~kjcole/edubuntu.cookbook-delete/wip

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<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE book PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.3//EN"
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[
 <!ENTITY % globalents SYSTEM "global.ent">
 %globalents;
]>
<book id="tuxlab-cookbook">
  <title>tuXlab Cookbook</title>
  <bookinfo>&jean;
    <othercredit>
      <firstname>Leonora</firstname>
      <surname>van Staden</surname>
      <contrib>Illustrator</contrib>
    </othercredit>
    <edition>&tuxlab-edition;</edition>
    &pubdate;
    &copyright;
    &legalnotice;
    &publisher;
  </bookinfo>
  <!--
We use an apostrophe to create plural forms in two limited situations: 
for pluralized letters of the alphabet and when we are trying to create 
the plural form of a word that refers to the word itself. Here we also 
should italicize this "word as word," but not the 's ending that belongs 
to it. Do not use the apostrophe+s to create the plural of acronyms 
(pronounceable abbreviations such as laser and IRA and URL) and other 
abbreviations.
http://webster.commnet.edu/grammar/plurals.htm
-->
  <!-- I don't capitalise "internet".
http://blog.contentious.com/archives/2004/08/16/jargon-evolution-ditching-unnecessary-capitalization
http://blog.contentious.com/archives/2004/09/30/yes-i-said-internet-and-so-did-npr

-->
  <chapter id="introduction">
    <title>Introduction</title>
    <para>If you're reading this, you're about to embark on a journey of
    discovery and empowerment. Welcome! Though it might seem like a uphill
    battle now, you'll soon be the master of your tuXlab, with a roomful of
    computers humming along and a community of users making them work
    hard.</para>
    <para>This book is meant for anyone who would like to set up a computer
    laboratory according to the specifications of the Shuttleworth Foundation.
    This kind of laboratory --- called a 
    <emphasis>tuXlab</emphasis> after the Linux mascot, Tux the Penguin (XXX:
    Tux image) --- uses only free software, is easy to administer, and makes
    the best use of old or obsolete hardware. It has been designed to be easy
    to administer, and because it is properly documented (for example, in the
    book you're holding now), there is a community of tuXlab administrators to
    whom you may turn for help if you get stuck.</para>
    <para>Although the tuXlab project is primarily aimed at schools, tuXlabs
    are not only useful in a school environment. Any kind of community
    organisation may benefit from a secure and powerful computer laboratory, so
    feel free to pass on this book to anyone who can use it.</para>
    <section id="how-to-use-this-book">
      <title>How to use this book</title>
      <para>This book caters for a couple of different audiences. In the first
      place, the book accompanies all the tuXlab installations done by the
      volunteers of the 
      <ulink url="http://www.slug.org.za"> Schools Linux Users Group</ulink>. In
      this case, it serves to document what you have, and to help you
      understand it in order to keep it in good running order.</para>
      <para>In the second place, the book will be sent to schools or centres
      that have been selected to become part of the tuXlab program, but that
      are too remote for the volunteers to reach in order to do the
      installation. In this case, you'll have to take care of it yourself, and
      this book is intended to guide you through this process.</para>
      <para>Lastly, anyone with enough enthusiasm, as well as access to some
      old computers and the other equipment necessary, may use the book as a
      blueprint to install a computer lab for their community.</para>
      <para>The book is also meant to introduce you to the concept of a
      computer laboratory, and to give you some insight into what it takes to
      run one. It provides you with the necessary background to apply to the
      Shuttleworth Foundation for inclusion in the tuXlabs program, laying out
      the requirements for participation.</para>
      <itemizedlist>
        <listitem>
          <para>If you are thinking of applying for a tuXlab, start reading at 
          <xref linkend="getting-a-lab" /> to see what it takes to get involved
          in the tuXlab program.</para>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <para>If you're preparing to install your own tuXlab, turn to 
          <xref linkend="lab-layout" /> to start readying the space.</para>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <para>If you already have an up and running tuXlab, you'll want to
          skip to 
          <xref linkend="software-components" /> to find out about everything
          your tuXlab has installed.</para>
        </listitem>
      </itemizedlist>
    </section>
    <section id="why-we-wrote-this-book">
      <title>Why we wrote this book</title>
      <para>The ultimate aim of the tuXlab project is empowerment: to place
      state of the art Information and Communication Technology within the
      reach of everyone. This is in line with the 
      <ulink url="http://www.ictcharter.org.za/"> Empowerment Charter</ulink> for
      the ICT Sector, an industry-driven document being put together by major
      stakeholders in the ICT sector, together with valuable input from
      government represented, in part, by the Department of Communications and
      the Department of Trade and Industry. However, computers and networks are
      complicated things, and simply knowing how to ask the right questions can
      be very hard if you don't already have a lot of experience.</para>
      <para>This book is intended to help you to be self-sufficient, and to
      enable you to ask for help effectively. It gathers together information
      about all the components that make up a tuXlab, and it tells the story
      behind the global, grass-roots free software movement that created all
      the software, millions upon millions of lines of code, that make it
      work.</para>
      <para>The book sketches a big picture, relating the individual tuXlab to
      all the other tuXlabs out there, and to the wider free software
      community, and is intended to foster good communication among all
      participants in the project.</para>
    </section>
    <section id="tuxlab-project-outline">
      <title>tuXlab project outline</title>
      <para>The tuXlab project has its roots in the Shuttleworth Foundation's
      commitment to improve the standard of education in South Africa. This is
      a huge task with many facets, and just putting computers in schools is
      not nearly enough. The one critical factor in education is the people
      involved: the teachers and the learners they have to educate. For
      computer labs to make a difference, the people who use them must
      understand them and be able to use them for anything that they can
      imagine. They must be able to take ownership of the computers and the
      software that they run, and to create new learning material to share with
      each other and with society as a whole.</para>
      <para>While an understanding of computers and information technology is
      critical in our modern global society, they are not a sufficient goal in
      themselves. There are many other fields of knowledge that beckon to be
      explored, and to be discussed and debated with other people. However,
      publishing and distributing books on paper is expensive, and unless you
      are in a big city with the means to travel around easily, it is awkward
      and costly to take part in the global conversation. Information
      technology offers us a chance to leapfrog these problems by providing
      access to vast resources of texts, curricula, art and music via the
      internet, and allows us to stay in touch by electronic means, even in
      remote areas.</para>
      <para>Without some degree of mastery of technology, it is easy to miss
      the debates of real importance on the internet. To understand legislation
      concerning intellectual property, access to information and privacy
      issues, it is crucial to understand what the technology offers and how it
      differs from the possibilities of the past. In a sense, this is the real
      meaning of the digital divide: if you don't understand how computers and
      networks can be used, you can starve even in the midst of plenty of
      conversation and information.</para>
      <para>To accomplish these objectives of social innovation and
      empowerment, and to further the uptake of technology in South Africa, the
      Shuttleworth Foundation launched the tuXlab project. The aim of this
      project is to establish a national network of computer laboratories based
      exclusively on open source software. The Shuttleworth Foundation strongly
      believes that open source software should be the preferred choice of
      software for schooling in South Africa. Open source software provides
      users with freedoms not obtainable from proprietary software. This
      includes the freedom to obtain, use, modify and distribute the
      software.</para>
      <mediaobject>
        <imageobject>
          <imagedata fileref="images/opensourceyahoo.png" />
        </imageobject>
      </mediaobject>
      <para>The Shuttleworth Foundation believes that the use of open source
      software will provide effective and economical access to information and
      communication technology.</para>
      <section id="open-source-learning-centres-background">
        <title>Open Source Learning Centres Background</title>
        <para>In 2002 the Foundation started to actively promote the use open
        source software as a computer lab solution for schools. The Foundation
        funded several projects to establish open source based computer labs in
        schools, as well as an internally initiating a pilot to prove the
        effectiveness of open source software as a school computing solution.
        The Foundation also initiated a project to facilitate the involvement
        of volunteers in refurbishing computers and establishing open source
        learning centres.</para>
        <para>Based on the success of the pilot and volunteer project, the
        Foundation extended the pilot to establish a further 80 open source
        learning centres in the Western Cape. This goal was reached in November
        2004.</para>
      </section>
      <section id="shuttleworth-tuxlab-program-outline">
        <title>Shuttleworth tuXlab Program Outline</title>
        <para>Both primary and secondary schools are being targeted. In order
        to maximise the impact of the program, schools are selected in
        clusters. Through clustering, schools are able to plan the use of the
        centres together, and they can share resources and community support.
        The Shuttleworth Foundation believes that clustering is the best method
        of ensuring that schools remain self-sufficient in terms of support in
        the future. This is supported by the 
        <emphasis>Computers in Schools</emphasis> survey of 2000, which states
        (my emphasis):</para>
        <blockquote>
          <attribution>
            <ulink url="http://www.school.za/research/uwc-epu/screen/Executive%20Summary.pdf">
            Computers in Schools, 2000</ulink>
          </attribution>
          <para>Experiences from other countries, whatever their stage of
          development, show that factors which accompany the successful
          implementation of ICTs in schools are 
          <emphasis>networks of connectivity</emphasis> and 
          <emphasis>structured and continuous programmes</emphasis> to train
          teachers to use the new technology for educational purposes.</para>
        </blockquote>
        <para>Within a cluster, schools are selected based on criteria set by
        the Foundation. At a very minimum, these criteria will include the
        availability of a secure computing environment, guaranteed commitment
        of the school (including governing body) to the project, as well as
        proof of comprehensive plans to introduce the Shuttleworth tuXlab into
        school activities. Additional criteria may be set for each
        cluster.</para>
        <para>Within each school, a 20 to 24 seat tuXlab is established.
        Refurbished hardware is used for the workstation computers, and new
        hardware purchased for the server. The Shuttleworth tuXlabs are
        implemented using a thin-client paradigm, with GNU/Linux used as the
        primary operating system and open source applications wherever
        possible.</para>
        <para>The Shuttleworth Foundation requires that staff and students
        participate fully in the installation process. In accordance with its
        mandate, the Foundation adopts a skills transfer methodology during
        installation --- all participants will receive the necessary skills to
        establish and maintain further Shuttleworth tuXlabs. The Foundation
        will also facilitate the involvement of external volunteers, such as
        students, throughout the entire process.</para>
        <para>Throughout the course of this program, the Foundation intends to
        partner with as many organisations as possible. On its own, the
        Foundation does not have the resources and infrastructure to take the
        tuXlab program national. Through partnership we hope to maximise the
        impact of the program, develop skills, reduce costs, grow resources,
        and hopefully facilitate the adoption of the program within other
        contexts.</para>
        <para>In 2005, hundreds of tuXlabs are being installed throughout South
        Africa in partnership with local organisations and user groups. The
        project is also being launched in Namibia, and reports of roll-outs
        overseas (such as a large-scale project in Azerbaijan! (XXX: link))
        have also come in.</para>
      </section>
    </section>
  </chapter>
  <chapter id="walkthrough">
    <title>Walkthrough</title>
    <para>Maybe you've just taken acceptance of a brand new tuXlab, or perhaps
    you're just dreaming about when it will all be done. Whatever the case may
    be, let's take a walk through the completed lab to see how everything fits
    together.</para>
    <section id="the-lab">
      <title>The lab</title>
      <para>Every tuXlab consists of a room where people may come to use the
      facilities of the lab.</para>
      <para>The room is secured with a gate and burglar bars on the windows,
      and the really expensive components of the tuXlab are locked away even
      further, in another room or in a cage. 
      <footnote>
        <para>See 
        <xref linkend="lab-layout" />.</para>
      </footnote></para>
      <para>The room provides a comfortable space to work in, with desks at the
      right height for the learners at the school, and with enough plugs and
      cables for all the computers. All the users of the tuXlab may sit down at
      any of the workstations and log in, to find their working environment
      just as they left it, even if they're using a different computer
      now.</para>
    </section>
    <section id="the-machines">
      <title>The machines</title>
      <para>A tuXlab usually contains between 20 and 25 workstation computers,
      although you may add workstations if you already have some computers, or
      if you can get donations. These workstations are connected to a server
      computer by way of a high-speed network.</para>
      <para>The workstations are where the rubber hits the road, so to speak.
      They are standing out there on the desks, and everyone who uses the
      tuXlab is constantly using their keyboards and adjusting their screens,
      and so they do undergo some wear and tear. Because they are intended to
      be accessible to use, they are not that easy to secure. If something is
      locked away, it's hard to learn how to use it. To deal with this state of
      affairs, tuXlabs are designed so as to make the workstations as cheap and
      as easy as possible to replace. They should be completely
      interchangeable, and they store nothing: no documents, and no information
      about any user.</para>
      <mediaobject>
        <imageobject>
          <imagedata fileref="images/workstation.png" />
        </imageobject>
        <caption>A classroom workstation</caption>
      </mediaobject>
      <para>The server actually does all the work in a tuXlab. If the server
      goes away, the workstations will just stand around scratching their
      heads, like bees when something happens to the queen bee. Whatever you
      see when working at a tuXlab workstation has been sent to the workstation
      by the server over the network. All the documents you save, and all the
      information regarding users, everything is stored on the server.</para>
      <mediaobject>
        <imageobject>
          <imagedata fileref="images/server.png" />
        </imageobject>
        <caption>A classroom server for a tuXlab</caption>
      </mediaobject>
    </section>
    <section id="the-network">
      <title>The network</title>
      <para>The third critical component of a tuXlab is the computer network
      that connects all the machines in the room. If you're looking at a
      finished tuXlab, the network cabling shouldn't be terribly obvious.
      However, every workstation has a Ethernet cable plugged into it, and you
      should be able to see the switch cabinet where all the cables go.
      However, if you were to look inside the trunking running along the walls
      or under the desks, you would see that there is an Ethernet cable for
      each and every workstation, connecting it to the network switch. The
      tuXlab server is also connected to the switch by a fly-lead.</para>
      <para>In this configuration, it is as if every workstation in the tuXlab
      is connected directly to the server. The switch itself is transparent to
      the network. It sees to it that network traffic from the server is sent
      as directly as possible to the workstation for which it is intended. From
      the perspective of the computers, it looks as though they're all
      connected directly to each other.</para>
      <para>If anything goes amiss in a tuXlab, there's an even chance that it
      may be a problem with the network, since, from the workstation's point of
      view, a broken network is just as bad as a broken server. It can't do
      anything in either case.</para>
    </section>
  </chapter>
  <chapter id="background">
    <title>Background</title>
    <section id="starting-from-scratch">
      <title>Starting from scratch</title>
      <section id="what-goes-in-a-lab">
        <title>What goes in a lab?</title>
        <para>A tuXlab consists of computers, a lot of cables, a room to put
        them in, and software to make the computers do something useful.</para>
        <para>Most of the computers are client workstations. They're the
        computers that are used every day by the lab users. One or two
        computers, however, are 
        <emphasis>servers</emphasis>. They are locked away and normally only
        accessed via the network. The classroom server is by far the most
        powerful computer in the lab, and does all the work.</para>
        <para>All the equipment in a tuXlab is 
        <emphasis>networked</emphasis>. For this, all the computers need a
        network card, which is connected to a network switch using a length of
        cable.</para>
        <para>Lastly, the computers need software to run. The software falls
        roughly into two categories: the operating system software, and
        applications. All the computers in the lab run the Linux operating
        system (the workstations fetch their copy from the server upon
        startup). This enables the server to display the applications it is
        running for all the workstations on the screens of the workstations
        themselves, using the 
        <application>X Windows</application> system, the graphical windowing
        environment used by Linux.</para>
        <para>The applications installed in a tuXlab are focused on an
        educational environment, and include software that is essential for
        general computer literacy such as word processors, spreadsheet and web
        browsers, as well as educational software that allow learners to
        practise skills (e.g. typing, arithmetic) and knowledge (e.g. spelling,
        geography). See 
        <xref linkend="open-source-educational-software" /> for some examples.
        Besides these, a tuXlab contains a great variety of programming
        languages, tools, texts and examples that can be used to teach
        programming and to study how existing programs work, all the way from
        first principles to systems architecture. Nothing is proprietary: you
        may examine the source code of every component in the system.</para>
        <para>In the following sections, we'll look much more closely at how
        these parts fit together.</para>
      </section>
      <section id="what-is-an-operating-system">
        <title>What is an Operating System?</title>
        <para>In the earliest days of computers, a whole machine was built to
        do only one thing, for example numerical integration. There was no
        clean distinction between hardware and software, as aspects of the
        program might be reflected by physical switches and jumpers set on the
        machine itself.</para>
        <para>As computers became more general, the same computer could be
        programmed to do many different things. All these programs, however,
        would still have to deal with the hardware aspects of the machine,
        writing to the printer, reading from the magnetic drum memory, and so
        on. Since these jobs needed to be done over and over and over again,
        the bits of code that dealt with them could be shared among all the
        programs that run on that computer. This shared code, the code that
        handles the basic tasks any program needs in order to run, was the
        beginning of operating systems.</para>
        <para>Today's operating systems are complex, sophisticated systems,
        that can schedule many different programs to run at once, and that
        provide such a comprehensive range of services that many programs can
        be compiled to run on many different operating systems, regardless of
        the variations in the underlying hardware.</para>
        <para>An operating system ( 
        <acronym>OS</acronym> for short) is the most basic layer of the
        software, and if your computer is switched on, the operating system
        kernel is the one program that will always be executing. It provides a
        framework for all the subsystems that make up the computer.</para>
        <para>Imagine, for a moment, that a computer is like a ship. The
        physical hardware is the steel or wooden hull that floats. The
        operating system is like the officers of a ship, and its subsystems are
        like the captain, the first mate, the engineer, the cook, and so on.
        They see to it that the engine is running and that the ship is on an
        even keel.</para>
        <para>All the other software that runs on the computer are like the
        rest of the crew and the passengers. The operating system manages the
        resources of the computer like the captain manages the crew of the
        ship. He maintains discipline, sees to it that the crew don't fall all
        over one another, do things in an orderly fashion, and keep everything
        shipshape.</para>
        <para>If a program does something wrong (such as writing to memory that
        the operating system is using for something else. In the ship example,
        this is like making a hole in the hull!), the operating lets the
        offending program know, shutting it down completely if necessary (it
        gets thrown in the brig).</para>
        <mediaobject>
          <imageobject>
            <imagedata fileref="images/operatingsystem1.gif" />
          </imageobject>
        </mediaobject>
        <mediaobject>
          <imageobject>
            <imagedata fileref="images/operatingsystem2.gif" />
          </imageobject>
        </mediaobject>
        <section id="what-is-linux">
          <title>What is 
          <emphasis>Linux</emphasis>?</title>
          <para>Linux is an 
          <emphasis>operating system</emphasis> consisting of a 
          <emphasis>kernel</emphasis> as well as all the hundreds of libraries,
          tools and utilities that make it usable as a computing environment.
          The kernel was developed by Linus Torvalds, using the tools and
          utilities of the 
          <ulink url="http://www.gnu.org"> GNU project</ulink>. Together, the
          whole system is called GNU/Linux. Some other common operating systems
          are the Unix family (including members like Linux, BSD, AIX, Solaris,
          HP-UX, and others); DOS; Microsoft Windows; Amiga; and Mac 
          <acronym>OS</acronym>. An upcoming variety of operating systems, such
          as Symbian and PalmOS, run on cellphones. There are special-purpose
          operating systems wherever you look, far more than you would have
          suspected.</para>
          <para>Linux is Free Software. So, not only is it OK to make copies of
          Linux and give them to your friends, it's also fine to fix things
          while you're at it --- as long as you also freely provide your
          modified source code to everyone else. When you're doing this, you're
          not just providing a freebie to the people who get your fixes: you're
          also exercising your right to influence Linux, and to change the way
          that you want it to work. In return for this right which has been
          granted to you, you must allow those who come after you the same
          freedom in making use of your work. The issue is 
          <ulink url="http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/free-sw.html">
          <emphasis>freedom</emphasis>, not price</ulink>.</para>
          <note>
            <title>Charging for Free Software</title>
            <para>How can people build businesses on software if everything
            must be given away? Actually, you're welcome to ask money, but then
            people are paying for your expertise and services, e.g. assurances
            of support that you may give them. You may also provide added
            value, such as attractive packaging and shipping. Only the source
            code itself must be available at nominal cost.</para>
          </note>
          <para>No one company or individual "owns" Linux. It was developed,
          and is still being improved, by thousands of programmers all over the
          world. Some are supported by businesses that make money from their
          work, and some are volunteers who like to help people. Some are
          scientists who need computers to get their work done, and who find it
          convenient to use Linux because they can easily adapt it to do
          exactly what they require to get their research done.</para>
        </section>
        <section id="which-operating-system-is-best">
          <title>Which operating system is best?</title>
          <para>Our consumer culture puts huge stress on having "the best".
          Usually this means wearing some fashionable brand of jeans, or
          driving a fancy car. Obviously this is a very superficial
          measurement, and we have to look deeper when trying to compare
          operating systems.</para>
          <para>It's important to remember that computer science is relatively
          young. I don't think that any operating system has been in continuous
          use for longer than a single human lifespan. At the dawn of the
          computer age, there was a great explosion of diversity, like in the
          Cambrian period in prehistory, when different designs and
          architectures proliferated. This was succeed by a period of
          consolidation, with the result that today, even though the details
          "under the hood" may be very different, a great deal of consensus has
          emerged about the types of services an operating system should
          provide. 
          <footnote>
            <para>This consensus is reflected in 
            <emphasis>standards</emphasis>, such as the 
            <ulink url="http://www.pasc.org/#POSIX"> Portable Operating System
            Interface</ulink> ( 
            <acronym>POSIX</acronym>).</para>
          </footnote></para>
          <mediaobject>
            <imageobject>
              <imagedata fileref="images/operating-joke.png" />
            </imageobject>
          </mediaobject>
          <para>At the moment, the operating systems you're likely to encounter
          on desktops are to some extent interchangeable. Linux, Macintosh OS X
          and Windows all implement 
          <acronym>POSIX</acronym> to some degree. Software that was written to
          make use portable use of the operating system's services may be
          compiled to run on all of them.</para>
          <para>These operating systems can all do the same jobs, and you may
          develop skills that apply to other operating systems on any of them.
          Therefor there is no quick, objective answer to the question as which
          one is "best". You have to forget that one, and ask a better
          question: "Which operating system is best 
          <emphasis>for me</emphasis>?"</para>
          <para>Well, of course that depends on who you are and what you need
          it for. If you're interested in tuXlabs then you probably don't have
          lots and lots of money, and you're probably interested in learning:
          learning about computers, yes, but also education in general. When
          answering this question for yourself, here are two things to keep in
          mind:</para>
          <itemizedlist>
            <listitem>
              <formalpara>
                <title>How does it impact the world I live in?</title>
                <para>The software you choose can influence many aspects of
                your life. For example, you need to ask: "Who controls the
                technology?" If you teach yourself to use a product that
                belongs to some company, you'd better hope that they don't go
                out of business.</para>
              </formalpara>
              <para>Governments are also starting to use computers for tasks
              such as counting votes. During the previous two elections in
              America, there was great controversy about the results turned in
              by Diebold's vote counting machines. Diebold controls the
              software, and expect voters to take the trustworthiness of their
              software on faith. For matters such as this, democracies in the
              digital age must use open source software.</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <formalpara>
                <title>Current technical merit is only one measure</title>
                <para>Even if something is imperfect now, if you can get at it,
                you can make it better and learn in the process.</para>
              </formalpara>
              <para>For example, the open source program called the 
              <application>GIMP</application> (the GNU Image Manipulation
              Program) goes head-to-head with Adobe 
              <application>Photoshop</application>. At the moment, Photoshop
              still comes out pretty far ahead, but it has been under
              continuous development for a decade or more. Does this mean that
              aspiring designers should turn their back on the GIMP? If they
              do, they lose the things that the GIMP already gives them which
              Photoshop doesn't, such as the ability to write extensions in a
              variety of high-level programming languages, and to build on the
              contributions of the entire community of users.</para>
            </listitem>
          </itemizedlist>
        </section>
      </section>
      <section id="what-is-a-distribution">
        <title>What is a distribution?</title>
        <para>In the following text, you'll read about a number of different 
        <emphasis>distributions</emphasis>, e.g. Debian, K12LTSP and RedHat
        Fedora. This is a term that emerged from the open source way of
        gathering and organising software for sharing: a coherent,
        well-maintained, up-to-date collection of software (especially on the
        scale of an operating system) is called a 
        <emphasis>distribution</emphasis>.</para>
        <para>As you saw above, Linux is the source code of an operating system
        being written by hundreds of volunteers who pursue their own goals and
        interests. It uses tools from other projects, such as the GNU project,
        and is used on a very wide range of machines, for widely varying goals.
        From this, you may imagine that it is a hugely complex system, and
        you'd be right. Assembling just the subset of code that is relevant to
        you, and compiling it to run optimally on the hardware that you happen
        to have, is a major undertaking requiring deep skill and experience.
        Keeping your system up to date with changes in disparate parts of the
        whole is a major undertaking in itself.</para>
        <para>In order to have a manageable system, well-understood and
        reasonably easy to customise and keep up to date, groups of users began
        to band together to collect just the right combinations of software,
        and to coordinate this job. Some people built their business around the
        process of gathering, labelling, testing, documenting and marketing
        free software, for example RedHat and SuSE. Some communities assemble
        distributions that conform to their ideals; Debian, for example,
        operates in accordance with a 
        <ulink url="http://www.debian.org/social_contract"> Social
        Contract</ulink> which maintains the same principles of good husbandry
        and mutual cooperation that prompted Richard Stallman to found the Free
        Software Foundation.</para>
        <para>tuXlabs and Wizzy actually make use of no less than 
        <emphasis>four</emphasis> related distributions. 
        <itemizedlist>
          <listitem>
            <para>The classroom server runs a modified K12LTSP distribution,
            and</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>the Wizzy server is based on Whitebox Linux.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>K12LTSP, in turn, is based on RedHat Fedora;</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>and Whitebox Linux is based on RedHat Enterprise.</para>
          </listitem>
        </itemizedlist> In part, the reasons for the variation are historical:
        the Wizzy solution was developed independently of the tuXlab
        project.</para>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section id="where-it-all-began">
      <title>Where it all began</title>
      <section id="academic-computer-science-background">
        <title>Academic computer science background</title>
        <para>The idea of free software, with source code that could be shared
        by everyone, started in academia. In America, it was Richard Stallman
        at MIT, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, who started the ball
        rolling, but the person who accidentally turned it into an avalanche
        was Linus Torvalds, a Finnish university student.</para>
        <mediaobject>
          <imageobject>
            <imagedata fileref="images/stallman.png" />
          </imageobject>
          <caption>Richard Stallman</caption>
        </mediaobject>
        <para>At MIT, Stallman had been part of a community of programmers that
        came to an end when their work was commercialised and access to the
        source code was restricted. To Stallman, this felt like having the air
        he needed to breathe cut off. Because Stallman believed strongly that
        programmers should be able to help one another by sharing their source
        code, he set out to write a complete free operating system. He began
        systematically, though, first setting out to write all the supporting
        tools that an operating system requires to work. This is a mammoth
        task, and in fact they're still busy refining better and better
        tools.</para>
        <para>Linus Torvalds, in Helsinki, wasn't burdened with any such a
        sense of responsibility or thoroughness. He just wanted to make the
        most of the PC he had at home, which had an Intel 80386 
        <acronym>CPU</acronym>. The 80386 contained a memory management unit,
        which was big news at the time. The operating systems he had at his
        disposal didn't take advantage of this and he dearly wanted to use it,
        and so he started to write his 
        <emphasis>own</emphasis> operating system. To do this, he used many of
        the tools created by the GNU project. After months and months of steady
        work, he released a very early version of the kernel that became known
        as Linux to the internet. To his surprise, other people started sending
        him fixes and improvements for his kernel, and eventually he found
        himself managing and coordinating a global community of programmers.
