On Wed, 2005-08-10 at 22:05 -0500, William A. Mahaffey III wrote: > Karl S. Katzke wrote: > > > First of all, I just want to say *again* how happy I am with CentOS. > > Across our boxes and our clients boxes, we're running it on more than > > 20 machines at the moment and it's by far the most painless OS to > > administer in detail that I've ever used. (Of course, I'm an old Slak > > hat, but ...) Thanks so much to the community and the maintainers. > > > > We've recently run into a problem with a dual-opteron system that is > > running LTSP and serving up X and Firefox to a whole bunch of diskless > > clients. We're using the x86-64 build of CentOS, with the appropriate > > Firefox package. The client users have all been asking for Flash, > > since many websites are unusable without Flash these days ... but > > there's no 64-bit build of the Flash plugin. (Thanks, Macromedia! You > > suck!) > > > > What's the best way to provide Flash (and maybe Java?) with Firefox on > > this server box? How big will the performance hit be from running > > non-64 bit packages? Any specific tips & hints? > > > > Thanks! > > > > -Karl Katzke > > _______________________________________________ > > > > You could run the 32-bit Firefox & 32-bit plugins, they are *supposed* > to work seamlessly under the x86_64 OS. YMMV & all that. I have seen > much talk about this on the SuSE AMD64 list, and this recommendation has > floated out more than once. > Right ... the only option would be to remove the x86_64 firefox and install the i386 one ... but that might require MANY other i386 libraries. (I can't test it here). Tell them to get over it is another option :) Should not be a huge performance issue ... at least I haven't noticed any earth shattering performance enhancements between the x86_64 and i386 distros when installed on x86_64 machines (that one could feel via the GUI screen). -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: not available Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 189 bytes Desc: This is a digitally signed message part Url : http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos/attachments/20050811/fad6f4c8/attachment.bin