Hi
I'm kind of new to this LUG- I've been subscribed for a while, and am just trying to learn more about Linux. At the moment I only have a dual boot Linux/XP box, connected to my dormmate's laptop via a switched 10/100 connection, and to a few other computers in other dorms via a wireless access point. (I am at boarding school at a STRICTLY CLASSIFIED location) However, next year, I would like to get or put together some sort of server that is almost silent (so I can leave it on 24 hours per day), run Samba fileserving, run a vpn to a second computer at home, through the school firewall, and run a downstream proxy so people can get unrestricted internet access (from my home adsl connection)
My eye is currently on getting two school computers (they are getting rid of these for about £10 or so), stuffing my copy of SuSE 9.1 on them, using remote desktop to control the one at home. I believe the spec is something like Pentium 3, 400mHz, 64 or 128 megs of RAM, 10/100 NIC, 10GB hd.
I plan to upgrade one of them with a wireless card (to connect to the unsecured access point via the cantenna), and to put a 300 gig hard drive in the same one. This one would be used at school.
The other one, I would leave 'as is', and use it at home, but this would have to have some sort of remote desktop connection, as my dad knows nothing about computers in general.
The school is currently running an old version of Novell or something, and people have managed to use HTTPort and worms through it before.
The rest of the unofficial wireless network runs Windows XP (bar one which runs Mac OSX).
Is this possible? Do any of you have any suggestions?
On 5/14/05, David Noble davidwnoble@gmail.com wrote:
run Samba fileserving, run a vpn to a second computer at home, through the school firewall, and run a downstream proxy so people can get unrestricted internet access (from my home adsl connection) Is this possible?
Yes. The fun is making it reliable (my work's firewall has a habit of dropping long running connections if they go too quiet, for example) and making it more legit. Will your home ADSL connection cope with the traffic?
Do any of you have any suggestions?
Have fun! Welcome to the world of sysadmin-ing.
Tim.