        All of them were using and improving Linux, and building on each
        others' work.</para>
        <mediaobject>
          <imageobject>
            <imagedata fileref="images/linus.png" />
          </imageobject>
          <caption>Linus Torvalds</caption>
        </mediaobject>
        <para>In a sense, the free software community that Stallman had known
        at MIT had risen anew, on a global scale. Their rallying point was a
        system made up of the Linux kernel, and the GNU development
        environment.</para>
      </section>
      <section id="open-source-software">
        <title>Open Source Software</title>
        <para>The first one to think of a name for the kind of software that
        could be shared without restrictions on how you could use it was
        Richard Stallman. He called it Free Software, because he wanted to
        emphasise the freedoms that he valued highly enough to dedicate his
        life to writing a free operating system.</para>
        <para>The 
        <ulink url="http://www.fsf.org"> Free Software
        Foundation</ulink> supports the freedoms of speech, press, and
        association on the internet, the right to use encryption software for
        private communication, and the right to write software unimpeded by
        private monopolies. Stallman formulated a license, the 
        <ulink url="http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html"> GNU Public
        License</ulink>, which uses the mechanism of copyright to protect these
        freedoms, and to add the responsibility of passing them on to other
        users of the software.</para>
        <para>When Linux started to be noticed by business, and when it began
        to be marketed as a serious IT platform, this emphasis on freedom made
        some people uncomfortable. The argument was that people don't run their
        businesses in order to advance someone's freedom of speech --- they run
        their business to make money!</para>
        <para>Instead of emphasising the 
        <emphasis>freedom</emphasis> aspects so dear to Stallman's heart, more
        emphasis was placed on the fact that everyone had access to the source
        code of Linux. The programmer and writer Eric Raymond wrote some 
        <ulink url="http://www.catb.org/~esr/writings/cathedral-bazaar/">
        influential papers</ulink> in which he argued that the Linux style of
        community development produced 
        <emphasis>better software</emphasis> than the proprietary alternative.
        The choice for open source software could be made on a purely pragmatic
        basis. The critical factor, in his view, was the availability of the
        source code, and therefor he coined the term 
        <emphasis>Open Source</emphasis> to describe this kind of
        software.</para>
        <para>The contrast may be summed up in the sentence: "Open source is a
        development methodology; free software is a social movement." 
        <ulink url="http://www.fsf.org/philosophy/free-software-for-freedom.html">

          <acronym>FSF</acronym>
        </ulink></para>
        <para>Neither one of these approaches encompass the whole truth, they
        simply emphasise different aspects of a rich sphere of human endeavour.
        The pragmatic approach taken by tuXlabs in the selection of software
        for inclusion leans more toward the open source side of the debate, but
        the Shuttleworth Foundation's goal of "social innovation" is in line
        with the 
        <acronym>FSF</acronym> philosophy.</para>
        <para>Various other streams exists. The BSD license of the 
        <ulink url="http://www.freebsd.org"> FreeBSD</ulink> project, for
        example, does not specify the responsibilities of the GPL, and allows
        code under the BSD license to be incorporated into proprietary
        software. For many years, for example, the Windows 
        <acronym>TCP/IP</acronym> stack (see 
        <xref linkend="tcp-ip" />) was based on BSD code right up to the period
        of 
        <application>Windows 2000</application>--- perhaps it still is?</para>
      </section>
      <section id="open-source-culture">
        <title>Open Source Culture</title>
        <para>As the open source culture matured, the principles of mutual
        education, self-sufficiency and sharing were applied to many things
        besides software. One of the first projects to bring the wider world of
        culture into the open source community was 
        <ulink url="http://www.gutenberg.org/"> Project Gutenberg</ulink>, a
        project to make available as many as possible public domain and freely
        redistributable texts at no cost. Due to recent changes in American
        legislation (which enables copyright holders to keep works out of the
        public domain forever), this essentially means works created before
        1923. At the moment, there are more than 13,000 books 
        <ulink url="http://www.gutenberg.org/catalog/"> available for
        download</ulink>.</para>
        <para>Another open source project is the 
        <ulink url="http://www.wikipedia.org/"> Wikipedia</ulink>, an online
        encyclopedia read and edited entirely by volunteers. The English
        edition, started in 2001, already has almost half a million articles.
        If your tuXlab includes a Wizzy internet server, the entire Wikipedia
        can be made available on the tuXlab network.</para>
        <para>
        <ulink url="http://www.lessig.org/"> Larry Lessig</ulink>, a law
        professor at Stanford, noticed the need to apply the open source
        principles of collaboration and sharing in other domains besides
        software, and set about crafting a flexible set of licenses that could
        be used to bring music, books, movies and educational material into the
        open source world. Since his project has as a goal the re-establishment
        of a 
        <emphasis>commons</emphasis>, a area for the use of the community as a
        whole, to replace the endangered public domain, these licenses are
        called the 
        <ulink url="http://creativecommons.org/"> Creative
        Commons</ulink> licenses.</para>
        <section id="why-do-people-do-this">
          <title>Why do people do this?</title>
          <para>There are many reasons, but I'll mention only one. Far more
          expensive than the recording of a song, or the writing of a book, is
          the task of promoting, printing and distributing it. Unless this task
          can be handed over to everyone who reads or listens, only large media
          companies are able to afford this cost. A creative commons license
          allows authors to publish work that the media companies are not
          interested in.</para>
        </section>
      </section>
      <section id="open-source-in-education">
        <title>Open Source in education</title>
        <para>Free Software can be a valuable resource in education, and can
        also promote the values of the GNU project, namely freedom and
        cooperation, in schools.</para>
        <para>There are general reasons why all computer users should insist on
        free software. 
        <footnote>
          <para>Source for the following paragraphs: 
          <ulink url="http://www.fsf.org/philosophy/schools.html">
          http://www.fsf.org/philosophy/schools.html</ulink></para>
        </footnote> It gives users the freedom to control their own computers
        --- with proprietary software, the computer does what the software
        owner wants it to do, not what you want it to do. Free software also
        gives users the freedom to cooperate with each other, to lead an
        upright life. These reasons apply to schools as they do to
        everyone.</para>
        <para>But there are special reasons that apply to schools.</para>
        <itemizedlist>
          <listitem>
            <para>First, free software saves money. Even in the richest
            countries, schools are short of money. Free software gives schools,
            like other users, the freedom to copy and redistribute the
            software, so the school system can make copies for all the
            computers they have. This is essential to help close the digital
            divide.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>Secondly, schools should help learners to build a strong
            society after they leave school. They should promote the use of
            free software just as they promote recycling and protecting your
            environment. If schools teach learners about free software, then
            they will use free software after they leave school. This will help
            communities to be more self-reliant, and will make them less
            dependent on big corporations who repatriate their profits to other
            countries.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>Thirdly, free software permits learners to find out how
            software really works. They can go and look at the source code to
            find out how the operations they use were implemented, and
            experiment by changing it.</para>
          </listitem>
        </itemizedlist>
        <para>Proprietary software rejects their thirst for knowledge: it says,
        "The knowledge you want is a secret --- learning is forbidden!" Free
        software encourages everyone to learn. The free software community
        rejects the "priesthood of technology", which keeps the general public
        in ignorance of how technology works; we encourage students of any age
        and situation to read the source code and learn as much as they want to
        know. Schools that use free software will enable gifted programming
        students to advance.</para>
        <section id="resources">
          <title>Resources</title>
          <para>Here are pointers to a few of the organisations and projects
          that work to further the use of free software in education:</para>
          <itemizedlist>
            <listitem>
              <para>The 
              <ulink url="http://www.nl.debian.org/devel/debian-jr/"> Debian Jr.
              Project</ulink> is a custom Debian distribution. It aims to make
              Debian an 
              <acronym>OS</acronym> that children will want to use, by studying
              the needs expressed by the children themselves. Their initial
              focus is on children up to age 8. Once this goal has been
              accomplished, their next target age range is 7 to 12.</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>
              <ulink url="http://www.tux4kids.com/"> Tux4Kids</ulink> provides
              some great software packages for Debian Jr.</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>
              <ulink url="http://wiki.debian.net/?DebianEdu">
              DebianEdu</ulink> is about improving Debian to make it the best
              distribution for educational use.</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Because they believe that free and equal access to
              information technology is important in modern society, the 
              <ulink url="http://www.ofset.org/"> Organisation for Free Software
              in Education and Teaching</ulink> is actively promoting and
              developing free software for schools.</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>
              <ulink url="http://www.schoolforge.net/"> SchoolForge</ulink> is an
              umbrella organisation or a communication channel for different
              groupings with the mutual goal to advance open resources at
              school.</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>The 
              <ulink url="http://sourceforge.net/projects/osie"> Open Source in
              Education Project</ulink> (OSiE) supports and advocates the use of
              GNU/Linux systems in the UK.</para>
              <para>This is just one example of a local project. Others exist
              in 
              <ulink url="http://fsub.schule.de/"> Germany</ulink>, 
              <ulink url="http://www.linuxdidattica.org/"> Italy</ulink>, 
              <ulink url="http://www.laka.lv/"> Latvia</ulink>, 
              <ulink url="http://www.gleducar.org.ar/"> Argentina</ulink>, and
              many other countries across the globe.</para>
            </listitem>
          </itemizedlist>
        </section>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section id="what-does-this-let-us-do">
      <title>What does this let us do?</title>
      <para>Great, now we know what we have. What can we do with it? Three
      things:</para>
      <itemizedlist>
        <listitem>
          <para>We can start bridging the Digital Divide.</para>
          <para>A tuXlab can provide access to information, books, music, news,
          and myriads of other resources. It can also provide new ways to
          communicate with your peers, near and far, and open channels of
          communication to organisations that may be hard to reach because they
          are far away or widely distributed.</para>
          <mediaobject>
            <imageobject>
              <imagedata fileref="images/ditaldivide.png" />
            </imageobject>
          </mediaobject>
          <para>In order to manage this, we must build something sustainable,
          unbreakable and flexible. Instead of leaping ahead, for example by
          accepting an expensive lab that we cannot maintain, with proprietary
          software that we cannot study, we must build steadily from the ground
          up, so that we have a foundation that will last. To do this, we have
          to keep some things in mind:</para>
          <itemizedlist>
            <listitem>
              <para>The components of the tuXlab must be as cheap as possible.
              Use what's available, and make the parts generic and
              interchangeable. Use standards, for example 
              <acronym>TCP/IP</acronym> for networking. (See 
              <xref linkend="tcp-ip" />.)</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>The tuXlab shouldn't require a permanent internet
              connection in order to access cultural goods, and enable
              participation in the culture.</para>
              <para>Especially in South Africa, a high-bandwidth internet
              connection is incredibly expensive. Wireless service providers
              are just starting to appear in the big urban centres, but even
              they cost hundreds of Rands per month, and that's for home
              users.</para>
            </listitem>
          </itemizedlist>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <para>In this way, we foster self-reliance and create local
          expertise, while building an international community.</para>
          <para>In one of his essays, Richard Stallman writes about the
          importance of free software in developing local IT expertise:</para>
          <blockquote>
            <attribution>Richard Stallman, 
            <ulink url="http://www.fsf.org/philosophy/schools.html">
            http://www.fsf.org/philosophy/schools.html</ulink></attribution>
            <para>Free software permits students to learn how software works.
            When students reach their teens, some of them want to learn
            everything there is to know about their computer system and its
            software. That is the age when people who will be good programmers
            should learn it. To learn to write software well, students need to
            read a lot of code and write a lot of code. They need to read and
            understand real programs that people really use. They will be
            intensely curious to read the source code of the programs that they
            use every day.</para>
          </blockquote>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <para>Lastly, we can also save money. While it's essential to spend
          money on education, we have to make sure that the money goes as far
          as possible. By using only free software in tuXlabs, you save money
          in a couple of ways:</para>
          <itemizedlist>
            <listitem>
              <para>There are no software license fees to be paid. The Linux
              operating system is world wide, stable, and FREE.</para>
              <para>In addition, for every Windows software product we have
              included a Linux alternative that looks for all intents the same.
              For example, a word processor (that can read Microsoft word
              document files, incidentally), a spreadsheet, a publisher, an
              HTML editor for creating web pages, a typing tutorial, etc. 
              <footnote>
                <para>This paragraph is from 
                <ulink url="http://wizzy.org.za/article/articleview/4/1/3" />.</para>
              </footnote></para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>By using free software and open file formats that you can
              read without needing expensive software, we save money for the
              community.</para>
              <para>Whether they intend to or not, teachers make their
              learners' families buy proprietary software if they use it at
              school. By using free software that learners can take home, the
              school helps the community to save money.</para>
            </listitem>
          </itemizedlist>
        </listitem>
      </itemizedlist>
    </section>
  </chapter>
  <chapter id="getting-a-lab">
    <title>Getting a lab</title>
    <section id="steps-involved-in-getting-a-lab">
      <title>Steps involved in getting a lab</title>
      <itemizedlist>
        <listitem>
          <formalpara>
            <title>Get in contact</title>
            <para>Contact the tuXlab team to gain information. The telephone
            number is 0860 OS HELP (0860 674 357); the website, from which you
            can download documentation, is 
            <ulink url="http://www.tuXlab.org.za" />. You should also get in
            contact with the tuXlab closest to you, to see how you may assist
            each other.</para>
          </formalpara>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <formalpara>
            <title>Get on the mailing list</title>
            <para>Join the tuXlab mailing list by registering at 
            <ulink url="http://www.slug.org.za" />. You should join both the 
            <emphasis>announce</emphasis> and 
            <emphasis>schools</emphasis> mailing lists.</para>
          </formalpara>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <formalpara>
            <title>Submit questionnaire</title>
            <para>Submit the completed questionnaire by sending a fax to 0860
            674 357. Please complete the questionnaire electronically, or take
            care to write legibly if you fill it out by hand. You may find the
            questionnaire at the 
            <!-- XXX: how to protect ampersands in URLs from being
              turned into entities? -->
            <ulink url="http://tuxlab.org.za/index.php?option=content&amp;task=blogsection&amp;id=30">
            tuXlab page</ulink>.</para>
          </formalpara>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <formalpara>
            <title>Attend your first tuXlab installation</title>
            <para>Attend a tuXlab installation, to gain knowledge of the
            technology platform and installation process. The times and dates
            of installations are announced on the 
            <emphasis>announce</emphasis> mailing list mentioned above.</para>
          </formalpara>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <formalpara>
            <title>Attend tuXlab induction installation; prepare
            proposal</title>
            <para>Register to attend a tuXlab induction session. Prepare
            proposal as well as infrastructure requirements.</para>
          </formalpara>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <formalpara>
            <title>Attend your second tuXlab installation, finalise</title>
            <para>After your second tuXlab installation, you can contact the
            tuXlab team to finalise outstanding requirements as well as await
            final approval.</para>
          </formalpara>
        </listitem>
      </itemizedlist>
    </section>
    <section id="drawing-up-a-business-plan">
      <title>Drawing up a business plan</title>
      <para>In order to qualify as the recipient of a tuXlab, you must have a
      business plan that shows that you will be able to integrate the lab in
      your school's curriculum, that you can muster the resources to keep the
      lab in good operating condition, and that you will be able to involve the
      wider community to benefit from the lab. Look at 
      <xref linkend="business-plan-template" /> for a good starting
      point.</para>
    </section>
    <section id="the-lab-in-community-context">
      <title>The lab in community context</title>
      <section id="clusters-of-schools">
        <title>Clusters of schools</title>
        <para>Schools will be selected in clusters. Through clustering, schools
        are able to jointly plan and prepare for their tuXlabs, and can share
        resources and community support. Clustering is a method of ensuring
        that schools remain self-sufficient in the future.</para>
        <para>A cluster consists of at least three schools. Each cluster will
        form a committee consisting of at least two representatives from each
        cluster school. These cluster committees should meet on a regular basis
        (at least quarterly) to discuss and share ideas, experiences and
        methodologies. Cluster communities should be in a position to setup a
        future Shuttleworth tuXlab with their collaborative knowledge and
        experience.</para>
      </section>
      <section id="volunteers">
        <title>Volunteers</title>
        <para>Open source communities are generally formed by developers,
        administrators and users that freely provide their expertise and time
        to the projects that interest them or that further their way of making
        a living. Contributing to an open source project does not just take the
        form of submitting source code, but rather any activity which benefits
        the community or open source in general. Establishing tuXlabs is
        similar in many respects to an open source software project --- rather
        than developing software, the Shuttleworth Foundation is installing
        labs, but still using the concept of open source volunteerism to
        facilitate this process. Establishing a volunteer group is a daunting
        task; however, with many possible methods to solicit volunteers, it is
        possible.</para>
      </section>
    </section>
  </chapter>
  <chapter id="lab-layout">
    <title>Lab layout 
    <footnote>
      <para>See 
      <ulink url="http://www.shuttleworthfoundation.org/images/stories/docs/tuxlablayout.pdf">
      tuXlab room layout</ulink> from the Shuttleworth Foundation's site.</para>
    </footnote></title>
    <para>Before you carry a lot of computers into a room, there needs to be a
    good deal of preparation. A classroom will need to be modified to include
    special features, such as a lockable cabinet to secure the switch and
    server, and a layout that accommodates the re-arrangement, addition, or
    removal of furniture. Electricity is another consideration: every computer
    needs power, and in order to protect them from power surges, the computers
    need to be on a separate power circuit.</para>
    <para>Security is also an important consideration, and will involve at
    least burglar bars on the windows and an alarm system. The exact security
    measures that should be taken will differ from school to school. Several
    factors should be considered: for example, the known crime rate in the
    area, the isolation of the school, and the affordability of the security
    measures.</para>
    <mediaobject>
      <imageobject>
        <imagedata fileref="images/lablayout.png" />
      </imageobject>
    </mediaobject>
    <section id="security">
      <title>Security 
      <footnote>
        <para>See 
        <ulink url="http://www.shuttleworthfoundation.org/images/stories/docs/infrastructurespecs.pdf">
        Infrastructure and Security</ulink></para>
      </footnote></title>
      <para>Here are some guidelines to consider when selecting a room for a
      tuXlab. They aren't hard and fast rules, and when you look through them,
      you'll notice where there's room for initiative. They should however be
      taken as a baseline to improve upon where there's opportunity.</para>
      <section id="window-security">
        <title>Window security</title>
        <itemizedlist>
          <title>Specifications:</title>
          <listitem>
            <para>Frame: 25mm square metal tubing, bolted to the wall.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>Vertical Bars: 16mm round, 120mm c/c.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>Centre Horizontal Bar: 30mm x 5mm flat bar.</para>
          </listitem>
        </itemizedlist>
        <para>While the above may be used as a guide, the diameter and the
        finish of the bars can be further determined by the school authorities
        and the project manager, as is deemed necessary according to the known
        risk in the area.</para>
      </section>
      <section id="stone-guards">
        <title>Stone guards</title>
        <para>Galvanised metal mesh should be fitted on all outside
        windows.</para>
        <para>The sides of the frame should be closed. For fasteners, use
        tamperproof coach screws with turn-off heads.</para>
        <mediaobject>
          <imageobject>
            <imagedata fileref="images/coach-screw.png" />
          </imageobject>
          <caption>A coach screw. Note the double head. The top part turns off,
          making the screw very hard to remove once it's in.</caption>
        </mediaobject>
      </section>
      <section id="non-concrete-ceiling-security">
        <title>Non-concrete ceiling security</title>
        <para>Wherever possible, the room identified for the lab should have a
        concrete floor above it. This means that in schools with two levels, it
        is preferable to select a room on the lower level. Where this is not
        possible and the ceiling is of hardboard or something equally flimsy,
        the ceiling should be covered with wire mesh or razor wire. In order to
        notice tampering, it's probably best for the wire to be 
        <emphasis>beneath</emphasis> the ceiling.</para>
      </section>
      <section id="door-security">
        <title>Door security</title>
        <para>Since the gate is the key security feature, it should be made of
        steel of substantial thickness. In some cases, an internal security
        cage with steel gate or double steel gates are advised, depending on
        finances and risks. Methods of securing and fitting of locks should be
        strategic to make breaking in as difficult as possible.</para>
        <para>Specifications:</para>
        <itemizedlist>
          <listitem>
            <para>Frame: 50mm x 50mm x 5mm. Angle Iron bolted to the wall on 3
            sides. 
            <mediaobject>
              <imageobject>
                <imagedata fileref="images/angleironbracket.png" />
              </imageobject>
              <caption>Angle iron and bracket</caption>
            </mediaobject></para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>Bolts should be welded shut, or tamperproof.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>The fitting of two barrel type locks covered with metal
            plates is advised. 
            <mediaobject>
              <imageobject>
                <imagedata fileref="images/barreltypelock.png" />
              </imageobject>
            </mediaobject></para>
          </listitem>
        </itemizedlist>
      </section>
      <section id="alarm-system">
        <title>Alarm system</title>
        <para>A security alarm system with at least two room sensors is
        required. If the lab has a ceiling, a sensor in the ceiling is advised.
        The alarm must be monitored around the clock, with armed response in
        the event of an alarm event.</para>
        <para>The number and location of sensors should be determined with
        input from security companies.</para>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section id="infrastructure">
      <title>Infrastructure</title>
      <section id="specifications-for-desktops">
        <title>Specifications for desktops</title>
        <para>The design and length of desktops in most cases is determined by
        the number of computers and learners, and the size of the room. If
        there is room, it's advisable to install desktops for future expansion
        of computer network at once, depending on the finances
        available.</para>
        <para>New desktops should be postform, minimum 28mm thick or similar
        stock, with a melamine/Formica/varnished finish. They must be 900mm
        deep, to accommodate the keyboard, screen, and cabling without crowding
        and with proper ventilation. Depending on the chair height and the age
        of the learners, the top of the desktops should be 700 to 720mm from
        the floor. It is important for the desks to be at an appropriate height
        for the learners who will be using the lab, as an awkward posture can
        impair concentration.</para>
        <mediaobject>
          <imageobject>
            <imagedata fileref="images/gat-v-draad.png" />
          </imageobject>
          <caption>For every workstation, the desktops have a hole that
          collects and passes through the network and power cables to the
          trunking under the desks.</caption>
        </mediaobject>
      </section>
      <section id="wall-brackets-and-centre-aisle-framework">
        <title>Wall brackets and centre aisle framework</title>
        <para>Desktops should be mounted on 40mm x 40mm x 5mm angle iron
        brackets. They should only have legs if brackets are not a option, as
        legs tend to get in the way of learners sharing workstations. Each
        bracket must be a minimum of 750mm x 650mm. The brackets must be no
        less than 1000mm apart and each must be fixed with at two heavy duty
        rawlbolts, one of which must be as high up as possible.</para>
        <para>Where appropriate, provision should be made for ducting along
        which to run wiring and network cabling underneath the work surfaces,
        with holes in the desktops to allow the cables to reach the computers
        and peripherals.</para>
        <para>Where possible, the length of the desk should be chosen to allow
        1200mm of space for each computer.</para>
      </section>
      <section id="specification-for-server-cabinet">
        <title>Specification for server cabinet</title>
        <para>If it's at all possible, put the server in a separate room, where
        it's out of sight and locked away permanently. All that is necessary is
        for a network fly-lead to reach from the server to the network switch.
        Otherwise, a well ventilated, lockable cabinet should be built.</para>
        <para>This cabinet should be at least 900mm square inside, as it will
        house the classroom server, another server acting as internet gateway,
        and a modem. The cabinet will be set away from the wall to allow for
        ventilation, since a pair of servers will generate a good deal of
        heat.</para>
        <note>
          <itemizedlist>
            <listitem>
              <para>A wall mounted steel mesh cabinet can also be
              installed.</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Dimensions for steel mesh cage: LxDxH: 1200mm x 750mm x
              720mm.</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Height: 720mm Includes a 32mm x 900mm Postform Top.</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Doors: 2 doors 450mm wide is required on the 900mm
              section.</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Suitable locks must be fitted so that the doors cannot be
              easily opened.</para>
            </listitem>
          </itemizedlist>
        </note>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section id="electrical-requirements">
      <title>Electrical requirements</title>
      <section id="specification-of-electrical-wall-points">
        <title>Specification of electrical wall points</title>
        <para>It's important that all electrical work be done by a qualified
        technician, who should issue a certificate of compliance to the school
        upon completion of the work.</para>
        <para>There must be enough 15 amp 3-point plugs to accommodate each
        computer on a separate plug, and in addition, there should be enough
        plugs for peripherals as well. A good rule of thumb is to have a double
        plug for each computer point. For safety reasons, electrical wiring
        must be in conduit piping below the work surfaces, but Surfix-type
        cable and wall mounted sockets are also acceptable and should be
        installed below desktops.</para>
        <mediaobject>
          <imageobject>
            <imagedata fileref="images/surfixcable.gif" />
          </imageobject>
          <caption>This is a cross section of a Surfix cable.</caption>
        </mediaobject>
        <mediaobject>
          <imageobject>
            <imagedata fileref="images/wallsocket.gif" />
          </imageobject>
        </mediaobject>
        <para>To avoid power spikes and dips, which are extremely damaging to
        workstations, the computer lab must be on its own electrical circuit.
        The circuit must be broken into segments, each adequate to accommodate
        the computers and peripherals on that segment. Air conditioners, or
        other equipment that use a lot of electricity, must not share the
        circuit with the computers.</para>
        <mediaobject>
          <imageobject>
            <imagedata fileref="images/onwettige-plug.png" />
          </imageobject>
          <caption>Don't use extension leads or multi-plugs. They can cause
          shorts and power spikes that may damage your equipment.</caption>
        </mediaobject>
        <para>Electrical wires to an island worktop in the middle of the room
        must preferably be under the floor or must have suitable ducting.
        Otherwise, it is a perfect certainty that someone will fall over the
        wires, breaking their neck and bringing all the workstations within
        reach crashing to the floor.</para>
      </section>
      <section id="subdistribution-electrical-board">
        <title>Sub-distribution electrical board</title>
        <para>The sub-distribution board should be fitted with earth leakage
        protection, if required. A maximum of five wall plug sockets should be
        connected to one circuit, and each circuit should be protected by a 20
        amp circuit breaker.</para>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section id="network-infrastructure">
      <title>Network infrastructure</title>
      <section id="switch-cabinet">
        <title>Switch cabinet</title>
        <para>Where required, a 4U cabinet will be installed to house a minimum
        of two 24-port switches 
        <footnote>
          <para>See 
          <xref linkend="networking" /> for an explanation of what switches
          do.</para>
        </footnote>, leaving some space for expansion. Server equipment is a
        bit like bricks: they're all the same basic shape. One switch is 1U (or
        unit) big, so a 4U cabinet has room for four of them. Computer
        suppliers will know what you're talking about.</para>
        <para>The placing of the switch cabinet should determined by the lab
        layout, and to minimise the required cable lengths, it should be placed
        in a central position. If installed in the lab, the cabinet should be
        1000mm above or below desktops.</para>
        <mediaobject>
          <imageobject>
            <imagedata fileref="images/switch.gif" />
          </imageobject>
          <caption>Cabinet to house switches</caption>
        </mediaobject>
      </section>
      <section id="network-trunking">
        <title>Network trunking</title>
        <para>Network cabling must run in 40mm x 40mm square trunking. If
        financial considerations require that network cabling share the
        trunking of the electrical cabling, it is imperative for the
        electricity to be switched off at the sub-distribution board whenever
        the trunking is opened during network troubleshooting.</para>
        <mediaobject>
          <imageobject>
            <imagedata fileref="images/trunking.gif" />
          </imageobject>
          <caption>Trunking running under the desks.</caption>
        </mediaobject>
        <para>Ensure that 10mm holes are made in trunking for the cable ends to
        reach their workstations. Allow at least 500mm of free network cable
        per computer, and loop and tie the extra length neatly. Network cables
        that are too short can be just as irritating as socks that are two
        sizes too small, and moreover lead to high blood pressure and increased
        risk of cardiac arrest. Cabling to an island desktop must preferably be
        under the floor or must have suitable ducting that will ensure the
        safety of pupils who have to walk over these cables.</para>
      </section>
    </section>
  </chapter>
  <chapter id="thin-client-computing">
    <title>Thin-client computing</title>
    <para>A tuXlab computer laboratory consists of a classroom full of 
    <emphasis>thin client</emphasis> workstations communicating with a classroom
    server. The specific implementation of thin client computing used in
    tuXlabs is discussed in 
    <xref linkend="linux-terminal-server-project" />.</para>
    <section id="what-is-thin-client-computing">
      <title>What is Thin Client Computing?</title>
      <para>
      <emphasis>Thin client</emphasis> and 
      <emphasis>fat client</emphasis> (also called "thick" or "rich" client) are
      mostly marketing terms for different configurations of computer. A thin
      client asks a central server to do most of its processing, and keeps as
      little hardware and software as possible on the workstation side.
