Programming perl
What to Do When the Lease Expires: A Moving Experience
LISA '98 Proceedings of the 12th USENIX conference on System administration
Virtual Appliances for Deploying and Maintaining Software
LISA '03 Proceedings of the 17th USENIX conference on System administration
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Back in the late 80s and early 90s, when disk drives were expensive, it was more economical to buy one server and configure it with enough disk space to support several "diskless" workstations. Now that disks are cheaper, most workstations now come with internal disks which contain an entire bootable operating system. Most vendors provide ways of automatically upgrading multiple "diskless" workstations; unfortunately, the same is not true for "diskfull" configurations. Upgrading "diskfull" workstations typically involves either a lot of manpower or a lot of tedious, repetitive work. In any moderate to large sized network, something needs to be done to automate the upgrade process. This paper describes a scheme which we use to upgrade our various networks of Silicon Graphics workstations. Interestingly, it relies on the same technology that allows "diskless" workstations to boot over the network.