Slashdot Mirror


Sun Announces Support for PostgreSQL

jadavis writes "Sun announces 24x7 support for PostgreSQL on Solaris 10. From the article: 'Today Sun announced that it will be integrating the Postgres open source data base into the Solaris 10 OS and providing world-wide 24x7 support for customers who wish to develop and deploy open source database solutions into their enterprise environments. Sun is working with the PostgresSQL community to take advantage of the advanced technologies in the Solaris 10 OS, such as Predictive Self-Healing, Solaris Containers and Solaris Dynamic Tracing (DTrace).'"

2 of 283 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Sun opening up? by Kunta+Kinte · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Interesting. Could this be an indication of things to come?

    Opening up? Things to come?

    Sun has been one of the biggest commercial open source supporters for years now. Probably only surpassed by IBM and the Linux companies ( RedHat and Suse, Linux is their core business after all ).

    Millions to buy StarOffice, millions to setup and run OO.org and OpenDocument development, marketing, promoting OpenDocument. Releasing packages like GridEngine, etc. http://www.sunsource.net/. Years of shipping and support opensource applications to companies that would never have used it otherwise.

    Back when I was a network admin, we got a whole lot of GNU software in the system by first showing superiors that Sun endorsed those packages and actually provided solaris binaries.

    Sun's main issue is PR, I suspect. When IBM does something good, it makes sure everyone knows. But that doesn't seem to be McNealy's style...

    --
    Based on upvotes, Ageism is the only "-ism" Slashdotters care about and think isn't SJW
  2. Re:sun will need to make BIG changes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    - ditch the forte crap and vendor lockin scheme

    Done. Sun released Studio 11 (http://www.sun.com/software/products/studio/index .xml) on Tuesday. It's completely free to use unless you want support. They also ship lots of GNU tools included in Solaris (under /usr/sfw) in case you would rather use them.

    - ultrasparc performance is terrible. Address it.

    Done. The UltraSPARC-IV+ chip (http://www.sun.com/processors/UltraSPARC-IVplus/) is up to five times faster than UltraSPARC-III and up to twice as fast as the initial UltraSPARC-IV. And the UltraSPARC T1 chip (code-name Niagara http://www.sun.com/processors/UltraSPARC-T1/index. xml) delivers incredible throughput (in my testing, often faster than a V40z with four Opteron 850 CPUs) while consuming much less power and generating much less heat than any other chip delivering anything close to the same performance and throughput.

    - get the X11 libraries and headers fixed - completely

    Done. Solaris 10 (at least on X86) uses the Xorg implementation. The previous Xsun implementation is also available if you need it, though.

    - Get ldap working without so many support applications

    I can't say that I understand this one. Sun's Directory Server is the best performing and most scalable server available. It's very in-line with the standards so any LDAPv3-compliant application should work with it just fine. It is the preferred directory for use with most commercial LDAP-enabled applications.

    - make your platform work better with OSS software (eg: gcc)

    What else needs to be done in this area? Solaris 10 ships with a lot of OSS software, including GCC, and Sun makes a lot of additional OSS software available on the Companion CD (http://www.sun.com/software/solaris/freeware/). If that's not enough, you can use the SunFreeware (http://www.sunfreeware.com/) or Blastwave (http://www.blastwave.org/) collections to get what you need.