Jim, in future, would you please refrain from sending HTML-Mail to this list? Not everybody is able to read that and it's generally frowned apon.
Sorry. I wasn't thinking. I reset my email to plain text. Hope this one comes thru alright. --jrh
Will SuSE run on a Sun Sparc2 workstation? I have the chance to > buy a couple of workstations but the OS is outdated.
No, there's currently no SuSE Linux for Sparc available :-(
Solaris 7 is avaiable for free (as in beer not speech) and you can even > get Solaris 8 early enterpise developers pre-release version w/64 bit support (or as the rest of the world calls it "Solaris 8 Beta")
I also think Red Hat makes a Linux distro avaiable for Sparc CPU's.
OpenBSD and NetBSD will also run on these machines.
You might want to consider the price-cost/performance benifit of these machines. I got on off ebay for about $200 bucks with 64 megs and 2.2 gigs in 2 SCSI seagate hard drives. At the time I also had a P-75 w/ 48 Megs of ram with 1.2 gigs in 1 SCSI hard drive. One was running Solaris 2.6 and the other Red Hat Linux 5.1.
The servers where both used for testing purposes, unoffical junk that I didn't one to spread around and infect my "real" servers/workstation. Test software things like that. When I was running software off either of them remotely I couldn't tell the differance in speed. They seemed equal and had about the same performance.
The only differance between the two machines, is that one was Sun hardware and costed me allot more than equal speed from a x86 machine running Linux. The thing people forget is that Linux was orignally designed for the x86 processer and that is where most of the effort is going. It was ported over to sparc after the fact, just like sun port solaris over to the x86 after it was done.
As my friend always told me:
if it is x86 run linux if it is sparc run solaris if it is mips run irix if you have no fscking clue of the cpu try netbsd, it will work.
Jack
Thanks for the info Jack (and everyone else). I am maybe rethinking this purchase. The (8)systems I am looking at are $150ea, have 64Megs ram, and vary in HD size but are somewhere around a gig. There's a bunch of extra HD's, a couple of tape units, cd, modem, etc. I was thinking this was a good way to get some scsi systems but I see I can get a 10gig scsi drive for around $300-$400 (which would equal all of the HD's from the Sparcs) it doesn't look very cost effective. Besides I really like SuSE and would just like to stay with that Linux dist. Thanks a bunch! --jrh -- To unsubscribe send e-mail to suse-linux-e-unsubscribe@suse.com For additional commands send e-mail to suse-linux-e-help@suse.com Also check the FAQ at http://www.suse.com/Support/Doku/FAQ/