Author : Brian L. Wong
Publisher : Prentice Hall PTR
ISBN 13 : 9780133499520
Total Pages : 0 pages
Book Rating : 4.4/5 (995 download)
Book Synopsis Configuration and Capacity Planning for Solaris Servers by : Brian L. Wong
Download or read book Configuration and Capacity Planning for Solaris Servers written by Brian L. Wong and published by Prentice Hall PTR. This book was released on 1997 with total page 0 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: No matter what application or SPARC architecture you're working with, "Configuration and Capacity Planning for Solaris Servers" can help you maximize the performance of your Solaris-based server. This is the most comprehensive guide to configuring and sizing Solaris servers for virtually any task, including: World Wide Web, Internet E-mail, ftp, and Usenet news serversNFS serversDatabase managementClient/server computingTimesharingGeneral purpose application serversInternet firewalls Sun Microsystems engineer Brian Wong reviews the load characteristics of each type of usage, in detail. He then demonstrates how each application interacts with Solaris server architecture to impact each aspect of system performance, including throughput, latency, utilization, and efficiency. Ten detailed case studies make it easy for system administrators to take advantage of the book's concepts and methodology. "Configuration and Capacity Planning for Solaris Servers" focuses extensively on critical I/O issues, showing how to tailor usage, applications, software, and hardware to accommodate the realities of I/O. It presents detailed coverage of memory and virtual memory; SBus and VME configuration; disk access, SCSI and RAID subsystems; and file systems and backup issues. Wong also presents important considerations in configuring systems based on each major SPARC architecture. Whether you're optimizing an existing Solaris system or planning a new one," Configurations and Capacity Planning for Solaris Servers" gives you the practical advice and detailed technical information you need to deliver maximum performance at the lowest possible cost.