I use unique names for each host(star wars, lotr, greek myth, etc). Then I setup cnames for each function and point those at the host that serve them. For more info, check out:
http://www.infrastructures.org/bootstrap/directory.shtml
Jim Truher from Microsoft had an informal Birds-Of-a-Feather session at LISA 2002. I showed up because I wanted to see this guy squirm a little (LISA is almost all UNIX/Linux folk). He claimed to be one of the designers of this new shell and he wanted our input about the most needed features. He mentioned created a language similar to PERL only better(i.e. proprietary). Full transaction support was suggested as well to allow a multilevel "undo" capability.
We're using both Tomcat and Jetty in our environment. They're both packaged as part of commercial products. Unfortunately both have to run on the same server. Two Java web servers on the same machine (yech!)
I use unique names for each host(star wars, lotr, greek myth, etc). Then I setup cnames for each function and point those at the host that serve them. For more info, check out: http://www.infrastructures.org/bootstrap/directory.shtml
Check out http://infrastructures.org/
I doubt MythTV does that.
Actually, the MythTV automatic conflict resolution works great!So if you want to use the latest protocol, you can't use ttssh.
Debian could seriously use some more ASYNC-ness in the rc scripts.
You can parallelize the boot process by replacing "init" with "runit" in Debian (apt-get install runit).Jim Truher from Microsoft had an informal Birds-Of-a-Feather session at LISA 2002. I showed up because I wanted to see this guy squirm a little (LISA is almost all UNIX/Linux folk). He claimed to be one of the designers of this new shell and he wanted our input about the most needed features. He mentioned created a language similar to PERL only better(i.e. proprietary). Full transaction support was suggested as well to allow a multilevel "undo" capability.
We're using both Tomcat and Jetty in our environment. They're both packaged as part of commercial products. Unfortunately both have to run on the same server. Two Java web servers on the same machine (yech!)
It's the best I've ever experienced. Their phone techs treat you like the geek you are and don't try to dumb it down.