Fedora WS: (simultaneous) install on multiple pc's
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@coliver said in Fedora WS: (simultaneous) install on multiple pc's:
@DustinB3403 said in Fedora WS: (simultaneous) install on multiple pc's:
@Dashrender said in Fedora WS: (simultaneous) install on multiple pc's:
You could deploy an image using FOG
While this was my initial thought as well, he has asked about doing this simultaneously. Which fog generally isn't "all at once go".
It kind of is...I was using FOG to do multicast imaging 7 years ago. We're talking 30-60 machines at a clip.
Sure it can do it but that doesn't mean that you should do it. It's about network performance and if you're not setup for it you'll encounter massive slowdowns
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@DustinB3403 said in Fedora WS: (simultaneous) install on multiple pc's:
@coliver said in Fedora WS: (simultaneous) install on multiple pc's:
@DustinB3403 said in Fedora WS: (simultaneous) install on multiple pc's:
@Dashrender said in Fedora WS: (simultaneous) install on multiple pc's:
You could deploy an image using FOG
While this was my initial thought as well, he has asked about doing this simultaneously. Which fog generally isn't "all at once go".
It kind of is...I was using FOG to do multicast imaging 7 years ago. We're talking 30-60 machines at a clip.
Sure it can do it but that doesn't mean that you should do it. It's about network performance and if you're not setup for it you'll encounter massive slowdowns
This is somethign I don't undestand on the network side.
If you're doing multicasts - why would the rest of switch be affected? Only the ports subscribed to the multicast, and the one providing the multicast should be affected..
Now of course if you end up going over an uplink connection, the downstream switch will be entirely affected.. but assuming that's not the case, why would everyone else be affected by the multicast? -
@Dashrender said in Fedora WS: (simultaneous) install on multiple pc's:
@DustinB3403 said in Fedora WS: (simultaneous) install on multiple pc's:
@coliver said in Fedora WS: (simultaneous) install on multiple pc's:
@DustinB3403 said in Fedora WS: (simultaneous) install on multiple pc's:
@Dashrender said in Fedora WS: (simultaneous) install on multiple pc's:
You could deploy an image using FOG
While this was my initial thought as well, he has asked about doing this simultaneously. Which fog generally isn't "all at once go".
It kind of is...I was using FOG to do multicast imaging 7 years ago. We're talking 30-60 machines at a clip.
Sure it can do it but that doesn't mean that you should do it. It's about network performance and if you're not setup for it you'll encounter massive slowdowns
This is somethign I don't undestand on the network side.
If you're doing multicasts - why would the rest of switch be affected? Only the ports subscribed to the multicast, and the one providing the multicast should be affected..
Now of course if you end up going over an uplink connection, the downstream switch will be entirely affected.. but assuming that's not the case, why would everyone else be affected by the multicast?Because of poor network design and options in the space, thus using uplink ports across several different switches.
When I changed from using the general network to a segmented one, I was able to run 20 machines at a time (limited by the switch that was available) and no one knew the difference.
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@DustinB3403 said in Fedora WS: (simultaneous) install on multiple pc's:
@coliver said in Fedora WS: (simultaneous) install on multiple pc's:
@DustinB3403 said in Fedora WS: (simultaneous) install on multiple pc's:
@Dashrender said in Fedora WS: (simultaneous) install on multiple pc's:
You could deploy an image using FOG
While this was my initial thought as well, he has asked about doing this simultaneously. Which fog generally isn't "all at once go".
It kind of is...I was using FOG to do multicast imaging 7 years ago. We're talking 30-60 machines at a clip.
Sure it can do it but that doesn't mean that you should do it. It's about network performance and if you're not setup for it you'll encounter massive slowdowns
Mutlicast is the way to go. You can even do it over broadcast domains. It sounds like you didn't have multicast configured correctly? Even doing 60 machines we didn't see any network slowness associated with imaging.