      Ideally, the user of a thin client should have only a screen, keyboard,
      mouse and enough computing power to handle display and network
      communications --- you don't even need (or want) a hard drive. The less
      you have, the less there can go wrong.</para>
      <para>A fat client does as much processing as possible itself and only
      passes data required for communications and storage on to the server. A
      standalone PC is the typical fat client with which everyone is
      familiar.</para>
      <mediaobject>
        <imageobject>
          <imagedata fileref="images/fatclient.gif" />
        </imageobject>
        <caption>Fat client</caption>
      </mediaobject>
      <para>A thin client may be a software program executing on a generic PC,
      or it may be a hardware device, called a terminal, designed to provide
      only user input and display functions. Because old PCs (whether retired,
      written off, obsolete or just out of fashion) are easier to find than
      specialised thin client hardware, tuXlabs uses them as thin clients, with
      the appropriate software. Because they don't do much work themselves, the
      hardware requirements for these "old" PCs are very basic. Since every
      client in a thin client network asks a central server to do its work, all
      the individual workstations look the same: they all share the same
      server, and they all behave exactly like the server would if you were
      using it directly.</para>
      <para>In addition, although everyone who uses the lab can have their own
      computing environment stored on the server, with their own files,
      desktop, and so on, the individual workstations can't get viruses or be
      misconfigured by curious learners --- there simply isn't anything to
      configure! The thin client doesn't have enough brains to get
      confused.</para>
      <para>This means that the lab computers are trivial to keep up and
      maintenance is restricted to the server in the back room.</para>
      <para>Thin clients are cheaper and require less administration than fat
      clients. On the other hand, they tend to require far greater network
      bandwidth, as display data will probably need to be passed to the thin
      clients. They can't do a single thing on their own --- for each and every
      action, they need to talk to the server. This means that a server for a
      room full of thin clients must be much more capable than a server used by
      fat clients.</para>
      <para>One of the advantages that this configuration entails, is that all
      the software resides on the server, and so you only have to upgrade it
      once. In a fat client configuration, every workstation has its own copies
      of the software, and so any upgrade needs to be rolled out to every
      workstation.</para>
      <mediaobject>
        <imageobject>
          <imagedata fileref="images/thinclient.gif" />
        </imageobject>
      </mediaobject>
    </section>
    <section id="linux-terminal-server-project">
      <title>Linux Terminal Server Project</title>
      <para>The Linux Terminal Server Project ( 
      <acronym>LTSP</acronym>) is a configuration of Linux that allows you to
      connect lots of low-powered thin client terminals to a Linux server. The 
      <acronym>LTSP</acronym> provides a simple way to utilise low cost
      workstations as either graphical or character-based terminals on a
      GNU/Linux server.</para>
      <para>K12LTSP is based on RedHat Fedora Linux and the 
      <acronym>LTSP</acronym> terminal server packages (see 
      <xref linkend="about-the-k12ltsp-distribution" /> for more detail). It's
      easy to install and configure. It's distributed under the GNU General
      Public License. That means it's free and it's based on Open Source
      software.</para>
      <para>Once installed, K12LTSP lets you boot (see 
      <xref linkend="glossary" />) diskless workstations from an application
      server.</para>
    </section>
    <section id="how-the-lab-works">
      <title>How the lab works</title>
      <para>There is a shorter version of this in 
      <xref linkend="thin-client-startup-process" />.</para>
      <orderedlist>
        <listitem>
          <formalpara>
            <title>"Power On Self Test" ( 
            <acronym>POST</acronym>)</title>
            <para>When you turn on the workstation, it will go through its
            Power On Self Test ( 
            <acronym>POST</acronym>; for this and other acronyms, see 
            <xref linkend="glossary" />).</para>
          </formalpara>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <formalpara>
            <title>Find the boot 
            <acronym>ROM</acronym></title>
            <para>During the self test, the 
            <acronym>BIOS</acronym> will search for expansion ROMs. The network
            card contains an Etherboot boot-ROM, which is an expansion 
            <acronym>ROM</acronym>. The 
            <acronym>BIOS</acronym> will detect the 
            <acronym>ROM</acronym> on the network card (it doesn't know about
            the network card, it only notices the 
            <acronym>ROM</acronym>).</para>
          </formalpara>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <formalpara>
            <title>Boot</title>
            <para>Once the 
            <acronym>POST</acronym> is complete, execution will jump into the
            Etherboot code.</para>
          </formalpara>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <formalpara>
            <title>Find the network card</title>
            <para>The Etherboot code will scan for a network card. Once it
            detects the card, the card will be initialized.</para>
          </formalpara>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <formalpara>
            <title>
            <acronym>DHCP</acronym> request</title>
            <para>The Etherboot code will then broadcast a 
            <acronym>DHCP</acronym> request to the local network. The request
            will include the 
            <acronym>MAC</acronym> address of the network card.</para>
          </formalpara>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <formalpara>
            <title>
            <acronym>DHCP</acronym> request received</title>
            <para>The 
            <command>dhcpd</command> daemon on the server will see the broadcast
            request from the workstation, and look in its configuration file
            for an entry that matches the 
            <acronym>MAC</acronym> address of that workstation.</para>
          </formalpara>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <formalpara>
            <title>
            <acronym>DHCP</acronym> request reply</title>
            <para>The 
            <command>dhcpd</command> daemon will construct a reply packet,
            containing several pieces of information. This packet will be sent
            back to the workstation. The reply information includes:</para>
          </formalpara>
          <itemizedlist>
            <listitem>
              <para>an IP address for the workstation,</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>the netmask setting (see 
              <xref linkend="glossary" />) for the local network,</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>the pathname of the kernel to download (this is a
              filesystem path on the server),</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>the pathname of the root filesystem (see 
              <xref linkend="glossary" />) to mount as the root of the client
              filesystem,</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>optional parameters to be passed to the kernel, via the
              kernel command line.</para>
            </listitem>
          </itemizedlist>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <formalpara>
            <title>Boot 
            <acronym>ROM</acronym> configures 
            <acronym>TCP/IP</acronym> interface</title>
            <para>The Etherboot code will receive the reply from the server,
            and it will configure the 
            <acronym>TCP/IP</acronym> interface in the network card with the
            parameters that were supplied. Once this is done, the client
            computer has an IP address on the network.</para>
          </formalpara>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <formalpara>
            <title>Download the kernel using 
            <acronym>TFTP</acronym></title>
            <para>Using 
            <acronym>TFTP</acronym> (Trivial File Transfer Protocol), the
            Etherboot code will contact the server and begin downloading the
            kernel.</para>
          </formalpara>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <formalpara>
            <title>Kernel downloaded</title>
            <para>Once the kernel has been completely downloaded to the
            workstation, the Etherboot code will place the kernel into the
            correct location in memory.</para>
          </formalpara>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <formalpara>
            <title>Control passes to kernel</title>
            <para>Control is then passed to the kernel. The kernel will
            initialise the entire system and all of the peripherals that it
            recognizes.</para>
          </formalpara>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <formalpara>
            <title>Mount temporary boot filesystem as 
            <acronym>RAM</acronym> disk</title>
            <para>This is where the fun really begins. Tacked onto the end of
            the kernel is a filesystem image. This is loaded into memory as a 
            <acronym>RAM</acronym> disk, and temporarily mounted as the root
            filesystem. A kernel command line argument of 
            <literal>root=/dev/ram0</literal> tells the kernel to mount the
            image as the root directory.</para>
          </formalpara>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <formalpara>
            <title>Kernel boot sequence calls 
            <literal>linuxrc</literal> shell script (before the normal boot
            sequence starts)</title>
            <para>Normally, when the kernel is finished booting, it will launch
            a program called 
            <command>init</command>. But, in this case, we've instructed the
            kernel to load a shell script (see 
            <xref linkend="glossary" />) instead. We do this by passing 
            <literal>init=/linuxrc</literal> on the kernel command line.</para>
          </formalpara>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <formalpara>
            <title>Identify kernel module for network card</title>
            <para>The 
            <command>linuxrc</command> script begins by scanning the PCI bus,
            looking for a network card. For each PCI device it finds, it does a
            lookup in the 
            <filename>/etc/niclist</filename> file, to see if it finds a match.
            Once a match is found, the name of the NIC driver module is
            returned, and that kernel module is loaded. For ISA cards, the
            driver module MUST be specified on the kernel command line, along
            with any IRQ or address parameters that are required.</para>
          </formalpara>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <formalpara>
            <title>Load kernel module for network card</title>
            <para>Once the network card has been identified, the 
            <command>linuxrc</command> script will load the kernel module that
            supports that card.</para>
          </formalpara>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <formalpara>
            <title>
            <command>linuxrc</command> makes 
            <acronym>DHCP</acronym> query</title>
            <para>
            <command>dhclient</command> will then be run, to make 
            <emphasis>another</emphasis> query from the 
            <acronym>DHCP</acronym> server. We need to do this separate
            user-space query. We cannot depend on the query that comes from
            Etherboot, because it gets swallowed up when the kernel uses it.
            The kernel will also ignore any 
            <acronym>NFS</acronym> server that might have been specified in the
            root-path. This is important if you want the 
            <acronym>NFS</acronym> server to be different from the 
            <acronym>TFTP</acronym> server.</para>
          </formalpara>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <formalpara>
            <title>Configure 
            <literal>eth0</literal></title>
            <para>When 
            <command>dhclient</command> gets a reply from the server, it will
            run 
            <filename>/etc/dhclient-script</filename>, which will take the
            information retrieved, and configure the 
            <literal>eth0</literal> interface.</para>
          </formalpara>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <formalpara>
            <title>Mount the root filesystem from the server via 
            <acronym>NFS</acronym></title>
            <para>Up to this point, the root filesystem has been a 
            <acronym>RAM</acronym> disk. Now, the 
            <command>linuxrc</command> script will mount a new root filesystem
            via 
            <acronym>NFS</acronym>. The directory that is exported from the
            server is typically 
            <filename>/opt/ltsp/i386</filename>. The new filesystem can't just
            be mounted as 
            <filename>/</filename> immediately. It must first be grafted into
            the local filesystem by mounting it, typically on the path 
            <filename>/mnt</filename>. Then, the client can do a 
            <command>pivot_root</command>. 
            <command>pivot_root</command> will swap the current root filesystem
            for a new filesystem. When it completes, the 
            <acronym>NFS</acronym> filesystem will be mounted on 
            <filename>/</filename>, and the old root filesystem will be mounted
            on 
            <filename>/oldroot</filename>.</para>
          </formalpara>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <formalpara>
            <title>Hand off to the normal 
            <command>init</command> program (non-LTSP boot sequence
            continues)</title>
            <para>Once the mounting and pivoting of the new root filesystem is
            complete, we are done with the 
            <command>linuxrc</command> shell script and we need to invoke the
            real 
            <command>init</command> program. 
            <note>
              <para>Note: from this point, all file paths (except those
              starting with 
              <filename>/oldroot</filename>, of course) refer to files that are
              served from the server via 
              <acronym>NFS</acronym>.</para>
            </note></para>
          </formalpara>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <formalpara>
            <title>
            <command>init</command> processes 
            <filename>/etc/inittab</filename></title>
            <para>
            <command>init</command> will read the 
            <filename>/etc/inittab</filename> file and begin setting up the
            workstation environment.</para>
          </formalpara>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <formalpara>
            <title>
            <acronym>LTSP</acronym> starts in runlevel 2</title>
            <para>
            <command>init</command> works in terms of 
            <emphasis>runlevels</emphasis>. A runlevel has a number, and
            specifies a set of services that should be available while the
            system is running in that runlevel. The 
            <acronym>LTSP</acronym> workstation starts in runlevel 2. That is
            set by the 
            <literal>initdefault</literal> line in the 
            <filename>inittab</filename> file.</para>
          </formalpara>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <formalpara>
            <title>Run 
            <command>rc.local</command></title>
            <para>One of the first items in the 
            <filename>inittab</filename> file is the 
            <command>rc.local</command> command that will be run while the
            workstation is in the 
            <literal>sysinit</literal> state.</para>
          </formalpara>
          <orderedlist>
            <listitem>
              <formalpara>
                <title>
                <command>rc.local</command> creates a 
                <acronym>RAM</acronym> disk for volatile data during
                bootup.</title>
                <para>The 
                <command>rc.local</command> script will create a 1MB 
                <acronym>RAM</acronym> disk to contain all of the things that
                need to be written to or modified in any way.</para>
              </formalpara>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <formalpara>
                <title>
                <acronym>RAM</acronym> disk mounted as 
                <filename>/tmp</filename></title>
                <para>The 
                <acronym>RAM</acronym> disk will be mounted as the 
                <filename>/tmp</filename> directory. This directory exists in
                order to hold files that need to be written during the boot
                process. We don't want to write to these files on the hard
                disk, because then we'll change them for all other clients as
                well, and the changes pertain only to our client while it's
                booting.</para>
              </formalpara>
              <para>Any files that need to be written will actually exist in
              the 
              <filename>/tmp</filename> directory. On the hard disk of the
              server, there are only symbolic links pointing to these
              files.</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <formalpara>
                <title>The 
                <filename>/proc</filename> filesystem is mounted.</title>
                <para>This is a virtual filesystem that exposes information
                about all the currently running processes as a hierarchy of
                textfiles that may be read exactly as any other file on
                disk.</para>
              </formalpara>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <formalpara>
                <title>Network swap enabled</title>
                <para>If the workstation is configured to swap over 
                <acronym>NFS</acronym>, the 
                <filename>/var/opt/ltsp/swapfiles</filename> directory will be
                mounted as 
                <filename>/tmp/swapfiles</filename>. Then, if there isn't a
                swap file for this workstation yet, it will be created
                automatically. The size of the swap file is configured in the 
                <filename>lts.conf</filename> file. For more detail about this
                file, see 
                <xref linkend="troubleshooting-reference" />.</para>
              </formalpara>
              <para>The swap file will then be enabled, using the 
              <command>swapon</command> command.</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <formalpara>
                <title>Configure loopback interface</title>
                <para>The loopback network interface is configured. This is the
                networking interface that has 
                <literal>127.0.0.1</literal> as its IP address.</para>
              </formalpara>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <formalpara>
                <title>Mount 
                <filename>/home</filename></title>
                <para>If LOCAL_APPS is enabled (see below), then the 
                <filename>/home</filename> directory will be mounted, so that
                running applications can access the users' home
                directories.</para>
              </formalpara>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <formalpara>
                <title>Create 
                <filename>/tmp</filename></title>
                <para>Several directories are created in the 
                <filename>/tmp</filename> filesystem for holding some of the
                transient files that are needed while the system is running.
                Directories such as:</para>
              </formalpara>
              <orderedlist>
                <listitem>
                  <para>/tmp/compiled</para>
                </listitem>
                <listitem>
                  <para>/tmp/var</para>
                </listitem>
                <listitem>
                  <para>/tmp/var/run</para>
                </listitem>
                <listitem>
                  <para>/tmp/var/log</para>
                </listitem>
                <listitem>
                  <para>/tmp/var/lock</para>
                </listitem>
                <listitem>
                  <para>/tmp/var/lock/subsys</para>
                </listitem>
              </orderedlist>
              <para>will all be created.</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <formalpara>
                <title>Configure X Windows</title>
                <para>The X Windows system will now be configured. In the 
                <filename>lts.conf</filename> file, there is a parameter called
                XSERVER. If this parameter is missing, or set to "auto", then
                an automatic detection will be attempted. If the workstation
                has a PCI video card, then we will get the PCI Vendor and
                Device id, and do a lookup in the 
                <filename>/etc/vidlist</filename> file.</para>
              </formalpara>
              <para>If the card is supported by XFree86 31.X, the 
              <command>pci_scan</command> routine will return the name of the
              driver module. If it is only supported by XFree86 32.3.6, 
              <command>pci_scan</command> will return the name of the X server
              to use. The 
              <command>rc.local</command> script can tell the difference because
              the older 33.3.6 server names start with 
              <literal>XF86_</literal>.</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <formalpara>
                <title>Generate XF86Config</title>
                <para>If XFree86 34.x is used, then the 
                <command>/etc/rc.setupx</command> script will be called to build
                an XF86Config file for X4. If XFree86 35.3.6 is used, then 
                <command>/etc/rc.setupx3</command> will be called to build the
                XF86Config file, based on entries in the 
                <filename>/etc/lts.conf</filename> file.</para>
              </formalpara>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <formalpara>
                <title>
                <command>rc.local</command> resumes, 
                <filename>start_ws</filename> created</title>
                <para>When the 
                <command>rc.setupx</command> script is finished, it will return
                to 
                <command>rc.local</command>. Then the 
                <command>/tmp/start_ws</command> script will be created. This
                script is responsible for starting the X server.</para>
              </formalpara>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <formalpara>
                <title>Configure 
                <command>syslogd</command></title>
                <para>The 
                <filename>/tmp/syslog.conf</filename> file will be created. This
                file tells the 
                <command>syslogd</command> daemon where to send logging
                information (this may be any host on the network). Any program,
                including the kernel, that wants to record information for the
                purposes of monitoring, auditing, debugging or later reference
                can make use of 
                <command>syslogd</command>, which sees to it that this
                information is written to a file, and that the logged
                information is eventually cleaned up. 
                <tip>
                  <para>The syslog host is specified in the 
                  <filename>lts.conf</filename> file. There is a symbolic link
                  from 
                  <filename>/etc/syslog.conf</filename> to the 
                  <filename>/tmp/syslog.conf</filename> file.</para>
                </tip></para>
              </formalpara>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <formalpara>
                <title>Start 
                <command>syslogd</command></title>
                <para>The 
                <command>syslogd</command> daemon is started, using the config
                file created in the previous step.</para>
              </formalpara>
            </listitem>
          </orderedlist>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <formalpara>
            <title>
            <command>init</command> resumes, changes to 
            <emphasis>default</emphasis> runlevel</title>
            <para>Control is then passed back to 
            <command>init</command>, which will look at the 
            <literal>initdefault</literal> entry to determine which runlevel to
            enter. As of 
            <literal>lts_core-2.37</literal>, the value of 
            <literal>initdefault</literal> is 2.</para>
          </formalpara>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <formalpara>
            <title>What the different runlevels do</title>
            <para>A runlevel of 2 will cause init to run the 
            <command>set_runlevel</command> script which will read the 
            <filename>lts.conf</filename> file and determine what runlevel the
            workstation will run in. 
            <tip>
              <para>The standard runlevels for 
              <acronym>LTSP</acronym> are 3, 4 and 5.</para>
            </tip></para>
          </formalpara>
          <variablelist>
            <varlistentry>
              <term>3</term>
              <listitem>
                <para>This will start a shell. This is very useful for
                debugging the workstation.</para>
              </listitem>
            </varlistentry>
            <varlistentry>
              <term>4</term>
              <listitem>
                <para>This will run one or more Telnet sessions in character
                mode. This is great if you are just replacing old serial
                terminals.</para>
              </listitem>
            </varlistentry>
            <varlistentry>
              <term>5</term>
              <listitem>
                <para>GUI mode. This will bring up X windows, and send an XDMCP
                query to the server, which will bring up a login dialogue box
                to let you log into the server. You will need a display manager
                listening on the server, such as XDM, GDM or KDM.</para>
              </listitem>
            </varlistentry>
          </variablelist>
        </listitem>
      </orderedlist>
    </section>
    <section id="benefits">
      <title>Benefits</title>
      <section id="easy-maintenance">
        <title>Easy maintenance</title>
        <para>If a user reconfigures a workstation in a fat client computer
        lab, all the other users of that workstation will have to cope with
        these changes. This means that if someone inadvertently sets the
        workstation to use black type on a black background, for example, then
        no-one will be able to see what's going on.</para>
        <para>In contrast, in a thin client lab, every user has their own
        files, their own email, and their own desktop environment that they can
        change to their liking without influencing anyone else, all stored on
        the classroom server. A configuration mistake like the above will
        inconvenience only themselves. 
        <footnote>
          <para>
            <ulink url="http://wizzy.org.za/article/articlestatic/5/1/2/" />
          </para>
        </footnote></para>
      </section>
      <section id="cheap-hardware">
        <title>Cheap hardware</title>
        <para>Most of the equipment in a computer lab are workstations for
        learners to use. There may be one or two printers, network switches and
        a server, but they are far outnumbered by between 20 and 40 client
        workstations.</para>
        <para>In a tuXlab, these can all be really old, used,
        previous-generation computers. This is because the demands on these
        machines is so slight that almost anything will do. All those stacks of
        old computers everywhere that no one knows what to do with are suddenly
        useful, and saving schools vast amounts of cash that they would
        normally have to outlay on relatively new equipment so they can run
        contemporary software.</para>
        <para>The thin client paradigm also means that requirements for
        uniformity among terminals is relaxed. As long as they conform to a
        couple of basic requirements (network boot, SVGA graphics card, enough 
        <acronym>RAM</acronym>) it doesn't matter if they have idiosyncratic
        hardware. Only the server configuration needs to be maintained.
        Heterogeneous hardware doesn't make life difficult for the
        admin.</para>
        <para>The thin-client network in the lab ensures that each terminal, no
        matter what its own computing characteristics, behaves with all the
        speed and capability of the server, so each user has an experience of
        top quality, smooth, fast computing. Unfortunately, this does mean that
        if some of your client workstations are powerful, modern machines, they
        may not be fully utilised in a default tuXlab configuration, as they
        will still be letting the server do all the work.</para>
      </section>
      <section id="less-theft">
        <title>Less theft</title>
        <para>In a tuXlab, the most accessible hardware is also the easiest to
        replace and the hardest to use outside the lab. A tuXlab client
        workstation on its own, without the classroom server, is more or less
        useless. It's too bulky for a doorstop, and it can't run modern
        software. It doesn't even have a hard drive. 
        <footnote>
          <para>
            <ulink url="http://wizzy.org.za/article/articlestatic/5/1/2/" />
          </para>
        </footnote></para>
      </section>
      <section id="mobile-desktops">
        <title>Mobile desktops</title>
        <para>As the terminals only serve to display a session from the
        classroom server, it doesn't matter which one you use. If one breaks
        while you've using it, you can move to the next one, log on, and pick
        up where you left off. If someone is using the workstation where you
        were working, go to another one and log in there to regain access to
        your desktop.</para>
      </section>
      <section id="data-easy-to-back-up">
        <title>Data easy to back up</title>
        <para>All the data in a tuXlab resides on the disk array of the
        classroom server. Instead of having to backup 20 or 40 individual hard
        drives, it's possible to backup only one, and still get a complete
        backup of everyone's data.</para>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section id="drawbacks">
      <title>Drawbacks</title>
      <para>Every solution will have some drawbacks, and a tuXlab is no
      exception. I'll just mention a few in passing.</para>
      <variablelist>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>Unreal Tournament will be lethargic or lag in response
          rate</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>Graphics-intensive applications such as games will not
            perform well, as all the display information will have to be pushed
            over the network by the server. This is hundreds of times slower
            than driving a local graphics card. Playing action games, however,
            is not a goal of the tuXlab project.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>All the clients run the same 
          <acronym>OS</acronym></term>
          <listitem>
            <para>Since it's really only one instance of Linux serving all the
            desktops and applications, all the clients in the lab will
            necessarily offer a Linux environment. It is possible for the
            server to run software such as Wine (which enables many Windows
            programs to run under Linux) or VMWare (which allows the server to
            run instances of other operating systems), but in these cases the
            underlying system will still be Linux, and the server will still be
            doing all the work.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>Single point of failure</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>While it's very convenient that the thin-client workstations
            are interchangeable and that you can access your desktop from
            anywhere, it does mean that a catastrophic failure of the server
            will put 
            <emphasis>all</emphasis> client workstations out of
            commission.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
      </variablelist>
    </section>
    <section id="hardware">
      <title>Hardware</title>
      <section id="minimum-specifications">
        <title>Minimum specifications</title>
        <variablelist>
          <varlistentry>
            <term>Server</term>
            <listitem>
              <para>
              <emphasis role="strong">Memory</emphasis>--- The server should
              have 2GB 
              <acronym>RAM</acronym> or more (512MB for the base system, and
              50MB for each additional client). As long as you're using it all
              up, more 
              <acronym>RAM</acronym> means more speed (it doesn't help to have 
              <acronym>RAM</acronym> that you don't use). Too little 
              <acronym>RAM</acronym> will bring your server to a crawl as it
              starts swapping memory to the hard drive. If you run out of
              memory, performance will be unacceptable.</para>
              <para>
              <emphasis role="strong">Hard drive</emphasis>--- SCSI is faster
              than IDE: We've seen 
              <acronym>LTSP</acronym> servers slow to a crawl when more than 10
              clients are running from IDE drives. SCSI drives are better
              equipped to handle the multiple read/write requests.</para>
              <para>
              <emphasis role="strong">Network</emphasis>--- Your server will
              have at least one Ethernet card to create a private network ( 
              <literal>192.168.0.x</literal>). This card connects to a switch
              for terminals. If there is a school network to which you need to
              connect, or if the school has a internet connection via the
              server, it will have a second Ethernet card, which will get an IP
              address on the second network.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>
          <varlistentry>
            <term>Clients</term>
            <listitem>
              <para>
              <emphasis role="strong">Memory</emphasis>--- Client workstations
              should have at least 32MB of 
              <acronym>RAM</acronym>. Clients aren't that dependent on swap
              space for extra memory capacity, since memory usage on them is
              reasonably constant because they don't execute applications: they
              only display them.</para>
              <para>
              <emphasis role="strong">Hard drive</emphasis>--- Client
              workstations should not have hard drives.</para>
              <para>
              <emphasis role="strong">Network</emphasis>--- Each client
              workstation should have one network card with a boot 
              <acronym>ROM</acronym> to enable booting from the network.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>
          <varlistentry>
            <term>Switch</term>
            <listitem>
              <para>An Ethernet hub is not acceptable (see 
              <xref linkend="switches-hubs" />), it's too slow for network boot
              and 
              <acronym>NFS</acronym>. Having a fast Ethernet switch will make
              your life better and more colorful.</para>
              <para>The number of ports on the switch must be enough for your
              clients and server. If you have more than 24 NICs, 2 or more
              12-port/16-port fast Ethernet switches are recommended. The
              client ports should be 100 megabit, and there should be a gigabit
              port for the server. Since all clients get their display from the
              server, a slow link to the server would be a bottleneck for the
              whole lab.</para>
              <mediaobject>
                <imageobject>
                  <imagedata fileref="images/switch-front-blinkenlights.gif" />
                </imageobject>
                <caption>The front panel of the switch shows a light for every
                network cable that's been plugged in. The light shows whether
                the link is up, whether there is traffic and what its speed
                is.</caption>
              </mediaobject>
              <mediaobject>
                <imageobject>
                  <imagedata fileref="images/switch-cables.gif" />
                </imageobject>
                <caption>The cables from the workstations all terminate at the
                switch. If you don't label them, they get very hard to tell
                apart!</caption>
              </mediaobject>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>
        </variablelist>
      </section>
      <section id="things-to-look-out-for">
        <title>Things to look out for</title>
        <variablelist>
          <varlistentry>
            <term>Monitors</term>
            <listitem>
              <para>The display size should be at least 15", and the monitor
              must be capable of SVGA video modes. It should also be compatible
              with the video card of the client.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>
          <varlistentry>
            <term>Uniform equipment</term>
            <listitem>
              <para>If you use the same equipment throughout your tuXlab, it
              becomes easier to buy in bulk and to swap out components. It also
              makes it easier for tuXlabs to assist each other with skills and
              equipment.</para>
              <para>Heterogeneous boxes, in comparison, are harder to keep
              running, and more likely to be "throw-away" --- not worth trying
              to resurrect. As long as they don't cost you anything, this is
              worth it, but you have to guard against them becoming a drain on
              your time and resources.</para>
            </listitem>
          </varlistentry>
        </variablelist>
      </section>
      <section id="sources-for-second-hand-equipment">
        <title>Sources for second hand equipment</title>
        <para>Locally, FreeCom supplies tested refurbished computers. Because
        of the high volume of hardware required by the large number of tuXlabs
        installed, the Shuttleworth Foundation has procured the client
        workstations from international distributors such as Computer Aid.
