[debian-edu-commits] [Debian Wiki] Update of "DebianEdu/Documentation/Stretch/Architecture" by WolfgangSchweer

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Fri Feb 17 14:27:54 UTC 2017


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The "DebianEdu/Documentation/Stretch/Architecture" page has been changed by WolfgangSchweer:
https://wiki.debian.org/DebianEdu/Documentation/Stretch/Architecture?action=diff&rev1=9&rev2=10

Comment:
fix typo; thanks victory.

  
  {{attachment:Debian_Edu_Network_Stretch.png|The Debian Edu network topology|width=1024}}
  
- The figure is a sketch of the assumed network topology. The default setup of a Skolelinux network assumes that there is one (and only one) main-server, while allowing the inclusion of both normal workstations and LTSP-servers (with associated thin-clients and/or diskless workstations). The number of workstations can be as large or small as you want (starting from none to a lot). The same goes for the LTSP servers, each of which is on a separate network so that the traffic between the clients and the LTSP server doesn't affect the rest of the network services.
+ The figure is a sketch of the assumed network topology. The default setup of a Skolelinux network assumes that there is one (and only one) main server, while allowing the inclusion of both normal workstations and LTSP-servers (with associated thin-clients and/or diskless workstations). The number of workstations can be as large or small as you want (starting from none to a lot). The same goes for the LTSP servers, each of which is on a separate network so that the traffic between the clients and the LTSP server doesn't affect the rest of the network services.
  
  The reason that there can only be one main server in each school network is that the main server provides DHCP, and there can be only one machine doing so in each network. It is possible to move services from the main server to other machines by setting up the service on another machine, and subsequently updating the DNS-configuration, pointing the DNS alias for that service to the right computer.
  
@@ -21, +21 @@

  DHCPD on Tjener serves the 10.0.0.0/8 network, providing a syslinux menu via PXE-boot where you can choose whether to install a new
  server/workstation, boot a thin client or a diskless workstation, run memtest, or boot from the local hard disk.
  
- This is designed to be modified - that is, you can have the NFS-root in syslinux point to one of the LTSP servers or change the DHCP next-server option (stored in LDAP) to have clients directly boot via PXE from the terminal server.
+ This is designed to be modified - that is, you can have the NFS-root in syslinux pointing to one of the LTSP servers or change the DHCP next-server option (stored in LDAP) to have clients directly boot via PXE from the terminal server.
  
  DHCPD on the LTSP servers only serves a dedicated network on the second interface (192.168.0.0/24 and 192.168.1.0/24 are preconfigured options) and should seldom need to be changed.
  



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