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Full Discussion: SuSE comparision
Operating Systems Linux SuSE SuSE comparision Post 61988 by Neo on Thursday 10th of February 2005 10:13:26 AM
Old 02-10-2005
Dear phantom,

True. But, I find that knowledgable support people understand that the kernel is the same.

With regard to problems, "what problems" laughing out loud, linux and their applications work like clockwork. Only "rookies" have problems and their problems are generally related to not understanding the environment (permission problems, libs, environmental variables, etc.).

In my opinion, it is better to have a solid OS than one that is simply "supported" when you "call in". So, as you can see, there are alternative perspectives and requirements, based on the user. Not all people run "big commercial linux" in the production environment.

So I disagree with your statement that not running "RedHat or SuSE" in production is "a big mistake". Your statement creates the wrong impression and makes a blanket opinion, which is too strong and misleading.
 
dr(7d)								      Devices								    dr(7d)

NAME
dr, drmach, ngdr, ngdrmach - Sun Enterprise 10000 dynamic reconfiguration driver SYNOPSIS
dr drmach ngdr ngdrmach DESCRIPTION
The dynamic reconfiguration (DR) driver consists of a platform-independent driver and a platform-specific module. The DR driver uses stan- dard features of the Solaris operating environment whenever possible to control DR operations and calls the platform specific module as needed. The DR driver creates minor nodes in the file system that serve as attachment points for DR operations. The DR driver provides a pseudo-driver interface to sequence attach and detach operations on system boards using file system entry points referred to as "attachment points." The attachment point form depends on the platform. Sun Enterprise 10000 Server On the Sun Enterprise 10000 server, the DR driver consists of a platform-independent driver (ngdr) and a platform-specific module (ngdr- mach). The domain configuration server (DCS) accepts DR requests from the system services processor (SSP) and uses the libcfgadm(3LIB) interface to initiate the DR operation. After the operation is performed, the results are returned to the SSP. For more information about the DCS on the Sun Enterprise 10000, refer to the dcs(1M) man page and the Sun Enterprise 10000 Dynamic Reconfiguration User Guide. The DR driver creates physical attachment points for system board slots that takes the following form: /devices/pseudo/ngdr@0:SBx Where x represents the slot number (0 to 15) for a particular board. The cfgadm_sbd(1M) plugin creates dynamic attachment points that refer to components on system boards, including CPUs, memory, or I/O devices. Refer to the cfgadm_sbd(1M) man page for more details. SEE ALSO
cfgadm_sbd(1M), ioctl(2), libcfgadm(3LIB) Sun Enterprise 10000 Dynamic Reconfiguration User Guide SunOS 5.11 29 Sep 2003 dr(7d)
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