Solaris 8 Administrator's Guide
By Dr. Paul A. Watters
First Edition
January 2002
Pages: 300
ISBN 10: 0-596-00073-1 |
ISBN 13: 9780596000738




(Average of 8 Customer Reviews)


Book description
This guide covers all aspects of deploying Solaris as an enterprise-level network operating system, with a focus on e-commerce. Written for experienced network administrators who want an objective guide to networking with Solaris, the book covers installation on the Intel and Sparc platforms, and instructs you how to setup Solaris as a file server, application server, and database server.
Full Description
The Solaris operating system, along with related Sun products like
Java, is one of the most reliable and scalable platforms on which
to build e-commerce products, and on which to support all networked
services. Yet, one problem that potential users face is finding out
more information about what Solaris offers. In a sense, they want to
know how much technical work is involved in migrating to Solaris,
and what kind of philosophy Solaris is based on.
To answer these questions, Solaris 8 Administrator's Guide
covers all aspects of deploying Solaris as a network server, including
both basic and advanced network services. Given newfound interest in
Solaris as an enterprise network operating system, this guide is aimed
squarely at supporting enterprise-level services. It's written for
experienced network administrators who want an objective guide to
networking with Solaris, and covers installation on both the Intel
and Sparc platforms. With it, you will learn how to setup Solaris as
a file server, application server, and database server.
In its coverage of advanced topics, Solaris 8 Administrator's Guide
offers examples of configuration files and the installation of third-party
software packages. This comprehensive book also contains more conceptual
and difficult material that is absent from other Solaris reference manuals.
At all points, emphasis is placed on issues like evaluating the security,
scalability, and reliability of specific software packages--at the expense
of providing detailed coverage of every available package.
The book covers the practical experience and new skills needed to understand
the impact of new services and new software products on existing server systems.
Author Paul Watters--a recognized authority on Solaris--avoids so-called
"historical" services, like UUCP, which can easily fill chapters but are
not commonly found in today's production environments. Indeed, he doesn't
bother to provide an in-depth history of Solaris or UNIX at all, assuming
that you can find this material elsewhere. Instead, the practical focus is
on supporting relevant contemporary networking technologies.
Solaris 8 Administrator's Guide provides you with a third-party view
that not only praises Solaris, but is critical and realistic in its assessment.
This book is for experienced Solaris Administrators as well as and those looking
to migrate to this operating system.
Browse within this book
Cover
| Table of Contents
| Colophon
Featured customer reviews

