Solaris 7 5/99 Sun Hardware Platform Guide

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Solaris 7 5/99 Sun Hardware Platform Guide Solaris 7 5/99 Sun™ Hardware Platform Guide Sun Microsystems, Inc. 901 San Antonio Road Palo Alto, CA 94303-4900 U.S.A Part No.: 806-0276-10 May 1999, Revision A Send comments about this document to: [email protected] Copyright 1999 Sun Microsystems, Inc., 901 San Antonio Road, Palo Alto, California 94303-4900 U.S.A. This product or document is protected by copyright and distributed under licenses restricting its use, copying, distribution, and decompilation. No part of this product or document may be reproduced in any form by any means without prior written authorization of Sun and its licensors, if any. Third-party software, including font technology, is copyrighted and licensed from Sun suppliers. Parts of the product may be derived from Berkeley BSD systems, licensed from the University of California. UNIX is a registered trademark in the U.S. and other countries, exclusively licensed through X/Open Company, Ltd. Sun, Sun Microsystems, the Sun logo, AnswerBook, Solaris, Sun Enterprise, Sun StorEdge, SPARCstorage, SPARCserver, SPARCclassic, SPARCstation SLC, SPARCstation ELC, SPARCstation IPC, SPARCstation IPX, ShowMe TV,SunFDDI, SunForum, SunVTS, and Ultra are trademarks, registered trademarks, or service marks of Sun Microsystems, Inc. in the U.S. and other countries. All SPARC trademarks are used under license and are trademarks or registered trademarks of SPARC International, Inc. in the U.S. and other countries. Products bearing SPARC trademarks are based upon an architecture developed by Sun Microsystems, Inc. The OPEN LOOK and Sun™ Graphical User Interface was developed by Sun Microsystems, Inc. for its users and licensees. Sun acknowledges the pioneering efforts of Xerox in researching and developing the concept of visual or graphical user interfaces for the computer industry. Sun holds a non-exclusive license from Xerox to the Xerox Graphical User Interface, which license also covers Sun’s licensees who implement OPEN LOOK GUIs and otherwise comply with Sun’s written license agreements. RESTRICTED RIGHTS: Use, duplication, or disclosure by the U.S. Government is subject to restrictions of FAR 52.227-14(g)(2)(6/87) and FAR 52.227-19(6/87), or DFAR 252.227-7015(b)(6/95) and DFAR 227.7202-3(a). DOCUMENTATION IS PROVIDED “AS IS” AND ALL EXPRESS OR IMPLIED CONDITIONS, REPRESENTATIONS AND WARRANTIES, INCLUDING ANY IMPLIED WARRANTY OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE OR NON-INFRINGEMENT, ARE DISCLAIMED, EXCEPT TO THE EXTENT THAT SUCH DISCLAIMERS ARE HELD TO BE LEGALLY INVALID. Copyright 1998 Sun Microsystems, Inc., 901 San Antonio Road, Palo Alto, Californie 94303 Etats-Unis. Tous droits réservés. Ce produit ou document est protégé par un copyright et distribué avec des licences qui en restreignent l’utilisation, la copie, la distribution, et la décompilation. Aucune partie de ce produit ou document ne peut être reproduite sous aucune forme, par quelque moyen que ce soit, sans l’autorisation préalable et écrite de Sun et de ses bailleurs de licence, s’il y en a. Le logiciel détenu par des tiers, et qui comprend la technologie relative aux polices de caractères, est protégé par un copyright et licencié par des fournisseurs de Sun. Des parties de ce produit pourront être dérivées des systèmes Berkeley BSD licenciés par l’Université de Californie. UNIX est une marque déposée aux Etats-Unis et dans d’autres pays et licenciée exclusivement par X/Open Company, Ltd. Sun, Sun Microsystems, le logo Sun, AnswerBook, Solaris, Sun Enterprise, Sun StorEdge, SPARCstorage, SPARCserver, SPARCclassic, SPARCstation SLC, SPARCstation ELC, SPARCstation IPC, SPARCstation IPX, ShowMe TV,SunFDDI, SunForum, SunVTS, et Ultra sont des marques de fabrique ou des marques déposées, ou marques de service, de Sun Microsystems, Inc. aux Etats-Unis et dans d’autres pays. Toutes les marques SPARC sont utilisées sous licence et sont des marques de fabrique ou des marques déposées de SPARC