Hi, Alex. What you would want to do is have all of the clients boot via an bootp server which you would configure on your server. In order for this to be successful the client machines must have a PXE-capable NIC and the system BIOS must support booting via TCP/ip. You would use NFS to export /home, /usr, etc. to the client machines so they would have access to any shared directories on the server you would want. As far as making the machines boot, you would create an image directory on the server that would include the kernel, etc. the machines would need. I'll try and dig up some how-to's for you here, but this should get you pointed in the right place. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Alex Snow" <alex_snow@xxxxxxx> To: <speakup at braille.uwo.ca> Sent: Friday, November 07, 2003 3:17 PM Subject: terminal servers > Hi all. I have a lot of crap hardware around here I can probably turn > into some really low-end machines. I would like to use these machines > mostly 486dx's and early pentiums as diskless terminals. > I took a look at the ltsp but it doesn't seem like it will run on > slackware. Does anyone know where I could look to get started on setting > up a terminal server and it's clients? > > -- > Who is General Failure and why is he reading my hard disk? > > _______________________________________________ > Speakup mailing list > Speakup at braille.uwo.ca > http://speech.braille.uwo.ca/mailman/listinfo/speakup