On 4/14/2010 2:38 PM, Stephen Harris wrote: > I got my hands on a HP t5720. This was designed as a thin-client > workstation (originally Windows XPembedded, talking to a Windows terminal > server). It's not very powerful, with an AMD Geode NX 1500 (1.0 GHz), > 256Mb RAM (16MB used for video) and a 512Mb flash "hard disk". > > I plugged in a USB DVD drive and was able to boot "linux rescue" from > a C5.4 32bit disk, and it basically looks like pretty generic PC hardware. > > So I thought this would be a great device to build as an "instant on" > type device. Well, as close to instant-on as possible :-) This probably > means a standard C5 build is not suitable (too many processes running; > would take a while to start up). So an "X terminal", maybe. > > I look at the LTSP code base, but this looks like it wants to run as it's > own OS; I already have a C5 server in my house, I don't want to build > another one (not even as a virtual image). LTSP doesn't install another OS on the server - it PXE-boots one to client devices with just enough to run X as a thin client. That would probably work for you - or whatever local install you can do that doesn't start X and once it is up, do 'X -query server'. > Acting as an X terminal, I'd guess the 256Mb RAM should be sufficient; > it won't be processing much beyond the display locally (although I might > want to enable ssh and add a locally connected printer). The root disk > could be local (512Mb flash) or by NFS. > > What do people recommend for building this? What would have the quickest > power-on-to-ready time? This probably isn't what you want, but my favorite for quick access is a windows or mac laptop that handles sleep mode gracefully and let it sleep instead of powering off. Then when it wakes up and gets a network connection (in a few seconds), fire up the NX client from www.nomachine.com to connect to a freenx session on your server - which you can disconnect and re-connect as needed with everything on the desktop still running. Some of the more current linux distributions might handle sleep mode but you'd either have to install a local window manager or work to get it to run the nx client in a bare X session. -- Les Mikesell lesmikesell@xxxxxxxxx _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos