




Solaris 11 Released 224
angry tapir writes "Oracle has updated its Unix-based operating system Solaris, adding some features that would make the OS more suitable for running cloud deployments, as well as integrating it more tightly with other Oracle products. While not as widely known for its cloud software, Oracle has been marketing Solaris as a cloud-friendly OS. In Oracle's architecture, users can set up different partitions, called Zones, inside a Solaris implementation, which would allow different workloads to run simultaneously, each within their own environment, on a single machine."
Cloud hosting (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Cloud hosting (Score:5, Interesting)
What platform are you running Solaris on? Last time I ran it on an x86 platform (which admittedly was over 6 years ago), performance under load was worse than a comparable Linux box. (at the time, I blamed it on the NIC drivers).
i thought the whole point of cloud servers was that when the load peaks, it's easy to spin up additional servers, so it doesn't really matter what the performance of any individual server is?
How is Azure a fallback for Solaris+Cloud hosting? If you have a Solaris cloud that is scalable and reliable, why do you need an Azure fallback?
But generally, scalable cloud hosting really is good for hosting big traffic sites.
But why is Solaris more suitable to having cloud hosted servers than Linux? While I can see why Solaris zones would make my own private cloud easier to implement, I can have a script spin up EC2 Linux instances on demand and have them serving traffic within minutes. Why would Solaris be any better at that?
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What platform are you running Solaris on? Last time I ran it on an x86 platform (which admittedly was over 6 years ago), performance under load was worse than a comparable Linux box. (at the time, I blamed it on the NIC drivers).
Worth checking out at least; works reasonably well in a VM (vmware-tools are available last I checked).
Generally I've found Solaris to be better under load that Linux (been using both for at least a decade). When things are light Linux may be more responsive, but I've found it gets bogged down when the going gets tough. On average I've experienced at least one live-lock a year with Linux, but have never with Solaris (even on an Sun Ultra 10 with a load avg of over 300 I could still get in and fix things). I
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i thought the whole point of cloud servers was that when the load peaks, it's easy to spin up additional servers, so it doesn't really matter what the performance of any individual server is?
The better each individual server performs, the less you have to pay for more of them.
But at $1000/socket for Solaris), even an extra 50% performance benefit is lost in the licensing costs. (does Solaris really cost that much? That's the only price I could find out Oracle's website). A 2 socket X2270 Sunfire is around $3000 more than an equivalent Dell.
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Use illumos or one of its derivatives instead.
Re:Cloud hosting (Score:5, Interesting)
When things are light Linux may be more responsive, but I've found it gets bogged down when the going gets tough
I'm astonished at how bad Linux is under load. My former university's computer society has had to reboot their Linux server several times over the last couple of months because Apache + PHP managed to completely kill it with what was effectively a fork bomb (a little bit more complicated, lots of short-lived processes were being created). I thought that kind of thing didn't happen with modern operating systems. Even OS X hasn't been susceptible to that kind of thing since 10.5 (10.4 was pretty easy to kill).
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This is a crap post, sorry. There is no modern OS that can mitigate an application that is bad. The only thing that can do that is a good operator (which re-nices the forking process or better yet, fixes the bug that is causing it or adds new capacity).
Solaris won't ride its golden winged horse down out of the heavens to save you from this kind of problem, trust me.
Re:Cloud hosting (Score:5, Informative)
There is no modern OS that can mitigate an application that is bad
Of course there is! That's the entire point of the OS. If an application can bring down the OS, then that's an OS bug. The responsibility of a time sharing system is to ensure that no process and no user monopolises the resources to the extent that others are unable to do anything. The correct behaviour in this case (and the behaviour I've seen on Solaris, recent OS X, and FreeBSD), is for the Apache process to slow right down and other users to experience a noticeable amount of degraded performance (unless they're running with elevated privileges). Being unable to log in from the console because of the actions of an unrelated userspace process is simply unacceptable.
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If you have a Solaris cloud that is scalable and reliable, why do you need an Azure fallback?
