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    How to make it FASTER

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    • P
      prince xyryl
      last edited by

      DOWNLOAD or UPLOAD or DEPLOYING an image…

      How to make the process faster?

      what factors should I check?

      Disk speed?
      network speed?
      hardware specs?

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • Jaymes DriverJ
        Jaymes Driver Developer
        last edited by

        Also the compression listed on the GUI of the FOG dashboard. If you adjust the PIGZ compression to a lower number (less compression) the image will take less time to upload, it will take longer to deploy though.

        What speeds are you seeing with Unicast that makes you feel as if FOG could be faster?

        It’s VERY dependent on network gear too, are you using managed or unmanaged switches?

        Have you followed the Cisco programming guide in the tutorials section if you have Cisco switches to see if your settings match that which are recommended?

        We can’t make a recommendation for EVERY network set up in the world but we sure will try!

        WARNING TO USERS: My comments are written completely devoid of emotion, do not mistake my concise to the point manner as a personal insult or attack.

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        • P
          prince xyryl
          last edited by

          what will be the recommended hardware specs to have an overall better performance?

          I’m more concern on fast deployment…

          what I have now is just :::

          i3 processor
          16G ram
          500G HDD
          Dlink DIR-300 router

          Server2008 as DNS and DHCP on VirtualBOX
          Ubuntu server 12.04.5 LTS on VirtualBox also where I installed FOG 1.2.0
          Windows Image on VirtualBox also

          What do you recommend ? do I need to change hardware specs? network gear?

          I just have one computer to use, so I’m building the server via VM.

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • Tom ElliottT
            Tom Elliott
            last edited by

            Prince,

            While I assure you none of us mind helping, there are certain limitations to what we can help you with. If it’s problems with fog, please post them. Simple recommendations of things, sure. Your hardware specifications. I think that’s asking far too much as there’s too many variables to play with here.

            Please help us build the FOG community with everyone involved. It's not just about coding - way more we need people to test things, update documentation and most importantly work on uniting the community of people enjoying and working on FOG! Get in contact with me (chat bubble in the top right corner) if you want to join in.

            Web GUI issue? Please check apache error (debian/ubuntu: /var/log/apache2/error.log, centos/fedora/rhel: /var/log/httpd/error_log) and php-fpm log (/var/log/php*-fpm.log)

            Please support FOG if you like it: https://wiki.fogproject.org/wiki/index.php/Support_FOG

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            • P
              prince xyryl
              last edited by

              ok I understand. Thank you

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              • Jaymes DriverJ
                Jaymes Driver Developer
                last edited by

                FOG doesn’t have any financial backing form big corporations so we don’t really have hardware specifications or recommendations 😉

                I can tell you my network is a Novell Netware 6.5 network, I don’t recommend Novell to ANYONE!!! And it’s not that the product is crappy, or the servers suck, its that when you fall behind you get left behind. It’s very hard to find anyone that services Novell in our area, let alone an out dated version. Now when we have problems and we contact any dealer, they look at our OS and they say “You’re OS is out of date, I’m sure that the latest update has fixed this issue for you, please update your server OS for further assistance”. Novell also has a really bad habit of selling off the management tools that they provide you with and this causes problems later, or stops supporting tools all together… I.e. ConsoleOne, iManager just to name a few.

                I would, however, recommend some good switch gear. We use Cisco managed switches and Dlink managed switches. When it comes to labs most of the switches are Asus unmanaged gear, and for classrooms it is the same.

                I would recommend at least gig speed equipment, if you have anything 10/100 base this could cause a bottle neck and has even crashed network gear.

                As far as a server goes, FOG is linux based, that means the most mundane of machines can run this awesome technology. I would recommend using something at least Duo Core or higher, and of course lots of ram (2 or 4 gigs is more than enough).

                I know this is really general, but FOG wasn’t built to ONLY run on AMD equipment, or ONLY intel equipment. It’s meant to be versatile so that even aged server equipment can suffice. I have in the past used our out going technology, but I quickly switched to some newer grade equipment (nothing spectacular, it would work as an AutoCad machine if I loaded windows on it, Duo Core Processor and 2 gigs of ram) and for my small imaging projects this server is quite the work horse! 🙂

                WARNING TO USERS: My comments are written completely devoid of emotion, do not mistake my concise to the point manner as a personal insult or attack.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • V
                  VincentJ Moderator
                  last edited by

                  So many ways to make things faster… disk/cache/storage nodes/switches/NICs.

                  I try to keep my image size down by using other tools that install some applications after imaging (if they’re needed on that machine)

                  the upside being that the machine can be in use while the applications silently install.

                  Would be nice to see if someone is using 10GbE or SSD or both.

                  Possibly also the new features involving clients seeding data to other clients in the latest SVN might make things a ton faster.