        Other workstations have been donated by private industry.</para>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section id="thin-client-configuration">
      <title>Thin Client configuration</title>
      <para>While there is little to do for the installation of the thin client
      workstations, there are a couple of things you can pay attention
      to.</para>
      <variablelist>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>Network cards</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>All the client computers need to get a network card with
            space for a boot 
            <acronym>PROM</acronym> (see 
            <xref linkend="glossary" />), so that they can start looking for
            the server on the classroom network as soon as they are switched
            on. The server also needs a network card, and it needs to be a fast
            one (gigabit Ethernet), as the link between the server and the
            switch is ten times quicker than the link between the switch and
            the client workstations.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>Boot PROMs</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>Depending on the network cards you managed to get, the
            correct Etherboot image may need to be written to the network
            cards. The 
            <ulink url="http://drbl.sourceforge.net/"> Diskless Remote Boot in
            Linux</ulink> project has made available an 
            <ulink url="http://www.k12os.org/modules.php?op=modload&amp;name=News&amp;file=article&amp;sid=46&amp;mode=thread&amp;order=0&amp;thold=0">
            Etherboot NIC Detection Disk</ulink> which can help you to determine
            what you need to write to the card.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>Dual-booting</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>The 
            <acronym>BIOS</acronym> in the client workstations normally needs to
            be configured to boot from the network. To do this, watch the
            workstation screen after turning the power on --- for a couple of
            seconds, the 
            <acronym>BIOS</acronym> will display a notice that you may press a
            key (such as 
            <keycap>DEL</keycap> or 
            <keycap>F8</keycap>, depending on the 
            <acronym>BIOS</acronym>) to enter setup mode. This will enable you
            to specify where the computer should look for boot records during
            startup; for example on a 
            <acronym>CD</acronym>, a floppy disk, a hard disk, or the network
            card. In the event that you have a relatively capable workstation
            with a hard drive, you may want to boot the workstation as a
            standalone computer from time to time. To do this, you may
            configure the 
            <acronym>BIOS</acronym> to look for a boot record on a floppy disk
            before trying the network card.</para>
            <para>One kind of scenario where this may be useful, is where you
            have an existing computer lab with software installed at each
            workstation. Boot from hard disk to access the standalone
            workstations, and boot from the network to have a tuXlab! It is
            even possible for the standalone workstations to access the tuXlab
            network, and to use the classroom server as a file server, and the
            Wizzy server as an internet proxy. Since a tuXlab is implemented
            using standard protocols, this will work no matter what operating
            system is installed on the workstation computers.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>Other resources</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>This cookbook can do no more than scratch the surface. Some
            of the other resources regarding thin-client computing available on
            the web include:</para>
            <itemizedlist>
              <listitem>
                <para>
                  <ulink url="http://drbl.sourceforge.net/redhat/"> Diskless
                  Remote Boot in Linux (DRBL) for Redhat 8.0, 9, Fedora Core 1,
                  2, Mandrake 9.2, 10</ulink>
                </para>
              </listitem>
              <listitem>
                <para>
                <ulink url="http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/Diskless-root-NFS-HOWTO.html">
                Root over 
                <acronym>NFS</acronym> clients &amp; server HOWTO</ulink>, if
                your workstations have disks, and you don't want to delegate
                processing to the classroom server.</para>
              </listitem>
              <listitem>
                <para>
                <ulink url="http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/Network-boot-HOWTO/index.html">
                Network Boot and Exotic Root HOWTO</ulink> This document
                explains how to quickly setup a Linux server to provide what
                diskless Linux clients require to get up and running, using an
                IP network. It is based on the Diskless-HOWTO, the
                Diskless-root-NFS-HOWTO, the Linux kernel documentation, the
                Etherboot project's documentation, the Linux Terminal Server
                Project's homepage, and the author (Brieuc Jeunhomme)'s
                personal experience.</para>
              </listitem>
            </itemizedlist>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
      </variablelist>
    </section>
  </chapter>
  <chapter id="software-components">
    <title>Software components</title>
    <para>A tuXlab includes both 
    <xref linkend="open-source-educational-software" /> as well as office tools
    and web browsers (see 
    <xref linkend="applications" />). At its core, however, it consists of the
    server software that runs the classroom server and the Wizzy internet proxy
    server.</para>
    <section id="k12ltsp-classroom-server">
      <title>K12LTSP classroom server</title>
      <section id="about-the-k12ltsp-distribution">
        <title>About the K12LTSP distribution</title>
        <para>A tuXlab classroom server is based on the K12LTSP distribution,
        with some configuration changes and additional software
        packages.</para>
        <para>
        <ulink url="http://k12ltsp.org/contents.html"> K12LTSP</ulink> is based
        on RedHat Fedora Linux and the work of the 
        <acronym>LTSP</acronym>. It's easy to install and configure. It's
        distributed under the GNU General Public License. That means it's free
        and it's based on Open Source software.</para>
        <para>This is quite a mouthful, so I'll unpack the terms one by
        one.</para>
        <itemizedlist>
          <listitem>
            <para>The 
            <emphasis>
              <acronym>LTSP</acronym>
            </emphasis> is the Linux Terminal Server Project. This project
            assembles all the software components that are necessary for a
            computer to act as a fat server for a network of thin clients, and
            provides the configuration necessary for the server to function as
            such.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>RedHat Fedora Linux is the free distribution packaged by
            RedHat, Inc. The K12LTSP team has added an option to the RedHat
            installation menu, so that installing a classroom server is as
            simple as choosing the first installation option and answering some
            questions.</para>
          </listitem>
        </itemizedlist>
        <para>The K12LTSP distribution tries to make it as easy as possible for
        you. It is a regular Fedora distro with an option to install 
        <acronym>LTSP</acronym> right there in the setup screen. When
        installing, the 
        <acronym>LTSP</acronym> option is the first item on the menu, added
        above the default Workstation, Server and Custom options. This means
        that you don't have to mess around with the configuration files until
        you've had a chance to see what it is they do, and by then you'll
        probably only need to tweak them a little.</para>
        <para>The 
        <acronym>LTSP</acronym> server defaults to an IP gateway and firewall
        when two Ethernet cards are present. This will only be the case in
        tuXlabs that are permanently online, which will usually not be the
        case. Normally, the Wizzy server will be the gateway, as all tuXlabs
        with internet access use a Wizzy server.</para>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section id="wizzy-server">
      <title>Wizzy server</title>
      <para>A Wizzy server can be used to provide a managed internet access
      solution for a tuXlab. Currently, a Wizzy server is an extra to a tuXlab
      install. The Shuttleworth Foundation may award a Wizzy server to a school
      with a tuXlab if the school demonstrates that it is making good use of
      the lab. Wizzy is a project of Andy Rabagliati, a techno-philanthropist
      who has been wiring rural schools for cheap internet connectivity for
      many years now.</para>
      <para>The software (like K12LTSP) is based on RedHat Linux, currently
      version 8.0. Whereas K12LTSP is based on RedHat Fedora, Wizzy is an
      adapted version of 
      <ulink url="http://www.whiteboxlinux.org/"> Whitebox Linux</ulink>, itself
      a straight recompile from source RPMs of 
      <ulink url="http://www.redhat.com/software/rhel/"> RedHat Enterprise
      Linux</ulink>. Many extra packages have been added, all under the GPL
      license.</para>
      <para>It performs the duties of dialup manager, firewall, mailserver
      (IMAP mailserver XXX), web cache, and authentication server (LDAP
      authentication server XXX). The Wizzy server does normal dialup via a
      telephone line, but it can also do 
      <acronym>ADSL</acronym> and wireless. It would be possible to do all these
      things on the classroom 
      <acronym>LTSP</acronym> server as well, but a custom mail arrangement
      would still be necessary: while the tuXlab is not connected to the
      internet, mail needs to be delivered to an remote server. Another reason
      to separate the internet gateway from the classroom server, is that it
      might not be such a good idea for the classroom server to have a
      public-facing IP address. All machines exposed to the internet are
      vulnerable to compromise, and the classroom server contains all the user
      data.</para>
      <para>The way in which the Wizzy server sends and receives email is
      customised to work with an intermittent internet connection. It utilises
      a protocol that was more commonly used in the days before permanent
      internet connections became common, namely UUCP (the Unix-to-Unix Copy
      Protocol). UUCP is suited to queueing data to be copied to remote hosts
      for delivery when a network connection is established.</para>
      <para>Wizzy has the goal of providing all its services via UUCP, in order
      to accommodate high latency connections where there may be long
      disconnected periods. This type of connection includes situations where a
      connection is established by dialling up at night when phone rates are
      low, as well as situations without any dialup access at all.</para>
      <para>In cases without dialup access, the connection is made by carrying
      the data across by hand! 
      <footnote>
        <para>See 
        <ulink url="http://wizzy.org.za/article/articleview/18/1/3" /></para>
      </footnote> The transfer medium may be, for example, a USB memory stick, a
      mobile wireless-enabled laptop, or a USB hard drive. The transfer medium
      will contain newly fetched data and the queued requests for new web
      pages, as well as mail waiting to be sent. This is not a stated goal of
      the tuXlabs project, so if your school wishes to pursue this route, you
      may have to contact Wizzy to work out the details.</para>
      <mediaobject>
        <imageobject>
          <imagedata fileref="images/usbenabling.png" />
        </imageobject>
        <caption>A wireless antenna that plugs into a USB plug on a laptop or a
        PC.</caption>
      </mediaobject>
      <para>If you do have access to a telephone line for the tuXlab, the
      internet is dialled up only at night when the rates are low (Telkom South
      Africa provides a particular phone account that allows a single 12 hour
      phone call for R7). In this period, approximately 250MB of email and web
      material can be downloaded onto the Wizzy server in the classroom. In the
      morning, after the phone has been hung up, the learners can access the
      downloaded material as though they had a direct web connection. Their
      experience of email and web during the school day is almost identical to
      a very fast online web experience, with the exception that newly
      requested pages will only be available by the next morning. 
      <footnote>
        <para>See 
        <ulink url="http://wizzy.org.za/article/articleview/4/1/3" /></para>
      </footnote></para>
      <para>Normally, if you want to connect to the internet, you need a
      telephone line and a modem, a satellite uplink, or some other means of
      tapping into 'the Net'. Unfortunately, in South Africa, the necessary
      telecommunications infrastructure is not always there to tap into. Around
      a third of South Africans don't have a phone line, and roughly 88% of
      schools in the Northern Province lack an internet connection. 
      <footnote>
        <para>See 
        <ulink url="http://wizzy.org.za/article/articleview/18/1/3" /></para>
      </footnote></para>
      <section id="benefits-of-a-wizzy-server">
        <title>Benefits of a Wizzy server</title>
        <para>Every student can have email and web access without the cost of
        being online. This is true even for schools that don't have a
        telephone.</para>
        <para>While the delay in retrieving web pages is a necessary
        consequence of the Wizzy solution, it has a desirable side effect in
        that it helps educators to manage web access. Since anybody with an
        internet connection can publish on the Web, there is an absolute ocean
        of complete trash that threatens to engulf the unwary browser. Groping
        through this mess just wastes school resources. Automated solutions to
        this issue have been proposed, often by companies that market filtering
        products. Apart from the fact that these products suffer from both
        false positives and negatives, blocking material unnecessarily and
        letting undesirable material through, it shifts responsibility from the
        teacher to a software product.</para>
        <para>The Wizzy solution believes that it's better to let the teacher
        decide what is appropriate. This also allows the teacher to stay in
        touch with the material accessed by the learners he or she is teaching.
        Teachers can explicitly choose the web material that learners can
        access and definitively reject web material that is not appropriate.
        They can also set the Wizzy server to monitor websites, retrieving new
        versions as they become available.</para>
        <para>Because the school is never in direct connection with the
        internet, but rather has its web content delivered upon request,
        students cannot "surf" the internet. However, since all the web sites
        that have been requested by the IT administrator of the school are
        delivered and stored on the school's server, the students can "surf"
        this local web cache as though it were a miniature internet.</para>
        <para>These specially chosen web sites can easily number in the
        hundreds. They can be updated daily; and should a new site be desired
        on a regular basis, the school would have to wait only one day for the
        delivery to begin. The "surfing" of this miniature internet within the
        tuXlab costs nothing, and is fast enough to give you whiplash, since
        all communication takes place within the tuXlab, between the server and
        the client computers. 
        <footnote>
          <para>See 
          <ulink url="http://wizzy.org.za/article/articlestatic/19/1/2/" /></para>
        </footnote></para>
        <para>tuXlabs aims to give educators the tools to help learners explore
        computers and the Wizzy server allows them to put reasonable limits on
        learners' access, guiding them towards independent use of the computer
        as they mature. tuXlabs does not make any judgement regarding what
        content is regarded as appropriate, but is there to help provide the
        tools and documentation to help educators with these decisions. The
        focus is more on the "guidance" aspect, rather than restriction, as the
        former is a positive activity while the latter is negative.</para>
        <para>The Wizzy solution integrates seamlessly with existing labs.
        Normally, no additional equipment is required to have this kind of
        internet lab.</para>
      </section>
      <section id="batch-mail-delivery-solutions">
        <title>Batch mail delivery solutions</title>
        <para>First, a recap of the basics. 
        <footnote>
          <para>See 
          <ulink url="http://wizzy.com/wizzy/mail.html" /></para>
        </footnote> How does mail from far away get to your account, say: 
        <literal>somebody@myschool.wizzy.org.za</literal>?</para>
        <itemizedlist>
          <listitem>
            <para>The remote mail client probably punts the mail to a smarter
            host --- the 
            <acronym>SMTP</acronym> (Simple Mail Transfer Protocol) server of
            their 
            <acronym>ISP</acronym> (Internet Service Provider). This will have
            been configured by the sender when first setting up their mail
            client.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>Their 
            <acronym>ISP</acronym> mail server will ask a local nameserver (i.e.
            
            <acronym>DNS</acronym> server) for the 
            <acronym>MX</acronym> (Mail Exchange) records of 
            <literal>myschool.wizzy.org.za</literal>. These are the IP
            addresses of machines listed as handling mail for this domain. The 
            <acronym>ISP</acronym> will try to deliver directly to the
            lowest-numbered 
            <acronym>MX</acronym> record in the list, via 
            <acronym>SMTP</acronym>. If it cannot connect, it will try other 
            <acronym>MX</acronym> hosts, usually in ascending order.</para>
            <para>The 
            <acronym>DNS</acronym> service for the tuXlab and Wizzy networks is
            provided by 
            <ulink url="http://www.schoolnet.org.za/"> SchoolNet</ulink></para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>With this step, or via intermediate 
            <acronym>MX</acronym> hosts, the mail will eventually land on the
            target host --- the lowest-numbered 
            <acronym>MX</acronym>, often your local 
            <acronym>ISP</acronym>. Most of the time, your 
            <acronym>ISP</acronym> will deliver all the mail for that domain
            into a single mailbox, and leave you to figure out the rest.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>The reason why the 
            <acronym>ISP</acronym> can't easily do more, is due to the fact that
            
            <acronym>SMTP</acronym> is not authenticated to specific users, and
            therefore relies on name services --- fixed IP addresses --- to
            route messages to their destination. This makes it impractical for
            intermittently connected machines, that dial up nightly and are
            dynamically assigned an IP address by the 
            <acronym>ISP</acronym>, to function as mail exchangers.</para>
            <para>One way to preserve the 
            <acronym>SMTP</acronym> protocol across dynamic IP addresses is to
            batch 
            <acronym>SMTP</acronym> commands in a file, and pass the file over a
            separate transport. 
            <footnote>
              <para>See 
              <ulink url="http://wizzy.com/wizzy/batch.html" /></para>
            </footnote> Batched 
            <acronym>SMTP</acronym> is similar to normal 
            <acronym>SMTP</acronym>, but, because it is being written to a
            file, all responses are ignored. (Normally, an 
            <acronym>SMTP</acronym> connection is a conversation of commands and
            responses between the sending and the receiving servers, so that
            the sender may probe for the capabilities of the receiver, confirm
            successful delivery, etc.) Fortunately, this is not critical: as
            long as all the responses are known to be 
            <literal>OK</literal>, everything works.</para>
            <para>The Wizzy solution is to write messages to a file, use UUCP
            over 
            <acronym>TCP/IP</acronym> as an authenticated transport from the 
            <acronym>SMTP</acronym> server of the 
            <acronym>ISP</acronym> (in this situation, Andy's Cape Town Wizzy
            server will be the 
            <acronym>SMTP</acronym>), and unpack the batch at the final
            destination (the tuXlab). The batched 
            <acronym>SMTP</acronym> format is described in 
            <ulink url="http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc2442.html"> RFC 2442 --- The
            Batch 
            <acronym>SMTP</acronym> Media Type</ulink></para>
            <para>Wizzy uses 
            <command>exim</command> as the 
            <acronym>SMTP</acronym> agent at both ends, and Taylor (GNU) UUCP as
            the middle transport.</para>
          </listitem>
        </itemizedlist>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section id="applications">
      <title>Applications</title>
      <section id="openoffice-org">
        <title>OpenOffice.org</title>
        <para>OpenOffice is a full office suite, intended to measure up to and
        surpass Microsoft Office. This is what its original author, Marco
        B&#195;&#182;rries, intended when he started StarDivision to create the
        software that would eventually become OpenOffice in 1984, when he was
        just sixteen. He called it StarOffice. By the time Sun Microsystems
        bought Marco's company in 1999, over 25 million copies of Star Office
        had been sold to customers who needed platform independence (see 
        <xref linkend="glossary" />) and an alternative to Microsoft.</para>
        <para>In July 2000, Sun released most of the Star Office source code
        (about 7.5 million lines of C++) to the stewardship of the open source
        community, under the 
        <ulink url="http://www.fsf.org"> Free Software Foundation</ulink>'s LGPL
        license. The community project has as its goal: "To create, as a
        community, the leading international office suite that will run on all
        major platforms and provide access to all functionality and data
        through open-component based APIs and an XML-based file format." The
        open APIs (see 
        <xref linkend="glossary" />) and file formats are turning OpenOffice
        into a platform in its own right, supporting projects such as 
        <ulink url="http://opengroupware.org/"> OpenGroupware</ulink>, which
        aims to provide an open alternative to Microsoft's Exchange and
        SharePoint products.</para>
        <para>This is in direct contrast to Microsoft's approach, who have
        always used the fact that only their own software could easily use
        their document formats to keep customers locked in, in effect reserving
        the Office platform to Windows applications.</para>
        <para>OpenOffice includes a word processor, spreadsheet, interfaces to
        many databases, a presentation builder, and a diagramming tool. It is
        now able to decode most variants of Microsoft Office document formats,
        but although its StarBasic macro language is syntactically identical to
        Visual Basic, OpenOffice cannot execute Visual Basic scripts. Although
        these are preserved upon conversion, the scripts need to be adjusted to
        use the OpenOffice API before they can be used.</para>
        <para>OpenOffice can be used to teach all the basic computer skills
        required to enter the job market, and as the design paradigms of the
        software is very close to Microsoft Office, the skills learnt are
        readily transferable.</para>
      </section>
      <section id="mozilla">
        <title>Mozilla</title>
        <para>In 1998, Netscape Communications 
        <ulink url="http://www.catb.org/%7Eesr/writings/cathedral-bazaar/cathedral-bazaar/ar01s13.html">
        released the source code of its Navigator web browser software as open
        source</ulink>, and the Mozilla project was born. Netscape released
        their software as open source in order to compete with Microsoft, who
        were bundling Internet Explorer with every copy of Windows sold.
        Netscape hoped that the cooperation of thousands of developers around
        the world would create a better product than Internet Explorer. It did,
        but it took years, and Netscape fell by the wayside. The code lived on,
        though.</para>
        <para>In 2004, six years after the start of the project, the non-profit
        Mozilla Foundation that was created to coordinate the project finally
        released version 1.0 of the Firefox browser. Earlier versions of the
        software had been in use for years, but at last it was deemed ready for
        a high-profile release to the general public.</para>
        <para>The full Mozilla suite includes far more than the web browser. It
        includes Thunderbird, a mail client with address books and calendaring
        support, and Composer, a web page editor. For developers, it includes
        Venkman, a Javascript debugger, and the 
        <acronym>DOM</acronym> Inspector, a wonderful tool for interactively
        exploring the enormous, intricate internal structure of complicated web
        pages.</para>
        <para>The code base has been painstakingly restructured to get as much
        use out of it as possible. So, for instance, all the Mozilla
        applications use the same rendering engine, called Gecko, to layout and
        display HTML pages on screen. This is critical, since it is extremely
        hard work to implement the standards that govern web page structure and
        display correctly. Mozilla has the best support for the HTML and CSS
        standards of any browser out there. In the past, Microsoft has used
        Internet Explorer's idiosyncratic and incomplete implementation of web
        standards to coerce people to craft their web pages to look good in
        Internet Explorer at the expense of other browsers. For the web to
        become a dependable platform, however, developers have to be able to
        build on solid public standards that don't leave them at the mercy of
        any company's prosperity.</para>
        <para>As with OpenOffice, the Mozilla project is becoming a platform
        for 
        <ulink url="https://addons.update.mozilla.org/extensions/">
        extensions</ulink> from the community.</para>
        <section id="id30">
          <title>Security</title>
          <para>As the internet has become more popular, viruses, spam, spyware
          and trojans have grown to be an enormous problem. These are all
          caused by programs that are received and executed on computers
          without the knowledge or consent of their users. How can this
          happen?</para>
          <para>In general, there are two ways for this to happen:</para>
          <itemizedlist>
            <listitem>
              <para>You may have given implicit permission without intending to
              do so;</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>The unwanted program may be exploiting errors or bugs in
              some program in order to insinuate themselves into it, so that it
              can execute with the permissions of the original program.</para>
            </listitem>
          </itemizedlist>
          <para>Firefox and Thunderbird try to protect you as far as possible
          by setting up reasonable defaults. Nothing in an email message is
          executed unless you explicitly run it yourself. And execution of
          Javascript in web pages can be switched off at any point. Firefox
          also allows you to grant or revoke specific permissions (e.g. opening
          popups, hiding the status bar, or changing images) to
          Javascript.</para>
          <para>The Mozilla suite also affords you a measure of protection from
          the second case. While Internet Explorer has access to practically
          the entire running system of a Windows PC via a powerful integration
          technology called ActiveX, Firefox and Thunderbird are far more
          restricted. It also helps to be running on Linux, where the user of
          the web browser will generally not be able to damage the operating
          system, and the system administration account is never used to run
          user applications.</para>
        </section>
      </section>
    </section>
  </chapter>
  <chapter id="networking">
    <title>Networking</title>
    <section id="why-network">
      <title>Why network?</title>
      <para>On its own, a computer can be a fascinating tool. However, when you
      connect many computers together using a network, worlds of possibility
      open up. In a network, better use is made of all the connected resources,
      because they can be 
      <emphasis>shared</emphasis>. For example, if there is one printer,
      everyone can use it. It is also possible to concentrate resources where
      they will have the greatest benefit --- all the additional memory added
      to the server becomes available for running the programs of 
      <emphasis>all</emphasis> the clients.</para>
      <para>The advantages of networking only 
      <emphasis>start</emphasis> with economies in hardware expenditure. Another
      aspect, one that is really far more exciting, is the opening up of
      communication channels among lab users, and, if you can reach the
      internet, with the world at large. Only some of the lab users will be
      interested in computers for their own sake. Many more users will be
      writing essays, asking questions, drawing pictures or practising skills
      using the educational programs offered in a tuXlab. With a network, they
      can easily share documents, discuss them, and have a record of
      discussions for the learners that come after them.</para>
      <section id="printing">
        <title>Printing</title>
        <para>A tuXlab will usually have only one or two printers for the lab
        as a whole. Since everyone will use these, it's worthwhile to get the
        best printers you can afford: as long as they're on a network, everyone
        will benefit.</para>
        <para>Depending on the make of printer, it may be connected to the
        network switch with a network cable, or it may be connected directly to
        a print server (which may be the classroom server) with a parallel
        cable.</para>
        <para>Printing in a tuXlab will be managed using 
        <acronym>CUPS</acronym>, the Common Unix Printing System. It provides a
        web interface (accessible at 
        <literal>http://printserver:631/</literal>) where you may check the
        status of printers and print jobs, print test pages, and so on. ( 
        <literal>printserver</literal> is the hostname of the printer or the
        server to which the printer is connected.)</para>
      </section>
      <section id="email">
        <title>Email</title>
        <para>Email has been called the "killer application" of the internet.
        It's the most ubiquitous and accessible way to communicate with people
        across the world.</para>
        <para>Not all tuXlabs have email. Generally, you'll only have email if
        a Wizzy server is installed along with the classroom application
        server. The Wizzy server functions as a post office and a stand-in, or
        a proxy, for the world wide web.</para>
        <para>If your tuXlab is equipped with a Wizzy server, you'll be able to
        send mail to each other and to other schools or mailing lists all over
        the world.</para>
        <para>XXX: How does Wizzy handle delivery of 
        <emphasis>local</emphasis> email? Does that also go via the Cape Town
        Wizzy server, and take a day for the round trip? Probably not ..</para>
      </section>
      <section id="file-sharing">
        <title>File sharing</title>
        <para>Without a network, transferring files from one computer to
        another is a difficult and inconvenient process. You have to copy the
        file onto some storage medium (such as a floppy disk or a 
        <acronym>CD</acronym>) and carry it over to the other computer
        yourself. Floppy disks tend to break or become silently corrupted. 
        <acronym>CD</acronym>s can only be written once, and are relatively
        expensive. Even rewritable 
        <acronym>CD</acronym>s are slow to use, and even more expensive.
        Finally, all kinds of disk drives have many moving parts, and they have
        to deal with a disk platter that spins hundreds of times per second.
        They all break eventually.</para>
        <mediaobject>
          <imageobject>
            <imagedata fileref="images/floppysilent.png" />
          </imageobject>
          <caption>Watch out for this one, it only looks innocent.</caption>
        </mediaobject>
        <mediaobject>
          <imageobject>
            <imagedata fileref="images/floppyviolent.png" />
          </imageobject>
          <caption>If you're lucky, the floppy will let you know when it's
          broken.</caption>
        </mediaobject>
        <para>It's much better to shift the job to network cables. Once laid, a
        cable will keep on working forever. It doesn't cost anything to
        transfer data over it, and it's very fast.</para>
        <para>In the thin-client configuration of a tuXlab, the reality is even
        better. None of the client workstations store any data, so the need for
        them to have internal hard disk drives has also been eliminated. The
        only computer in a tuXlab that must contain at least one disk drive is
        the classroom server. Every user of the tuXlab --- in other words,
        every person with a username and password to login at a workstation ---
        has some storage space on the classroom server's hard drive allocated
        to them, where they may store their data. They all reach their data via
        the network.</para>
        <para>This means that making a copy of a file for another user comes
        down to making a copy elsewhere on the same disk drive. Similarly, for
        files that many people need to share without necessarily needing their
        own copies to modify, this means that everyone may access the exact
        same copy of the file. In a non-networked situation, every single
        workstation would need their own copy of such files. This is the case
        for all the operating system and application software, for
        example.</para>
      </section>
      <section id="servers-and-clients">
        <title>Servers and clients</title>
        <para>Without a network, every workstation needs to be sufficient unto
        itself, and to provide all the storage space and processing power that
        a user is likely to need. With the introduction of a network, it
        becomes feasible to differentiate between computers, and equip them
        according to their roles. For a tuXlab, this means removing everything
        that can break or costs money from the client workstations --- their
        role is only to receive data over the network, and to display the
        user's desktop, sent from the server. The server does all the work, so
        it can have all the memory, disk space and computing power that you can
        afford. Everyone benefits from money spent on the server.</para>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section id="equipment">
      <title>Equipment</title>
      <para>In this section, we have a look at the different kinds of equipment
      that we need to set up a network.</para>
      <para>There are many different kinds of computer networks, with different
      strengths and weaknesses. Some might be designed for the maximum data
      transfer speed, some to minimise costs, and others to make it as easy as
      possible to connect computers to one another. In the case of tuXlabs, we
      need a really fast network, because everything displayed by the client
      workstations needs to be sent from the server over the network. We also
      need a standard network that allows any kind of computer or peripheral to
      be added to the network easily.</para>
      <para>In order to meet these criteria, tuXlab uses an 
      <emphasis>Ethernet</emphasis> network with 
      <emphasis>category 5</emphasis> network cabling (CAT-5, for short).</para>
      <para>In an Ethernet, data packets are broadcast onto the network for all
      connected devices to receive. The devices themselves then examine the
      data packet to determine whether it was meant for them. If so, they
      process it; otherwise, they drop it on the floor and it vanishes.</para>
      <para>The name "Ethernet" comes from the ancient Greek concept of
      "ether". According to them, this was the fluid that filled the spaces
      between stars. Of course there isn't any such thing, but they made it up
      because surely there couldn't be 
      <emphasis>nothing</emphasis> between stars, could there? In an Ethernet,
      as far as the communicating computers are concerned, there aren't any
      cables either. Of course there really are cables, but you don't have to
      send a data packet down a specific cable to a specific computer. You just
      entrust it to the "ether", and all computers get the packet.</para>
      <section id="switches-hubs">
        <title>Switches / Hubs</title>
        <para>There are different ways of wiring an Ethernet local area
        network. One way is to simply lay coaxial cable from one computer to
        the next, until all the computers are connected, forming a 
        <emphasis>ring</emphasis>. This is relatively simple, but the resulting
        network is slow, both because of the electrical properties of the
        coaxial cable, as well as because all the data has to share a single
        cable.</para>
        <para>Since a tuXlab needs more speed, a 
        <emphasis>star</emphasis> topology is used instead 
        <emphasis>diagram</emphasis>. In this configuration, a single CAT-5
        cable connects each workstation to a central node. This central node
        acts as an interchange. In a simple network where speed isn't critical,
        this node can be a 
        <emphasis>hub</emphasis>. This is a device with ports where you can
        plug in many network cables; usually 8, 16 or 24. A hub is very chatty:
        it simply repeats all the data coming in on one port on all the other
        ports. This way, the data is sure to reach the computer it's meant for.
