I don't know why, but OpenSolaris runs horribly slow in VirtualBox.
Does anyone know anything about this?
Phoronix: A Weekend Look At OpenSolaris 2009.06
It has been a while since last talking about OpenSolaris 2009.06 at Phoronix, but this weekend we decided to fire up Sun's latest build based upon the SXCE 111a build available from Genunix. Enclosed are a few screenshots and other information about this Sun community operating system that should be officially released within a month.
http://www.phoronix.com/vr.php?view=13778
I don't know why, but OpenSolaris runs horribly slow in VirtualBox.
Does anyone know anything about this?
Whats the point of this distro even? Is there any novelty at all to run a solaris kernel these days?
I believe there are many who are quite invested in the Solaris platform, and Sun has created technologies to allow building and maintaining robust infrastructure.
Besides, there wouldn't a distribution if there wasn't a community around it no? The great thing about FOSS is the ability to port any portion of a complete stack of software creates a low barrier of entry for different ideas of what makes up a distribution.
[That can also be viewed as a weakness, but that will likely improve as we decide which parts of this wave of custom everything is actually worthwhile]
Mentioning the PulseAudio integration as missing in a post about OpenSolaris...which has never had anything to do with PulseAudio...heh
Anyway, what phoronix failed to mention, is that 2009.06 will finally have a newer gcc stack (4.3.2) [1], and I believe this is more important than having a slightly modified volume control.
[1] The commit for it: http://mail.opensolaris.org/pipermai...il/013199.html
Ok, it's 2 years I'm waiting that OpenSolaris supports my motherboard's gibabit ethernet card. If it doesn't this time I'm gonna say goodbye to it once for all.
And could you enlighten us all what does forking have to do with OpenSolaris, which can't use any Linux kernel stuff anyway as the licenses are not compatible. Moreover, the kernels are way too different for such a port to make sense anyway.
And if I need it and everyone else who uses it needs it, then we are all fictional and do not exist, right ?
Last edited by etacarinae; 05-03-2009 at 06:51 PM.