Linked by Will Senn on Tue 26th Apr 2005 20:14 UTC
Sun Solaris, OpenSolaris Wow! With Solaris 10, Sun Microsystems has done a marvelous job of bringing Solaris fully into the x86 world. Gone are the days when Solaris only runs on Sun hardware or when it only runs well on Sun hardware. Solaris 10 comes with greatly expanded off-the-shelf x86 hardware compatibility and a license that is hard to beat. It's a binary right to use and Open Solaris, the open source version is soon to come. IT Managers that have been wanting to bring a stable, scalable Operating Environment into their network infrastructures, but who have been unwilling to commit to the Sun hardware platform, for various reasons, are now free, pun intended, to bring Solaris on board and to run it on the hardware of their choice.
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@ MJ
by Robert Escue on Wed 27th Apr 2005 09:40 UTC

Thanks for the response. As I stated in the follow up e-mail message I am base lining Solaris Express with iozone. Once the base line is complete I will modify maxphys and see what happens.

My bigger question is why the small data transfer rate in the first place? On SCSI I can bump up maxphys to 16 MB (the upper limit on some FC HBA's). With modern IDE disks (both ATA and SATA) we should have a much better data transfer rate than 56 kb!