International, Inc. aux Etats- Unis et dans d’autres pays. Les produits portant les marques SPARC sont basés sur une architecture développée par Sun Microsystems, Inc. L’interface d’utilisation graphique OPEN LOOK et Sun™ a été développée par Sun Microsystems, Inc. pour ses utilisateurs et licenciés. Sun reconnaît les efforts de pionniers de Xerox pour la recherche et le développement du concept des interfaces d’utilisation visuelle ou graphique pour l’industrie de l’informatique. Sun détient une licence non exclusive de Xerox sur l’interface d’utilisation graphique Xerox, cette licence couvrant également les licenciés de Sun qui mettent en place l’interface d’utilisation graphique OPEN LOOK et qui en outre se conforment aux licences écrites de Sun. CETTE PUBLICATION EST FOURNIE "EN L’ETAT" ET AUCUNE GARANTIE, EXPRESSE OU IMPLICITE, N’EST ACCORDEE, Y COMPRIS DES GARANTIES CONCERNANT LA VALEUR MARCHANDE, L’APTITUDE DE LA PUBLICATION A REPONDRE A UNE UTILISATION PARTICULIERE, OU LE FAIT QU’ELLE NE SOIT PAS CONTREFAISANTE DE PRODUIT DE TIERS. CE DENI DE GARANTIE NE S’APPLIQUERAIT PAS, DANS LA MESURE OU IL SERAIT TENU JURIDIQUEMENT NUL ET NON AVENU. Please Recycle Contents Preface vii 1. Installing Software From the Solaris CD 1 Automatic Installation of Solaris Software 1 Manual Installation of Solaris Software 1 Custom JumpStart Profiles 8 32-bit Kernel the Default on 200MHz or Lower UltraSPARC Systems 9 2. Supported Sun Hardware 11 Supported Platforms 11 Supported Storage Peripherals 12 Controllers 16 PCMCIA 17 Graphics Accelerators 17 TTY Graphics Input Devices 19 Networking and Communications 19 Keyboard and Mouse Options 20 3. Installing Software from the Sun Computer Systems Supplement CD 21 Software Support 21 Contents iii Installing Sun Computer Systems Supplements for Solaris 7 5/99 Software Using swmtool 22 Installing Sun Computer Systems Supplements for Solaris 7 5/99 Software on a Standalone System Using pkgadd 23 Open Data Base Connectivity (ODBC) Driver Manager 26 Online Validation Test Suite Software (SunVTS Software) 28 OpenGL Software 31 PC File Viewer/PC Launcher 36 ShowMe TV 1.2.1 Software 41 Solaris 7 5/99 AnswerBook Set 45 Sun Computer Systems Manual Page Clusters and Packages 49 Sun Remote System Control for Sun Servers 50 SunForum 51 Network Adapter Drivers Included on the Supplement CD 52 4. Updating the Flash PROM on the Ultra 1, Ultra 2, Ultra 450, and Sun Enterprise 450 Systems 55 Related Material 55 Determining If the Flash PROM Needs Updating 56 Updating the Flash PROM 57 Recovering From a Power Failure During the Flash PROM Update 73 Restoring NVRAM Configuration Variables 75 Error Messages 77 Location of Flash PROM Jumpers in Sun Enterprise 450 System and the Ultra 450 Workstation 78 Flash PROM Update Multimedia Collection 80 5. Updating the Flash PROM on the Sun Enterprise 3x00, 4x00, 5x00, and 6x00 Systems 85 Determining If the Flash PROM Needs Updating 86 Updating the Flash PROM 87 iv Solaris 7 5/99 Sun Hardware Platform Guide • May 1999 Location of Flash PROM Jumpers in Sun Enterprise Server Systems 99 Recovering From a Power Failure During the Flash PROM Update 102 6. Installing the Solaris Operating Environment With the SPARCstorage Array 107 Disk Management Software 107 SPARCstorage Array Firmware 108 Installation and Upgrade Scenarios 108 Scenario 1: New Installation of Solaris 7 5/99 Software on Systems Booting From the SPARCstorage Array Disk 109 Scenario 2: New Installation of Solaris 7 5/99 Software on Systems Not Booting From the SPARCstorage Array Disk 114 Scenario 3: Upgrading to the Solaris 7 5/99 Operating Environment 115 7. Power Management on Sun Hardware 119 Supported Platforms 119 Supported Peripherals 121 SPARCstation 4 Issues 122 8. Alternate Pathing 2.2 on the Sun Enterprise 3x00, 4x00, 5x00, and 6x00 Servers 123 Performing a Fresh Install of AP 123 Performing an Upgrade of AP 130 9. Alternate Pathing 2.2 on the Sun Enterprise 10000 Server 141 Performing a Fresh Install of AP 141 Performing an Upgrade of AP 148 10. Solaris 7 5/99 on the Sun Enterprise 10000 163 Performing a Fresh Install 