----- Original Message -----
From: "MCR" <
mike1071@yahoo.com>
To: <
plug-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us>
Sent: Monday, May 26, 2003 10:07 PM
Subject: Newbie Server--Admin. Questions.
> If I am only going to have these service, it the
> X-windows system needed to be installed? As a newbie
> would there be a benifit for me to have X on there, or
> should I just not install it? When I set up a home
> server 95% of my configuring was on the command line,
> so I have to imagine I could do with it.
I use X all the time - so I can have multiple shells open at once. ;-)
Seriously - I am as big a command line bigot as the next guy, but I *love*
having 4 (or more) virtual desktops going with 4 (or more) xterms on three
and my GUI stuff on another (Mozilla, Evolution, etc.)
> Would it be recommend to have the network tools, like
> nmap and ping on the server?
Absotively posolutely.
> Can/does the e-mail server go on the same box as the
> http server?
Sure. You can run as many services as you have resources (CPU, memory, disk
space/IO capacity, bandwidth) for. You will have a SPOF, but for
non-commercial home use, what the heck.
> I am going to be using Slackware as the O/S, the
> Apache as the http server. The others I have not
> decided.
<disclaimer>
I am distro and OS agnostic - I love 'em all, even Windows. Each one is a
different opportunity for me to learn. I hate the "my distro is cooler than
yours" crap. Having said that...
</disclaimer>
I love Slack. It is an *awesome* learning distro. Keep in mind though that
Red Hat has market share. It might make sense to learn their distro if you
are looking to increase your marketability (is that a word?).
> I am open to other advice, and I would appreciate
> any help.
As you build the box, fire off your questions. Someone will know the
answer.
--
Thomas Cameron, RHCE, CNE, MCSE, MCT
Cameron Technical Services, Inc.
(512) 454-3200 Main
http://www.camerontech.com