote:
After close to 1TB of data added and 20+ virtual machine installs over
iSCSI, it is still running and performs better than expected at this point.
(the server was running windows storage server for a few months before,
stable but, disappointed perform
After close to 1TB of data added and 20+ virtual machine installs over
iSCSI, it is still running and performs better than expected at this point.
(the server was running windows storage server for a few months before,
stable but, disappointed performance wise so I know it is not hardware
related).
On 2013-02-28 20:47, dormitionsk...@hotmail.com wrote:
There is no thin client software to deal with, per se. The thin clients don't
need an embedded OS. I know some thin client units that you see sold today
have a Windows CE or Linux embedded OS. You don't need that at all with LTSP.
I wo
On Feb 28, 2013, at 6:27 AM, Jim Klimov wrote:
> Hello Peter,
>
> In Solaris legacy, /home is an FS node controlled by automounter
> (via /etc/auto* files) to mount local and remote home directories
> (with lofs and nfs/cifs as appropriate). Local homes are stored in
> /export/home, and for a pa
On Feb 28, 2013, at 12:20 PM, Jim Klimov wrote:
> On 2013-02-28 18:15, dormitionsk...@hotmail.com wrote:
>> Dear Mr. Albertsson,
>>
>> I'm not sure you understand what LTSP is. It's basically an xorg (or
>> whatever) connection into the server, along with goodies like the ability to
>> use USB
It had the same behavior with 151a5 and 151a7. It is not really doing
anything. Come to think of it the problem only started after attempting to
installing Virtualbox. I only ran the server for 1 or 2 hours before trying
to install it, locks up when loading kernel modules. I tried a few
different r
On 2013-02-28 18:15, dormitionsk...@hotmail.com wrote:
Dear Mr. Albertsson,
I'm not sure you understand what LTSP is. It's basically an xorg (or whatever)
connection into the server, along with goodies like the ability to use USB
sticks, printers, scanners, and some other devices, including S
On Feb 28, 2013, at 6:55 AM, Edward Ned Harvey (openindiana) wrote:
>> From: Sebastian Gabler [mailto:sequoiamo...@gmx.net]
>> Sent: Thursday, February 28, 2013 6:03 AM
>>
>> The solution offered by Oracle is a
>> workaround that was implemented in Oracle's own branch.
>> Is that workaround also
Dear Mr. Albertsson,
I'm not sure you understand what LTSP is. It's basically an xorg (or whatever)
connection into the server, along with goodies like the ability to use USB
sticks, printers, scanners, and some other devices, including SCSI, Serial, and
Parallel port devices, on the workstati
Are your Windows clients setup to use a WINS server? If so, turn off WINS.
If not, try disabling IPv6 and SMB2.0.
http://www.petri.co.il/how-to-disable-smb-2-on-windows-vista-or-server-2008.htm
Also, if you're using offline files, reinitialize your CSC folder on
clients that are impacted: http://s
I wasn't online for a long time, and probably 150 mails still need to
be answered. Only this much in advance: It was not my intention to
burn a single bridge.
It was probably not understood correctly. I only tried to protect myself.
And back then, a month ago, I simply attempted to emphasize, that
> From: Sebastian Gabler [mailto:sequoiamo...@gmx.net]
> Sent: Thursday, February 28, 2013 6:03 AM
>
> The solution offered by Oracle is a
> workaround that was implemented in Oracle's own branch.
> Is that workaround also available in any OI or any other community-based
> Solaris distro?
I have
Hello Peter,
In Solaris legacy, /home is an FS node controlled by automounter
(via /etc/auto* files) to mount local and remote home directories
(with lofs and nfs/cifs as appropriate). Local homes are stored in
/export/home, and for a particular local zone's cause, you might
be better off speci
On Wed, 27 Feb 2013 22:48:30 -, Jerry Kemp
wrote:
Also, from the other "emerging-platforms". I believe that was the
correct term.
I do not believe that I ever saw any of the code or binaries for MIPS,
or the IBM mainframe stuff.
I think that the ARM stuff is still available, and is/could
I'm not sure about this: we're not a regular workplace or a tight-knit
community in any other way, we're a disparate bunch and if we want to go
with a non-SunRay solution we want the advantages of having a good PC on
the desk, for playing HD video and possibly simulations.
Are there LTSP clie
Hi,
we are suffering for quite some time now from the notorious 0x8007003
error on Windows 7 desktops in our network when accessing shares on our
OI based file server over SMB. I am using the Solaris CIFS server.
It's an on-and-off issue, and I always had the impression that it had
something t
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