        Unfortunately, it also reaches all the other computers, taking up
        precious network bandwidth.</para>
        <para>Instead of a hub, you can also use a 
        <emphasis>switch</emphasis>. It looks just like a hub, but it's
        cleverer about routing the traffic that moves across it. In short, it
        remembers which computer is where, so that when it receives a data
        packet meant for a particular computer, it sends it only to the port
        where that computer is connected.</para>
        <para>Switches can be linked together to form one bigger switch. For
        example, if you have a lab with 25 workstations, you can link together
        two 16-port switches using a fly-lead. See 
        <xref linkend="switch-cabinet" />.</para>
        <mediaobject>
          <imageobject>
            <imagedata fileref="images/switch-flyleads.gif" />
          </imageobject>
          <caption>Every switch has a couple of special high-speed ports. These
          are used to link the switch to the server, or to link switches to
          each other.</caption>
        </mediaobject>
      </section>
      <section id="cabling">
        <title>Cabling</title>
        <para>Category 5 cable, commonly known as CAT-5, is an unshielded
        twisted pair type cable designed for high signal integrity. The actual
        standard defines specific electrical properties of the wire, but it is
        most commonly known as being rated for its Ethernet capability of 100
        MBit/s. Its specific standard designation is EIA/TIA-568. CAT-5 cable
        typically has three twists per inch of each twisted pair of 24 gauge
        copper wires within the cable. Another important characteristic is that
        the wires are insulated with a plastic (FEP) that has low dispersion;
        that is, the dielectric constant of the plastic does not depend greatly
        on frequency. Special attention also has to be paid to minimising
        impedance mismatches at connection points. In practise, this means
        that, when you attach connectors to the cable ends, you shouldn't
        untwist more of the cable than absolutely necessary.</para>
      </section>
      <section id="building-the-network">
        <title>Building the network</title>
        <para>When laying CAT-5 cable, you need a crimping tool, RJ-45 jacks,
        and boots for the jacks.</para>
        <para>The crimping tool is a clever piece of work. It combines the
        functions of a cable-cutter, wire-stripper, and a special grip
        specifically designed to fix the RJ-45 jack to the cable. I'll explain
        them as I go through the steps of preparing a cable.</para>
        <mediaobject>
          <imageobject>
            <imagedata fileref="images/netwerkkabelplug.png" />
          </imageobject>
          <caption>An RJ-45</caption>
        </mediaobject>
        <mediaobject>
          <imageobject>
            <imagedata fileref="images/crimptool.png" />
          </imageobject>
          <caption>A crimping tool</caption>
        </mediaobject>
        <section id="cutting-the-cables">
          <title>Cutting the cables</title>
          <para>The first thing you need to do, is to cut the cable into the
          appropriate lengths, using the crimping tool's cable-cutter. To do
          this, measure the distance from the box where the switch will be
          installed to the furthest computer in each row. (Usually, in a
          tuXlab, there will be four rows of workstations.) It's easiest to use
          the cable itself for this, and to mark the length with a piece of
          masking tape.</para>
          <para>To keep things organised, write something on the masking tape
          to identify the computer which the cable is meant for. Label the rows
          using a letter (so that you have rows A, B, C and D), and label each
          computer in a row with a number (so that you have A1 to A8, and so
          on). Once you have the longest cable in each row, you can figure out
          all the other lengths by shortening each subsequent cable with the
          distance between two workstations (normally, this will be
          1200mm).</para>
          <para>While you are cutting the cable into the right lengths, take
          care to keep the cables for each row together. Bind all the cables
          for a row together in a bundle, using masking tape. At the one end of
          the bundle (the switch end) all the cable ends will be together. On
          the other end, the ends will vary from the shortest to the
          longest.</para>
          <para>Besides the cables from the switch to the workstations, you
          also need to cut a couple of fly leads. These are used to connect the
          server(s) to the switch, and also to link together multiple
          switches.</para>
        </section>
        <section id="laying-the-cables">
          <title>Laying the cables</title>
          <para>Once all the cables have been cut and gathered together in
          bundles, you can take them in to the lab. Put them on the ground
          underneath the desks, and ensure that the cables at the switch end
          can comfortably reach the switch.</para>
          <para>If your network shares the same trunking with the electrical
          wiring of the lab, you MUST switch off the lab's power at the
          electrical subdivision board for the lab.</para>
          <para>Now you need to put the cables inside the trunking. To do this,
          get as much help as you can muster, as it's hard work and no fun to
          do alone. Take the cover off the trunking. Note carefully where each
          workstation will be standing, and drill a small hole in the trunking
          below each workstation, for the CAT-5 cable to reach the workstation.
          While the cables and the covers are lying on the floor, thread each
          cable through the correct hole in the trunking (the cable for
          computer A1 goes through the hole for A1, and so on).</para>
          <para>Once this is done, carefully put the cables inside the trunking
          and put the covers back on. Pass the cable ends up above the desks.
          You should have about 1m free cable for each workstation.</para>
        </section>
        <section id="crimping-the-cables">
          <title>Crimping the cables</title>
          <para>Stepping back, your lab looks the same as before, with the
          addition of cable ends emerging above the desks, and a whole bundle
          of cables terminating at the switch cabinet. Now you need to attach
          RJ-45 jacks to the cable ends, so that they can be plugged into the
          switch at the one end, and into each workstation's network card on
          the other end.</para>
          <para>To do this, complete the following steps for each cable.</para>
          <itemizedlist>
            <listitem>
              <para>Insert the 'boot' over the cable. This will cover the
              exposed wires where the RJ-45 jack is attached to the cable
              wires.</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Cut through the sheath around the cable to expose the pairs
              of coloured wires, without damaging them.</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Untwist about 2cm of each pair of wires (no more, as this
              impairs the effectiveness of the cable for data
              transmission).</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Arrange the wires in the correct colour sequence.
              (Straight-through cabling for cables between the switch and
              workstations, or Cross-over cabling for fly leads that connect
              switches, or that connect the switch to the server).</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Insert the wires into the RJ-45 connector. Push them up so
              that all the wires terminate right at the tip of the
              connector.</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Check the colour sequence of the wires again.</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Crimp the wires to the connector using the tool. You'll
              notice that the connector has copper strips along the top. These
              connect to matching strips in the plug of the workstation's
              network card or the switch. When you crimp the connector, it
              bites into the wires through their plastic covering, connecting
              its copper strips to the copper wire. This is why it's critical
              to push the wires right up to the tip of the connector, so that
              the connector's teeth find the wire.</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Test the cable using a continuity tester, if you have one.
              If you don't, you'll just have to figure out whether it works by
              trial and error later.</para>
            </listitem>
          </itemizedlist>
          <mediaobject>
            <imageobject>
              <imagedata fileref="images/cablingcrossed.png" />
            </imageobject>
            <caption>Cross-over CAT-5 cable</caption>
          </mediaobject>
          <mediaobject>
            <imageobject>
              <imagedata fileref="images/cablingstraight.png" />
            </imageobject>
            <caption>Straight-through CAT-5 cable</caption>
          </mediaobject>
        </section>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section id="lans-and-wans">
      <title>LANs and WANs</title>
      <para>You have now constructed a 
      <emphasis>local area network</emphasis>, or 
      <acronym>LAN</acronym>. It's what gives your tuXlab life, but it stops at
      the classroom walls. To be able to send and receive email or access the
      internet, it is necessary to connect to further networks. This happens
      over a 
      <emphasis>wide area network</emphasis>, or WAN. A WAN is a computer
      network covering a wide geographical area. The grandest example of a WAN
      is the internet.</para>
      <para>WANs are used to connect local area networks together, so that
      users and computers in one location can communicate with users and
      computers in other locations. Many WANs are built for one particular
      organisation and are private; others, built by internet service
      providers, provide connections from an organisation's 
      <acronym>LAN</acronym> to the internet. This is the case with a tuXlab
      that is connected to the internet. 
      <emphasis>Private</emphasis> WANs are most often built using leased lines.
      At each end of the leased line, a router connects to the 
      <acronym>LAN</acronym> on one side and a hub or a switch within the WAN on
      the other. (XXX: diagram)</para>
      <para>While a 
      <acronym>LAN</acronym> is a network of computers and devices, a WAN is
      most often a network of networks. A router, or a computer configured to
      function as a router, on each network, connects to routers on other
      networks.</para>
      <para>Behind every router there may be many computers (or networks) that
      are not directly connected to the internet. It is then the function of
      the internet gateway computer to route packets from outside networks to
      the correct computer on the inside. All the computers on a 
      <acronym>LAN</acronym> share a single connection to the internet. In the
      case of tuXlabs, the Wizzy server, if you have one, acts as a gateway
      computer.</para>
      <para>However, because a permanent WAN connection is very expensive in
      South Africa, especially in rural areas where telecommunication
      infrastructure may be lacking, a tuXlab will connect to the internet only
      intermittently. When it is not connected, the Wizzy server acts as a
      proxy for the internet, serving cached requests, and queueing email to
      send later when the connection is established again.</para>
    </section>
    <section id="tcp-ip">
      <title>
        <acronym>TCP/IP</acronym>
      </title>
      <para>The network protocol of the tuXlab 
      <acronym>LAN</acronym> is the same as that used for communication on the
      internet, namely 
      <acronym>TCP/IP</acronym>. This is the 
      <emphasis>Transmission Control Protocol (TCP)</emphasis>, encapsulated
      within the 
      <emphasis>Internet Protocol (IP)</emphasis>. The Internet Protocol takes
      care of routing data packets from a source IP address to a destination IP
      address. An IP address consists of four numbers that look like this: 
      <literal>192.168.10.200</literal>. IP packets can contain TCP packets.
      Whereas an IP packet only knows where it should go, TCP packets contain
      information about their position in a sequence of packets.</para>
      <para>TCP is wonderful: it makes it possible to treat a flaky network as
      though it were perfectly reliable. When you send anything across a 
      <acronym>TCP/IP</acronym> network (e.g. an email message, an image, or a
      document) it is broken down into many TCP packets. These are numbered and
      sent, one by one, to the destination computer. At the destination, the
      sequence number is used to put the packets in the correct order (as they
      may have become mixed up in transit). If there are gaps in the sequence,
      only those packets are requested again. If some packets are received more
      than once, the extra packets are simply dropped. Once all the packets in
      the sequence have been received, the entire file has been transferred
      successfully.</para>
      <para>Unsurprisingly, an IP address cannot be just any four numbers.
      Actually, there is a lot of underlying structure. In the first place, the
      numbers are a sequence of four 
      <emphasis>bytes</emphasis>. Computers generally handle data one byte at a
      time, so it's convenient to specify things as a sequence of bytes. A byte
      consists of eight binary digits. The binary number system has only two
      digits, namely 0 and 1: just as 99999999 is the largest number that you
      can express with eight decimal digits, 11111111 is the largest number
      that you can express with eight binary digits. If you convert that number
      to decimal, you get 256. For this reason, a sequence like 
      <literal>300.5.502.743</literal> does not make any sense as an IP
      address.</para>
      <para>In the second place, some address ranges are reserved. For example,
      all the networks that start with 
      <literal>192.168.---.---</literal> as their first two digits are private,
      not routed on the internet. The whole public IP address space is divided
      among ISPs. Each 
      <acronym>ISP</acronym> gets a range of numbers that they may portion out
      between its customers. This range of numbers is described in terms of a 
      <emphasis>netmask</emphasis>, a number which looks similar to an IP
      address, but is used to match all the IP addresses that belong to a
      particular network. Private networks can also be segmented into subnets
      using netmasks. Any computer on a network can send IP packets to any
      other computer on the network, but to send an IP packet to a computer on
      a 
      <emphasis>different</emphasis> network, there must be a gateway computer
      which is configured to help the packets cross from one network to
      another.</para>
      <para>Gateway computers also implement network management policies, e.g.
      by way of firewall software, that specify what traffic is allowed into
      and out of a network.</para>
    </section>
    <section id="ltsp-wizzy-wikipedia">
      <title>
      <acronym>LTSP</acronym>, Wizzy, Wikipedia</title>
      <para>On a tuXlab 
      <acronym>LAN</acronym>, there may be up to three important
      servers.</para>
      <itemizedlist>
        <listitem>
          <para>Most importantly, there will always be an 
          <emphasis role="strong">
          <acronym>LTSP</acronym> classroom server</emphasis>, which serves the
          desktop sessions of all the client workstations.</para>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <para>If the tuXlab makes use of the Wizzy solution for internet
          connectivity, there will be a 
          <emphasis role="strong">Wizzy server</emphasis> functioning as mail
          server (using Courier for IMAP mail storage, and 
          <command>exim</command> for sending and receiving of mail via 
          <acronym>SMTP</acronym>) and web proxy (using 
          <command>wwwoffle</command>). The address of this server will need to
          be configured in the mail clients and web browsers of all tuXlab
          users.</para>
          <para>For mail clients (XXX: Thunderbird?), the proper ports on the
          Wizzy server needs to be configured as 
          <acronym>SMTP</acronym> and IMAP server. This will normally be ports
          25 and 143 of 
          <literal>XXX.myschool.tuXlab.org.za</literal>. For web browsers, the
          Wizzy server needs to be configured as proxy server for all protocols
          (HTTP, SSL, FTP). 
          <command>wwwoffle</command>, the proxy server, usually runs on port
          3128.</para>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <para>If a local mirror of the Wikipedia project has been installed,
          it will be available as a website on the 
          <acronym>LAN</acronym>, e.g. at XXX 
          <literal>http://wikipedia.myschool.tuXlab.org.za/</literal>. As a
          website, it's served by 
          <command>apache</command>, just like the administration pages of the
          Wizzy server. The Wikipedia and the mail server / web proxy server
          may be the same machine.</para>
        </listitem>
      </itemizedlist>
    </section>
  </chapter>
  <chapter id="server-configuration">
    <title>Server configuration</title>
    <section id="wizzy-configuration">
      <title>Wizzy configuration</title>
      <para>A Wizzy server plays two roles. In the first place, it serves as an
      internet proxy, serving cached pages to a lab without a permanent
      internet connection. In the second place, it connects to the internet and
      retrieves requested pages to store them locally, sends queued email, and
      fetches received mail.</para>
      <para>These two roles don't have to be fulfilled by the same server: they
      may be split across two servers, for example if the school has no
      internet access. In this case, there will be a Wizzy in the tuXlab and
      another one at a remote location with internet connectivity.</para>
      <para>The hardware requirements for the Wizzy server are far less than
      those of the classroom application server, since it has to do far less
      work. All it needs to do most of the time is to serve up saved pages from
      its hard disk. For this, a server with a 200+MHz 
      <acronym>CPU</acronym>, 256MB 
      <acronym>RAM</acronym>, and a 40GB RAID 1 disk array is adequate.</para>
      <section id="software-used-by-the-wizzy-server">
        <title>Software used by the Wizzy server</title>
        <itemizedlist>
          <listitem>
            <para>The Wizzy server uses 
            <acronym>DHCP</acronym> ( 
            <xref linkend="dynamic-host-configuration-protocol" />) and 
            <acronym>TFTP</acronym> for booting, the same as the classroom
            server.</para>
            <para>XXX: What does the Wizzy server use 
            <acronym>TFTP</acronym> for? Does it also boot from the classroom
            server?</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>It uses the Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) for
            authentication. When users access their email on the Wizzy server
            they will need to supply a username and password. This information
            is kept by an LDAP server, which maintains a directory where user
            information may be looked up. It is analogous to a telephone
            directory.</para>
            <para>Ideally, there should be only one directory for a tuXlab,
            which contains the information on all the users and resources (such
            as printers) in the lab. Currently, however, the directory
            maintained by the Wizzy server is separate from the user database
            on the classroom server.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>The Unix-to-Unix Copy Protocol (UUCP) is used for 
            <emphasis>all</emphasis> email sending and receiving, as well as for
            fetching web pages. As long as a service can be configured to use
            UUCP for communication, it is possible to provide the service
            without a permanent internet connection. For this reason, Wizzy
            sticks to UUCP.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>The Wizzy server uses BIND (the Berkeley Internet Name
            Daemon) for domain name services ( 
            <acronym>DNS</acronym>), on the local network. 
            <acronym>DNS</acronym> is how IP addresses, such as 
            <literal>192.168.0.254</literal>, are resolved to readable domain
            names, such as 
            <literal>server.myschool.tuxlab.org.za</literal>.</para>
            <para>XXX: I'm not sure what "on the local network" means here.
            Does that mean it only resolves names that are local to the
            tuXlab?</para>
            <para>XXX: What domain name does a classroom server get?</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>For email, Wizzy uses the Courier IMAP server for inbound
            mail and webmail.</para>
            <para>IMAP (the Internet Mail Access Protocol) provides a way for
            all kinds of mail clients (such as Thunderbird, or Mozilla's email
            component) to access a mail store. In Wizzy's case, the Courier
            package handles mail storage and IMAP access. Wizzy also provides a
            webmail client to access the mail store using a web browser.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>To send mail, Wizzy uses the 
            <command>exim</command> program.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>As discussed in 
            <xref linkend="wizzy-server" />, one of the most important jobs the
            Wizzy does is to provide a browsable offline copy of all the web
            pages that interest tuXlab users. It does this using the 
            <ulink url="http://www.gedanken.demon.co.uk/wwwoffle/">
            wwwoffle</ulink> program to provide a local web cache. It augments 
            <command>wwwoffle</command> (the World Wide Web Offline Explorer)
            with some custom programs, since Wizzy's disconnected mode of
            operation goes beyond the options offered by 
            <command>wwwoffle</command> on its own.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>The Wizzy server provides its administration functions as
            well as webmail as web pages, and uses the 
            <ulink url="http://www.apache.org/"> apache</ulink> webserver to
            serve these pages. They may be accessed by going to XXX 
            <ulink url="http://wizzy/"> http://wizzy/</ulink> on the tuXlab 
            <acronym>LAN</acronym>.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>For a local FTP server, Wizzy uses XXX: vsftpd (XXX: but what
            is the local FTP server used for?)</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>In its role as a connection to the internet, the Wizzy server
            can connect to any 
            <acronym>ISP</acronym> with which the school has an account, in
            order to retrieve web pages. It does not, however, use any email
            facilities that the 
            <acronym>ISP</acronym> may provide: all mail goes through Andy
            Rabagliati's server in Cape Town using UUCP.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>For the sake of data integrity, Wizzy uses a RAID disk system
            for storage. RAID is a 
            <emphasis>Redundant Array of Inexpensive Disks</emphasis>. It is a
            way to federate multiple hard disk drives in such a way that the
            failure of any one disk does not result in data loss.</para>
          </listitem>
        </itemizedlist>
      </section>
      <section id="wizzy-as-a-classroom-server">
        <title>Wizzy as a classroom server</title>
        <para>The Wizzy project predates tuXlabs. It can also be configured to
        provide a similar range of application serving functions as the tuXlab
        classroom server provides. In this configuration, it uses the following
        packages:</para>
        <itemizedlist>
          <listitem>
            <para>Like the tuXlab server, Wizzy uses the 
            <acronym>LTSP</acronym> packages ( 
            <xref linkend="linux-terminal-server-project" />) for its
            thin-client NFS-mounted root directory.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>It also uses 
            <acronym>NFS</acronym> (the Network FileSystem) for home directories
            that are NFS-mounted by the thin clients.</para>
            <para>XXX: I don't know if I'm understanding this correctly. Does
            Wizzy mount the users' home directories from the classroom server,
            e.g. in order to server web pages from them?</para>
          </listitem>
        </itemizedlist>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section id="dynamic-host-configuration-protocol">
      <title>Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol</title>
      <para>Every computer on a local area network ( 
      <acronym>LAN</acronym>) needs to have a unique IP address (see 
      <xref linkend="tcp-ip" />) so that it may send and receive data. The
      Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol ( 
      <acronym>DHCP</acronym>) is a networking protocol that allocates IP
      addresses dynamically to computers on a 
      <acronym>LAN</acronym>. Without it, an administrator needs to give each
      client computer a static IP address manually. This may seem simple enough
      to begin with, but given time, it slowly turns into a nightmare:
      computers are added, removed or moved about, and the number assignments
      eventually become arbitrary and troublesome to keep track of. On a
      network with manually assigned addresses, it's also awkward to connect
      transient devices such as laptop computers that are also used on many
      other networks. You have to talk to the system administrator to find out
      the network configuration, and then check the network to find a free
      address. With 
      <acronym>DHCP</acronym>, it's easy: just plug in an Ethernet cable for
      the new device, and it will immediately request an IP address from the
      classroom server, which will assign an unused number to it.</para>
      <para>In a tuXlab, the classroom server is configured as a 
      <acronym>DHCP</acronym> server. A system administrator assigns a range of
      IP addresses to the server. Each client computer on the 
      <acronym>LAN</acronym> has its 
      <acronym>TCP/IP</acronym> software configured to request an IP address
      automatically from the 
      <acronym>DHCP</acronym> server when that client computer starts up. The
      request-and-grant process uses a lease concept with a controllable time
      period. This eases the network installation procedure on the client
      computer side considerably.</para>
      <para>In addition to the IP address, a 
      <acronym>DHCP</acronym> server can set other configuration information,
      such as the address of the 
      <acronym>DNS</acronym> server, the 
      <acronym>DNS</acronym> domain of the client, and the gateway IP address,
      so that the client computer can be fully functional.</para>
      <para>Before I continue, let me explain the concepts I've just
      introduced. First, the 
      <acronym>DNS</acronym> domain: all Linux computers are given a hostname
      upon installation of the 
      <acronym>OS</acronym>, which is used in system messages and
      configuration. When the computer joins a network, its hostname and the
      domain of the network together combine to form the Fully Qualified Domain
      Name ( 
      <acronym>FQDN</acronym>) of the computer. In the case of a tuXlab, the 
      <acronym>FQDN</acronym> of each workstation will be something like XXX 
      <literal>client1.myschool.tuxlab.org.za</literal>. The public 
      <acronym>DNS</acronym> servers that resolve the domain names of tuXlabs on
      the internet are maintained by SchoolNet 
      <ulink url="http://www.schoolnet.org.za/schoolsurveys/suveys_index.htm">
      http://www.schoolnet.org.za/schoolsurveys/suveys_index.htm</ulink></para>
      <para>Secondly, the gateway IP address. In 
      <xref linkend="lans-and-wans" /> I explained that the internet is a 
      <emphasis>network of networks</emphasis>. For data packets from a
      computer on one network to reach a server on another network, there needs
      to be a gateway that is connected to both networks at once. Usually, the
      gateway computer will have a network card for every network to which it
      is connected.</para>
      <para>By default, the 
      <acronym>LTSP</acronym> server uses its first network card ( 
      <literal>eth0</literal>, numbered from 0 like most things in the computer
      world) for the classroom 
      <acronym>LAN</acronym>. It runs 
      <acronym>DHCP</acronym> on this card, and automatically gives out IP
      numbers upon request. It then accepts BootP (Boot Protocol) and 
      <acronym>PXE</acronym> (Pre-boot eXecution Environment) boot requests, and
      passes on the Linux kernel to the client using 
      <acronym>TFTP</acronym> for the transfer. Once the client has received the
      kernel, it boots into Linux. The default 
      <filename>dhcpd.conf</filename> file will support over 200 clients. The 
      <acronym>LTSP</acronym> server will not answer 
      <acronym>DHCP</acronym> requests over 
      <literal>eth1</literal> (with the default settings.)</para>
      <section id="files">
        <title>Files</title>
        <para>The configuration settings for the 
        <acronym>DHCP</acronym> server are contained in the 
        <filename>/etc</filename> directory --- standard Linux location for
        configuration data --- in the file 
        <filename>/etc/dhcpd.conf</filename>. XXX which settings in here should
        be explained?</para>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section id="network-configuration">
      <title>Network configuration</title>
      <para>The first network card, 
      <literal>eth0</literal>, is the interface on the thin-client side of your
      
      <acronym>LTSP</acronym> server. This network card connects to your
      terminal hub. The 
      <literal>192.168.0.x</literal> address range is designated as a "private"
      IP range for internal networks. It is not routed on the internet. IP
      traffic from your clients are routed to the internet through 
      <literal>eth1</literal>. (Note that if there is a Wizzy server, it will
      be the one with the two network cards.)</para>
      <para>The classroom server has the last available address in this range,
      namely 
      <literal>192.168.0.254</literal> ( 
      <literal>192.168.0.255</literal> is the 
      <emphasis>broadcast</emphasis> address: packets sent to this address reach
      all the computers on the network). The first client will be assigned an
      IP number of 
      <literal>192.168.0.253</literal>. 