This question, at least, is easy. There's no such thing as "too big to fail". If you ever have to start counting your nines on more than one hand or you have to start planning for century events, you might need to think about multiple redundant hosting. The hosting company could fail or be shut down by court order, or the hosting location could be hit by natural disaster, or there could be a catastrophic accident. What if the Asian slice of the global database you're mandated by law and by mission to ha
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If you have a Solaris cloud that is scalable and reliable, why do you need an Azure fallback?
This question, at least, is easy. There's no such thing as "too big to fail". If you ever have to start counting your nines on more than one hand or you have to start planning for century events, you might need to think about multiple redundant hosting. The hosting company could fail or be shut down by court order, or the hosting location could be hit by natural disaster, or there could be a catastrophic accident. What if the Asian slice of the global database you're mandated by law and by mission to have always available is located in Fukushima because the power supply was convenient?
I don't understand your answer. Solaris and Azure are not hosting providers, they are technologies. You can have geographical diversity with either one.
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I don't understand your answer. Solaris and Azure are not hosting providers, they are technologies. You can have geographical diversity with either one.
Azure is both a technology and a cloud hosting service, and in the question I was responding to it wasn't being compared to Solaris. It was being compared to a hypothetical Solaris cloud. Whether or not if it makes any technological sense to program across two platforms wasn't the question I was answering. The point is that a cloud service still has a geographic location and a service from a single hosting company could still be shut down by bankruptcy or court order.
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For starters it's better because you don't have to call it GNU/Solaris.
Oracle Solaris is better?
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I agree completely (Score:5, Funny)
Let me quote from an email that an associate of mine recently sent me on his experience with Oracle.
"Oracle Solaris Cloud leverages core skillsets and world-class synergy through teamwork to provide clients worldwide with robust, scalable, modern turnkey implementations of flexible, personalized, cutting-edge Internet-enabled ebusiness application product suite esolution architectures that accelerate response to customer and real-world market demands and reliably adapt to evolving technology needs, seamlessly and efficiently integrating and synchronizing with their existing legacy infrastructure, enhancing the sodomy-readiness capabilities of their ecommerce production environments across the enterprise while giving them a critical competitive advantage and taking them to the next level."
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I know it is the usual thing to hate on slashdot
No, it is usual for people who frequent slashdot to hate companies and products that have made some portion of their life miserable. The hate is not random.
Re:Cloud hosting (Score:5, Insightful)
I come here for the ones that can call them out on it.
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Nonsense. I've been watching people on slashdot trash things they know absolutely nothing about for something near a decade.
I come here for the ones that can call them out on it. :)
Well in that case you may wish to find something more constructive to do, like watch reality TV. You'll find much more bitching there.
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Also, I'm not particularly interested in the end result of any argument over, "best hair product".
Re:Cloud hosting (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Cloud hosting (Score:5, Insightful)
Really than why don't they hate linux? After all as a linux admin my life was made hard by linux much more often than windows or Solaris
Some of us do. And if you think Linux makes your life difficult as an admin, spare a thought for developers. Poor standards compliance, convoluted APIs (e.g. no unified kernel event mechanism, unlike *BSD and Solaris), a massive overdose of NIH (e.g. OSS, which works everywhere and is a simple userland API, vs ALSA which only works on Linux and is a mess), and a deprecation-happy team that seems to delight in deprecating APIs as soon as you've started using them.
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Re:Cloud hosting (Score:5, Funny)
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
What Sun built in goodwill, Oracle destroys. (Score:5, Insightful)
Given how much they've done negatively to OpenSolaris (taking it from developer-friendly to "we don't care how many people get compromised, we're not going to hand out security updates without a large-fee contract", Oracle's made it worse than AIX.
(made Solaris worse, that is) (Score:2)
N/T
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The IBM Power 795 usually outperforms the M9000, and you're comparing a 64-socket machine to a 32-socket one.
Your evaluation of the T4 is actually much worse than the reality - it's a significant improvement over the T3. But the lack of speccpu or TPC-C benchmarks is interesting.
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That, and it has run on a wider range of IBM's own hardware versus Solaris and SPARC.
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Heck, they even restrict the driver downloads for Sun hardware.
Re:What Sun built in goodwill, Oracle destroys. (Score:5, Interesting)
Ever seen the Dementers in the Harry Potter films? Larry Ellison was the model. In terms of Corporate Evil, Oracle is the Prince of Fucking Darkness. They make Microsoft look like a bunch of panty-waists.
I do not necessarily agree. (Score:2)
IBM destroyed the mainframe clone market. While I don't know much about it, Amdahl and others had machines compatible with the 360 architecture that would run IBM's operating systems. IBM has been successful in even keeping the free Hercules emulator from legally running their OS.
Larry Ellison has never destroyed a major competetor - Sybase and Informix still stand.
Ellison also did not build Union Carbide, Dow Chemical, or Monsanto. Ellison can sleep at night, deservedly so.
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OpenSolaris was a cool project, don't get me wrong, but from a business perspective it had pretty much zero benefit and arguably a negative one. There was little to no community contribution back to the Solaris code base. All of the stuff that made Solaris great was developed in-house and the only thing that opening the source code did for Sun/Oracle is that it enabled a number of other projects and startups to profit off of Sun's investment in developing Solaris. A number of storage vendors have forked or
still no ZFS bp rewrite (Score:4, Insightful)
10 years and counting and still no ZFS bp rewrite implemented. For those that care, this presumably is required to implement such uninteresting things as vdev removal and defragmentation. And please, no defrag-denialists here... ZFS fragments like a cheap suit dipped into liquid nitrogen.
Zones (Score:2)
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They're OK... until you try to manage different (commercial) applications on them. When app 1 requires a kernel patch, well there's no real virtualization there - the zones still run the same kernel, so when app 2 requires a different, incompatible patch, you get the throw up your hands and become the IT that says "no".
These are old issues, but trying to sell zones as the end-all be-all, or as even much more interesting than a BSD jail, is bogus.
Let's get to real issues that this doesn't change: patch mana
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Re:Zones (Score:5, Informative)
Given that Zones can have:
different login identities
different network interfaces
different hostnames
different hardware available to them (disks, adapters, etc.)
be configured to use resource pools thus different amounts of cpu, floating or fixed
Yes, I'd say they are much more useful than chroot.
Nothing new here... (Score:2)
Partitions in solaris are so.... 1996.
e10k was a POS.... though it was trying mighty hard to keep up with LPARs under AIX...
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I only use real Unix, not fake crap like Linux (Score:4, Funny)
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Yes, you're right. Only a loser would ever use a piece of software that was copied from a previous, similar, piece of software. [slashdot.org]
Re:I only use real Unix, not fake crap like Linux (Score:4, Funny)
wow. Are you keeping tabs on everybody like that?
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Nope, just went to his home page to see if he was a new account or something and that post was one of the first ones listed. The hypocrisy was too great not to call attention to it.
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I don't think you can be tongue-in-cheek and hypocritical at the same time.
Solaris is good as dead (Score:2)
Re:Solaris is good as dead (Score:5, Insightful)
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Oracle has been messing up everything else they have acquired that they haven't had time to get around to Virtualbox yet. Don't worry, they'll eventually get around to it - they are fucking up the products in the order of most users to fewest users. ;)
Re:Solaris is good as dead (Score:4, Funny)
Oracle has been messing up everything else they have acquired that they haven't had time to get around to Virtualbox yet. Don't worry, they'll eventually get around to it - they are fucking up the products in the order of most users to fewest users. ;)
I thought maybe it was alphabetical
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When I reverted to a previous version the problems went away. I haven't bothered to check recent versions since (I did try one or two but reverting was the only way).
I guess Ellison changed his mind (Score:3)
I guess Ellison changed his mind about cloud computing... here's him a year or two back ranting about how stupid the idea is.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0FacYAI6DY0 [youtube.com]
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Remember Sun's "the network is the computer" from quite a few years ago? That fits most definitions of "cloud computing" so if you are already on the bandwagon that others are jumping on, why not let others know? They've provided "cloud" services such as Sun Grid Engine on rentable remote hosts since some time before the cloud hype happened.
Re:I guess Ellison changed his mind (Score:5, Informative)
Quite the opposite. In your own link he summarized by saying:
"I'm not going to fight this thing." but "I don't understand what we would do differently in the light of cloud computing, other than change the wording on some of our ads."
And sure enough, their ads now show how great Solaris is for cloud computing. Based on what?... zones, which have been in Solaris for a number of years.
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More than that, Ellison was decrying in 1995 how stupid it is to put software onto a piece of plastic, put the plastic in a box, put the box onto a pallet, put the pallet in a truck, drive the truck to a store, take the pallet out of the truck, take the box off the pallet and put it on a shelf, have someone pick it up off the shelf and put it in their car, drive their car home, take the box out of the car, take the plastic out of the box, and then get the software out of the plastic onto your computer.
I gue
ZFS v31+ at last? (Score:2)
I think what I'm most excited for with this release is seeing if Oracle follows through on their promise to put out the source for the up-to-the-date work on ZFS. While ZFS at v28 has proven to be both a lot of fun and very useful for many of us, the updates since (first available for general use with Solaris 11 Express last year I believe) add a few really nice features, including crypto and work on block pointer rewrite. While the illumos project could certainly fork it if required, it would be really gre
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> I don't see that Oracle has anything to lose here by staying open with that component, filesystems benefit a lot from widespread use and lots of testing, but, well, it is Oracle.
I believe netapp still believes, somehow, that zfs is wafl, and that they should be paid damages for distribution of their IP.
I know that Daniel Philips has claimed at conferences way back when that he has seen prior art on WAFLs patents, but he still stopped working on Tux2 instead of fighting it. I don't know if Larry and th
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If by "interesting and relevant" you mean "nasty enough to crush Linux and every single storage hardware provider that supports RAID", then yes. Seriously, the patents Sun were using make NetApp look positively benign.
Re:ZFS v31+ at last? (Score:4, Informative)
While ZFS at v28 has proven to be both a lot of fun and very useful for many of us, the updates since (first available for general use with Solaris 11 Express last year I believe) add a few really nice features
Careful, they've also abruptly removed a few really nice features in later versions that have caused major headaches for me and many others. For example the "aclmode" property was completely removed from version 31 - completely breaking a lot of deployments that made extensive use of ACLs. Version 33 released today with Solaris 11 thankfully restores that feature after significant outcry from affected customers (I believe Illumos went forward and restored it on their own as well) - but the damage has been done in a lot of cases.
Just a word of warning to be very careful before running "zpool upgrade" as Oracle's philosophy on backward compatibility and stability of existing features seems to be quite different than that of Sun.
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$1,000/year per CPU for non-Oracle hardware (Score:4, Interesting)
Ever since Oracle bought out Sun, they went overboard with the licensing costs for Solaris. Remember a few years back when Sun will let you run Solaris 10 for free? Well no more, if you have a non-Oracle two processor server it will cost you $2,000 per year. You don't own a license, you are basically renting the privilege to run Solaris on a server for one year. Also, you only get one flavor of support which they laughably call "premium". Their support is a joke now, and in my experience the good Sun engineers left a long time ago. For starters, you now get to talk to an overseas helpdesk which logs your call and for severity one issues, they give you a call back in an hour (if you're lucky). It used to be you will call an easy to remember number (1-800-USA-4SUN) and you will get a live transfer to a knowledgeable engineer to fix your problem. A few years ago I used to be a staunch supporter of Sun and Solaris but it seems like Oracle has done everything to drive me away from Sun's hardware and software. I am pretty sure I am not the only one either.
Re:$1,000/year per CPU for non-Oracle hardware (Score:4, Funny)
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Ever since Oracle bought out Sun, they went overboard with the licensing costs for Solaris. Remember a few years back when Sun will let you run Solaris 10 for free? Well no more, if you have a non-Oracle two processor server it will cost you $2,000 per year. You don't own a license, you are basically renting the privilege to run Solaris on a server for one year. Also, you only get one flavor of support which they laughably call "premium". Their support is a joke now, and in my experience the good Sun engineers left a long time ago. For starters, you now get to talk to an overseas helpdesk which logs your call and for severity one issues, they give you a call back in an hour (if you're lucky). It used to be you will call an easy to remember number (1-800-USA-4SUN) and you will get a live transfer to a knowledgeable engineer to fix your problem. A few years ago I used to be a staunch supporter of Sun and Solaris but it seems like Oracle has done everything to drive me away from Sun's hardware and software. I am pretty sure I am not the only one either.
I don't know where people are getting this $1000/socket bullsh*t. Maybe that's some ridiculous list price, but unless you're a moron, you won't pay anywhere close to that for full HW and OS support on Sun/Oracle hardware. The last time we renewed our support, I believe it was in the realm of $400-800/yr for HW/OS support on our x86 servers [dual socket Opterons and quad-socket Xeons]. The SPARC servers were a bit more expensive, closer to $2000 for support on a T5240 [dual-socket 8-core x 8-thread/core T3+
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I don't know where people are getting this $1000/socket bullsh*t. Maybe that's some ridiculous list price, but unless you're a moron, you won't pay anywhere close to that for full HW and OS support on Sun/Oracle hardware.
The $1000/socket/year is straight off of Oracle's website. As a small shop, Oracle hasn't been willing to cut us a deal or negotiate, and only offers us what's on their website. Too bad, I used to use and really like OpenSolaris.
Since the acquisition I had somewhat lost hope in Solaris with Oracle as the overlord, however, I've recently found OpenIndiana [openindiana.org]. It looks very promising!
ditch now... (Score:2)
... use the SmartOS fork instead. Do you really trust Oracle?
Solaris goes up too 11 (Score:2)
Come on Slashdot: surely the headline should have been "Solaris goes up too 11" !!
Solaris Zones have been around for years.... (Score:2, Insightful)
Solaris Zones have been around for years... more stupid "it's new & cloud-based" crap when is just re-marketing their old technology.
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That limit is in force on previous versions of Solaris, isn't it? I know I've encountered it in the past on UNIX variants available from various big-iron vendors.
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You can have longer than 8 character user names, but the characters after 8 are ignored. It's defined in limits.h as LOGNAME_MAX. It's an ABI restriction, hard-coded in several binary formats, NIS restriction, and UNIX interoperability issue. Another limit is the 32-bit character limit from POSIX, but that's been removed, I understand. Don't blame me--I'm just telling you.
Re:8 char usernames (Score:4, Funny)
You can have longer than 8 character user names, but the characters after 8 are ignored. It's defined in limits.h as LOGNAME_MAX. It's an ABI restriction, hard-coded in several binary formats, NIS restriction, and UNIX interoperability issue. Another limit is the 32-bit character limit from POSIX, but that's been removed, I understand. Don't blame me--I'm just telling you.
Well tried, but I know its your fault!
Re:8 char usernames (Score:5, Funny)
Jeez, only a complete loser would have an 8-character user name.
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Tell me about it.
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You fellas sure ain't whistling Dixie.
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8 chars? Why back in my day we had only 6! And we were glad to have them too! How else would be we able to tell between julia and julian without that sixth character?
And we had to walk fifteen miles to see the sysadmin to get the username, too. In a raging snowstorm! Uphill! Both ways!!!!
Re:8 char usernames (Score:4, Funny)
Judging by "ls", "cp" and friends dating back from the dawn of Unix, you had it lucky at six. ~
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The problem is that for certain purposes, Linux just isn't a viable alternative because it does not contain production-quality support for ZFS.
Well, duh. Maybe if Oracle released ZFS under the GPL, it would be in the Linux kernel.
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Re:Nothing to see here (Score:5, Interesting)
Well, duh. Maybe if Oracle released ZFS under the GPL, it would be in the Linux kernel.
That doesn't explain why no one did a ground-up implementation of ZFS on Linux (there is a public spec) or why no file system designed for Linux itself has taken data integrity at all seriously.
