15 messages in com.mysql.lists.win32Re: MySQL on a TerminalServer
FromSent OnAttachments
Stefan Schmiedl16 Jan 2001 02:32 
PeterWR16 Jan 2001 02:47 
Stefan Schmiedl16 Jan 2001 03:14 
Stefan Schmiedl16 Jan 2001 03:30 
Stefan Schmiedl16 Jan 2001 03:34 
PeterWR16 Jan 2001 03:43 
Stefan Schmiedl16 Jan 2001 04:06 
Glenn F. Henriksen16 Jan 2001 04:13 
Stefan Schmiedl16 Jan 2001 05:20 
Stephen Woodbridge16 Jan 2001 08:48 
peter carter16 Jan 2001 09:04 
peter carter16 Jan 2001 09:23 
Stefan Schmiedl16 Jan 2001 10:46 
Garrison, Kerry16 Jan 2001 12:37 
Alessandro La Ragione17 Jan 2001 10:32 
Subject:Re: MySQL on a TerminalServer
From:PeterWR (pw@post4.tele.dk)
Date:01/16/2001 03:43:34 AM
List:com.mysql.lists.win32

Hi Stefan,

The Terminal Server is a "gateway/emulation/interface/communication"-server
between the "internal" LAN and "external" low-cost terminals/older
PCs/modem/etc.

Your application and database should be placed on a application-server connected
to the LAN, and by that be reachable from internal via LAN, and from external
via TerminalServer.

I think You will face continously problems trying to use the TerminalServer as
an applicationserver.

Best regards Peter

Hi Peter,

thanks for the fast reply.

I talked to a tech rep of a larger local hard/software store and they told me that "some applications are certified" to run under TS.

The main problem seems to be proper behaviour in various aspects, expecially as far as dlls are concerned.

Has anyone ever tried this before? Or am I the one to boldly go where no man has gone before?

Bye,

Stefan

+---------+------------------------- | from | PeterWR <pw@post4.tele.dk> | to | Stefan Schmiedl <s@xss.de> | date | 16.01.2001 11:47 | subject | MySQL on a TerminalServer +---------+-------------------------

P> Hi

P> I'm not completely sure, but as far as I'm informed Terminal Server is a
dedicated server where You can not run other "generel" applications. For this
You need a Win 95 / 98 / NT / 2000.

P> Check at www.microsoft.com

P> Best regards P> Peter

Greetings,

are there any known issues with MySQL installation on a NT Terminal Server?

Could somebody provide a list of files that are changed with the installation procedure so that I can make an educated guess whether it will kill the machine or not?

It seems as if the installation of the mysql server stays completely inside its C:\mysql folder, but I might have blinked at the wrong moment.

Any feedback would be greatly appreciated.

Thanks, Stefan