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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Major differences between AIX, Solaris, HP-UX, Linux Post 302071252 by amro1 on Thursday 13th of April 2006 02:29:18 PM
Old 04-13-2006
They are different... inmany ways.

To cut long story short.
these are completely different systems that happened to represent virtually all branches of UNIX and despite they share some basic approaches the system architecture is quite different. Above the basic command set, the system management issues solved differently, configuration managed differently and volume management is different as well.
Solaris is the only real survivor of System V type, has huge number of system improvements, and on a modern equipment allows changing the CPUs and system memory without stopping system. Has great, very advances permission model and as all Sys V uses run levels. It offers systems from desktops to hundreds CPU supercomputers. Very exciting.
HP UX is BSD based system, very reliable and comfortable. However the expendability is limited. As HP acquired Compaq that acquired DEC, they messed up with this entire legacy.
AIX is superb system in a middle with very cool Tivoli extensions, very developed set of hardware/software improvements and extremely easy to use management tools.
Linux is by design is garage band project, that utilizes run level approach and despite as for today, offers many advanced features, since has no dedicated hardware manufacturer suffers from it.

As I said, the systems are similar up to some level, but completely different in the way they managed and maintained.
hope it helps.
 

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rtc(1M) 						  System Administration Commands						   rtc(1M)

NAME
rtc - provide all real-time clock and GMT-lag management SYNOPSIS
/usr/sbin/rtc [-c] [-z zone-name] DESCRIPTION
On x86 systems, the rtc command reconciles the difference in the way that time is established between UNIX and MS-DOS systems. UNIX systems utilize Greenwich Mean Time (GMT), while MS-DOS systems utilize local time. Without arguments, rtc displays the currently configured time zone string. The currently configured time zone string is based on what was last recorded by rtc-z zone-name. The rtc command is not normally run from a shell prompt; it is generally invoked by the system. Commands such as date(1) and rdate(1M), which are used to set the time on a system, invoke /usr/sbin/rtc -c to ensure that daylight savings time (DST) is corrected for properly. OPTIONS
-c This option checks for DST and makes corrections if necessary. It is normally run once a day by a cron job. If there is no RTC time zone or /etc/rtc_config file, this option will do nothing. -z zone-name This option, which is normally run by the system at software installation time, is used to specify the time zone in which the RTC is to be maintained. It updates the configuration file /etc/rtc_config with the name of the specified zone and the current GMT lag for that zone. If there is an existing rtc_config file, this command will update it. If not, this command will create it. FILES
/etc/rtc_config The data file used to record the time zone and GMT lag. This file is completely managed by /usr/sbin/rtc, and it is read by the kernel. ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Architecture |x86 | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability |SUNWcsu | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ SEE ALSO
date(1), rdate(1M), attributes(5) SunOS 5.11 3 Oct 2003 rtc(1M)
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