I shouldn't pick on Linux exclusively, though, since neither Microsoft nor Apple seem to care about data integrity in their file systems either. The persistence of NTFS on Windows is just embarrassing.
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Apple did care, and even had a working version of ZFS on Mac OS X 10.6. However, they were unable to come to licensing terms with Sun at the time, and unceremoniously ripped the project from Mac OS Forge. If you go a-Googling, you can probably still find the release candidate filesystem drivers.
Also, FreeBSD 8+ has an (older) implementation of ZFS, which I believe they pulled from the OpenSolaris and found a way to make it work.
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Seriously? Is a well designed file system error handling routine worth 2x - 5x premium you pay to use sparc? considering you could create redundant hosts and multipath solutions with the savings.
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Btrfs? How does it not take data integrity seriously? It supports checksums and redundancy on user data and metadata blocks.
It also has features that ZFS lacks. Defragmentation, shrinking, balancing over adding and removing devices from the pool.
Btrfs is getting close to prime time.
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Re:Nothing to see here (Score:4, Informative)
It's Linux. If you need it, build it.
Arrrgghhhhh! Grow up!!!! That is like dumping someone on a plot of land and telling them if they need a house they should just build it themselves. Not everyone is an architect, master builder, plumber, electrician etc. etc. Nor is everyone capable of writing their own file system software. This argument is not sane and I cannot believe that supposedly intelligent people have continued to make it for many decades now.
Or are you just bored and trolling?
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That's mighty odd. The place I work has hundreds of OSOL servers. I've seen ZFS only flake out once.
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That's still once too many.
And still one more than I've ever seen of VxFS. I've managed many, many petabytes of VxFS file systems, and never lost so much as a single file to FS corruption.
(even when I had a coworker manage to import the same VxVM disk group on 2 cluster nodes simultaneously and mount the FS in both places...). A little private region editing and I was able to correct the damage.
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Linux won't even boot on sun4u machines :(
Hasn't been updated in awhile, but https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Architectures/SPARC [fedoraproject.org] I've also had gentoo and ubuntu running on ultra 5 workstations...
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Linux won't even boot on sun4u machines :(
Debian runs very well on my Ultra 60, with its 450MHz UltraSPARC II. As does OpenBSD.
Re:*crickets chirping* (Score:4, Interesting)
ZFS development has moved to FreeBSD.
No. No, it has not.
Correct me if I'm wrong but:
* FreeBSD's ZFS is years behind what Illumos offers in features, and shows no signs of catching up.
* The same can be said about hardware support (and by support, I mean drivers which are considered stable) and a generally bug-free implementation. It's largely comparable to btrfs, but less verbose in actually telling you when something fucks up.
* the FreeBSD implementation is still dogged by performance issues. Any significant workload on ZFS is still marginal compared to, well, pretty much anything else (including, dare I say, NTFS on Windows).
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* FreeBSD's ZFS is years behind what Illumos offers in features, and shows no signs of catching up.
If you know so much about it, would you mind updating the Wikipedia article about ZFS that lists "Notable ZFS storage pool versions" with FreeBSD and Illumos both on 28.
Re:*crickets chirping* (Score:4, Informative)
FreeBSD's ZFS is years behind what Illumos offers in features, and shows no signs of catching up.
FreeBSD 8-STABLE and 9-RELEASE contain ZFS v28, the same version of ZFS as OpenSolaris. iXSystems is now funding development, and it has seen quite a lot of bug fixes that have yet to be back-ported to any Solaris version.
the FreeBSD implementation is still dogged by performance issues. Any significant workload on ZFS is still marginal compared to, well, pretty much anything else (including, dare I say, NTFS on Windows).
I installed FreeBSD 9 BETA on a machine with three disks in a RAID-Z configuration and the only time the bottleneck for reading and writing to the array was not the GigE connection, was when I was writing to a compressed deduplicated filesystem. Then the CPU was the limit, at about 20-30MB/s. That's with a pretty anaemic CPU (1.6GHz AMD Fusion) and with WITNESS turned on in the kernel, which adds lots of extra error checking around kernel code and slows everything down.
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