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Oracle Solaris 11 Advanced Administration Cookbook

You're reading from   Oracle Solaris 11 Advanced Administration Cookbook Over 50 advanced recipes to help you configure and administer Oracle Solaris systems

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2014
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781849688260
Length 478 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Alexandre Borges Alexandre Borges
Author Profile Icon Alexandre Borges
Alexandre Borges
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Toc

Table of Contents (11) Chapters Close

Preface 1. IPS and Boot Environments FREE CHAPTER 2. ZFS 3. Networking 4. Zones 5. Playing with Oracle Solaris 11 Services 6. Configuring and Using an Automated Installer (AI) Server 7. Configuring and Administering RBAC and Least Privileges 8. Administering and Monitoring Processes 9. Configuring the Syslog and Monitoring Performance Index

Managing a zone using the resource manager


Installing and configuring Oracle Solaris 11 non-global zones is great, and as we have mentioned previously, it is a great technique that isolates and runs applications without disturbing other applications if anything goes wrong. Nonetheless, there's still a problem. Each non-global zone runs in a global zone as it were running alone, but an inconvenient effect comes up if one of these zones takes all resources (the processor and memory) for itself, leaving little or nothing for the other zones. Based on this situation, a solution named resource manager can be deployed to control how many resources are consumed for each zone.

Focusing on the resource manager (without thinking about zones), there are many forms that enforce resource control in Oracle Solaris 11. For example, we can use a project (/etc/project), which is composed by tasks and each one of these tasks contains one or more processes. A new project is created using the projadd command...

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