home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!darwin.sura.net!convex!linac!att!cbnewse!cbnewsd!att-out!uchinews!machine!sunbird!amiserv!austral!rrezaian
- From: rrezaian@austral.chi.il.us (Russell Rezaian)
- Newsgroups: chi.mail
- Subject: Re: Software used/etc.
- Message-ID: <1992Dec28.025711.819@austral.chi.il.us>
- Date: 28 Dec 92 02:57:11 GMT
- References: <electric.05ea@meltdown.chi.il.us>
- Organization: D.O.C. Data Processing Systems
- Lines: 95
-
- In article <electric.05ea@meltdown.chi.il.us> electric@meltdown.chi.il.us (Rick Martinez) writes:
- >To add a system to the clout project, exactly what type of software/hardware
- >preferences do you recommend.
-
- I am not entirely sure what you mean by this question. You do not make
- clear just exactly what type of addition to the project you are talking
- about.
-
- First off, the Clout project is a group of people who are involved in
- improving E-Mail connectivity in the Chicago area, we also have a strong
- mandate to encourage the use of Domainist addressing wherever possible,
- and as such we have chosen to be involved with the .us domain project.
-
- As for things done with machines, which I assume is what you are talking
- about, there are a few ways a machine may become "involved" in the project.
- If you have a machine that you would like to have registered in a domain,
- we can do that for you. We can also provide E-mail connections. We
- currently have well over 150 such client sites in the area.
-
- All you need is a mail package for your machine, this can be included if
- you have UNIX, or there are add ons for other operating systems, such as
- the Amigas native OS, the Macintosh and even a few packages for MS-DOS. I
- believe it is possible to shoehorn a working mail package into a basic
- MS-DOS machine with verly little drive space. I even have a package
- somewhere for CP/M (though it is a bear to do E-mail without a clock).
-
- The clout machine itself is a distributed multi node virtual machine. It
- actually spreads over several different physical computers (currently only
- 2 of them are fully active, though more are planned) and is functionally
- the same to the outside world (with a few minor cosmetic changes) across
- the board.
-
- I may be wrong, but it appears you are asking about the requirements of a
- machine that will host a clout virtual machine session. We usually refer
- to such a machine as a clout node (as opposed to a client which is a real
- machine that real people use). The current clout nodes are all UNIX
- workstations. The original clout nodes when the project was first started
- were AT&T 3B1 machines, however some of the limitations of those machines
- (mostly in the area of networking) prompted us to move to Sun
- workstations. The last 3B1 was replaced about a year ago with a System V
- r4 machine which may be replaced by annother Sun soon.
-
- As for a basic set of minimum requirements:
-
- o It has to run some version of UNIX.
- o HDB (or BNU for those who read AT&T docs) UUCP is STRONGLY desired.
- o BSD networking, is NOT currently essential with this version of the
- software, but that may change very soon.
- o A more or less complete set of UNIX utilities is required, we depend
- on such programs as awk and make. C and development tools should
- go without saying...
-
- As for hardware, or big problem is disk space. Currently the clout
- software alone takes several megs of space. Our databse is rather small
- now, but it will chunk up dramatically in the next releases. The
- underlying mail transport agents take about 3 to 5 megs, but that might not
- count depening on whether the system is handling much non-clout related
- mail traffic (enough to justify the prescence of a more verstile MTA).
- The real crunch actually comes from the mail traffic itself.
-
- So once UNIX is installed, including the development tools, we throw in
- about annother 5 to 20 megs of sundry utilities (depending on just exactly
- what we will be doing, and how much of what we need is already present)
- and annother 2 or 3 megs of clout specific software and data.
-
- Then there comes spool space requirements.
-
- As an example, my home machine which only recieves mail for one person
- (who else?) runs anywhere from a few hundred k of traffic weekly (if I am
- more or less out of things) to about 400k outgoing (my all time high) and
- a few megs incoming (and none of it ftpmail!) weekly. Many sites in the
- area that are clients are public access systems with anywhere from 20 to a
- few hundred users. While not all of them are quite as active e-mail users
- as I am, some can be much worse.
-
- >As a couple clout members know, I am interested in this project. Let me know
- >and I'll see what I can do. I also might be able to get a shitty little
- >college (Harper Community College) into this as I know the computer dept.
- >heads.
-
- We really appreciate your interest! As you can see, what we need most is
- disk space. As I mentioned in my last post we really don't need any more
- clout nodes right now; however, if you know anyone who would be willing to
- donate a few hundred megs of SCSI disk to the project, we could really
- use it!
-
- The larger clout node is running right on the ragged edge, and has been that
- way for over a year. There was a time when we could do some very limited
- development work on that machine, now it's a struggle to do simple software
- upgrades. We need to get to work on the next release of the software, and
- while we have a machine ready to play host to our experimentation, we don't
- have any drive space for it.
- --
- Russell Rezaian | rrezaian@austral.chi.il.us
- rrezaian@clout.chi.il.us | rrezaian@zed.chi.il.us
-