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Re: [K12OSN] teaching kids sys admin with VM's
- From: "David H. Barr" <dhbarr gozelle com>
- To: "Support list for open source software in schools." <k12osn redhat com>
- Subject: Re: [K12OSN] teaching kids sys admin with VM's
- Date: Thu, 17 Jan 2008 19:36:45 -0600
On Jan 17, 2008 12:36 PM, Les Mikesell <les futuresource com> wrote:
> Robert Arkiletian wrote:
> > Wondering if I could run k12ltsp 5EL for a full class of 30 kids. But
> > in addition to the ltsp environment, each kid also have a vmware VM so
> > I can teach them to install/configure a Linux OS.
> >
> > Problem: what are the sys req of such a box?
>
> The disk contention is probably going to be the bottleneck. The more
> spindles the better - and the more RAM the better.
We successfully ran VMware server (free-as-in-lager) on k12ltsp
CentOS. No troubles with a Pentium D processor, 4GB of desktop RAM,
and software raid5 SATA 3.0. There were six individual instances of
virtualized Windows 98 (for training on a particular Windows + IE only
site) running on the "server" and displayed on the PXE booted scrap
PCs.
Remember that the Pentium D is about the lowest form of dual-core
processor, and our memory was clocked at 533 mhz. I suppose what I'm
trying to say is that a dual-quad setup with 16 GB of RAM could quite
conceivably handle such a load. With 16GB of RAM, you could probably
assign each student 256 or 384 MB of RAM for their VM with very little
difficulty (not 512, as VMware requires a little overhead per VM).
This advice is worth exactly what you paid for it, YMMV, and so forth :)
-dhbarr.
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