163 Performing an Upgrade 184 11. Sun PGX32 Graphics Accelerator 203 Contents v Overview 203 Configuring the PGX32 Screen 205 Starting the Desktop Environment 211 Changing the Console Resolution 213 vi Solaris 7 5/99 Sun Hardware Platform Guide • May 1999 Preface The Solaris 7 5/99 Sun Hardware Platform Guide contains important information about the Sun™ hardware supported by this Solaris™ 7 5/99 software environment. Note – For general Solaris 7 5/99 operating environment installation instructions, refer to Chapter 1. This manual: ■ Provides platform-specific installation instructions for the Solaris 7 5/99 software ■ Describes software provided on the Sun Computer Systems Supplement CD and explains how to install product software ■ Describes flash PROM update procedures necessary for some systems to run in 64-bit mode. ■ Describes installation issues affecting the Sun Enterprise 10000 system ■ Identifies installation issues affecting the SPARCstorage™ Array ■ Describes hardware and software requirements affecting Power Management™ software Note – For information about how to install software contained on the Sun Computer Systems Supplement CD and information about supported hardware, refer to Chapter 3, “Installing Software from the Sun Computer Systems Supplement CD”. vii Where to Find Installation Information The Solaris 7 5/99 software is delivered on two CDs: ■ Solaris 7 5/99 SPARC Platform Edition (called the Solaris CD throughout this manual) ■ Supplement for Solaris 7 5/99 Operating Environment for Sun Computer Systems (called the Supplement CD throughout this manual). Before installing the Solaris 7 5/99 software, check TABLE P-1 for listings of manuals with information that may apply to your situation and TABLE P-2 for specific installation information. Note – All Solaris and SPARC documentation can be found on the Documentation CD. All Sun hardware specific documentation can be found on the Supplement CD.
Recommended publications
  • Validated Products List, 1995 No. 3: Programming Languages, Database
    NISTIR 5693 (Supersedes NISTIR 5629) VALIDATED PRODUCTS LIST Volume 1 1995 No. 3 Programming Languages Database Language SQL Graphics POSIX Computer Security Judy B. Kailey Product Data - IGES Editor U.S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE Technology Administration National Institute of Standards and Technology Computer Systems Laboratory Software Standards Validation Group Gaithersburg, MD 20899 July 1995 QC 100 NIST .056 NO. 5693 1995 NISTIR 5693 (Supersedes NISTIR 5629) VALIDATED PRODUCTS LIST Volume 1 1995 No. 3 Programming Languages Database Language SQL Graphics POSIX Computer Security Judy B. Kailey Product Data - IGES Editor U.S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE Technology Administration National Institute of Standards and Technology Computer Systems Laboratory Software Standards Validation Group Gaithersburg, MD 20899 July 1995 (Supersedes April 1995 issue) U.S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE Ronald H. Brown, Secretary TECHNOLOGY ADMINISTRATION Mary L. Good, Under Secretary for Technology NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF STANDARDS AND TECHNOLOGY Arati Prabhakar, Director FOREWORD The Validated Products List (VPL) identifies information technology products that have been tested for conformance to Federal Information Processing Standards (FIPS) in accordance with Computer Systems Laboratory (CSL) conformance testing procedures, and have a current validation certificate or registered test report. The VPL also contains information about the organizations, test methods and procedures that support the validation programs for the FIPS identified in this document. The VPL includes computer language processors for programming languages COBOL, Fortran, Ada, Pascal, C, M[UMPS], and database language SQL; computer graphic implementations for GKS, COM, PHIGS, and Raster Graphics; operating system implementations for POSIX; Open Systems Interconnection implementations; and computer security implementations for DES, MAC and Key Management.
