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Date:      Tue, 15 May 2001 21:27:20 -0700
From:      "Ted Mittelstaedt" <tedm@toybox.placo.com>
To:        <david.groves@imagination.com>, <questions@FreeBSD.ORG>
Subject:   RE: Using PC's as X Terminals
Message-ID:  <001b01c0ddc0$7f133b40$1401a8c0@tedm.placo.com>
In-Reply-To: <3B011EA3.5234DB81@imagination.com>

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It would seem to be that the easiest thing would be to
create a small partition, like 200MB, on the disk and
put a bare-bones FreeBSD on it.

Ted Mittelstaedt                      tedm@toybox.placo.com
Author of:          The FreeBSD Corporate Networker's Guide
Book website:         http://www.freebsd-corp-net-guide.com


>-----Original Message-----
>From: owner-freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG
>[mailto:owner-freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG]On Behalf Of David Groves
>Sent: Tuesday, May 15, 2001 5:19 AM
>To: questions@FreeBSD.ORG
>Subject: Using PC's as X Terminals
>
>
>I'm trying to find a way to turn client machines (i386 machines running
>other operating systems that can't be replaced), into dumb X terminals
>on a part time basis. The people that will be using them are mainly
>going to be running windows the majority of the time, but will have the
>need to dip into an X environment on occasion. For various reasons, my
>superiors are unwilling to consider Win32 X servers, so this isn't an
>option for me.
>
>The ideal solution from my point of view is to have a removable boot
>disk which you insert when you want to use the machine as an X terminal.
>The X terminals will then usually be used to connect to a single
>machine, the lab "workstation". However they will occasionally need to
>connect to other hosts, so I'm going to need to run the "chooser".
>
>1.) Have the entire system on the boot media, ie. the kernel, the X
>server, and the other bare minimum things needed to get a system up and
>running.
>
>2.) Do a netboot. Boot from a floppy which does something like etherboot
>to bring up a working system.
>
>=====
>
>Questions.
>
>a.) If I use option 2, can I NFS mount all the file systems needed by a
>bunch of heterogeneous clients from the same place. If I can, what
>configuration issues do I have (like /tmp).
>
>b.) If I use option 1, what do I do about files that need to be written.
>Can I easily use something like a ramdisk with FreeBSD (I imagine I
>can), or a NFS mount (which gets me back into the same problems as (A).
>
>c.) Something totally different, the totally obvious solution that I've
>missed.
>
>d.) What is the 'chooser'. AFAICT, it is a prompt for what machine you
>want to serve up your X session from. The XDM documentation has me
>scratching my head to figure this out though.
>
>e.) Also, what are the security concerns here. I know I'm going to be
>using a lot of potentially icky things, like NFS with it's trust of
>client UID's, possibly TFTP with it's problems. I can accept some
>security trade-offs in my environment (which is well contained), but I
>want to know what problems I may have to worry about in the future.
>
>-- 
>____________________________________________________________________
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