Slashdot Mirror


Sun Solaris Vs Linux: The x86 Smack-down

JigSaw writes "Tony Bourke put together a long article, benchmarking File System, System, Compilation, OpenSSL and Web Performance for both Linux and Solaris on x86 hardware. While SPARC's Solaris is said to be more optimized than its x86 counterpart on the other hand so is Linux 2.6 compared to 2.4. Solaris-x86 performed well in the tests, but Linux 2.4 seems to win most of the tests and the overall impressions."

6 of 320 comments (clear)

  1. Guess what! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Flamebait

    Windows XP trumps all.

  2. The Linux cover by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Flamebait

    Dissertation on the Uselessness of Linux Zealots

    A spectre is haunting the world -- the spectre of the Linux zealot.

    What the Linux zealot is will appear evident to whoever has experienced or came in contact with the discussions which daily rage the Web disguised as news, e-mails, reference material, etc. The Linux zealot, is nothing but an animal wandering unceasingly in virtual and true reality (which moreover he treats in the same way) claiming to be an authority on the Linux operating system, an out-and-out guarantor for everyone's freedom, opposed to any safeguard of intellectual works (for a Linux zealot, the expression "copyright" is tantamount to sin against the Holy Spirit: there is no kind of expiation); in fact, he champions software freedom as a fundamental point for world evolution.

    But first and foremost, the Linux zealot is a deeply dangerous being as he claims to be the guardian of truth, and looks with suspicion (when it goes off well) or scorn (for the rest of cases, i.e. most of them) those people who simply think differently from him.

    But what's Linux? A Linux zealot will never give an authentic answer to this kind of question. He won't, not because he doesn't want to (even if this is the case), but because this question has been answered already, somewhere else by someone else. Linux is nothing but an operating system. The Linux zealot will claim that it is a different operating system from all other ones. But this is not the case. Because an OS is an OS, its main function is to manage the resource of a machine we will call "computer" from now on, for comfort of description. By the term "computer" we mean what is commonly meant by this expression, i. e. the system of hardware resources which are fixed to a certain purpose, be it home use, business use, or server management. Linux is an operating system. Like Windows, MS-DOS, OS/2, etc. There is no difference, in this sense, between Linux and other operating systems. Linux manages a computer, no more, no less. So do MS-DOS, Windows and OS/2. What the Linux zealot self-importantly and arrogantly highlights, is the fact that Linux is a free operating system, i.e., it is made available free of charge to the end user. This of course isn't true at all, but the Linux zealot believes it. Linux is freely distributable, not free of charge. This means that the kernel and everything included in the operating system's minimal requirements can be freely distributed, not that they must be distributed free of charge. This is the first great misapprehension of the Linux zealots, who find their claim challenged by facts: if the essential parts which make the operating system, and some additional software, are freely distributable, they should explain the reason of the costs -- not prohibitive but certainly notable -- of the most popular Linux distributions, Red Hat and SuSE foremost. And most of all, they should explain the fact that companies like Red Hat are regularly listed on the stock exchange, and Mr. Linux Torvalds enjoys a rather high standard of living. These benefactors of mankind, these software alternatives, these computer non-conformists (so much non-conformist as to be terribly conformist in their non-conformism) naturally justify the distributing companies' profits with excuses like "but there's a printed manual", "but the bundled software is qualitatively and numerically superior compared to the most popular distribution". "but it is easier to install" and other unspeakable nonsense. "On the other hand" they say "if someone wants Linux, they can just as easily download it from the Internet". Sure. Download it from the Internet. But how long must you stay connected, if you regularly pay an Internet bill, to complete the download of an updated version of a decent distribution of an operating system? So what? Is Linux free? No. Linux is not free, same as nothing downloaded from the Internet is free, unless you have access to an University server or can in whatever way scrounge a connection. If you ask a Linux zealot

  3. You are missing the point by ultrabot · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Linux has no place on Server. Period. Solaris is industrial strength, mature, stable and rock-solid. It has the "secret sauce" that even SCO doesn't know of. It brings Value to Enterprise, unlike that hobbyist jalopy OS. After all, it's about Systems. Now you can use commodity x86 hardware with the OS made in heaven.

    And yeah, almost forgot, lots of mobile phones run Java.

    --
    Save your wrists today - switch to Dvorak
  4. I'm gonna bite, it amuses me to do so by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Flamebait

    Thank you for your insight. I can see you have constructed a carefully worded argument to support your position, only you wrote it on used toilet paper. Why do you hate Linux so much? Is it because she rejected you for another guy? Or perhaps another woman? Or because you can't figure it out for yourself and you lash out like some kind of M$ whore in support of your favorite company (of which you probably own zero stock in, but are too stupid to realize how they are shafting you)?

  5. ffffffffff by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Flamebait

    aaaaaaaaaaaa

  6. stability benchmark by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Flamebait

    Number of crashes per day:

    Windows 95: 2
    Linux: 4
    Solaris x86: 0

    The review forgot to include these results, unless the article is politically motivated (paid for by IBM).