Date: Tue, 18 Apr 1995 02:52:02 -0700 From: jkh@violet.berkeley.edu (Jordan K. Hubbard) To: core@freebsd.org, doc@freebsd.org Subject: this could sort of be of interest to us, too.. Message-ID: <199504180952.CAA13030@violet.berkeley.edu>
next in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help
Newsgroups: comp.unix.bsd.bsdi.announce Path: agate!howland.reston.ans.net!swrinde!hookup!remus.wat.hookup.net!metrics.com!tomh From: Paul A Vixie <paul@vix.com> Subject: WEB: BSD/OS hardware information archive Approved: tomh@metrics.com Message-ID: <D77JDF.832@metrics.com> Sender: tomh@metrics.com (Tom Haapanen) Organization: Software Metrics Inc. Date: Tue, 18 Apr 1995 01:41:37 GMT Followup-To: comp.unix.bsd.bsdi.misc Lines: 24 I am often asked to recommend a high performance machine for BSD/OS. Uses for this kind of beast include: * A timeshare system for a bunch of X Terminals (or PCs or Macs). * An NFS file server (data <EM>will</EM> come out of it at Ethernet speed). * An Internet information server (dns, http, ftp, gopher, veronica). * An Internet data processor (nntp, smtp, uucp). * An Internet terminal server (slip, ppp, bbs). * An Internet gateway and possibly firewall (bgp4, rip{,2}, hello). * An X workstation (maybe with a multi-screen display). * A mix of the above if you can only afford one big host. This text assumes the use of BSD/OS 2.0, and some of the hardware I recommend does not work on other systems or on early versions of BSD/OS. Caveat emptor. The information is available on the Web at the following URL: http://www.vix.com/pc-hw/bsd-os-hwconfig.html -- [ /tom haapanen -- tomh@metrics.com -- software metrics inc -- waterloo, ont ] [ "only a toy." -- alexander graham bell's father-in-law, 1876 ]
Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?199504180952.CAA13030>