    [Show full text]
  • Sun Ultratm 5 Workstation Just the Facts
    Sun UltraTM 5 Workstation Just the Facts Copyrights 1999 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Sun, Sun Microsystems, the Sun logo, Ultra, PGX, PGX24, Solaris, Sun Enterprise, SunClient, UltraComputing, Catalyst, SunPCi, OpenWindows, PGX32, VIS, Java, JDK, XGL, XIL, Java 3D, SunVTS, ShowMe, ShowMe TV, SunForum, Java WorkShop, Java Studio, AnswerBook, AnswerBook2, Sun Enterprise SyMON, Solstice, Solstice AutoClient, ShowMe How, SunCD, SunCD 2Plus, Sun StorEdge, SunButtons, SunDials, SunMicrophone, SunFDDI, SunLink, SunHSI, SunATM, SLC, ELC, IPC, IPX, SunSpectrum, JavaStation, SunSpectrum Platinum, SunSpectrum Gold, SunSpectrum Silver, SunSpectrum Bronze, SunVIP, SunSolve, and SunSolve EarlyNotifier are trademarks, registered trademarks, or service marks of Sun Microsystems, Inc. in the United States and other countries. All SPARC trademarks are used under license and are trademarks or registered trademarks of SPARC International, Inc. in the United States and other countries. Products bearing SPARC trademarks are based upon an architecture developed by Sun Microsystems, Inc. UNIX is a registered trademark in the United States and other countries, exclusively licensed through X/Open Company, Ltd. OpenGL is a registered trademark of Silicon Graphics, Inc. Display PostScript and PostScript are trademarks of Adobe Systems, Incorporated, which may be registered in certain jurisdictions. Netscape is a trademark of Netscape Communications Corporation. DLT is claimed as a trademark of Quantum Corporation in the United States and other countries. Just the Facts May 1999 Positioning The Sun UltraTM 5 Workstation Figure 1. The Ultra 5 workstation The Sun UltraTM 5 workstation is an entry-level workstation based upon the 333- and 360-MHz UltraSPARCTM-IIi processors. The Ultra 5 is Sun’s lowest-priced workstation, designed to meet the needs of price-sensitive and volume-purchase customers in the personal workstation market without sacrificing performance.
    [Show full text]
  • SPARC/CPU-5V Technical Reference Manual
    SPARC/CPU-5V Technical Reference Manual P/N 203651 Edition 5.0 February 1998 FORCE COMPUTERS Inc./GmbH All Rights Reserved This document shall not be duplicated, nor its contents used for any purpose, unless express permission has been granted. Copyright by FORCE COMPUTERS CPU-5V Technical Reference Manual Table of Contents SECTION 1 INTRODUCTION ....................................................................................1 1. Getting Started ..................................................................................................................................... 1 1.1. The SPARC CPU-5V Technical Reference Manual Set.................................................................. 1 1.2. Summary of the SPARC CPU-5V ................................................................................................... 2 1.3. Specifications ................................................................................................................................... 4 1.3.1. Ordering Information........................................................................................................... 6 1.4. History of the Manual ...................................................................................................................... 9 SECTION 2 INSTALLATION ....................................................................................11 2. Introduction........................................................................................................................................ 11 2.1. Caution
    [Show full text]
  • System Administration
    System Administration Varian NMR Spectrometer Systems With VNMR 6.1C Software Pub. No. 01-999166-00, Rev. C0503 System Administration Varian NMR Spectrometer Systems With VNMR 6.1C Software Pub. No. 01-999166-00, Rev. C0503 Revision history: A0800 – Initial release for VNMR 6.1C A1001 – Corrected errors on pg 120, general edit B0202 – Updated AutoTest B0602 – Added additional Autotest sections including VNMRJ update B1002 – Updated Solaris patch information and revised section 21.7, Autotest C0503 – Add additional Autotest sections including cryogenic probes Applicability: Varian NMR spectrometer systems with Sun workstations running Solaris 2.x and VNMR 6.1C software By Rolf Kyburz ([email protected]) Varian International AG, Zug, Switzerland, and Gerald Simon ([email protected]) Varian GmbH, Darmstadt, Germany Additional contributions by Frits Vosman, Dan Iverson, Evan Williams, George Gray, Steve Cheatham Technical writer: Mike Miller Technical editor: Dan Steele Copyright 2001, 2002, 2003 by Varian, Inc., NMR Systems 3120 Hansen Way, Palo Alto, California 94304 1-800-356-4437 http://www.varianinc.com All rights reserved. Printed in the United States. The information in this document has been carefully checked and is believed to be entirely reliable. However, no responsibility is assumed for inaccuracies. Statements in this document are not intended to create any warranty, expressed or implied. Specifications and performance characteristics of the software described in this manual may be changed at any time without notice. Varian reserves the right to make changes in any products herein to improve reliability, function, or design. Varian does not assume any liability arising out of the application or use of any product or circuit described herein; neither does it convey any license under its patent rights nor the rights of others.
