Solaris is known for its scalability, especially on SPARC systems, as well for being the origin for many innovative features such as DTrace and ZFS.[1][2] Solaris supports SPARC-based and x86-based workstations and servers from Sun and other vendors, with efforts underway to port to additional platforms.
In 1987, AT&T and Sun announced that they were collaborating on a project to merge the most popular Unix variants on the market at that time: BSD, System V, and Xenix. This would become Unix System V Release 4 (SVR4).[3]
On September 4, 1991, Sun announced that it would replace its existing BSD-derived Unix, SunOS 4, with one based on SVR4. This was identified internally as SunOS 5, but a new marketing name was introduced at the same time: Solaris 2.[4] While SunOS 4.1.x micro releases were retroactively namedSolaris 1 by Sun, the Solaris name is almost exclusively used to refer to the SVR4-derived SunOS 5.0 and later.[5]
The justification for this new "overbrand" was that it encompassed not only SunOS, but also the OpenWindowsgraphical user interface and Open Network Computing (ONC) functionality. The SunOS minor version is included in the Solaris release number; for example, Solaris 2.4 incorporated SunOS 5.4. After Solaris 2.6, Sun dropped the "2." from the number, so Solaris 7 incorporates SunOS 5.7, and the latest release SunOS 5.10 forms the core of Solaris 10.
Supported architectures
Solaris uses a common code base for the platforms it supports: SPARC and i86pc (which includes both x86 and x64).[6]
Solaris has a reputation for being well-suited to symmetric multiprocessing, supporting a large number of CPUs.[7] It has historically been tightly integrated with Sun's SPARC hardware (including support for 64-bitSPARC applications since Solaris 7), with which it is marketed as a combined package. This has often led to more reliable systems, but at a cost premium over commodity PC hardware. However, it has also supported x86 systems since Solaris 2.1 and the latest version, Solaris 10, includes support for 64-bit x86 applications, allowing Sun to capitalize on the availability of commodity 64-bit CPUs based on the x86-64 architecture. Sun has heavily marketed Solaris for use with both its own "x64" workstations and servers based on AMDOpteron and IntelXeon processors, as well as x86 systems manufactured by companies such as Dell, Hewlett-Packard, and IBM. As of 2007, the following vendors support Solaris for their x86 server systems:
Dell - will "test, certify, and optimize Solaris and OpenSolaris on its rack and blade servers and offer them as one of several choices in the overall Dell software menu"[8]
IBM - also distributes Solaris and Solaris Subscriptions for select x86-based IBM System x servers and BladeCenter servers[9]
Solaris 2.5.1 included support for the PowerPC platform (PowerPC Reference Platform), but the port was canceled almost as soon as it was released. In October 2006, an OpenSolaris community project called Polaris was started to create a port to PowerPC[13] and kickstarted by Sun Labs' "Project Pulsar"[14], integrating the relevant parts from the Solaris 2.5.1 port in OpenSolaris[15].
A port of Solaris to the Intel Itanium architecture was announced in 1997 but never brought to market.[16]
Solaris also supports the Linux platform ABI, allowing Solaris to run native Linux binaries on x86 systems. This feature is called "Solaris Containers for Linux Applications" or SCLA, based on the branded zones functionality introduced in Solaris 10 8/07.[19]
Desktop environments
OpenWindows on Solaris
Early releases of Solaris used OpenWindows as their desktop environment. In Solaris 2.0 to 2.2, OpenWindows supported both NeWS and X applications, and provided some backward compatibility for SunView applications from Sun's older desktop environment. Sun later dropped support for NeWS and SunView applications: OpenWindows 3.3 (which shipped with Solaris 2.3) was a port of X11 release 5.
As a member of COSE, the Common Open Software Environment initiative, Sun helped develop the Common Desktop Environment. CDE was an initiative to create a standard Unix desktop environment. Each vendor contributed different components: Hewlett-Packard did the window manager, IBM did the file manager, and Sun did the e-mail and calendar facilities, and the drag-and-drop support (ToolTalk). Solaris 2.5 onwards supported CDE, and OpenWindows was dropped from Solaris 9. Solaris 9 8/03 also introduced GNOME 2.0 as an alternative to CDE.
Solaris 10 supports Sun's Java Desktop System, which is based on GNOME and comes with a large set of applications, including StarOffice, Sun's office suite. Sun describes JDS as a "major component" of Solaris 10.[20]
The Open Source desktop environments KDE and XFCE, along with numerous other window managers, also compile and run on recent versions of Solaris.