      <footnote>
        <para>For more information, see 
        <ulink url="http://www.k12ltsp.org/install.html">
        http://www.k12ltsp.org/install.html</ulink></para>
      </footnote></para>
      <para>(XXX: make a local one) Dialogue (screenshot): 
      <ulink url="http://www.k12ltsp.org/screen7.gif">
      http://www.k12ltsp.org/screen7.gif</ulink></para>
      <section id="wizzy-network-configuration">
        <title>Wizzy network configuration</title>
        <para>When the tuXlab has a Wizzy server, there are a couple of other
        aspects to network configuration.</para>
        <itemizedlist>
          <listitem>
            <para>Protocols</para>
            <para>Wizzy Digital Courier relies on standard networking protocols
            for the interactive portions, linked by UUCP for the intermittent
            sections.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>Mail configuration</para>
            <para>During installation, you must choose a hostname for the Wizzy
            server. This hostname will identify the server within the mail
            domain, which is 
            <literal>wizzy.org.za</literal> (because Wizzy provides the email
            infrastructure), so that your complete mail domain becomes 
            <literal>myschool.wizzy.org.za</literal> (where 
            <emphasis>myschool</emphasis> is the hostname you chose). This means
            that all the tuXlab users will get email addresses like 
            <literal>user@myschool.wizzy.org.za</literal>.</para>
            <para>You will also need to contact Andy Rabagliati at XXX, to tell
            him your UUCP password, as he must set up mail routing for
            you.</para>
            <para>For tuXlabs, Wizzy servers have a special configuration
            available --- accessible by typing the following at the Syslinux
            boot prompt:</para>
            <screen>
boot: linux ks=cdrom:/tsf-ks.cfg
</screen>
          </listitem>
        </itemizedlist>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section id="network-filesystem">
      <title>Network Filesystem</title>
      <para>tuXlab uses 
      <acronym>NFS</acronym>, the Network Filesystem, to make the home
      directories of lab users appear to be local to the client workstations,
      even though they really reside on the classroom server. The 
      <acronym>NFS</acronym> configuration is specified in the file 
      <filename>/etc/exports</filename> on the classroom server.</para>
    </section>
    <section id="ltsp-configuration">
      <title>
      <acronym>LTSP</acronym> configuration</title>
      <para>The 
      <acronym>LTSP</acronym> configuration is specified in the file 
      <filename>lts.conf</filename> on the classroom server. For more detail
      about this file, see 
      <xref linkend="troubleshooting-reference" />.</para>
    </section>
    <section id="tftpboot">
      <title>tftpboot</title>
      <para>Upon power-up, the 
      <acronym>BIOS</acronym> of each client workstation contacts the classroom
      server, and retrieves the Linux kernel from it via the 
      <acronym>TFTP</acronym> protocol. XXX: more detail.</para>
    </section>
    <section id="users-and-groups">
      <title>Users and groups</title>
      <para>All the users of the tuXlab will have accounts on the classroom
      server. (Additionally, if they have email they will have accounts stored
      in the Wizzy server's LDAP directory.)</para>
      <para>XXX: who adds them? Root? Using some RedHat config tool?</para>
      <section id="permissions">
        <title>Permissions</title>
        <para>Access to directories, files and executable programs under Linux
        is managed in terms of users, groups and permissions. Every user
        belongs to a group, and every file belongs to a user and a group. The
        basic permissions are 
        <emphasis>read</emphasis>, 
        <emphasis>write</emphasis> and 
        <emphasis>execute</emphasis>. For every file and directory, these
        permissions can be set for the user who owns the file, the group, and
        for all others (i.e. everyone but the owner or the group). For example,
        here are the permissions of a user's home directory:</para>
        <screen>
jean@klippie jean $ ls -ld /home/jean 
drwxr-xr-x 112 jean users 6664 Des 26 17:31 /home/jean
</screen>
        <para>The permissions are shown by the string 
        <literal>drwxr-xr-x</literal>. The first character, 
        <literal>d</literal>, indicates that this is a directory. You should
        read the following 9 characters in groups of three, that show the
        permissions for the owner 
        <literal>jean</literal> ( 
        <literal>rwx</literal>), the group 
        <literal>users</literal> ( 
        <literal>r-x</literal>), and all others ( 
        <literal>r-x</literal>). In this case, the owner has 
        <emphasis>read</emphasis> ( 
        <literal>r</literal>), 
        <emphasis>write</emphasis> ( 
        <literal>w</literal>) and 
        <emphasis>execute</emphasis> ( 
        <literal>x</literal>) permissions, while the group and others only have
        
        <emphasis>read</emphasis> and 
        <emphasis>execute</emphasis> permissions. In the case of a directory, 
        <emphasis>execute</emphasis> permissions means that you are allowed to
        access the contents of the directory. This home directory may therefore
        be read by everyone, but only the user may change it.</para>
        <para>Here are the permissions on the file that contains the system
        user database:</para>
        <screen>
jean@klippie jean $ ls -l /etc/passwd 
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 2118 Des 1 05:32 /etc/passwd
</screen>
        <para>These indicate firstly that this is a regular file, not a
        directory (the leading 
        <literal>-</literal>), and that the owner 
        <literal>root</literal> has 
        <emphasis>read</emphasis> and 
        <emphasis>write</emphasis> permissions ( 
        <literal>rw-</literal>), and everyone else have only 
        <emphasis>read</emphasis> permissions ( 
        <literal>r--</literal>). In effect, this means that only the 
        <literal>root</literal> user may add, modify or delete users.</para>
        <para>You may further note that the group to which this file belongs is
        also 
        <literal>root</literal>. This group only has one member (the 
        <literal>root</literal> user), and is used for files that are under
        control of only this unique user.</para>
        <section id="the-superuser">
          <title>The superuser</title>
          <para>Every Linux machine normally has a user called 
          <literal>root</literal>, who has all permissions. When a system
          administrator needs to do maintenance, they log in as 
          <literal>root</literal> only to make the necessary changes, and then
          switch to their regular user again.</para>
        </section>
      </section>
      <section id="retiring-users">
        <title>Retiring users</title>
        <para>XXX: what happens when a user is retired? Is the password just
        reset, or is the whole home directory and all email deleted?</para>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section id="id35">
      <title>Printing</title>
      <para>XXX: Cups ...</para>
    </section>
    <section id="developing-a-backup-procedure">
      <title>Developing a backup procedure</title>
      <para>The importance of backing up a system can never be stressed enough.
      You never know when the power may cut out or the hard drive may crash.
      Even though you can restore the operating system from the distribution
      CD-ROM, there are other files that you need to consider. What about the
      configuration changes that you made? There are also files created by
      users, what about those?</para>
      <para>Follow these steps to create a backup plan:</para>
      <orderedlist>
        <listitem>
          <para>Make a list of the files and directories that you need backups
          of. You'll always want to backup system configuration files in the 
          <filename>/etc</filename> directory, other configuration files may be
          found in 
          <filename>/usr/lib</filename>. In addition, you may want to backup
          user files in the 
          <filename>/home</filename> directory as well as the superuser ( 
          <literal>root</literal>) files in 
          <filename>/root</filename>.</para>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <para>Find a few tools to use when backing up and archiving files and
          directories. Several tools are available that will archive a group of
          files, and there are tools that will compress files and
          archives.</para>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <para>Decide how often the system and individual files need to be
          backed up. How often do your files change? If files change
          frequently, the your backup frequency should match the change
          frequency. So, you may need to perform a backup every day. If you
          only make one or two configuration changes on occasion, you can
          easily backup the configuration files only when the changes is
          made.</para>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <para>Select a storage medium that will store the backup file. If you
          have a few files to backup, you could just store them on a floppy
          disk. If you have more files, or larger files, you can consider using
          a zip drive or a CD-RW drive.</para>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <para>Store the files in a safe place. The safest place to store the
          backup media is at a location different from where the computer is
          located. To be really safe, this location needs to be protected from
          fire and other hazards. You may also want to keep a copy of the
          backup files close by so that you can quickly restore lost
          files.</para>
        </listitem>
      </orderedlist>
      <para>
      <emphasis role="strong">Tip</emphasis>: Always make a copy of
      configuration files before you make any configuration changes. That way,
      should your new settings not work, you can restore the old configuration
      files.</para>
    </section>
  </chapter>
  <chapter id="downloading-the-internet">
    <title>Downloading the internet</title>
    <para>On the homepage of the Wizzy server, accessible by browsing to the
    server using a web browser (XXX domain?), there is a form to request web
    sites for caching. Educators may preconfigure the server with a range of
    interesting websites, and learners may request new sites per email or in
    the classroom situation. When the Wizzy server connects to the internet
    (directly, or indirectly via a counterpart in a remote location) it fetches
    the requested pages, and refreshes those pages which it should keep up to
    date.</para>
    <section id="accessibility">
      <title>Accessibility</title>
      <para>All email and websites browsed by the tuXlab users during the day
      are served directly from the server in the classroom. This means
      instantaneous and constant connectivity to a local miniature internet
      over a top quality hardwired network. There is no waiting. 
      <footnote>
        <para>See 
        <ulink url="http://wizzy.org.za/article/articlestatic/19/1/2/" /></para>
      </footnote></para>
    </section>
    <section id="the-internet-as-school-library">
      <title>The internet as school library</title>
      <para>Nothing will ever approach the importance of printed books for
      fostering a love to read. Only by curling up with a book somewhere safe
      and comfortable can your mind rise on the wings of the pages and take you
      to worlds beyond your own. Books are expensive and scarce, though. There
      are never enough copies. Furthermore, some books work very well in
      electronic form, especially reference works that you don't read from
      cover to cover. For these reasons, the internet can be a wonderful
      addition to the school library.</para>
      <section id="id38">
        <title>Wikipedia</title>
        <para>If the Wikipedia has been installed, the Wizzy server will also
        serve a local mirror of it.</para>
        <para>The 
        <ulink url="http://www.wikipedia.org"> Wikipedia</ulink> is a
        one-of-a-kind collaborative effort to create an online encyclopedia. It
        is managed and operated by the non-profit Wikimedia Foundation. In
        addition to standard encyclopedic knowledge, the Wikipedia project has
        developed offshoots that include the kind of information associated
        with almanacs and gazetteers, as well as coverage of current events.
        With a little effort, it can be used offline in schools.</para>
        <para>The Wikipedia is being written collaboratively as an open source
        project, using specialised 
        <emphasis>wiki</emphasis> software called 
        <literal>mediawiki</literal>. This means that anyone, including you,
        can make changes and add information. In fact, the openness of
        Wikipedia to local knowledge is one of its most important
        characteristics. For the first time, the world is being described not
        by an editorial committee but by a global community of volunteers, who
        are able to augment academic knowledge with local experience.</para>
        <para>A 
        <emphasis>wiki</emphasis> is a simple form of web-publishing that was
        thought up by a software design consultant called Ward Cunningham. His
        original wiki is still running at 
        <ulink url="http://c2.com/cgi/wiki">
        http://c2.com/cgi/wiki</ulink></para>
        <para>In a wiki, every page is editable as plain text which is
        converted to HTML when served, following a number of simple conventions
        that convey the structure of the text. Specifically the convention for
        linking between pages is what gives wikis their identity. To create a
        link to another page, you simply write its title in a special format
        (e.g. 
        <literal>AnotherPage</literal>), and if that page exists the title is
        turned into a hyperlink to it. If it 
        <emphasis>doesn't</emphasis> exist, the title is turned into a link
        leading to a blank page where you may create 
        <literal>AnotherPage</literal> instead. The 
        <literal>mediawiki</literal> software also keeps a record of all
        versions of a page, so that the entire editorial history of a page may
        be examined.</para>
        <para>For schools that don't have a permanent internet connection, this
        entire resource, because of its Open Content license, can be installed
        locally. Even for schools that are permanently online there are
        advantages to a local install, in preference to a 
        <literal>wwwoffle</literal> mirror:</para>
        <itemizedlist>
          <listitem>
            <para>It's more effective, since it doesn't fetch all the HTML
            furniture (everything that repeats from page to page, such as the
            page header and footer) repeatedly.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>It's complete. A 
            <literal>wwwoffle</literal> mirror would contain only the articles
            that were requested, piecemeal.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>It's searchable via SQL.</para>
          </listitem>
        </itemizedlist>
        <para>A local Wikipedia mirror does introduce some complexity though.
        In addition to 
        <literal>apache</literal>, it requires PHP, Mediawiki and 
        <literal>mysql</literal>. 
        <footnote>
          <para>See 
          <ulink url="http://wizzy.org.za/article/articlestatic/23/1/2/" /></para>
        </footnote></para>
      </section>
      <section id="gutenberg">
        <title>Gutenberg</title>
        <para>
        <ulink url="http://www.gutenberg.org/"> Project Gutenberg</ulink> was
        started in 1971 by Michael Hart, with the goal to provide books
        electronically at no cost.</para>
        <para>Their collection numbers more than 13,000 e-books, produced by
        hundreds of volunteers. Most of the Project Gutenberg e-books (but not
        all) are older literary works that are in the public domain in the
        United States. 
        <footnote>
          <para>Incidentally, this emphasises the importance of a public
          domain. Current legislation in the United States effectively allows
          work to be kept out of the public domain indefinitely. This is bad
          news for future generations.</para>
        </footnote> All may be freely downloaded and read, and redistributed for
        non-commercial use (for complete details, see the 
        <ulink url="http://www.gutenberg.org/license"> license
        page</ulink>).</para>
        <mediaobject>
          <imageobject>
            <imagedata fileref="images/downloadbooks.png" />
          </imageobject>
        </mediaobject>
      </section>
      <section id="connexions">
        <title>Connexions</title>
        <para>The 
        <ulink url="http://cnx.rice.edu/"> Connexions</ulink> project of 
        <ulink url="http://www.rice.edu"> Rice University</ulink> is an endeavour
        to create open source course material. On their homepage, they state:
        "Knowledge should be free, open, and shared. Connexions is a rapidly
        growing collection of free scholarly materials and a powerful set of
        free software tools to help authors publish and collaborate,
        instructors rapidly build and share custom courses, and learners to
        explore the links among concepts, courses, and disciplines.</para>
        <para>They provide small "knowledge chunks", called modules, that
        connect into courses. Thanks to an open license, anyone can take these
        materials, adapt them to meet their needs, and contribute them back to
        the Commons.</para>
      </section>
    </section>
  </chapter>
  <chapter id="open-source-educational-software">
    <title>Open source Educational Software</title>
    <para>This is just a very quick overview of a few of the educational
    software packages that may be suitable for use in schools.</para>
    <para>XXX: which of these are in the tuXlab distro?</para>
    <section id="the-kde-edutainment-project">
      <title>The 
      <ulink url="http://edu.kde.org"> KDE Edutainment project</ulink></title>
      <para>The KDE project comprises many sub-projects that cover a wide range
      of computing areas, from office applications to development tools. One of
      these projects, the KDE Edutainment project, has education as focus. 
      <footnote>
        <para>The following overview comes from the first edition of 
        <ulink url="http://fsfeurope.org/projects/education/tgs/tagatschool1.en.html">
        TUX&amp;GNU@school</ulink></para>
      </footnote></para>
      <para>The software is divided into categories. Currently, these are
      Astronomy, Chemistry, Languages, Mathematics, Miscellaneous and Planning.
      Astronomy contains the very extensive program 
      <emphasis>KStars</emphasis> which shows the starry night sky with some 10
      000 objects. The application 
      <emphasis>Kalzium</emphasis> belongs to Chemistry category, and offers an
      informative and clear presentation of the Periodic Table of the Elements.
      In the Languages section are many programs that let you practise a
      specific language, or that help you to learn expressions in other
      languages. 
      <emphasis>KHangMan</emphasis> and 
      <emphasis>KMessedWords</emphasis> are games which let children learn new
      words while playing. In the Mathematics category, we find 
      <emphasis>KGeo</emphasis>, a program for the presentation and
      construction of geometric drawings.</para>
      <para>Here are some more detailed descriptions of some of the
      packages:</para>
      <variablelist>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>Ghemical --- Modelling and computing molecules</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>
            <ulink url="http://bioinformatics.org/ghemical/"> Ghemical</ulink> is
            a free program for chemistry, which allows you to model and compute
            molecules relatively easily.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>Tuxpaint --- Painting is fun</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>
            <ulink url="http://www.newbreedsoftware.com/tuxpaint/">
            Tuxpaint</ulink> is a free painting program for children.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>GCompris</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>
            <ulink url="http://www.ofset.org/gcompris"> GCompris</ulink> lets a
            learner practise various skills. One module lets you practise
            reading clocks and telling the time, another offers a simple
            vector-based painting program, and a third teaches you where the
            different countries are situated in North and South America.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>Kalzium</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>
            <ulink url="http://www.kalzium.org/"> Kalzium --- The Periodic Table
            of the Elements (PTE)</ulink> allows you navigate the periodic
            table. All the known elements are listed simply and clearly, and
            more information about the selected element can be shown.</para>
            <para>It also offers a view that lets you go back in history, so
            that you can see which elements were already known at which point
            in time. Another view lets you can select the display according to
            the state of matter, so that you may explore which element are
            vapour, liquid or solid at which temperatures.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>Klicker</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>
            <ulink url="http://www.duskglow.com/personal/software.shtml">
            Klicker, the KDE metronome</ulink>, provides visual and sound
            beats. It is becoming a more general music helper application with
            a tuning helper, a voicing component, a chords trainer and
            more.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>KLogoTurtle</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>
            <ulink url="http://edu.kde.org/klogoturtle"> KLogoTurtle</ulink> is a
            
            <ulink url="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logo_programming_language">
            Logo</ulink> interpreter for KDE. It helps to teach computing and
            mathematics to beginning programmers.</para>
            <para>While Logo is a general programming language, it is
            especially well known for its "turtle graphics": programming
            concepts are taught by giving instructions that move a marker
            called a "turtle" across the screen, drawing lines as it moves.
            While many programming languages make it complicated to interact
            with graphics on today's sophisticated computers, Logo sees to it
            that the learner has an immediately responsive drawing board to
            play with.</para>
            <para>If you're interested in learning Logo, you should note that
            Brian Harvey has made his famous series of three programming texts
            freely available for personal use from his homepage. They
            are:</para>
            <itemizedlist>
              <listitem>
                <para>
                <ulink url="http://www.cs.berkeley.edu/~bh/v1-toc2.html">
                Symbolic Computing</ulink>, a Logo programming text that
                concentrates on natural language processing rather than the
                graphics most people associate with Logo.</para>
              </listitem>
              <listitem>
                <para>
                <ulink url="http://www.cs.berkeley.edu/~bh/v2-toc2.html">
                Advanced Techniques</ulink>, in which discussions of more
                advanced Logo features alternate with sample projects using
                those features, with commentary on the structure and style of
                each.</para>
              </listitem>
              <listitem>
                <para>
                <ulink url="http://www.cs.berkeley.edu/~bh/v3-toc2.html"> Beyond
                Programming</ulink>, brief introductions to six college-level
                computer science topics.</para>
              </listitem>
            </itemizedlist>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>KGeo --- Geometry with the mouse</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>KGeo is a free geometry education program which recently
            became part of the 
            <ulink url="http://edu.kde.org"> KDE Edutainment
            project</ulink></para>
            <para>When the program first starts, you are presented with the
            main window and function panels at its sides. The main window is a
            construction board for geometric shapes, complete with a coordinate
            system. The function panels are laid out to be clear, and not
            overloaded with functions. Apart from the menu, there are five
            panels which the user may arrange themselves. Three of these panels
            are used for the construction of geometric shapes, another one
            contains functions for measuring and calculating lengths, areas,
            and so on, and the last one contains functions for moving or
            erasing shapes.</para>
            <para>When the user works with KGeo, he is always in one of three
            modes: drawing, dragging, or tracing. In the drawing mode, you can
            draw geometric shapes and their attributes such as points,
            triangles, vectors, centres, parallels and angles. By combining
            these shapes and drawing methods, you can even construct
            reflections, translations or rotations. You can explore the shapes
            using tools to measure the circle areas, distances, angles, slopes
            or circumferences. All drawing buttons have an information window
            that appears when you hover over them with the mouse.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
      </variablelist>
    </section>
    <section>
      <title>Resources</title>
      <para>There are numerous sources of educational software on the web. Some
      starting places are:</para>
      <itemizedlist>
        <listitem>
          <para>
          <ulink url="http://www.schoolforge.net/"> SchoolForge</ulink>.
          SchoolForge's mission is to unify independent organisations that
          advocate, use, and develop open resources for primary and secondary
          education.</para>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <para>
          <ulink url="http://eduslug.sourceforge.net/index.php">
          Edu-SLUG</ulink>, the workspace of the Schools Linux User Group, for
          the creation of educational software for South African
          schools.</para>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <para>You may find an informal collection of links loosely related to
          the 
          <ulink url="http://del.icio.us/tag/tuxlab"> tuXlab project at
          del.icio.us</ulink>, where you may register and post your own
          extensions to the list.</para>
        </listitem>
      </itemizedlist>
    </section>
  </chapter>
  <chapter id="advanced-topics">
    <title>Advanced topics</title>
    <para>In this section, I will briefly touch on some more advanced topics
    that you may want to investigate as you become familiar with your tuXlab.
    The notes here serve only as hints. Contact the tuXlab helpline if you want
    to explore the ideas here further.</para>
    <section id="incorporating-your-linux-lab-into-an-existing-windows-network">

      <title>Incorporating your Linux lab into an existing Windows
      network</title>
      <para>A tuXlab may easily be accommodated within an existing Windows
      network. If you want the Windows workstations to double as thin clients
      in your tuXlab, see the note about dual booting in 
      <xref linkend="thin-client-configuration" />. If the tuXlab is a separate
      lab, you can set it up as usual, but the second network card in the
      classroom server can act as a bridge to the Windows network. Alternately,
      only a Wizzy internet proxy can be introduced to an existing Windows lab,
      to provide offline internet access. This is outside the scope of the
      Shuttleworth Foundation's Open Source mandate, however.</para>
    </section>
    <section id="community-wans">
      <title>Community WANs?</title>
      <para>Using affordable wireless technology, it is possible for nearby
      schools to create direct links between their tuXlab LANs, binding them
      into a WAN without exposing them to the internet or incurring 
      <acronym>ISP</acronym> costs. Computers at home for teachers or learners
      may be connected to the tuXlab 
      <acronym>LAN</acronym> in the same way. Note that to enable authentication
      and security for wireless access, the connection needs to be established
      using PPPoE: the Point-to-Point protocol tunnelled over Ethernet. This is
      because PPP offers some features that Ethernet doesn't, specifically
      authentication and access control.</para>
    </section>
    <section id="alternate-sources-of-information">
      <title>Alternate sources of information</title>
      <para>After the resources mentioned in 
      <xref linkend="steps-involved-in-getting-a-lab" /> and the other schools
      in your tuXlab cluster, your local Linux users' group is a good place to
      turn with your questions. With some patience, politeness and carefully
      formulated questions, these groups are inexhaustible founts of expert
      knowledge and assistance. By the time you have run out of questions to
      ask, there will be many newbies asking questions that you will be able to
      answer! In the Cape region, try the 
      <ulink url="http://www.clug.org.za/"> Cape Linux Users' Group</ulink>, and
      in the North, try 
      <ulink url="http://www.linux.org.za/glug/"> Gauteng Linux User
      Group</ulink>.</para>
    </section>
    <section id="programming-running-each-other-s-scripts">
      <title>Programming, running each other's scripts</title>
      <para>While writing programs for your own edification and amusement does
      have its own appeal, sooner or later you'll want to share. Here, the
      system administrator has a couple of options.</para>
      <itemizedlist>
        <listitem>
          <para>If the home directories of learners on the classroom server are
          left world-readable (i.e. everyone, or at least every learner, with
          an account on the server is able to see the contents of someone
          else's files), then learners need only tell their classmates the
          location of their scripts for them to be able to find and run them.
          As long as they don't have write access to each other's directories,
          they'll only be able to delete their own files. 
          <footnote>
            <para>Of course, it's always possible to trick someone into running
            a script that will damage their data. This is how many viruses
            work. Rather than trying to manage this through technology, in the
            classroom situation it's probably better to teach learners that
            it's better to help one another (and keep backups in case things go
            wrong).</para>
          </footnote></para>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <para>Alternatively, the system administration team could put scripts
          into a directory where everyone has execution rights after auditing
          the code themselves. While this may be a bit safer, it is likely to
          be an inhibiting factor.</para>
        </listitem>
      </itemizedlist>
      <para>A third possibility is to let learners write CGI scripts that are
      called from web pages served by the classroom server. This can be a fun
      way to see one's code in use by one's peers.</para>
    </section>
  </chapter>
  <chapter id="problem-solver">
    <title>Problem solver</title>
    <section id="id51">
      <title>Introduction</title>
      <para>Welcome to the troubleshooting part of the cookbook. It is aimed at
      the tuXlab administrator who needs to find a quick solution to a common
      problem. 
      <footnote>
        <para>This section incorporates the 
        <emphasis>tuXlab Troubleshooting Guide</emphasis> by Jonathan Carter
        (version 1.0, December 2004).</para>
      </footnote></para>
      <para>Administrators are encouraged to involve their entire computer
      committee when troubleshooting issues. This will facilitate a skill
      transfer process that will improve the sustainability factor of your
      tuXlab.</para>
      <section id="sections">
        <title>Sections</title>
        <section id="basic-overview">
          <title>Basic overview</title>
          <para>In this section, this guide provides a basic overview of how
          the tuXlab works on both the hardware and the software side, which
          should give you at least a vague idea of where the problem might
          lie.</para>
        </section>
        <section id="troubleshooting-problems">
          <title>Troubleshooting problems</title>
          <para>In 
          <xref linkend="troubleshooting-common-tuxlab-problems" />, problems
          are listed by symptom, which allows you to quickly find the section
          relevant to you. Most of explanations in this section refer to common
          tasks performed by tuXlab administrators. Instead of explaining these
          tasks in every part, it refers to the 
          <xref linkend="troubleshooting-reference" />, where you can also find
          a walk-through for the 
          <filename>lts.conf</filename> file.</para>
        </section>
        <section id="known-issues">
          <title>Known issues</title>
          <para>In this section, you can find more information on known issues
          that need to be worked around. This will typically be issues that
          need to be solved by the developers of some software package
          installed in a tuXlab, or limitations of the hardware in use.</para>
        </section>
        <section id="what-to-do-when-you-get-stuck">
          <title>What to do when you get stuck</title>
          <para>
          <xref linkend="further-reading" /> contains an explanation of the
          tuXlab support process, so that the tuXlab administrator knows when
          to contact the appropriate person/organisation.</para>
          <para>If anything in this document is unclear, remember that you may
          phone the tuXlab help desk on 0860 67 4357 for further information
          and explanations. They will also be able to log requests if you need
          any forms (such as the hardware order form or a tuXlab audit
          form).</para>
        </section>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section id="id54">
      <title>Basic overview</title>
      <section id="tuxlab-network-topology">
        <title>TuXlab Network Topology</title>
        <para>Your tuXlab uses a star topology. This means that every thin
        client connects directly to the switch, giving it a fast connection to
        the tuXlab server. In other topologies, such as ring topologies,
        messages are passed on from computer to computer. Star topologies are
        the fastest, and are best suited for thin client computers.</para>
        <para>In the diagram below, you will notice that all the thin clients,
        as well as the server, connect to the switch using CAT-5 cable. The
        server connects to a special high-speed port on the switch, called the
        "Gigabit" port. It has ten times the data throughput of the other
        ports, allowing computers to have fast access to the server. This is
        necessary because all the clients are constantly talking to the server,
        and not to each other.</para>
        <para>If your lab has an internet or e-mail setup, your server will
        also be connected to a 
        <emphasis>gateway</emphasis> computer. This computer will dial up at
        night to collect your email and off-line content. The gateway computer
        will have a modem attached, that converts the sounds from your phone
        line to digital signals that your computer can understand, and
        vice-versa.</para>
        <para>With troubleshooting, more than half the work is actually
        identifying the problem. Once you have a good overview of how things
        fit together, it is easier to locate the cause of the problem.</para>
        <para>Thin clients rely on a network connection to work, so if 
        <emphasis>all</emphasis> the computers fail to start up, you might want
        to check if the networking switch is turned on, or that the server is
        properly connected to a switch. If only one computer fails to start, it
        might be a problem with the cable connecting that computer to the
        switch. To make sure of this, plug this cable into a computer that
        starts successfully. If it stops working while using this cable and
        resumes working normally when the original cable is replaced, you know
        that the problem lies with the cable.</para>
        <para>To fix the cable, you can try crimping the cable ends again.
        Examine both the switch end and the workstation end of the cable,
        making sure that all the copper wires in the CAT-5 cable are pushed up
        right to the end of the cable. If you notice something wrong, cut the
        cable a couple of centimetres beyond the RJ-45 jack, and proceed as in 
        <xref linkend="building-the-network" /></para>
        <para>XXX: diagram</para>
      </section>
      <section id="thin-client-startup-process">
        <title>Thin client startup process</title>
        <itemizedlist>
          <listitem>
            <para>As soon as you switch on a thin client, it does a Power On
            Self Test ( 
            <acronym>POST</acronym>). This is the part where you normally see
            numbers counting, and a prompt to press 
            <keycap>F1</keycap>, 
            <keycap>F2</keycap>, or 
            <keycap>DEL</keycap> to enter setup.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>After the 
            <acronym>POST</acronym> is completed, control is given over to your
            network card's boot 
            <acronym>PROM</acronym> (Programmable Read-Only Memory). This is a
            small piece of memory on the network card that allows a computer to
            boot from the network. The two methods of booting off the network
            are called 
            <emphasis role="strong">Etherboot</emphasis> and 
            <emphasis role="strong">
              <acronym>PXE</acronym>
            </emphasis> (Pre-boot eXecution Environment). If you see one of
            these words, then your network card is configured.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>If your network card detects a connection to a switch, it
            will attempt to search for the server using 
            <acronym>DHCP</acronym>. 
            <acronym>DHCP</acronym> is the thin client's way of screaming "I am
            here! Please find me! Give me an address so that I can boot up!"