    [Show full text]
  • An Introduction to Sysadmin Training in the Virtual Unix Lab
    EuroBSDCon 2004 Karlsruhe, Germany: An Introduction to Sysadmin Training in the Virtual Unix Lab Hubert Feyrer <[email protected]> October 31st, 2004 Abstract The Virtual Unix Lab (vulab) is an interactive course system which allows students to do Unix system administration exercises. Machines are installed on which students can do their assignments with full ”root”-access. At the end, the system checks which parts were done correctly, and gives a feedback on the exercise result. Access to the lab is via the Internet via a web-browser as well as standard Unix clients (ssh, telnet, ftp). Some detail on exercise-verification are outlined in this paper. Contents 1 Introduction & Background 2 2 The Virtual Unix Lab 2 3 A Tour trough the Virtual Unix Lab 2 3.1 User Area . 2 3.2 Admin Area . 11 3.3 Creating New Exercises . 18 4 Setup 28 4.1 Hardware . 28 4.2 Lab Machine Installation . 30 4.3 Restricting Access to Lab Machines . 31 4.4 Software . 31 5 Current Status 32 6 Future Perspectives 32 References 32 1 Introduction & Background A problem in teaching Unix system administration is the lack of machines available on which students can practice with full system administrator privileges. Without system ad- ministrator (root) privileges, many things cannot be practiced. On the other handside, when handing out root privileges, the lab machines are in an unknown state, requiring reinstalla- tion of the lab machines for future students to get a known safe & well-configured environ- ment. The Virtual Unix Lab was created to solve this problem.
    [Show full text]
  • Sparcstation 5 Product Notes—August 1994 Sbus Compatibility
    SPARCstation5ProductNotes Sun Microsystems Computer Corporation 2550 Garcia Avenue Mountain View, CA 94043 U.S.A. Part No: 801-6393-11 Revision A, August 1994 1994 Sun Microsystems, Inc. 2550 Garcia Avenue, Mountain View, California 94043-1100 U.S.A. All rights reserved. This product and related documentation are protected by copyright and distributed under licenses restricting their use, copying, distribution, and decompilation. No part of this product or related documentation may be reproduced in any form by any means without prior written authorization of Sun and its licensors, if any. Portions of this product may be derived from the UNIX® and Berkeley 4.3 BSD systems, licensed from UNIX System Laboratories, Inc. and the University of California, respectively. Third-party font software in this product is protected by copyright and licensed from Sun’s Font Suppliers. RESTRICTED RIGHTS LEGEND: Use, duplication, or disclosure by the United States Government is subject to the restrictions set forth in DFARS 252.227-7013 (c)(1)(ii) and FAR 52.227-19. The product described in this manual may be protected by one or more U.S. patents, foreign patents, or pending applications. TRADEMARKS Sun, Sun Microsystems, the Sun logo, Solaris, SunOS, OpenWindows, NeWSprint, NeWSprinter, NeWSprinter CL+, AnswerBook, TurboGX, and TurboGXplus are trademarks or registered trademarks of Sun Microsystems, Inc. UNIX is a registered trademark in the United States and other countries, exclusively licensed through X/Open Company, Ltd. OPEN LOOK is a registered trademark of Novell, Inc. PostScript and Display PostScript are trademarkes of Adobe Systems, Inc. All other product names mentioned herein are the trademarks of their respective owners.
