PC brez diska

Steve

Guru
13. avg 2007
9.684
1.602
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Je to izvedljivo? V mislih imam predvsem mrežni disk, ki bi bil priklopljen preko routerja? bi šlo?
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philips

Guru
Osebje foruma
Administrator
17. avg 2007
9.769
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Za ta denar dobiš že 2GB USB ključ, s katerega tudi lahko bootaš (če seveda računalnik to podpira). Potem imaš še bootanje s CDja, diskete.

Za network boot pa ne bi vedel kako je, ker še nikoli nisem delal s tem. Mogoče pa bi se le dalo bootat z diska, ki je priključen na router.
 

Fusion

Fizikalc
1. okt 2007
13.448
3
38
spomnem se, da se je pred leti prodajal prenosnik brez diska in je menda deloval celo preko interneta. sam tisto je bil tudi edini primerek, ki sem ga zasledil.

vem, da ti nisem nič pomagal, sem napisal samo kot zanimivost.
 

Steve

Guru
13. avg 2007
9.684
1.602
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čim bolj tiho računalo in disk je med najglasnejšimi komponentami, zato bi se ga najraje losal
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alcazar

Pripravnik
3. sep 2007
871
12
18
Slovenia
In kako je hiter potem takšen računalnik?
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Če bi rad tišino, daj notri 2,5" disk (za prenosnike), so izredno tihi (4200 ali 5400 rpm).
 

stein

Fizikalc
16. sep 2007
19.575
1
36
Citat:
Uporabnik Steve pravi:
čim bolj tiho računalo in disk je med najglasnejšimi komponentami, zato bi se ga najraje losal
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Ni gibljivih delov -> ni hrupa. Torej flash.
Ali pa disk v sosednji sobi. SATA kabel gre do 2 metra, če se ne motim. SCSI do 12 metrov, ethernet pa 100 ali več.
Ja, boot preko mreže deluje, kaj nisi opazil BIOS opcij ?
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mihagr

Pripravnik
25. avg 2007
393
23
18
Ljubljana
Stein !
To kar si nazadnje omenil "boot preko mreže" bo pa težko izvedljivo!
Nekoč so bili časi ko si v mrežno kartico vstavil ROM z boot loaderjem za Novell in potem se je to zgodilo,
danes pa kar tako za običajen PC - hm, hm, veliko preveč dela!

Na temle naslovu imaš še več tega: http://www.kegel.com/linux/pxe.html

Remote Network Boot via PXE
Let's say you're responsible for a network of 100 computers shared by students. What do you do if one of those computers starts acting funny? If you're like me, you'll just do a clean install of the operating system. But that's a lot of work, especially if you have to do it several times a week. Fortunately, most PCs sold since 2001 follow the PC99 guidelines from Intel and Microsoft, which among other things says that new computers with Ethernet interfaces must implement two useful features: wake-on-LAN and network boot.
Wake-on-LAN
If your BIOS is set to enable Wake-On-LAN, and is off, it will turn itself on when it receives a packet containing 6 bytes of FFh followed by 16 copies of its Ethernet address. (See the Wake-On-Lan mini-HOWTO for more details.) This can be used to help force reinstalls of the operating system in the middle of the night, when nobody's there.
Network Boot
There are several ways computers can boot over a network, but the one mandated by PC99 is called PXE. PXE is a kind of DHCP extension, so all you need is an up-to-date DHCP server and a TFTP server.
Back when PC99 and PXE were new, the normal DHCP server hadn't yet been updated to handle PXE, so Red Hat created a package called 'pxe', and has shipped it with all versions of their Linux since 6.2. You probably don't want to use it, though, now that the normal ISC DHCP software shipped with Linux can handle PXE.

Together, a DHCP server and a TFTP server can be set up to handle PXE boot requests. It's up to you what to give the PCs when they boot; several possibilities include