Quote:
When you create a zone, you produce an application execution environment in which processes are isolated from the rest of the system. This isolation prevents processes that are running in one zone from monitoring or affecting processes that are running in other zones. Even a process running with superuser credentials cannot view or affect activity in other zones.
a non-global zone should have no indications/signs that it is in fact a non-global zone.
as far as what sri243 posted, `netstat -in` doesn't show me anything to be noted on a non-global zone. `arp -a` could, however. you just need to realize that the mac addresses are the same for two ips. but that doesn't mean its a non-global size as you can create multiple instances for a single interface. i would have to say that `ifconfig -a` will show you a second instance of the loop back and in my case, a second instance on the main interface. that might be your best bet. obviously the global-zone shows both instances.