    [Show full text]
  • Sparcstation 5 Model 110 Service Manual
    SPARCstation 5 Model 110 Service Manual Sun Microsystems Computer Company A Sun Microsystems, Inc. Business 901 San Antonio Road Palo Alto, CA 94303-4900 USA 650 960-1300 fax 650 969-9131 Part No.: 802-7085-10 Revision A, November 1996 1997 Sun Microsystems, Inc., 901 San Antonio Road, Palo Alto, California 94303-4900 U.S.A. All rights reserved. This product or document is protected by copyright and distributed under licenses restricting its use, copying, distribution, and decompilation. No part of this product or document may be reproduced in any form by any means without prior written authorization of Sun and its licensors, if any. Portions of this product may be derived from the UNIX® system, licensed from Novell, Inc., and from the Berkeley 4.3 BSD system, licensed from the University of California. UNIX is a registered trademark in the United States and in other countries and is exclusively licensed by X/Open Company Ltd. Third-party software, including font technology in this product, is protected by copyright and licensed from Sun’s suppliers. RESTRICTED RIGHTS: Use, duplication, or disclosure by the U.S. Government is subject to restrictions of FAR 52.227-14(g)(2)(6/87) and FAR 52.227-19(6/87), or DFAR 252.227-7015(b)(6/95) and DFAR 227.7202-3(a). Sun, Sun Microsystems, the Sun logo, and Solaris are trademarks or registered trademarks of Sun Microsystems, Inc. in the United States and in other countries. All SPARC trademarks are used under license and are trademarks or registered trademarks of SPARC International, Inc.
    [Show full text]
  • SPARC/CPU-8VT Technical Reference Manual
    SPARC/CPU-8VT Technical Reference Manual P/N 204718 Edition 2.1 March 1999 FORCE COMPUTERS Inc./GmbH All Rights Reserved This document shall not be duplicated, nor its contents used for any purpose, unless express permission has been granted. Copyright by FORCE COMPUTERS World Wide Web: www.forcecomputers.com 24-hour access to on-line manuals, driver updates, and application notes is provided via SMART, our SolutionsPLUS customer support program that provides current technical and services information. Headquarters The Americas Europe Asia FORCE COMPUTERS Inc. FORCE COMPUTERS GmbH FORCE COMPUTERS Japan KK 2001 Logic Drive Prof.-Messerschmitt-Str. 1 Miyakeya Building 4F San Jose, CA 95124-3468 D-85579 Neubiberg/München 1-9-12 Hamamatsucho U.S.A. Germany Minato-ku, Tokyo 105 Japan Tel.: +1 (408) 369-6000 Tel.: +49 (89) 608 14-0 Tel.: +81 (03) 3437 3948 Fax: +1 (408) 371-3382 Fax: +49 (89) 609 77 93 Fax: +81 (03) 3437 3968 Email [email protected] Email [email protected] Email [email protected] NOTE The information in this document has been carefully checked and is believed to be entirely reliable. FORCE COMPUTERS makes no warranty of any kind with regard to the material in this document, and assumes no responsibility for any errors which may appear in this document. FORCE COMPUTERS reserves the right to make changes without notice to this, or any of its products, to improve reliability, performance, or design. FORCE COMPUTERS assumes no responsibility for the use of any circuitry other than circuitry which is part of a product of FORCE COMPUTERS Inc./GmbH.