            The server will then give the thin client an address, called an IP
            (Internet Protocol) address. If a thin client is stuck at this
            point, it often means that the switch is on, but the server doesn't
            respond, or is not plugged in, or 
            <acronym>DHCP</acronym> is not running on the server.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>
            <acronym>DHCP</acronym> tells the thin client that it should use FTP
            (File Transfer Protocol) to download the Linux kernel (a file
            called 
            <filename>vmlinuz.ltsp</filename>) from the server. If a thin
            client gets stuck here, it's often a problem with the FTP server or
            a firewall blocking the FTP port. Perhaps the FTP server is not
            being started automatically?</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>The next step is to gain access to a filesystem on the server
            over 
            <acronym>NFS</acronym> (Network File System). This is the filesystem
            that all thin clients use to boot Linux after the kernel load, and
            can be found on the server at 
            <filename>/opt/ltsp/i386</filename>.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>XDMCP is the X Display Manager Copier. It sends the graphical
            user interface (GUI) from the server to your thin client. If XDPCP
            doesn't start, it's often because GDM (Gnome Display Manager) isn't
            starting up. This is normally where the problem lies if you get a
            grey screen with an X cursor.</para>
          </listitem>
        </itemizedlist>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section id="troubleshooting-common-tuxlab-problems">
      <title>Troubleshooting common tuXlab problems</title>
      <section id="thin-client-stops-at-searching-for-dhcp">
        <title>Thin client stops at "Searching for 
        <acronym>DHCP</acronym> "</title>
        <section id="symptom">
          <title>Symptom</title>
          <para>Thin client stops at "Searching for 
          <acronym>DHCP</acronym>...".</para>
          <para>Possible causes:</para>
          <orderedlist>
            <listitem>
              <para>
              <acronym>DHCP</acronym> server not running</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Server not connected to switch (either the cable is not
              plugged in, or it's faulty)</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>TuXlab server not powered up</para>
            </listitem>
          </orderedlist>
        </section>
        <section id="solutions">
          <title>Solutions</title>
          <orderedlist>
            <listitem>
              <para>If the 
              <acronym>DHCP</acronym> server isn't running, you can restart it
              by opening a terminal, logging in as root, and then typing in the
              following:</para>
              <screen>
# /etc/init.d/dhcpd restart 
Stopping DHCPD [FAILED]
Starting DHCPD [SUCCESS]
</screen>
              <para>In the transcript above, you'll notice that the attempt to
              stop the 
              <acronym>DHCP</acronym> server failed. This means that it wasn't
              running when you attempted to boot.</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Check if the green light is burning on the network card on
              the server. You can also check for a connection on the switch on
              the appropriate port. In some cases, it works better if the
              server is connected to a specific port (some switches have 
              <emphasis>two</emphasis> gigabit slots). If only one thin client
              has this symptom, check that the connection light is burning on
              the network card. Sometimes all that's needed is to press the
              "Esc" button on the thin client's keyboard.</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Check that the server is powered up. If the previous steps
              failed to solve your problem, attach a display, keyboard and
              mouse to your server to see any possible error messages.</para>
            </listitem>
          </orderedlist>
        </section>
      </section>
      <section id="thin-client-stops-at-loading-vmlinuz-ltsp">
        <title>Thin client stops at "Loading vmlinuz.ltsp..."</title>
        <section id="id55">
          <title>Symptom</title>
          <para>Thin client says "Loading vmlinuz.ltsp..." then stops.</para>
          <para>Possible causes:</para>
          <orderedlist>
            <listitem>
              <para>
              <acronym>TFTP</acronym> Server is not running</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Firewall is blocking 
              <acronym>TFTP</acronym> port</para>
            </listitem>
          </orderedlist>
        </section>
        <section id="id56">
          <title>Solutions</title>
          <orderedlist>
            <listitem>
              <para>Trivial File Transport Protocol ( 
              <acronym>TFTP</acronym>) is used to download the Linux kernel to
              the thin client. It is started by a service called 
              <command>xinetd</command>. Try to restart the server as
              root:</para>
              <screen>
# /etc/init.d/xinetd restart 
Stopping xinet [SUCCESS]
Starting xinetd [SUCCESS]
</screen>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Disable the firewall (as described in section XXX).
              Otherwise, you need to reconfigure your firewall to open the 
              <acronym>TFTP</acronym> port.</para>
              <para>
              <emphasis role="strong">Note</emphasis>: If your classroom server
              connects directly to the internet (without using a gateway
              machine), the firewall needs to be enabled. This will only be the
              case in a non-standard tuXlab that you may have modified
              yourself. Normally, the classroom server will not connect
              directly to the internet, but will go through a Wizzy
              server.</para>
            </listitem>
          </orderedlist>
        </section>
      </section>
      <section id="thin-clients-have-grey-screen-showing-only-an-x-cursor">
        <title>Thin clients have grey screen showing only an X cursor</title>
        <section id="id57">
          <title>Symptom</title>
          <para>Thin clients display grey screen with an X for a mouse pointer
          instead of login screen.</para>
          <para>Possible causes:</para>
          <orderedlist>
            <listitem>
              <para>XDMCP is disabled</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>GDM is not running</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Thin clients are connecting to wrong server</para>
            </listitem>
          </orderedlist>
        </section>
        <section id="id58">
          <title>Solutions</title>
          <orderedlist>
            <listitem>
              <para>Check if XDMCP is enabled. To do this, go to the server
              (you may have to connect a display, keyboard and mouse), and
              click on the main menu button on the bottom of the screen. Go to
              the 
              <emphasis>System Settings</emphasis> menu, and choose "Login" to
              modify your login settings. You will have to enter the root
              password. Then, click on the "XDMCP" tab, and ensure that the box
              that says "enabled" is selected.</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Check if GDM is running. You can gain access to the server
              by using a secure shell from one of the thin clients (refer to 
              <xref linkend="using-a-secure-shell-from-one-of-the-thin-clients" />).
              To check if GDM is running (once logged in), type:</para>
              <screen>
# ps -e | grep " .dm"
</screen>
              <para>If GDM is running, you will see an output similar to
              this:</para>
              <screen>
1973 ? 00:00:00 gdm 
3226 ? 00:00:00 gdm
</screen>
              <para>If GDM is not running, or if you'd like to restart GDM, you
              can type:</para>
              <screen>
# gdm-safe-restart
</screen>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>The server to be used for LTS (Linux Terminal Services) is
              specified in the 
              <filename>lts.conf</filename> file using the "server" directive.
              This value is normally 
              <literal>192.168.0.254</literal>, but may be different depending
              on your specific setup:</para>
              <screen>
# from lts.conf:
server = 192.168.0.254
</screen>
              <para>If you have more than one tuXlab server, or if you have
              more than one computer network in your school, then this address
              might have to be slightly different.</para>
            </listitem>
          </orderedlist>
        </section>
      </section>
      <section id="thin-client-displays-message-link-cable-error">
        <title>Thin client displays message "Link cable error"</title>
        <section id="id59">
          <title>Symptom</title>
          <para>Thin client does not connect, and complains about cable
          error.</para>
          <para>Possible causes:</para>
          <orderedlist>
            <listitem>
              <para>Networking switch is switched off (in which case 
              <emphasis>no</emphasis> clients will be able to connect), or
              faulty</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Cable is not properly crimped</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Cable is broken at some point</para>
            </listitem>
          </orderedlist>
        </section>
        <section id="id60">
          <title>Solutions</title>
          <orderedlist>
            <listitem>
              <para>Check that the switch is powered up. If none of the lights
              are on, or they don't flash, then the switch might be faulty. In
              this case you need to consult with neighbouring schools and, if
              necessary, the tuXlab help desk. If the switch is less than a
              year old, then it is still under guarantee, and it needs to go
              back to its supplier. The Shuttleworth Foundation will arrange a
              loan switch, if possible.</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>If the cable isn't properly crimped, you need to cut the
              network point off, and re-crimp it. If you do not have a crimping
              tool of your own, consult with a neighbouring school.</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>If the cable is damaged at any point, it needs to be
              replaced.</para>
            </listitem>
          </orderedlist>
        </section>
      </section>
      <section id="thin-client-screen-goes-black-or-fuzzy-at-startup">
        <title>Thin client screen goes black or fuzzy at startup</title>
        <section id="id61">
          <title>Symptom</title>
          <para>Thin client starts up normally, and displays text on screen,
          but as soon as the graphical login manager starts, the screen goes
          blank or fuzzy.</para>
        </section>
        <section id="possible-causes">
          <title>Possible causes</title>
          <orderedlist>
            <listitem>
              <para>Display resolution is set too high</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Thin client is using incorrect display driver</para>
            </listitem>
          </orderedlist>
        </section>
        <section id="solution">
          <title>Solution</title>
          <orderedlist>
            <listitem>
              <para>Some screens have trouble displaying resolutions of
              1024x768, and you might need to set it down to 800x600. We do not
              recommend using 640x480, and if it can only handle that
              resolution, we consider it faulty.</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>To change to the correct display driver, you need to know
              which type of display card the thin client has. The best way to
              determine this is to open up the box and take a peek. The name of
              the card will be written on a black chip on the display card. If
              it's an on-board card, it will often be the chip closest to where
              you plug in the monitor. [[XXX: A couple of example images and
              names would be cool.]]</para>
            </listitem>
          </orderedlist>
          <section id="how-to-change-the-resolution-and-display-driver">
            <title>How to change the resolution and display driver</title>
            <para>Thin client settings are all stored in a file called 
            <filename>lts.conf</filename>. The full path to this file on the
            server is:</para>
            <screen>
/opt/ltsp/i386/etc/lts.conf
</screen>
            <para>You can edit this file with a plain-text editor of your
            choice (such as 
            <command>vim</command>, 
            <command>gedit</command>, 
            <command>kate</command>, etc.). At the very bottom of this file,
            you can configure individual thin clients such as the following
            example:</para>
            <screen>
[A1:00:08:53:F1:01]
    XSERVER = cirrus
    X_MODE_0 = 800x600
</screen>
            <para>The line in brackets is the thin client's unique network
            address. This address is called a 
            <acronym>MAC</acronym> address, and is determined by the network
            card. You can find out what the 
            <acronym>MAC</acronym> address of a workstation is by pressing 
            <keycombo>
              <keycap>CTRL</keycap>
              <keycap>ALT</keycap>
              <keycap>F2</keycap>
            </keycombo> on the thin client to get a text console terminal
            session, and then typing in:</para>
            <screen>
# ifconfig
</screen>
            <para>This will give you information such as the following:</para>
            <screen>
eth0      Link encap:Ethernet  HWaddr 00:10:A4:7B:A7:CC  
        inet addr:192.168.0.50  Bcast:192.168.0.255  Mask:255.255.255.0
        UP BROADCAST RUNNING MULTICAST  MTU:1500  Metric:1
        RX packets:0 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 frame:0
        TX packets:0 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 carrier:0
        collisions:0 txqueuelen:100 
        RX bytes:0 (0.0 b)  TX bytes:0 (0.0 b)
        Interrupt:11 Base address:0x4c00 
</screen>
            <para>In the above, the 
            <acronym>MAC</acronym> address is called HWaddr, and is 
            <literal>00:10:A4:7B:A7:CC</literal>.</para>
            <para>After saving the 
            <filename>lts.conf</filename> file on the server, you can press 
            <keycombo>
              <keycap>CTRL</keycap>
              <keycap>ALT</keycap>
              <keycap>F1</keycap>
            </keycombo> (to go back to the graphical console), and then 
            <keycombo>
              <keycap>CTRL</keycap>
              <keycap>ALT</keycap>
              <keycap>BACKSPACE</keycap>
            </keycombo> (to restart the X server) to test your setting.</para>
            <para>The 
            <literal>XSERVER</literal> directive specifies what driver this
            machine should be using. In this case, it's a generic Cirrus Logic
            display card. If all fails, you might want to try a 
            <literal>vesa</literal> driver, which is a very generic display
            driver that should work with most display cards.</para>
            <para>The X_MODE_0 directive specifies which resolution this thin
            client should use. If the resolution is too high, text will become
            too small. Your ideal resolution should be 1024x768, followed by
            800x600.</para>
          </section>
        </section>
      </section>
      <section id="thin-client-freezes-reboots-regularly">
        <title>Thin client freezes / reboots regularly</title>
        <section id="id62">
          <title>Symptom</title>
          <para>Thin clients kicks user out or freezes when under load,
          especially when using software such as Mozilla or
          OpenOffice.org.</para>
        </section>
        <section id="id63">
          <title>Possible causes</title>
          <orderedlist>
            <listitem>
              <para>Thin client runs out of memory</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Thin client may contain faulty 
              <acronym>RAM</acronym> modules</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Thin client may have cooling problems</para>
            </listitem>
          </orderedlist>
        </section>
        <section id="id64">
          <title>Solution</title>
          <orderedlist>
            <listitem>
              <para>Enable swap over 
              <acronym>NFS</acronym>. In most tuXlabs, this should already be
              enabled. To check, press 
              <keycombo>
                <keycap>CTRL</keycap>
                <keycap>ALT</keycap>
                <keycap>F2</keycap>
              </keycombo> (from any thin client after logging in), and then
              type:</para>
              <screen>
gedit /opt/ltsp/i386/etc/lts.conf
</screen>
              <para>Scroll down, and check that the file contains the following
              lines under the 
              <literal>[defaults]</literal> section:</para>
              <screen>
ENABLE_NFS_SWAP = Y 
SWAPFILE_SIZE = 32m
</screen>
              <para>Swap file size should be a minimum of 8MB, but at least
              16MB is recommended. Since we have lots of disk space on the
              server, we can make it 32MB. When a thin client runs short on
              memory, it will use swap space over the network system to avoid
              running into problems.</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Check for faulty 
              <acronym>RAM</acronym> modules. The best way to do this is to
              remove the memory modules from one thin client, and swap it with
              another. If the other thin client gives problems, then you know
              it is due to faulty 
              <acronym>RAM</acronym>.</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Check the cooling of thin client. If the 
              <acronym>CPU</acronym> overheats or there are critical fans that
              are faulty, then it needs to be replaced.</para>
            </listitem>
          </orderedlist>
        </section>
      </section>
      <section id="mouse-doesn-t-move">
        <title>Mouse doesn't move</title>
        <section id="id65">
          <title>Symptom</title>
          <para>Mouse is stuck, and doesn't move at all.</para>
        </section>
        <section id="id66">
          <title>Possible causes</title>
          <orderedlist>
            <listitem>
              <para>Incorrect mouse type specified in 
              <filename>lts.conf</filename> file</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Mouse plugged into incorrect port</para>
            </listitem>
          </orderedlist>
        </section>
        <section id="id67">
          <title>Solution</title>
          <orderedlist>
            <listitem>
              <para>If you replace a PS/2 type mouse with a serial mouse, then
              you need to specify this change in your 
              <filename>lts.conf</filename> file (editing 
              <filename>lts.conf</filename> is explained in 
              <xref linkend="thin-client-screen-goes-black-or-fuzzy-at-startup" />).</para>
              <para>For serial mice (D-shape connector):</para>
              <screen>
[00:08:A1:48:F1:08]
    X_MOUSE_PROTOCOL = "microsoft"
    X_MOUSE_DEVICE = "/dev/ttyS0"
</screen>
              <para>In some cases, 
              <literal>ttyS0</literal> might have to be 
              <literal>ttyS1</literal>. If you have used serial mice in Windows
              before, then you will know 
              <literal>ttyS0</literal> as 
              <literal>com1</literal> and 
              <literal>ttyS1</literal> as 
              <literal>com2</literal>.</para>
              <para>For PS/2 mice (small, round connector):</para>
              <screen>
X_MOUSE_PROTOCOL = "PS/2" 
X_MOUSE_DEVICE = "/dev/psaux"
</screen>
              <para>If it's a PS/2 scroll mouse, you can change "PS/2" to
              "IMPS/2", although this might not work on all
              configurations.</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Check that the mouse and keyboard are plugged into the
              correct port. On most computers, the keyboard should be plugged
              into the bottom socket (purple), while the mouse is plugged into
              the top socket (green).</para>
            </listitem>
          </orderedlist>
        </section>
      </section>
      <section id="keyboard-doesn-t-work">
        <title>Keyboard doesn't work</title>
        <section id="id68">
          <title>Symptom</title>
          <para>Keyboard is dead.</para>
        </section>
        <section id="id69">
          <title>Possible causes</title>
          <orderedlist>
            <listitem>
              <para>Keyboard is damaged</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Keyboard is plugged into incorrect socket</para>
            </listitem>
          </orderedlist>
        </section>
        <section id="id70">
          <title>Solutions</title>
          <orderedlist>
            <listitem>
              <para>Check that the pins on the keyboard are not bent. If the
              keyboard is damaged, it should be replaced.</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Please refer to step 2 in 
              <xref linkend="mouse-doesn-t-move" />.</para>
            </listitem>
          </orderedlist>
        </section>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section id="id71">
      <title>Known issues</title>
      <section id="thin-client-capabilities">
        <title>Thin client capabilities</title>
        <para>Thin clients, being network computers, have limits on what
        they're capable of. It allows easy administration, and maintenance, but
        it has the following limitations:</para>
        <itemizedlist>
          <listitem>
            <para>3D graphics are slow/unusable</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>Full motion video playback is not possible on all the thin
            clients at the same time</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>OpenGL drivers are not available for older display
            cards</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>Software that uses lots of moving graphics do get slow</para>
          </listitem>
        </itemizedlist>
      </section>
      <section id="known-software-issues">
        <title>Known software issues</title>
        <para>Some of the software we install is very new, and may still be
        under development. In this section, we list the software that we know
        have issues.</para>
        <section id="id72">
          <title>GCompris</title>
          <para>GCompris is a relatively new piece of software, and in some
          parts of the program, it might kick you out of the program. GCompris
          is a great piece of software, especially with the lower grade
          students, we've included it for the parts that do work. We encourage
          teachers to inform our help desk of specific GCompris issues. We can
          then compile a list of issues experienced, and forward it on to the
          GCompris developers.</para>
        </section>
        <section id="tuxracer-chromium">
          <title>Tuxracer, Chromium</title>
          <para>These are games that require a 3D graphics or OpenGL graphics.
          They are not supported on thin clients and we recommend that you
          remove these two games from your system.</para>
          <para>To remove Tuxracer and chromium from your system, click on the
          main menu button on the bottom of your screen, point to "System
          Settings" and choose "Add/Remove Software". There you will have the
          option to remove this software under the Games section.</para>
        </section>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section id="troubleshooting-reference">
      <title>Troubleshooting reference</title>
      <section id="how-do-i-get-access-to-a-terminal">
        <title>How do I get access to a terminal?</title>
        <para>Simply put, a terminal is a place where you can type instructions
        for your computer. Terminal access is often the easiest way to adjust a
        wide variety of settings in your tuXlab.</para>
        <para>There are several ways to gain access to a terminal. In the
        following, we'll show a few of the ways.</para>
        <section id="opening-a-terminal-screen-from-your-gnome-desktop">
          <title>Opening a terminal screen from your GNOME desktop</title>
          <para>If you're already logged in, you can right-click on your GNOME
          desktop and click on "Open Terminal" or "New Terminal" (depending on
          the version of GNOME you are using). This will open a new terminal
          window on your desktop.</para>
        </section>
        <section id="using-a-console-terminal">
          <title>Using a console terminal</title>
          <para>Sometimes, it's not possible to log in using a normal account
          from a thin client machine. If this is the case, you might want to
          use a console terminal on the server. In order to do this, you need
          to have a display and keyboard attached to the server. To access a
          console terminal on the server, press 
          <keycombo>
            <keycap>CTRL</keycap>
            <keycap>ALT</keycap>
            <keycap>F1</keycap>
          </keycombo>. You can then log on as root from there to change
          settings. To return back to the graphical user interface, press 
          <keycombo>
            <keycap>CTRL</keycap>
            <keycap>ALT</keycap>
            <keycap>F7</keycap>
          </keycombo>. If you don't have a display and keyboard attached to
          your server, and your thin clients can still start up, you might want
          to access the server with a secure shell as described in the next
          section.</para>
        </section>
        <section id="using-a-secure-shell-from-one-of-the-thin-clients">
          <title>Using a secure shell from one of the thin clients</title>
          <para>Thin clients are generally just connections to the server, but
          each thin client also runs its own little Linux system (once it has
          booted up) that you can use to access the server. To gain access to
          the Linux system, press 
          <keycombo>
            <keycap>CTRL</keycap>
            <keycap>ALT</keycap>
            <keycap>F2</keycap>
          </keycombo> on any thin client. To connect to the server from a thin
          client, type:</para>
          <screen>
# ssh server 
The authenticity of host 'server (192.168.0.254)' can't be established. 
RSA key fingerprint is 9e:8e:0e:9a:88:b9:a0:1e:0c:80:15:41:54:47:dd:fa. 
Are you sure you want to continue connecting (yes/no)?
</screen>
          <para>You will then see a message warning you about a RSA key, this
          is normal. Type "yes" and press enter. You must then enter the
          server's root password and press enter again. When you're done, you
          can press 
          <keycombo>
            <keycap>CTRL</keycap>
            <keycap>d</keycap>
          </keycombo> to exit the secure session, and 
          <keycombo>
            <keycap>ALT</keycap>
            <keycap>F1</keycap>
          </keycombo> to return to the thin client's graphical user
          interface.</para>
        </section>
      </section>
      <section id="how-to-reset-the-root-password">
        <title>How to reset the root password</title>
        <para>There are two types of users: those who have forgotten their
        password, and those that will forget their password. This is often the
        case for system administrators as well.</para>
        <para>To reset your root password, you'll need:</para>
        <itemizedlist>
          <listitem>
            <para>Physical access to your server. Note well that anyone with
            physical access to your server can reset the root password, so take
            care to keep it locked up.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>A keyboard and display attached to the server.</para>
          </listitem>
        </itemizedlist>
        <para>Resetting your server in 4 easy steps:</para>
        <orderedlist>
          <listitem>
            <para>Restart the server</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>When the 
            <command>GRUB</command>
            <footnote>
              <para>GRUB is the 
              <emphasis>Grand Unified Bootloader</emphasis>, so called because
              various alternatives existed with different strengths and
              weaknesses. GRUB was written to try and take the best from them
              and make the choice of a bootloader less of an issue.</para>
              <para>Briefly, the bootloader is the first software program that
              runs when a computer starts. It is responsible for loading and
              transferring control to the operating system kernel (see 
              <xref linkend="what-is-an-operating-system" />). You can read 
              <ulink url="http://www.gnu.org/software/grub/"> more about GRUB in
              the 
              <acronym>FSF</acronym> software directory.</ulink></para>
            </footnote> screen is displayed, press the 
            <keycap>e</keycap> button on your keyboard, then the 
            <keycap>Down arrow</keycap> button, then 
            <keycap>e</keycap> again. Then press the 
            <keycap>end</keycap> button, type in a comma, a space and the letter
            
            <keycap>s</keycap> (so that it's ", s" at the end of the line) and
            press the 
            <keycap>b</keycap> button twice. This will boot you into single user
            mode.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>Once the server has started into single user mode, type
            in:</para>
            <screen>
# passwd
Enter new UNIX password: 
Retype new UNIX password:
passwd: password updated successfully
</screen>
            <para>After typing 
            <command>passwd</command>, enter your password, and then re-enter
            it. Your password (or password length) will not be displayed on the
            screen for security purposes, in case someone is watching over your
            shoulder.</para>
          </listitem>
        </orderedlist>
      </section>
      <section id="lts-conf-walkthrough">
        <title>
        <filename>lts.conf</filename> walk-through</title>
        <para>The 
        <filename>lts.conf</filename> file stores information about your thin
        client setup. Generally, thin client settings are detected
        automatically. However, there are times when you want to adjust certain
        settings manually. Remember to make comments when you change settings
        (it will make it easy for other people to troubleshoot the system).
        Comments are any lines in your 
        <filename>lts.conf</filename> file that start with a 
        <literal>#</literal>.</para>
        <section id="the-default-section">
          <title>The 
          <literal>[default]</literal> section</title>
          <para>This is where all the default settings are stored that applies
          to 
          <emphasis role="strong">all</emphasis> your thin clients:</para>
          <screen>
[default]
    SERVER = 192.168.0.254 
    XSERVER = vesa 
    #used to be s3, changed to vesa on 10 December 2004 by Jonathan
</screen>
          <para>In the section above, the 
          <acronym>LAN</acronym> IP address of the Linux terminal server is set
          to 
          <literal>192.168.0.254</literal>, and the default display driver for
          thin clients is set to 
          <literal>vesa</literal>. The last line is a comment, which explains
          that the setting has changed from 
          <literal>s3</literal> to 
          <literal>vesa</literal>. Whenever possible, try to put reasons for
          the changes in your comments as well, as well as identifying yourself
          and the date of the change.</para>
          <screen>
X_MOUSE_PROTOCOL = microsoft 
X_MOUSE_DEVICE = /dev/ttyS0
X_kb_Symboles = us(pc101) 
X_kb_Layout = us
</screen>
          <para>The 
          <literal>X_MOUSE</literal> and 
          <literal>X_kb</literal> section sets the default keyboard and mouse
          settings for all the thin clients. Refer to 
          <xref linkend="keyboard-doesn-t-work" /> for more information on
          changing pointing device settings.</para>
          <screen>
USE_XFS = N 
LOCAL_APPS = N 
SCREEN_01 = startx 
SCREEN_02 = shell 
USE_NFS_SWAP = Y 
SWAPFILE_SIZE = 24m
</screen>
          <variablelist>
            <varlistentry>
              <term>
                <literal>USE_XFS</literal>
              </term>
              <listitem>
                <para>Specifies whether we want to use an X font server or not.
                We generally say 
                <literal>N</literal> for 
                <literal>no</literal> here.</para>
              </listitem>
            </varlistentry>
            <varlistentry>
              <term>
                <literal>LOCAL_APPS</literal>
              </term>
              <listitem>
                <para>Specifies whether we want to use thin clients to run
                their own programs. This can be handy if you have powerful thin
                clients (Pentium 2 or better), because it takes load off the
                server, and can cause programs to run faster. Even though this
                can cause huge performance increases, it's lots of work to set
                up, and is still quite experimental. Future versions of 
                <acronym>LTSP</acronym> will use local applications more as it
                matures and as hardware improves.</para>
              </listitem>
            </varlistentry>
            <varlistentry>
              <term>
              <literal>SCREEN_01</literal> and 
              <literal>SCREEN_02</literal></term>
              <listitem>
                <para>These settings explain what we want to run on our thin
                clients. In this case, we will run our graphical user interface
                on the first screen of our thin clients, while we run a text
                mode shell on the second screen. To switch between screens on
                the thin clients, press 
                <literal>CTRL+ALT+F1</literal> for screen 1, and 
                <literal>CTRL+ALT+F2</literal> for screen 2.</para>
              </listitem>
            </varlistentry>
            <varlistentry>
              <term>
              <literal>USE_NFS_SWAP</literal> and 
              <literal>SWAPFILE_SIZE</literal></term>
              <listitem>
                <para>These are used to set up swap files for the thin clients
                on the server. When a thin client runs out of memory, it will
                use disk space on the server for extra swap memory. Enabling
                swap over 
                <acronym>NFS</acronym> greatly improves thin client performance
                as well as stability. If 
                <literal>SWAPFILE_SIZE</literal> is set too high, then there
                will be a waste in hard disk space and some loss in
                performance. It is recommended that you use a swap file of
                8-32MB. 24MB generally works well.</para>
              </listitem>
            </varlistentry>
          </variablelist>
          <screen>
RCFILE_01 = usb 
RCFILE_02 = floppyd
</screen>
          <para>RC (Run Command) files are scripts that are started up when the
          thin clients boot. 
          <command>usb</command> and 
          <command>floppyd</command> allows thin clients to connect to local
          devices using 
          <emphasis>mtools</emphasis> (a set of programs that allow you to use
          floppies formatted as 
          <acronym>VFAT</acronym>, the Windows disk format, without needing to
          mount and unmount them). If your thin clients have floppy drives,
          it's strongly recommended that you enable the 
          <command>floppyd</command> script.</para>
          <screen>
SOUND = Y 
SOUND_DAEMON = esd 
# SOUND_DAEMON = nasd 
VOLUME = 75 
SMODULE_01 = sb io=0x220 irq=5 dma=1
</screen>
          <para>If you want to enable sound on the thin clients, then 
          <literal>SOUND</literal> needs to be set to 
          <literal>Y</literal> and it needs to be uncommented. 
          <literal>SOUND_DAEMON</literal> selects the sound server to be used.
          Normally, only one of the two will work. The best way to set it up is
          to try the one, and if it doesn't work, try the other one. 
