That would be great!
Mike
-----Original Message-----** This list is PUBLICLY archived. ** PLEASE don't post personal or sensitive information unless you wish for it to be in the public domain. Email addresses are removed from the archive but other items included in the body of the email will be shown. To visit the main website for Free Geek Michiana go to http://www.freegeekmichiana.org To post to the list send email to frgeek-michiana@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx The archive is available at //www.freelists.org/archives/frgeek-michiana/ You may unsubscribe or change your list settings by going to the list website at //www.freelists.org/webpage/frgeek-michiana
From: Richard Zimmerman
Sent: Sep 21, 2011 9:10 AM
To: frgeek-michiana@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [frgeek-michiana] Re: Warehouse Report - Sept. 15, 2011
If no one else wants to tackle it, let me know and I'll swing over and configure it...
RichardOn Wed, Sep 21, 2011 at 8:57 AM, Tom Brown <tbrown@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Phil and I pulled the server out of the rack, wiped the 40 GB drive, installed the 160 GB drive and loaded Ubuntu Server 10.04 LTS.
The server has a DNS problem. Ubuntu Server is enough different from Slackware that I couldn't resolve the issue. I manually configured eth0 and the default gateway, and at that point I could ping 4.2.2.2 but not yahoo.com. Creating an /etc/resolve.conf file (there was none) didn't fix DNS. I tried several /etc/resolve.conf nameserver IP addresses from vendors we use at work (AT&T, OpenDNS, Omnicity wireless), but none worked. Resolve.conf is readable by user, group and world.
I don't want to put any more time into the server at work so I'll bring it to the workshop Thursday. Hopefully someone is more familiar with Debian/Ubuntu server installs than me and can quickly fix the problem.
Tom --
Phil Goldbach wrote:
Well, the 160 GB IDE drive I have did come in from a donation to FGM, so it's only fair that since I'm not using it that I bring it back in. It's a Western Digital WD1600, came in the Alienware tower that worked fine at the shop but died once I hooked it up at home. Plus the Dell Optiplex that I'm using now utilizes SATA for the hard drives, and has a Western Digital 160 GB in it as well. I still have a 200 GB IDE hard drive, but I'm keeping that.** This list is PUBLICLY archived. **
Phil Goldbach
"Men cry not for themselves, but for their comrades."
--- On *Mon, 9/19/11, Tom Brown /<tbrown@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>/* wrote:
From: Tom Brown <tbrown@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: [frgeek-michiana] Re: Warehouse Report - Sept. 15, 2011
To: frgeek-michiana@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Date: Monday, September 19, 2011, 2:42 PM
Phil and I pulled the Supermicro 1U server out of the rack and
popped the hood. There is no room for a second drive, and the
drive controller is IDE. Phil has a 160 GB IDE drive which he is
willing to let FGM use.
Tom --
------------------------------------------------------------------------
*From:* frgeek-michiana-bounce@freelists.org
[mailto:frgeek-michiana-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] *On Behalf Of *Tony
Germano
*Sent:* Monday, September 19, 2011 11:41
*To:* frgeek-michiana@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
*Subject:* [frgeek-michiana] Re: Warehouse Report - Sept. 15, 2011
I used the script I found on this
(http://xlylith.blogspot.com/2006/02/size-of-ubuntu-repository.html)
page to check. Table is below. Looking at only 10.04 32-bit
binaries it will be about 45-50G. The 64-bit binaries are only
slightly larger. I don't see a reason to mirror source, so I
didn't check sizes there. We would need additional disk space for
the host OS.
When I mentioned a "reference box" I was addressing the need if we
were using a package caching server instead of a mirror. While the
repositories are actually smaller than what I had thought, we will
really only need a very small fraction of what is available. Using
a caching server instead of a mirror, we should be able to fit
both 32-bit and 64-bit versions on Tom's existing hard drive.
Ultimately, it doesn't really matter to me which way we decide to
go on this.
i386-binary lucid main - 7.5G
i386-binary lucid restricted - < 1G
i386-binary lucid universe - 22.8G
i386-binary lucid multiverse - 2.6G
i386-binary lucid-updates main - 6.4G
i386-binary lucid-updates restricted - < 1G
i386-binary lucid-updates universe - 1.5G
i386-binary lucid-updates multiverse - < 1G
i386-binary lucid-security main - 4.1G
i386-binary lucid-security restricted - < 1G
i386-binary lucid-security universe - < 1G
i386-binary lucid-security multiverse - < 1G
Tony
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Sat, 17 Sep 2011 17:30:21 -0400
Subject: [frgeek-michiana] Re: Warehouse Report - Sept. 15, 2011
From: ke4rit@xxxxxxxxx
To: frgeek-michiana@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
I know what I posted before (didn't catch the 40g for 2007) do we
know about what size drive we need for the mirror. I think I might
have drives large enough to test with here first...
Richard
On Sat, Sep 17, 2011 at 3:37 PM, Tom Brown
<tbrown@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
</mc/compose?to=tbrown@riverbendhose.com>> wrote:
There is a 1U Supermicro headless server with Ubuntu Server 10.04
LTS installed and patched. At idle or full gallop it probably uses
less energy than the workshop server so it could be a good choice
for 24/7 use. Drawback: It needs a bigger HD.
I’m guessing it isn’t possible to download and install the initial
mirror in one warehouse session so your offer to do those tasks
looks helpful.
Tom --
------------------------------------------------------------------------
*From:* frgeek-michiana-bounce@freelists.org
</mc/compose?to=frgeek-michiana-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
[mailto:frgeek-michiana-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
</mc/compose?to=frgeek-michiana-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>] *On Behalf
Of *Richard Zimmerman
*Sent:* Saturday, September 17, 2011 12:45
*To:* frgeek-michiana@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
</mc/compose?to=frgeek-michiana@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
*Subject:* [frgeek-michiana] Re: Warehouse Report - Sept. 15, 2011
Actually no. The mirror maintainer runs a nightly script that
keeps the mirror in sync with the mater builds. When install a new
Ubuntu install, you over-ride the default mirrors in favor or your
mirror. This way, you keep the the traffic local and because you
run nightly updates to the mirror it the updates are also already
local...
You don;t need a "Reference box" at all... Take the warehouse
server and make it a straight Ubuntu install and add the server
tasks to it. Install the mirror on the warehouse server and your
job is done.
Richard
/ If it helps I have 15/3 Comcast internet again I can blast down
the initial mirror build if it helps...
// Would probably recommend changing the warehouse server to
Ubuntu so everything is on the same page...
/// Is anyone maintaining the warehouse server anymore?
<Tony Wrote>
One thing to consider, though, is that package upgrades will be
downloaded on demand rather than proactively. That could mean that
patches take longer to download than we have time to apply them
before we close the warehouse for the night. Perhaps we can have a
reference box running in a virtual machine that can download
patches during off hours so they are ready when the warehouse opens?
</Tony>
--
Richard "Goose" Zimmerman, ke4rit
Mishawaka , IN
--
--
Richard "Goose" Zimmerman, ke4rit
Mishawaka , IN
PLEASE don't post personal or sensitive information unless you wish for it to be in the public domain. Email addresses are removed from the archive but other items included in the body of the email will be shown.
To visit the main website for Free Geek Michiana go to http://www.freegeekmichiana.org
To post to the list send email to frgeek-michiana@xxxxxxxxxxxxx.
The archive is available at //www.freelists.org/archives/frgeek-michiana/
You may unsubscribe or change your list settings by going to the list website at //www.freelists.org/webpage/frgeek-michiana
--
--
Richard "Goose" Zimmerman, ke4rit
Mishawaka, IN