    [Show full text]
  • High-Performance Workstation at an Entry-Level Price
    SPARCstation™ 5 High-performance workstation at an entry-level price. With its high-speed 170 MHz TurboSPARC chip, the SPARCstation™ 5 delivers enough horsepower to make even your most CPU-intensive applications run the way they’re supposed to — fast. With multiple configurations to choose from, workstation. The Model 170 provides a low you’re sure to find a SPARCstation 5 system that cost solution for developing Java™ applets as well suitstheworkyoudo.TheSPARCstation 5 Model as browsing and publishing online information 170 offers a choice in monitors and graphics. on internal intranets and on the Internet. The And inside every SPARCstation 5 system there’s newest SunPC™ card makes the SPARCstation 5 room for one floppy drive, two hard drives, Model 170 an excellent choice for the enterprise three SBus slots, and even a CD-ROM. Because desktop. These products allow users to run your desktop space is at a premium, we used a their UNIX® and Windows applications all in compact pizza-box design. The SPARCstation 5 one desktop at an affordable price. comes standard with 32-MB memory, expand- And the Solaris™ operating environment, able up to 256 MB. You can store large graphics the leader for enterprise-wide computing, com- files with up to 118 GB of mass storage. bines an easy-to-use graphical user interface Innovative multimedia capabilities include with sophisticated, network-aware personal 16-bit CD-quality audio, speaker, external micro- productivity tools, including multimedia elec- phone, the ShowMe™ whiteboard and shared tronic mail, calendar manager, and graphical applications software, and the SunVideo™ card, file manager.
    [Show full text]
  • Paper, PDF, 2.07MB
    MTAPerformanceComparison: sendmailvs.postfixon*BSD BradKnowles SeniorConsultantforSnow,BV [email protected] http://www.shub-internet.org/brad/papers/mtacomparison/ Entirecontentscopyright©2002byBradKnowles,allrightsreserved Overview • Goal • Meta Information – Hardware Used – Software Tested – Tools Used – Methodology • Test Results • Conclusions 2002-11-16 Copyright©2002byBradKnowles 2 Goal • Show you what it looks like to do MTA performance tuning – On as many *BSD platforms as I could • Focus on the process, not the numbers or expected/desired outcome – You get to see (most) everything, warts and all 2002-11-16 Copyright©2002byBradKnowles 3 Goal • Basically, chapter 3 from the book sendmail Performance Tuning by Nick Christenson – See http://www.jetcafe.org/~n pc/book/sendmail/ 2002-11-16 Copyright©2002byBradKnowles 4 MetaInformation • Hardware Used • Software Tested • Benchmark Tools • Methodology 2002-11-16 Copyright©2002byBradKnowles 5 HardwareUsed • NetBSD – Twinhead “Twinstation 5G” (Sun SPARCstation 5 clone) – Not UltraSPARC, but the ancient SPARC 5 • OS: NetBSD 1.6-RELEASE • CPU: microsSPARC-II @ 110MHz • RAM: 32MB real, 384MB virtual • NIC: On-board “Lance” 10Base-T Ethernet & SBus QuadFastEthernet • Unfortunately, disk drives died before testing could be performed (bug in NetBSD regarding SCSI tagged command queueing for old drives?) 2002-11-16 Copyright©2002byBradKnowles 6 HardwareUsed • FreeBSD – Compaq Armada 4131T • OS: FreeBSD 4.6.2-RELEASE • CPU: Pentium 133 • RAM: 48MB real, 384MB virtual • NIC: Asanté FriendlyNET AL1011 “Prism2” 802.11b WiFi PCMCIA • HD: 10GB IBM Travelstar 20GN – 4200 RPM – 12ms avg. seek 2002-11-16 Copyright©2002byBradKnowles 7 HardwareUsed: FreeBSD Image copyright © 2001 Sunset Computer Services, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 2002-11-16 Copyright©2002byBradKnowles 8 HardwareUsed • MacOS X (Part 1) – PowerBook G3 “Pismo” • OS: MacOS X 10.2.1 • CPU: PowerPC G3 @ 400MHz • RAM: 1GB real, 2GB virtual • NIC: Apple AirPort 802.11b WiFi • HD: 48GB IBM Travelstar 40GH – 5400 RPM – 12ms avg.
