A Sun engineer on Linux
Posted Sep 23, 2004 16:50 UTC (Thu) by
philips (guest, #937)
In reply to:
A Sun engineer on Linux by ami.ganguli
Parent article:
A Sun engineer on Linux
Main advantage of Linux is its price.
Ask anyone in business what keeps Sun floating around that long?
Its Hardware? - no.
Solaris is the right answer. It just works. Everyone - who doesn't care about source code
availability - loves it. Well, you have to experience it.
Well, it is used mostly on crappy Sun's hardware. Will see how good Sun will manage to make x86
port.
With Sun/Solaris combination - you are assured that hardware will work ok with that OS. (Just
like in case of Apple/Mac)
With Linux/PC - almost any new installation reveals new edge case, which is not handled
correctly in kernel. And bunch of users on lkml trying to assure you that's feature and not bug.
(Well, there are many wierd hardware configuration - problems to be expected all the time).
On flip, side - Solaris might be as crappy as Linux can be sometimes - we just cannot run it on
any non-Sun's hardware.
P.S. Hm... Probably it is not Sun's hardware which is crappy - but Solaris which makes it crappy.
P.P.S. Including into equation support by hardware vendors of Linux, Linux just shines, compared
to Sun. The tests we were doing in our lab with Solaris and Linux have shown that Sun/Solaris is
about 10 times more expensive then Linux. But Linux was dropping packets constantly under full
1GB ethernet load - Solaris just did worked Ok.
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