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Full Discussion: Sun hardware sizing
Operating Systems Solaris Sun hardware sizing Post 302477628 by DukeNuke2 on Monday 6th of December 2010 03:49:06 AM
Old 12-06-2010
if you need a sparc system (which 2, 3 and 4 are not) and a v880 is for a 10 times bigger business you should maybe go for a M3000 system. the bigger M series server might be a little oversize.
if you need the harddisk space (lots of internal disks) a T series (also sparc) server or a X series server (if you can run your app on x86 hardware) might be handy...
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RARPD(8)						      System Manager's Manual							  RARPD(8)

NAME
rarpd - reverse address resolution protocol daemon SYNOPSIS
rarpd [-v] [-i interface ] DESCRIPTION
Rarpd listens on the ethernet for broadcast packets asking for reverse address resolution. These packets are sent by hosts at boot time to find out their IP address. Rarpd looks up the six octet ethernet number in the ethers map finding a host name. This name is translated to the IP address of the host by a DNS lookup. The IP address is then sent to the host. Before rarpd can start its service it first finds out what the IP address and hardware address of the ethernet is. Warning! Sun diskless workstations assume that the first RARP server that answers is the host they are to boot from. For this to work all other Sun RARP servers delay their answer if they are not also the requestors boot server. This rarpd does not have this kludge so it will happily engage the Sun boot server to see who can answer the client first. Unless your host can actually serve a Sun diskless client, it is better not to list any more hosts in the ethers file than necessary. OPTIONS
-v Be verbose. Show requests which the daemon is responding to. -i Bind to the named interface. By default rarpd binds to the default interface for the local system type, if available. SEE ALSO
ifconfig(8), ethers(5), hosts(5), AUTHOR
Derrick J. Brashear (shadow@dementia.org) The man page is mostly from the Minix version, by Kees J. Bot (kjb@cs.vu.nl) RARPD(8)
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