Hello Rusty,
Thanks for the reply.
I'm sitting at my workstation. I do have all of those packages
installed on the machine 'dru1a' where I was first trying.
[root@dru1a failsafe]# rpm -i ./IBMJava118-JRE-1.1.8-3.0.i386.rpm
./sysadm_base-client-1.3.2-6.i386.rpm ./sysadm_failsafe-client-0.1-4.i386.rpm
package IBMJava118-JRE-1.1.8-3.0 is already installed
package sysadm_base-client-1.3.2-6 is already installed
package sysadm_failsafe-client-0.1-4 is already installed
I exported my display to my workstation and when I tried to run it I
got the crash.
But you are right. If I install the client software on my workstation
I get this nice GUI and I can connect.
-Eric.
Rusty Ballinger writes:
> > Yesterday, I finally got some test hardware in place and I've
> > installed Red Hat 6.2 in the IDE drive on each node. Notably, I
> > installed without X windows server support, but the X libraries are
> > there. I suppose I could install the X server and KDE, but my goal is
> > to use a minimal OS installation.
>
> You're running the java client on one of the server machines, but
> you don't have an X server running? I'm pretty sure that won't
> work! You can run the GUI from another machine and connect to the
> servers; on the GUI machine, you will need to install
>
> IBMJava118-JRE (IBM's Java runtime)
> sysadm_base-client
> sysadm_failsafe-client
>
> Then when you run fstask on the client machine, you should get a
> login dialog which lets you connect to your servers.
>
> --Rusty
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