    [Show full text]
  • Sun Sparcstation 5 Service Manual
    Sun SPARCstation 5 service manual PN 408287-053 Revision A A PART OF THE MARQUETTE UNITY NETWORK ã Copyright Marquette Medical Systems, Inc. 1998. All rights reserved. Trademarked names appear throughout this document. Rather than list the names and entities that own the trademarks or insert a trademark symbol with each mention of the trademarked name, the publisher states that it is using the names only for editorial purposes and to the benefit of the trademark owner with no intention of improperly using the trademark. ACCUSKETCH, AccuVision, APEX, AQUA-KNOT, ARCHIVIST, Autoseq, BABY MAC, CardioServ, CardioSmart, CardioSys, CASE, CD TELEMETRY, CENTRA, CHART GUARD, CINE 35, CORO, COROMETRICS, CRG PLUS, Digistore, Digital DATAQ, E for M, EAGLE, Event-Link, HELLIGE, IMAGE STORE, LASER SXP, MAC, MAC-LAB, MACTRODE, MARQUETTE, MARQUETTE MAC, MARQUETTE UNITY NETWORK, MARS, MAX, MEDITEL, MEI, MEI in the circle logo, MEMOPORT, MEMOPORT C, MINISTORE, MINNOWS, Monarch 8000, MULTI-LINK, MULTISCRIPTOR, MUSE, MUSE CV, Neo-Trak, NEUROSCRIPT, OnlineABG, OXYMONITOR, Pres-R-Cuff, PRESSURE-SCRIBE, QMI, QS, Quantitative Medicine, Quantitative Sentinel, Qwik Connect Spiral, RAMS, RSVP, SAM, SEER, SOLAR, Spectra 400, Spectra-Tel, ST GUARD, TRAM, TRAM-NET, TRAM-RAC, TRAMSCOPE, TRIM KNOB, UNITY logo, UNITY NETWORK, Vari-X, Vari-X Cardiomatic, VariCath, VAS, and Vision Care Filter are trademarks of Marquette Medical Systems, Inc., registered in the United States Patent and Trademark Office. 12SL, 15SL, AccuSpeak, ADVANTAGE, BAM, BODYTRODE, Cardiomatic, CardioSpeak, CardioWindow, CD TELEMETRY®-LAN, CENTRALSCOPE, Corolation, Corometrics Sensor Tip, DASH, EDIC, HI-RES, IMAGE VAULT, IMPACT.wf, INTELLIMOTION, INTER-LEAD, IQA, LIFEWATCH, MARQUETTE MEDICAL SYSTEMS, MARQUETTE® RESPONDER, MENTOR, MicroSmart, MMS, MRT, MUSE CardioWindow, O2 SENSOR, OMRS, Premium, RAC, SILVERTRACE, SMART-PAC, SMARTLOOK, SOLARVIEW, Spectra-Overview, Trimline, UNITY, and Universal are trademarks of Marquette Medical Systems, Inc.
    [Show full text]
  • Solaris 9 9/05 Sun Hardware Platform Guide
    Solaris™ 9 9/05 Sun™ Hardware Platform Guide Sun Microsystems, Inc. www.sun.com Part No. 819-2946-10 September 2005, Revision A Submit comments about this document at: http://www.sun.com/hwdocs/feedback Copyright 2005 Sun Microsystems, Inc., 4150 Network Circle, Santa Clara, California 95054, U.S.A. All rights reserved. Sun Microsystems, Inc. has intellectual property rights relating to technology that is described in this document. In particular, and without limitation, these intellectual property rights may include one or more of the U.S. patents listed at http://www.sun.com/patents, and one or more additional patents or pending patent applications in the U.S. and in other countries. This document and the product to which it pertains are distributed under licenses restricting their use, copying, distribution, and decompilation. No part of the product or of this document may be reproduced in any form by any means without prior written authorization of Sun and its licensors, if any. Third-party software, including font technology, is copyrighted and licensed from Sun suppliers. Parts of the product may be derived from Berkeley BSD systems, licensed from the University of California. UNIX is a registered trademark in the U.S. and other countries, exclusively licensed through X/Open Company, Ltd. Sun, Sun Microsystems, the Sun logo, AnswerBook2, docs.sun.com, Netra, SunVTS, Sun HSI, SunForum, Sun ATM, Java 3D, ShowMe, Sun StorEdge, Sun Blade, Sun Fire, Sun Enterprise, Sun Enterprise Ultra, Power Management, OpenBoot, JumpStart, Ultra, SunFDDI, SunSwift, SunFast Ethernet, Sun Quad FastEthernet, Voyager, and Solaris are trademarks, registered trademarks, or service marks of Sun Microsystems, Inc.
    [Show full text]