14 Feb 2006 15:57
RE: fai vs. ZENworks vs. m23
Todd Snyder <tsnyder <at> shoppersdrugmart.ca>
2006-02-14 14:57:12 GMT
2006-02-14 14:57:12 GMT
If you go with Zenworks (which we're also looking at doing), I believe you need to use eDirectory (or link in with AD) which will probably mess with your LDAP Authentication. I'd suggest talking to Novell directly, talk to a sales drone or an SE and see what they have to say about implementing Zenworks in an existing environment. We haven't gotten to that level of detail with them yet, so I can't help you. Give me a couple weeks and we might have more information. Other than the constant harassment that happens after you talk to the sales drone, theres really nothing to lose. Cheers. T. -----Original Message----- From: infrastructures-admin <at> terraluna.org [mailto:infrastructures-admin <at> terraluna.org] On Behalf Of Adrian von Bidder Sent: Tuesday, February 14, 2006 2:52 AM To: infrastructures <at> terraluna.org Subject: [Infrastructures] fai vs. ZENworks vs. m23 Yo all! We're (finally) ending our historically grown each-machine-is-unique approach to maintaining our 80 Linux PCs and looking at some management tools. We're evaluating m23, zenworks and fai - any users of these tools here? fai and m23 would imply using Debian (or derivative), while ZENworks would imply SuSE (we're not looking at RH)- we are confident that both are absolutely viable choices, and since I'm more a Debian guy, while my collegue has more SuSE experience we thought that we'll decide on the software distribution tool first and base our distribution choice on that. As mentioned, there are ca. 80 clients. Some of them are on ADSL (700k, soon 2Mbps), some of them on VDSL (12Mbps) so upgrade by re-installing complete images is probably not a good idea. Also, many of these clients are only powered on when people want to work, so the update process needs to cope with that: * needs to happen in the background * needs to cope with being aborted a few times during download * needs to be client-driven, as we don't know and don't want to know when each client will be powered on. Wake on LAN might be possible except for the DSL clients. Otherwise, the environment is relatively simple. Uniform x86 Linux environment, even more or less uniform hardware (wrt net, graphics chipsets). The only problem will be the local printers, where we'll need to properly handle all the configuration differencies. LDAP as auth service, $HOME on NFS, KDE partly locked down with KIOSK. Comments? cheers -- vbi -- -- Today is Setting Orange, the 45th day of Chaos in the YOLD 3172
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