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • Tom ElliottT
                    Tom Elliott
                    last edited by

                    [quote=“VincentJ, post: 36948, member: 8935”]So many ways to make things faster… disk/cache/storage nodes/switches/NICs.

                    I try to keep my image size down by using other tools that install some applications after imaging (if they’re needed on that machine)

                    the upside being that the machine can be in use while the applications silently install.

                    Would be nice to see if someone is using 10GbE or SSD or both.

                    Possibly also the new features involving clients seeding data to other clients in the latest SVN might make things a ton faster.[/quote]

                    The capability to “seed” the files is there, but we have not yet included the installer. Nothing bad, just an add on that you will need to install a bittorrent client on the fog server for the “seeding” methodology to work.

                    Please help us build the FOG community with everyone involved. It's not just about coding - way more we need people to test things, update documentation and most importantly work on uniting the community of people enjoying and working on FOG! Get in contact with me (chat bubble in the top right corner) if you want to join in.

                    Web GUI issue? Please check apache error (debian/ubuntu: /var/log/apache2/error.log, centos/fedora/rhel: /var/log/httpd/error_log) and php-fpm log (/var/log/php*-fpm.log)

                    Please support FOG if you like it: https://wiki.fogproject.org/wiki/index.php/Support_FOG

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • P
                      prince xyryl
                      last edited by

                      [quote=“Jaymes Driver, post: 36925, member: 3582”]FOG doesn’t have any financial backing form big corporations so we don’t really have hardware specifications or recommendations 😉

                      I can tell you my network is a Novell Netware 6.5 network, I don’t recommend Novell to ANYONE!!! And it’s not that the product is crappy, or the servers suck, its that when you fall behind you get left behind. It’s very hard to find anyone that services Novell in our area, let alone an out dated version. Now when we have problems and we contact any dealer, they look at our OS and they say “You’re OS is out of date, I’m sure that the latest update has fixed this issue for you, please update your server OS for further assistance”. Novell also has a really bad habit of selling off the management tools that they provide you with and this causes problems later, or stops supporting tools all together… I.e. ConsoleOne, iManager just to name a few.

                      I would, however, recommend some good switch gear. We use Cisco managed switches and Dlink managed switches. When it comes to labs most of the switches are Asus unmanaged gear, and for classrooms it is the same.

                      I would recommend at least gig speed equipment, if you have anything 10/100 base this could cause a bottle neck and has even crashed network gear.

                      As far as a server goes, FOG is linux based, that means the most mundane of machines can run this awesome technology. I would recommend using something at least Duo Core or higher, and of course lots of ram (2 or 4 gigs is more than enough).

                      I know this is really general, but FOG wasn’t built to ONLY run on AMD equipment, or ONLY intel equipment. It’s meant to be versatile so that even aged server equipment can suffice. I have in the past used our out going technology, but I quickly switched to some newer grade equipment (nothing spectacular, it would work as an AutoCad machine if I loaded windows on it, Duo Core Processor and 2 gigs of ram) and for my small imaging projects this server is quite the work horse! :)[/quote]

                      thank you…

                      I think my PC hardware is enough to run FOG server 🙂

                      I will try convince my boss to have our classroom lab a Gigabit network gears…

                      I cant tell if my test fog server now is slow or fast, since I didnt use any imaging server but FOG…

                      so why I ask how to make it faster? it is because I just want to maximize the power and usefulness of this awesome project…

                      Thanks FOG team

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                      • P
                        prince xyryl
                        last edited by

                        This post is deleted!
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                        • P
                          prince xyryl
                          last edited by

                          the upside being that [COLOR=#ff0000][B]the machine can be in use while the applications silently instal[/B]l. [/COLOR]

                          what FOG tools is this?

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                          • Jaymes DriverJ
                            Jaymes Driver Developer
                            last edited by

                            [quote=“prince xyryl, post: 36956, member: 25316”]the upside being that [COLOR=#ff0000][B]the machine can be in use while the applications silently instal[/B]l. [/COLOR]

                            what FOG tools is this?[/quote]

                            I believe he is referring to the applications he installs himself, not a tool from FOG.

                            WARNING TO USERS: My comments are written completely devoid of emotion, do not mistake my concise to the point manner as a personal insult or attack.

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • JunkhackerJ
                              Junkhacker Developer
                              last edited by

                              [quote=“prince xyryl, post: 36956, member: 25316”]the upside being that [COLOR=#ff0000][B]the machine can be in use while the applications silently instal[/B]l. [/COLOR]

                              what FOG tools is this?[/quote]

                              fog snapins allow you to install programs on the computer while it is running, though it takes a bit of practice with installers to make them work.

                              signature:
                              Junkhacker
                              We are here to help you. If you are unresponsive to our questions, don't expect us to be responsive to yours.

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                              • V
                                VincentJ Moderator
                                last edited by

                                there are plenty of other programs to do this (silent application installs while pc is in use). I don’t use snapins in fog.

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