QuicksearchDisclaimerThe individual owning this blog works for Oracle in Germany. The opinions expressed here are his own, are not necessarily reviewed in advance by anyone but the individual author, and neither Oracle nor any other party necessarily agrees with them.
|
Some thoughts about IBMīs Workload Partition.Wednesday, August 15. 2007Comments
Display comments as
(Linear | Threaded)
I've read both documents.
Interestingly, the application WPARs look just like a cheap solaris "Projects" rip off. With the difference, that: -an additional parent process will be started -The application must be started using one command/script The later could be a problem when e.g. trying to run the oracle db and listener in one application WPAR. The system WPAR do not yet support virtual NICs yet. I haven't found any information regarding restrictions for apps running in a WPAR (like NFS server etc.) Have you read the security features redbook? http://www.redbooks.ibm.com/redpieces/pdfs/sg247430.pdf RBAC seems like also being a cheap Solaris rip-off.
Oh, and when setting RBAC attributes, the changes have to be pushed to the Kernel Security Table. That seems almost like a joke...
See page 229 |
+1The LKSF bookThe book with the consolidated Less known Solaris Tutorials is available for download here
Web 2.0Contact
Networking xing.com My photos Comments about ZFS Dedup Internals
Sat, 19.05.2012 09:50
There is no impact to boot/imp
ort times, as the DDT is loade
d as needed ... so the pool is
imported as fast as wit [...]
about Tracks
Tue, 15.05.2012 19:46
Very nice, I like the way the
eye is taken right into the pi
cture. Did you use any filter
s not to make the green [...]
about ZFS Dedup Internals
Thu, 10.05.2012 23:27
If the DDT is metadata, what i
mpact is there to boot times,
or zpool import times, when a
large DDT must be loaded [...]
Buttons![]() This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Germany License
![]() ![]() ![]() Blog Administration |
There must be a standard course at the IBM marketing school. The tricks of the benchmarkting are the same again and again. At least it doesnīt get boring to read at the IBM website. Standard Trick: Comparing different classes of systems The standard mar
Tracked: Dec 02, 19:12