On Sun, Oct 06, 2002 at 01:12:00PM -0700, Waitman C. Gobble wrote:
>
> I tried solaris x86 about a month ago and found (~frustratingly) it was
> pretty much junk. I have also seen many newsgroup postings and magazine
> articles confirming/collaborating my opinion.
>
Hmmmm not been my experience.
> The biggest problem I had with solaris x86 was with network interfaces,
> they kept going down, and when they were up they ran goofy. Pretty
> unreliable.
>
We have a few solaris x86 boxes here, some running squid, others
running squid plus ipfilter. The machines have been (so far, and
$DEITY please spare me ;-) rock solid.
> Of course, to be fair, I DIDN'T try to get my hands on one of the two or
> three network cards that solaris x86 "supports out of the box" - and had
> to use a "third party" driver....
>
two or three is an exaggeration, there are quite a few supported
network cards and the ones that are supported are hardly what you
could call rare or exotic. The machines I mentioned have Intel
network cards in them, these cards were picked because they were on
the compatiability list. I cannot see how you can bag Solaris for
this when Linux and the *BSD camps all recommend buying cards from the
supported list rather than trying to make some random hardware work.
> However, the same cards I used on that box work fine on Linux, FreeBSD
> and Windows machines.... without any trouble...
>
OK, so, the Solaris drivers were crap maybe getting supported cards
would be a better option next time.
-- Brett LymnReceived on Mon Oct 07 2002 - 02:55:01 MDT
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