OpenSolaris was seeded on June 14, 2005 from the then-current Solaris development code base; both binary and source versions are currently downloadable and licensed without cost. Source for upcoming features such as Xen support is now added to the OpenSolaris project as a matter of course, and Sun has said that future releases of Solaris proper will henceforth be derived from OpenSolaris.[24]
Solaris 10 5/08 added CPU capping for Solaris Containers, performance improvements, SpeedStep support for Intel processors and PowerNow! support for AMD processors [27][28]
Solaris 10 10/08 added boot from ZFS and can use ZFS as its root file system. Solaris 10 10/08 also includes virtualization enhancements including the ability for a Solaris Container to automatically update its environment when moved from one system to another, Logical Domains support for dynamically reconfigurable disk and network I/O, and paravirtualization support when Solaris 10 is used as a guest OS in Xen-based environments such as Sun xVM Server.[29]
iPlanet Directory Server, Resource Manager, Solaris Volume Manager, extended file attributes, IKE IPsec keying, and Linux compatibility added; OpenWindows dropped, sun4d support removed. Most current update is Solaris 9 9/05.
The first 64-bit UltraSPARC release. Added native support for file system meta-data logging (UFS logging). Dropped MCA support on x86 platform. Last update was Solaris 7 11/99.[31]
Only release to support PowerPC platform; Ultra Enterprise support added; user and group IDs (uid_t, gid_t) expanded to 32 bits,[33] also included processor sets[34] and early resource management technologies.
Solaris 2.5
SunOS 5.5
November 1995
-
First to support UltraSPARC and include CDE, NFSv3 and NFS/TCP. Dropped sun4 (VMEbus) support. POSIX.1c-1995 pthreads added. Doors added but undocumented.[35]
Solaris 2.4
SunOS 5.4
November 1994
-
First unified SPARC/x86 release. Includes OSF/Motif runtime support.
SPARC-only release. First to support sun4d architecture. First to support multithreading libraries (UI threads API in libthread)[36].
Solaris 2.1
SunOS 5.1
December 1992 (SPARC)
May 1993 (x86)
-
Support for sun4 and sun4m architectures added; first Solaris x86 release. First Solaris 2 release to support SMP.
Solaris 2.0
SunOS 5.0
June 1992
-
Preliminary release (primarily available to developers only), support for only the sun4c architecture. First appearance of NIS+.[37]
Solaris 1.x
SunOS 4.1.x
1991-1994
-
SunOS 4 rebranded as Solaris 1 for marketing purposes. See SunOS article for more information.
Solaris 8 stopped shipping in February 2007 but will be supported until April 2012;[38] earlier versions are unsupported.
A more comprehensive summary of some Solaris versions is also available.[39] Solaris releases are also described in the Solaris 2 FAQ.[40]
Development release
The underlying Solaris codebase has been under continuous development since work began in the late 1980s on what was eventually released as Solaris 2.0. Each version such as Solaris 10 is based on a snapshot of this development codebase, taken near the time of its release, which is then maintained as a derived project. Updates to that project are built and delivered several times a year until the next official release comes out.
The Solaris version under development by Sun as of 2008 is codenamedNevada, and is derived from what is now the OpenSolaris codebase.
In 2003, an addition to the Solaris development process was initiated. Under the program name Software Express for Solaris (or just Solaris Express), a binary release based on the current development basis was made available for download on a monthly basis, allowing anyone to try out new features and test the quality and stability of the OS as it progressed to the release of the next official Solaris version.[41] A later change to this program introduced a quarterly release model with support available, renamed to Solaris Express Developer Edition (SXDE).
In 2007, Sun announced Project Indiana with several goals, including providing an open source binary distribution of the OpenSolaris project, replacing SXDE.[42] The first release of this distribution was OpenSolaris 2008.05.
The Solaris Express Community Edition (SXCE) is intended specifically for OpenSolaris developers.[43] It is updated every two weeks. Although the download license seen when downloading the image files indicates its use is limited to personal, educational and evaluation purposes, the license acceptance form displayed when the user actually installs from these images lists additional uses including commercial and production environments.
^ Michael Totty (September 11, 2006). "Innovation Awards: The Winners Are...". Wall Street Journal. Retrieved on 2008-07-05. "The DTrace trouble-shooting software from Sun was chosen as the Gold winner in The Wall Street Journal's 2006 Technology Innovation Awards contest"
^Vance, Ashlee (2002-04-19). "Sun rethinks Solaris on Intel", Infoworld, IDG. Retrieved on 11 December 2006. "Neither Microsoft Windows nor Linux can match Solaris in this type of high-end architecture, said Tony Iams, an analyst at Port Chester, N.Y., research company D.H. Brown and Associates. "Solaris has earned its reputation over a long period of time," Iams said. "They have been working on high-end scalability features for 10 years, and that's the only way you can get solid results.""