Practical,
November 13 2007
Submitted by
Jason Priestley
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Nice, easy-to-read guide for setting up reliable Sun systems. Chapter 4 on networks was nicely done - compressed a whole textbook into one chapter.
Nice ... but dated,
August 28 2007
Submitted by
James Bosworth
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I picked up this book for a bargain price, as I still support around 60 Solaris boxen at my workplace. I enjoyed it very much, as it gives a good philosophical overview of the "why" in Solaris rather than just the "how". It could do with updating - I would buy an Open Solaris edition.
Solaris 8 Administrator's Guide Review,
October 22 2003
Submitted by Juanita Soller
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I thought this book was a very useful snapshot of *mostly* network admin topics. Sure, it could have been bigger. But how many manuals are there now on Solaris? Way too many, with too much detail for the average Joe admin. I think it was very useful to see how Solaris can support server-side Java without the top-end J2EE products which are slow (entity bean passivation/activation cycles being one example of the craziness at play). A great read.
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Solaris 8 Administrator's Guide Review,
October 01 2003
Submitted by yvuiivviuv
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it sucked big time , and the print also was bad
Solaris 8 Administrator's Guide Review,
January 12 2003
Submitted by Benny
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I was disappointed with this book. First book from O'reilly that made me feel like I bought a lemon. The reason for this disappointment probably is the fact that it tries to cover so much and therefor the topics covered could never be covered in depth enough.
Strangely enough some chapters go pretty deep while others really stop after no more than what feels like an introduction. Good idea : first check how deep the topic is covered by going through it quickly before you in ernest sit down and start reading it. You may find if you start reading a chapter without having an idea what is in it that the chapters stops at the very moment you get thirsty for more ...
Could be good to people that have no idea what System Administration is all about but to System Administrators this book is only very partially useful and there more than likely are better books available.
Solaris 8 Administrator's Guide Review,
January 01 2003
Submitted by Janet Brown
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Very useful!
I think, for a short overview of how to configure Solaris, this book is quite good. It is unfair for the other reviewers to expect the hundreds of pages of the bat book to be compressed into a 20 page chapter - of course, you should refer to the other excellent O'Reilly titles in this area for more information. I have find this book to be more of a roadmap - and there's some good detail in there too. I liked the scientific approach to capacity estimation very refreshing - I know we all have rules of thumb for doing this, but it's nice to see some formal models.
Unlike Milo, I found the four pages on SSH to be more than sufficient.
I just hope there is a
Solaris 9 version to be released soon covering more advanced topics.
J.B.
Solaris 8 Administrator's Guide Review,
April 01 2002
Submitted by Excellent
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This is the best
contemporary book on UNIX that I've read in a good while. There are so many books out there that concentrate on filling up endless pages of fluff with strange reworkings of UUCP and other historical beasts. This book has a good focus on Sun's (not necessarily UNIX's) strategic direction in terms of ONE and e-business. I know a lot of people don't agree with this, but unless you're a Wall St. pension fund analyst with Scott's phone number, you're not going to change Sun's thinking. I enjoyed the material on data management and modeling (rare in an OS book). I like the step-by-step approach of starting with systems and building networks. This could be greatly expanded (I would like to see a longer book).
More detail is required on LDAP and NIS-LDAP migration IMHO. Oracle should be covered as most Sun systems run Oracle. Why not cover iPlanet products in more depth like the application server instead of Apache? Everyone has their likes and dislikes but these are my suggestions.
Lawrence Kershaw
Richmond VA
Solaris 8 Administrator's Guide Review,
April 01 2002
Submitted by Milo Velimirovic
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This is the most disappointing book I have ever gotten from O'Reilly. Even though this book claims to be targeted at experienced administrators it contains page upon page of filler that are usually the resultant output of some command that any UNIX administrator should be familiar with. e.g. see pp 75-76 and the listing of DNS root servers. The book glosses over important details of Solaris installation and configuration. Many important configuration files and useful commands are only mentioned in passing and are not explained or omitted entirely.
Power management needs to be covered in more detail.
There is no mention of the file /etc/defaultrouter and /etc/notrouter is mentioned only in passing.
The Solaris package management tools are discussed but there is no mention of what is perhaps their most important use, installing recommended patches from SUN's website.
The section on printer administration is inadequate for dealing with today's network connected printers.
The description of the sendmail.cf file contains an error in the definition of the C command as being a "Complex macro" the author should be directed to read the bat book chapter 32 Class Macros. Additionally there is little discussion of the simple modifications that can be made to a stock sendmail.cf file to make it useful for production. These would include setting sendmail's idea of the hostname, masquerading, using a relay host, and enabling or disabling mail submission.
There is only a brief mention in passing of the automounter and no mention of how to configure map files for the automounter in the chapter on file serving.
Credit should be given for the mention of the need to use secure shell instead of telnet, but again it's a case of not enough information about the specifics of configuring ssh for Solaris. Again in the section on disabling IP ports, the examples given are for ports that any UNIX sysadmin who's been conscious for the last ten years should know about. But no mention is made of the ports that are unique to Solaris.
My recommendation to any UNIX sysadmin who is newly responsible for a Solaris8 system is to get several other O'Reilly books that cover the specific areas that they're interested in and to be patient with and learn to search the provided Answerbook for Solaris specific information. In particular
sendmail by Bryan Costales, with Eric Allman,
TCP/IP Network Administration by Craig Hunt,
Essential System Administration by Æleen Frisch,
DNS and BIND by Paul Albitz & Cricket Liu and the SANS document
Solaris Security Step By Step
Media reviews
"Overall, this is one of the must-have books for any Solaris administrator, or for other Unix admins who want to migrate to Solaris."
--Eugenia Loli-Queru, OSNews.com, June 2002
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