          <literal>SMODULE_01</literal> selects the driver module you want to
          use with the thin client's sound card. Generally, 
          <literal>sb</literal> will work with most sound cards. [[XXX: How are
          the io and irq parameters determined?]]</para>
          <screen>
#60 hz resolutions:
X_MODE_0 = 1024x768 65 1024 1048 1184 1344 768 771 777 806 -hsync -vsync
</screen>
          <para>You will normally find a whole bunch of mode lines like the one
          above in your 
          <filename>lts.conf</filename> file. 
          <literal>X_MODE_0</literal> specifies the resolution your thin clients
          should use. 1024x768 at 60hz is usually the best choice.</para>
          <para>To change the resolution of one specific thin client, you can
          refer to it by its 
          <acronym>MAC</acronym> address:</para>
          <screen>
[00:08:A1:F1:EE:01]
    X_MODE_0 = 800x600
    LOCAL_APPS = N
    USE_NFS_SWAP = N
</screen>
          <para>The numbers between brackets is the thin client's 
          <acronym>MAC</acronym> address. This is the unique address of each
          thin client determined by the thin client's network card. 
          <literal>X_MODE_0</literal> specifies the screen resolution. 
          <literal>LOCAL_APPS</literal> is disabled for this thin client, as
          well as swap over 
          <acronym>NFS</acronym>. Any of the settings in the 
          <literal>[default]</literal> section can be applied to a specific thin
          client as well.</para>
        </section>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section id="further-reading">
      <title>Further reading</title>
      <section id="tuxlab-support-process">
        <title>tuXlab support process</title>
        <para>The tuXlab support process is fairly simple. The support process
        poster in your tuXlab explains the steps:</para>
        <orderedlist>
          <listitem>
            <formalpara>
              <title>Inform your computer committee that you have a
              problem</title>
              <para>It's important that everyone in your computer committee
              knows what's going on in your lab. If a representative from 
              <acronym>SLUG</acronym> or the foundation phones your school, they
              will ask to speak to a tuXlab computer lab committee
              member.</para>
            </formalpara>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <formalpara>
              <title>Open up your logbook and note the problem in your
              logbook</title>
              <para>This allows you to keep a record of problems that have been
              experienced in your lab, along with the solutions. If you or a
              school in your cluster experience the same problem again, you'll
              have a reference to fall back on.</para>
            </formalpara>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <formalpara>
              <title>Allow staff and students and your facilitator to try and
              identify what the problem is.</title>
              <para>For your tuXlab to be truly sustainable, you need to have
              as much local skills as possible. To promote your own skill
              levels, you have to try and solve as many problems as you can
              yourself.</para>
            </formalpara>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <formalpara>
              <title>Contact the schools in your cluster to find out if they
              know a solution to your problem.</title>
              <para>If a neighbouring tuXlab family school have experienced a
              similar problem, they will be able to assist you with your
              problem. If you get stuck, mention your problem at your next
              cluster meeting, or phone the schools directly and speak to their
              tuXlab committee.</para>
            </formalpara>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <formalpara>
              <title>If no solution has been found, contact the tuXlab help
              desk at 0860 OS HELP (67 4357)</title>
              <para>The help desk also keeps track of problems in tuXlabs, as
              well as other general requests. You may also phone the help desk
              at any time for help on any problem or help that you may need in
              your tuXlab. They will provide you with telephonic
              support.</para>
            </formalpara>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>Contact 
            <acronym>SLUG</acronym>, the Schools Linux Users Group, a volunteer
            group who are very much dedicated to the tuXlab project. They can
            generally be reached via email. For more information, see 
            <ulink url="http://www.slug.org.za" />.</para>
            <para>These are students and volunteers who assist schools with
            setting up their tuXlabs. They also assist schools after the labs
            have been installed. In return, they are encouraged via incentive
            by the Foundation with training and certification exams.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>If no solution was found using these steps, you can contact
            Jonathan Carter at the Shuttleworth Foundation on (021) 970
            1230.</para>
            <para>This is your last resort helpline. If no one else can help
            you, you have to phone Jonathan with a detailed explanation of your
            problem.</para>
          </listitem>
        </orderedlist>
        <para>If you experience any hardware problems, it's generally a good
        idea to skip ahead to step 5 and phone the help desk, since other
        tuXlab schools might not always be able to help you there. Most tuXlab
        cluster leaders will have spare parts with them, contact your cluster
        leader to find out if they have any spares.</para>
      </section>
      <section id="where-to-source-hardware-from">
        <title>Where to source hardware from</title>
        <para>If you'd like to buy additional hardware for your tuXlab, or if
        you need to replace faulty equipment of which the guarantee has
        expired, you can source hardware from the following suppliers:</para>
        <section id="additional-server-hardware">
          <title>Additional server hardware</title>
          <para>Rectron: (021) 555 7111</para>
          <para>For better pricing, you may order server hardware from Rectron
          via the Shuttleworth Foundation.</para>
        </section>
        <section id="networking-hardware">
          <title>Networking hardware</title>
          <para>Scoop distribution: (021) 555 4740 (Neal Andrews)</para>
          <para>Scoop distribution supplies networking equipment such as
          switches, cabling, crimping tools, RJ-45 connectors and boots.</para>
        </section>
        <section id="thin-clients">
          <title>Thin clients</title>
          <para>Additional thin clients can be obtained from the Foundation
          using the hardware order form that can be found in the tuXlab starter
          pack.</para>
        </section>
      </section>
      <section id="additional-resources">
        <title>Additional resources</title>
        <para>These are just pointers to sites on the World Wide Web where you
        can read more about some of the topics mentioned, and where you can
        search for further information.</para>
        <section id="google-for-linux">
          <title>Google for Linux</title>
          <para>Google has a section dedicated to Linux related questions: 
          <ulink url="http://www.google.com/linux" /></para>
        </section>
        <section id="ltsp-related">
          <title>
          <acronym>LTSP</acronym> Related</title>
          <itemizedlist>
            <listitem>
              <para>The 
              <ulink url="http://www.k12ltsp.org"> K12LTSP project home
              page</ulink>.</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>The 
              <ulink url="http://www.ltsp.org">
              <acronym>LTSP</acronym> project homepage</ulink>. This is the
              distribution from which K12LTSP is derived.</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>The 
              <ulink url="http://wiki.ltsp.org">
              <acronym>LTSP</acronym> Wiki</ulink>. A 
              <emphasis>wiki</emphasis> is kind of site that's easy for visitors
              to edit. The name apparently means "quick" in Hawaiian, and it's
              intended to convey the informality of the typical wiki. It's
              often used to collect user-contributed documentation.</para>
            </listitem>
          </itemizedlist>
        </section>
        <section id="helpful-linux-sites">
          <title>Helpful Linux sites</title>
          <para>The 
          <ulink url="http://www.linuxquestions.org"> Linux questions
          forum</ulink>, where you may submit questions to be answered by other
          members of the community. Remember to 
          <acronym>RTFM</acronym> first!</para>
          <para>
          <ulink url="http://www.tldp.org"> The Linux Documentation Project
          (TLDP)</ulink>. This is a magnificent collection of documents that
          range from short HOWTOs to full-length books on all aspects of Linux
          system administration.</para>
        </section>
      </section>
    </section>
  </chapter>
  <chapter id="getting-the-most-from-your-lab">
    <title>Getting the most from your lab</title>
    <!-- XXX fill in 
    <section id="how-to-apply-the-program-in-your-school">
      <title>How to apply the program in your school</title>
    </section>
    <section id="facilitators">
      <title>Facilitators</title>
    </section>
    -->
    <section id="software-updates">
      <title>Software updates</title>
      <para>Newer versions of all the software components of the tuXlab will be
      released from time to time. Often this will simply be the result of
      ongoing work to improve the software, but from time to time bugs will be
      discovered that represent security risks.</para>
      <para>As a rule, only tuXlab system administrators will be able to
      perform software updates on the classroom server. Care should be taken
      when upgrading software, as it is possible to break things by installing
      incompatible versions of programs or by uninstalling packages that you
      really need.</para>
      <para>Not all upgrades fall into the same category, and they should be
      approached differently.</para>
      <itemizedlist>
        <listitem>
          <para>There are application upgrades or new installs, when you want
          to offer a new program or updated version to your users. This can
          usually be done easily using RedHat's package management facilities
          (called RPM), and need not impact core system components.</para>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <para>There are upgrades that fix security issues. In a trusted
          environment that is not directly exposed to the internet, such as a
          tuXlab, many of these will not be as critical as they would be in an
          open environment. The risk of upgrading system software on the
          classroom server should be weighed up against the importance of the
          fix. Another consideration is that support from the other tuXlabs in
          your cluster will be more effective if all the labs have the same
          configuration, as far as possible.</para>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <para>As long as the Wizzy server functions as it should, its
          software should not be upgraded. It should simply keep on running
          forever with no need for maintenance. Considerations that should be
          kept in mind with the Wizzy server are: it needs to communicate with
          a remote counterpart and should therefore remain compatible with it;
          it contains customisations that are not part of the distribution's
          package management system and that therefore need to be upgraded
          manually.</para>
        </listitem>
      </itemizedlist>
      <para>When you do want to upgrade software, there are various ways of
      going about it. The two main options are as follows:</para>
      <para>In the first place, you can get the source code from the author's
      site. In this case, you would have to configure, compile and install it
      locally. This should not be necessary unless you have specific reasons to
      do it.</para>
      <para>In the second place, you can get the precompiled package for the
      software from one of RedHat's distribution sites or from a CD-ROM, and
      install it using the Gnome desktop (XXX: details). This is the usual way
      of working. The RedHat CDs from which the classroom server is installed
      contain a huge amount of software, not all of which may be installed from
      the outset.</para>
      <para>Users who are not system administrators, and who therefore do not
      have the right to install software for other users, may still install
      software locally by compiling it themselves, and installing to their home
      directory. If they do this, they will need to adjust some environment
      variables (such as 
      <literal>PATH</literal> and 
      <literal>MANPATH</literal>) to include 
      <filename>~/bin</filename> and 
      <filename>~/man</filename> if they aren't there already. This can be a
      good way to learn about new software without destabilising the system for
      other users.</para>
    </section>
    <section id="expansion">
      <title>Expansion</title>
      <para>If your tuXlab is fully utilised and well-maintained, the
      Shuttleworth Foundation may allocate further workstations to it.</para>
    </section>
    <section id="other-uses-for-your-lab">
      <title>Other uses for your lab</title>
      <para>No one will know the needs of your community as well as you, and
      the resources (as far as equipment and available skills are concerned)
      will vary from school to school. Therefor the following should only be
      seen as an example of the kinds of possibilities you may explore, and
      should not limit your thinking.</para>
      <variablelist>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>Training</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>tuXlabs primarily fulfil an educational purpose, and so
            training outside the context of the school's curriculum is an
            obvious avenue to explore. This can include 
            <emphasis>extra lessons for learners</emphasis> who are curious and
            want to go beyond computer literacy lessons, or basic skills for
            those who have trouble keeping up.</para>
            <para>In the interests of sustainability, 
            <emphasis>volunteer training</emphasis> is also very important.
            tuXlabs are installed by volunteers, and rely on volunteers for
            maintenance and support. The school can recruit them from its
            community and the parents of learners, so that those who are
            interested are able to assist in the installation of new
            tuXlabs.</para>
            <para>As part of community outreach, the school can invite
            interested 
            <emphasis>parents</emphasis> to the tuXlab in order to introduce
            them to the environment their children are learning to use. Since
            the tuXlab software is freely available for installation at home,
            this can empower the parents to learn from their children and put
            the software to work at home.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>Time sharing</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>If there are other groups who need computers for their
            activities, it may be possible for them to share the lab under
            supervision.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>School projects</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>The tuXlab can be used for school projects such as an events
            calendar or a school newsletter. There is also Open Source software
            available for libraries, and an enterprising computer club could
            put the catalogue of the school library on the tuXlab
            network.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>General computer literacy</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>XXX: "Office" stuff -- Word processing, Spreadsheets, ...
            Making screenshots Downloading stuff from the internet Organising
            your files</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
      </variablelist>
    </section>
  </chapter>
  <chapter id="end-matter">
    <title>End matter</title>
    <para>End matter to be provided?</para>
  </chapter>
  <chapter id="appendices">
    <title>Appendices</title>
    <section id="business-plan-template">
      <title>Business plan template</title>
      <para>The following may be used as a guideline when drawing up a business
      plan for your tuXlab. You need to submit a business plan in order to
      apply for a tuXlab from the Shuttleworth Foundation. Please feel free to
      add any other information you feel is applicable to the application or
      business plan.</para>
      <section id="section-1-school-information">
        <title>Section 1: School information</title>
        <para>Please supply some general information about your school.</para>
        <itemizedlist>
          <listitem>
            <para>Background</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>Mission</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>Vision</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>Achievements</para>
          </listitem>
        </itemizedlist>
      </section>
      <section id="section-2-goals-and-objectives-for-a-computer-lab-tuxlab-or-other">

        <title>Section 2: Goals and objectives for a computer lab (tuXlab or
        other)</title>
        <itemizedlist>
          <listitem>
            <para>What are your plans to promote open source software?</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>How will lab use be integrated into the school
            timetable?</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>What are your plans to involve the community? Please address
            issues such as benefits and development opportunities for the
            community.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>What are your plans regarding staff development using the
            computer lab?</para>
          </listitem>
        </itemizedlist>
      </section>
      <section id="section-3-state-of-readiness">
        <title>Section 3: State of readiness</title>
        <itemizedlist>
          <listitem>
            <para>Please provide a statement of needs, including your current
            computer equipment, if any.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>Physical infrastructure --- current infrastructure as well as
            outstanding requirements (see 
            <xref linkend="tuxlab-school-criteria" />).</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>Plan of lab --- i.e. size and layout of room, including
            measurements (please supply a diagram).</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>Do you have a Computer Committee already established?</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>Who is the Facilitator?</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>Please detail your roll-out strategy: financial plans and
            actual work in measurable terms</para>
          </listitem>
        </itemizedlist>
      </section>
      <section id="section-4-opportunities-and-risks">
        <title>Section 4: Opportunities and Risks</title>
        <itemizedlist>
          <listitem>
            <para>What are the risks involved for you with establishing a lab?
            Address e.g. financial considerations, burglary as factor,
            etc.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>How will you be addressing possible risks?</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>What specific opportunities will be created for you if you
            have a computer lab.</para>
          </listitem>
        </itemizedlist>
      </section>
      <section id="section-5-general">
        <title>Section 5: General</title>
        <itemizedlist>
          <listitem>
            <para>How do you plan to sustain the tuXlab? For example, do you
            have a network of volunteers, will you be establishing an internet
            cafe or service bureau, etc.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>What types of skills transfer do you envisage?</para>
          </listitem>
        </itemizedlist>
        <para>Should you require any further assistance please contact:</para>
        <address>Casey-Lea Olson Open Source Project Administrator 
        <phone>Tel. 021 970 1232</phone> | 
        <fax>Fax. 021 970 1233</fax>
        <email>casey@shuttleworthfoundation.org</email></address>
      </section>
    </section>
    <section id="tuxlab-school-criteria">
      <title>tuXlab School Criteria</title>
      <para>Schools are selected, and the project implementation initiated,
      based on fulfilment of the following minimum criteria and
      expectations.</para>
      <para>The School will be required to:</para>
      <itemizedlist>
        <listitem>
          <para>Complete an initial survey activities;</para>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <para>Submit a business plan including its initial plans to introduce
          the tuXlab into school;</para>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <para>Establish a computer committee;</para>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <para>Ensure that a representative participates in the establishment
          of two tuXlabs prior to selection, as well as participation in at
          least two labs post installation;</para>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <para>Identify a room to house the tuXlab;</para>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <para>Secure the room with mesh window bars, safety gates and an
          alarm;</para>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <para>Ensure that the electrical system is suitable and sufficient
          electrical points are available;</para>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <para>Install trunking for networking cable;</para>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <para>Provide a cabinet to securely protect server and networking
          switch;</para>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <para>Install a telephone line for telephonic support and e-mail
          connectivity;</para>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <para>Ensure that desk space and seating is available;</para>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <para>Ensure participation from the educators and learners during the
          installation process;</para>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <para>Appoint or employ a facilitator for training and on-site
          support for a one-year period;</para>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <para>Actively play a role in the successful operation of the cluster
          unit;</para>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <para>Attend a monthly tuXlab meeting; and</para>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <para>Open the tuXlab at least one Saturday of each month for an
          "Open day".</para>
        </listitem>
      </itemizedlist>
      <para>Additional criteria may be set for each school.</para>
      <para>Based on successful selection, the exact terms of this project will
      be outlined in a 
      <citetitle>Memorandum of Understanding</citetitle>.</para>
      <para>Should you have any further queries with regards to the above
      requirements, please do not hesitate to contact us.</para>
    </section>
    <section id="credits">
      <title>Credits</title>
      <para>This book is a real open source project, and in writing it I have
      incorporated work from a number of other people. Here is a short list in
      alphabetical order. I'm sure I've missed some people, so please let me
      know.</para>
      <itemizedlist>
        <listitem>
          <para>Jonathan Carter, for his excellent 
          <citetitle>Troubleshooting Guide</citetitle>.</para>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <para>Jason Hudson, for the outline that started off this
          book.</para>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <para>Alistair Otter (XXX?) for his tuXlabs book</para>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <para>Andy Rabagliati, for various documents on the 
          <ulink url="http://wizzy.org/" /> site.</para>
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          <para>Hilton Theunissen and Casey-Lea Olson, for various policy and
          operating procedures documents on the 
          <ulink url="http://www.shuttleworthfoundation.org" /> site.</para>
        </listitem>
      </itemizedlist>
    </section>
    <section id="glossary">
      <title>Glossary</title>
      <variablelist>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line ( 
          <acronym>ADSL</acronym>)</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>
            <acronym>ADSL</acronym> is a technology for transmitting digital
            data across normal copper phone lines at high speeds. It is a
            short-range technology, requiring subscribers to be within a few
            kilometres of the exchange providing the service. It is called 
            <emphasis>Asymmetric</emphasis> because download speeds are
            configured to be far higher than upload speeds (you can receive
            more quickly than you can send).</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>Application Programming Interface (API)</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>Just as a program has a range of menus, icons and buttons
            with which a user can control it, it can have a set of method calls
            and data structures that can be used by other programs to control
            it. This is the 
            <emphasis>API</emphasis>.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>Basic In/Out System ( 
          <acronym>BIOS</acronym>)</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>A small program in non-volatile storage that is executed
            immediately after a computer is powered up. Normally, it passes
            control to the boot loader of the selected boot media as soon as
            possible. However, it also displays some diagnostic information
            while executing, including a prompt to enter configuration mode.
            While in configuration mode, you may set various basic properties
            of the computer, such as the time of the system clock and the
            selected boot media (e.g. CD-ROM, hard disk, or network).</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>boot</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>When a computer is powered up, control immediately passes to
            the 
            <acronym>BIOS</acronym>. The 
            <acronym>BIOS</acronym> finds the program code that should be
            executed to continue the startup process, until the operating
            system is up and running. The whole procedure is called 
            <emphasis>booting up</emphasis>, from the expression "pulling
            yourself up by your bootlaces". Picture a cartoon figure on flat
            land, grabbing hold of his bootlaces and pulling himself up into
            the air until he's flying. A computer manages something similar,
            when it changes from an inert lump of plastic to a running
            system.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>Central Processing Unit ( 
          <acronym>CPU</acronym>)</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>The 
            <acronym>CPU</acronym> is the core of the computer. It's one of the
            smaller pieces, consisting of a flat square of silicon, but it
            contains most of the computer's complexity, in the form of millions
            of transistors. When the computer is executing programs, all of the
            instructions as well as the data are fetched from 
            <acronym>RAM</acronym> and processed by the 
            <acronym>CPU</acronym>.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>Common Gateway Interface (CGI)</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>This is a specification for calling scripts that are
            triggered through the web. The CGI standard specifies what data
            must be passed to the script.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>daemon</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>A program that runs on a server, waiting for requests and
            servicing them. The program runs permanently, as long as the
            service should be offered.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>Document Object Model ( 
          <acronym>DOM</acronym>)</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>When a web browser parses an HTML page, it doesn't just write
            out text to the screen and have done with it. It needs to hold on
            to the entire structure in order to be able to rewrite it using
            Javascript, changing parts of the page in-place and reflowing the
            resulting document immediately. This internal structure is called
            the 
            <emphasis>Document Object Model</emphasis>. You can read all about
            it at the World Wide Web Consortium's 
            <ulink url="http://www.w3.org/DOM/"> Document Object Model
            page</ulink>.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>Domain Name System ( 
          <acronym>DNS</acronym>)</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>The Domain Name System is part of the core infrastructure of
            the internet. It consists of a massive globally distributed
            database that matches IP addresses (e.g. 
            <literal>216.239.57.99</literal>) to domain names that humans like
            to remember (e.g. 
            <literal>google.com</literal>). As long as they keep to the rules,
            anyone can run a 
            <acronym>DNS</acronym> server to resolve local address and to cache
            global addresses. No 
            <acronym>DNS</acronym> server needs to store 
            <emphasis>all</emphasis> the domain names on earth: the job is
            distributed among ISPs who each take responsibility for different
            sections of the namespace. If your local nameserver doesn't know an
            IP address, it knows who to ask to get an answer.</para>
            <para>If 
            <acronym>DNS</acronym> is unavailable, all the services that depend
            on it (such as web browsing and email) don't work.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol ( 
          <acronym>DHCP</acronym>)</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>See 
            <xref linkend="dynamic-host-configuration-protocol" />.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>Etherboot</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>See 
            <acronym>PXE</acronym> in 
            <xref linkend="glossary" />.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>Internet Service Provider ( 
          <acronym>ISP</acronym>)</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>A business which provides internet access to its customers.
            The nature of this service may vary widely, from dialup access and
            email for home users to wireless broadband and website hosting for
            big media companies and everything in between.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>platform independence</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>A 
            <emphasis>platform</emphasis> is a short name for the entire
            software environment which a specific program requires in order to
            run. Programs may target an operating system (the Windows, Linux or
            Macintosh platforms), or a virtual machine (the Java platform,
            which is available across operating systems). Increasingly, web
            applications such as Google's 
            <ulink url="http://gmail.com"> Gmail</ulink> email service target the
            
            <emphasis>web browser</emphasis> as platform.</para>
            <para>When a program is capable of being run on many different
            platforms, it is called 
            <emphasis>cross-platform</emphasis>. In this case, it either needs
            to be rather self-contained, not making use of any special
            capabilities of any specific platform, or it needs to contain
            alternative implementations for all the platforms it caters
            for.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>Power On Self Test ( 
          <acronym>POST</acronym>)</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>The 
            <acronym>POST</acronym> is a series of hardcoded self-tests that a
            computer's 
            <acronym>BIOS</acronym> performs to see whether basic resources such
            as its 
            <acronym>CPU</acronym>, memory, and keyboard are present and
            functional.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>Pre-boot eXecution Environment ( 
          <acronym>PXE</acronym>)</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>A small program on the network card that allows a computer to
            boot from the network. The 
            <acronym>PXE</acronym> takes care of finding a server from which to
            boot, and transferring the boot loader from the server to the
            client across the network.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>Programmable 
          <acronym>ROM</acronym> ( 
          <acronym>PROM</acronym>)</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>This is a kind of memory that can be written exactly once.
            After it's been written, its contents is fixed. It's generally used
            for things like network cards with the facility to boot from the
            network. Such cards can be used in many different environments,
            requiring different software. However, once deployed in some
            environment, it normally stays there. Therefor the required
            software can be written to a 
            <acronym>PROM</acronym> on the card, effectively locking down the
            card to the deployed environment.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>Media Access Control address ( 
          <acronym>MAC</acronym> address)</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>In computer networking, a 
            <acronym>MAC</acronym> address is a code on most forms of networking
            equipment that allows for that device to be uniquely
            identified.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>Network File System ( 
          <acronym>NFS</acronym>)</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>A local filesystem reads data from a hard disk. 
            <acronym>NFS</acronym> is a protocol that allows a remote filesystem
            to be mounted on a path of the local filesystem, so that data read
            from files on that path is not read from a local disk, but from a
            server on the network.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>netmask</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>In 
            <xref linkend="tcp-ip" /> networking, the 
            <emphasis>netmask</emphasis> specifies all the IP addresses that
            belong to a particular network.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>
          <acronym>RAM</acronym> disk</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>A physical hard disk stores data on magnetic platters. A 
            <acronym>RAM</acronym> disk emulates a hard disk using the
            computer's memory. Whereas a hard disk stores data permanently
            until it is rewritten, a 
            <acronym>RAM</acronym> disk only exists as a running program, and
            goes away when the program stops or the computer is powered
            down.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>Random Access Memory ( 
          <acronym>RAM</acronym>)</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>Memory that stores code and data only as long as the computer
            is powered up. At the first hint of a power interruption, 
            <acronym>RAM</acronym> becomes as blank as a beach washed clean by
            the tide. 
            <acronym>RAM</acronym> can be written to, and during execution,
            programs are continuously rewriting its contents.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>Read Only Memory ( 
          <acronym>ROM</acronym>)</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>Memory that stores code and data permanently, whether or not
            the workstation is powered up. It cannot be written to: every time
            it's read, it's exactly the same.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>Read the FINE Manual ( 
          <acronym>RTFM</acronym>)</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>Linux is a 
            <emphasis>self-documenting</emphasis> system. All Linux programs
            come with technical documentation, and most commands accept a 
            <literal>--help</literal> option that will start you off. The
            information is sometimes cryptic, or just very dense, but if you
            don't read it two, three, four or five times, you'll find yourself
            asking the same questions again and again, and never progressing
            beyond the basics.</para>
            <para>You'll also find that people answer your questions with a
            terse " 
            <acronym>RTFM</acronym>!", meaning that the answer is right there
            in the manual. Don't take offence, look it up.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>root</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>Linux systems loosely use a 
            <emphasis>tree</emphasis> metaphor to explain some aspects of their
            structure. So, for example, the user who is the system
            administrator, with all privileges to make or break the system, is
            the 
            <emphasis role="strong">root</emphasis> user. The 
            <literal>root</literal> user can create other users and groups with
            more limited privileges, like the branches of a tree that are
            separate and thinner than the trunk.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>root filesystem</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>The filesystem is an hierarchical tree structure. The
            directory which contains all the others is called the 
            <emphasis role="strong">root</emphasis>, and is written like this: 
            <filename>/</filename>. This is a subdirectory of the root
            directory: 
            <filename>/etc</filename>. This is a file in that subdirectory: 
            <filename>/etc/hosts</filename>.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>shell</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>Another metaphor used to express the structure of a Linux
            system is that of a nut containing a kernel. The kernel is hidden
            inside, it is surrounded by a 
            <emphasis>shell</emphasis>. As user you can't interact with the
            kernel directly, you interact with a 
            <emphasis>shell</emphasis> program. This is a program which accepts
            commands and gives feedback, all via a textual command line
            interface. The shell has a number of builtin commands, but it also
            does job control, starting and stopping programs that run under its
            control.</para>
            <para>The shell has a full complement of flow control structures,
            so that it can be used to write programs. These are called shell
            scripts. Shell scripts are most often used to coordinate the
            execution of other programs.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>Simple Mail Transfer Protocol ( 
          <acronym>SMTP</acronym>)</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>When you send an email, your mail server looks at the headers
            of the mail to see where it should be delivered. It then uses DNS
            to look up the IP address of the mail server on the receiving end.
            When it knows whom to contact, it starts an 
            <acronym>SMTP</acronym> conversation with the remote mailserver. It
            asks the server what version of the protocol it supports (so that
            it knows how to encode the mail, if necessary) and whether the
            server is accepting mail for the user you want to reach. When the
            two servers have gotten to know one another, the mail is
            transferred and queued for the remote user to read.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
        <varlistentry>
          <term>symbolic links</term>
          <listitem>
            <para>A file can only be stored in one place on a disk. If you want
            it to appear to be in other places as well, you can make a 
            <emphasis>symbolic link</emphasis> from there to the real location
            of the file. By most commands, the link will be transparent: it
            will be treated exactly as though the file really exists in that
            location.</para>
          </listitem>
        </varlistentry>
      </variablelist>
    </section>
  </chapter>
</book>