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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] A little more clarification -- Thank You!
Mark Thankyou for your complete set of answers -- Âyou scratched where you seemed to know I would be itchy. I have been over the manuals a number of times -- they are well written and I have no complaints. ÂBut I seemed unable to completely "get it as intended". ÂYou have bridged that problem for me. ÂThanks to both you and Tim.  I will try to download Tim's latest CD effort and test it but there is a good chance I will be unsuccessful in dowloading a very large file. By way of introduction. One of the reasons why I wanted to be CERTAIN on these matters is because I would like to participate where I can on this list even though green around the ears with the whole subject of virtual machines. ÂGetting information over the internet is for me a major difficulty. ÂToday, I expect to install SuSE 9.1 (which I have working on another Linux machine) onto a Linux machine where I have 20 GIG Â-- a full hard drive I can free up. ÂI may wait until I can make this a 200 Gig drive. ÂOr I may go ahead and use the present 20 Gig drive for a learning exercise and then replace it. The idea is I want to create a specific area in my Lan for this Xen virtual technology. ÂLater, for this same machine, I expect to replace another two 20 Gig drives for 200 Gig drives for the same reason (my point #4 in previous email). ÂI have plans but no money for a network storage unit consisting of 8 200 Gig drives if the cost of acquiring these drives drops. Also, I would like to get a 64 bit Linux machine and deploy it for the same reason. Certainly if I can manage this I will be able to provide a good test bed. ÂBut first I have to develop some meaningful experience. ÂToo bad there is not a Â"Xen For Dummnies" manual, that might do the trick. I'm a retired IT person. ÂBefore I retired I did a lot of code and database development. ÂNow, I do some code development but only to support various information processing that serves as content to web pages. I do my development work in my LAN (consisting of some 16 machines), six Linux, 3 XP (ugh), and the remainder Win95. Two Linux machines do double duty as gateways to the Internet handling two Dial Up (about 28k max) (ugh) telephone lines and other work. I do perl development and other tasks on the Linux machines including uploading web pages to my USA based web server.  There are no alternatives like Sattelite or DSL or cable services available as I live with my wife and my LAN and our dogs and cats in a rural area on a farm 60 miles NE of Edmonton, the capital city of the province of Alberta in Canada. My ISP has assured me this situation will not change. Dial Up for ever. There's gotta be an affordable way around this. I cannot afford business rates for a corporate sattelite connection and the Bell "sattelite in -- ground line out" arrangement does not work well for ftp and it not supported for ftp. I had Âhoped to use one of the Linux machines operating from my LAN out over sattelite to the Internet instead of the web server I operate in the USA. ÂI have about 2 Gig (used) on the USA web server. IF I ever get such a connection to my LAN I will mirror all the information you people want to make available to the public and the list, The 3 XP machines do double duty as data acquistion over the internet, shared storage, and web development. (the whole effort is non commercial non profit and religious) and are used as data servers to my main work activities. ÂThe acquired data is used for web page content for my USA based web server. My bandwidth (even with 2 telephone lines) is inadequate for my needs. ÂSo when I have the need to get technical information I have to divert one of the XP machines to that task so the data acquisition packages Âcan get that information for me. ÂWhen I'm not sure exactly what and where the needed information exists such as was the case with Xen I aim my data acquisition tools at a web site effectively mirroring it and it's references. But this takes a lot of time to happen (but frees me up for other pressing issues) because the other XP machines are also going 7x24 round the clock every day. ÂThen of course there is hoards of email and sometimes it takes half a day to get several hundred emails a day processed and get rid of the viruses and worms. Yes, I have a Windows Netscape based mail client (ugh) and am in the process of changing this to Linux. But I have to free up time before that can happen. Enough of that. If I want to surf the Internet and poke around reading web pages not yet downloaded then I have to suspend running processes that are often reluctant to suspend because the CPUs are going flat out. ÂI have been trying to get a service where I pay for specified downloaded information put onto a CD or DVD and then mailed to me. ÂApparently there is someone that provides this service but this person has not responded to my email.  Given that context, your complete set of answers is extremely helpful and I thank you and Tim again. Thanks very much, Ted Mark Williamson wrote: Hi Ted,
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