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Matt, The good news is that UNCA already has an LDM up and running, receiving data on storm2.atms.unca.edu. This server is receiving most of the standard data feeds with the exception of the NNEXRAD (level III nexrad data) feed. Most likely that would be your best bet for your upstream data host. Unidata support is always available to your institution to help you organize your data feeds and software packages. If your department wants to update your feed sources etc, just send an email to support@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx. When a site is running more than 1 LDM host, the best way to conserve bandwidth is not to duplicate streams into the University, and relay the data among LDM hosts within your institution. The GEMPAK distribution is available with Linux binaries, and pqact.conf actions are provided in the distribution. Steve Chiswell Unidata User Support support@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx On Sat, 22 Feb 2003, Matt Rosier wrote: > I'm a meteorology student at UNC Asheville and want to set up GEMPAK on one of > our weather lab computers running Linux. I know it may be a lot of work, but I > assume it's possible from using online documentation and software provided on > the unidata site that I'm already registered with. > > >From my understanding, I must first set up LDM. From reading documentation, > after I install the LDM, I must send an e-mail to the idd-connect list, the > only question I have is, what is my "Fully Qualified Hostname"? > > Before I dive into this, do you think it is possible for someone who is fairly > new to Linux to set up LDM/GEMPAK/etc on their own? > > Thanks! > > Matt >
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