System Administration Guide: Basic Administration

Overview of System Types

System types are sometimes defined by how they access the root (/) and /usr file systems, including the swap area. For example, stand-alone systems and server systems mount these file systems from a local disk. Other clients mount the file systems remotely, relying on servers to provide these services. This table lists some of the characteristics of each system type.

Table 6–1 Characteristics of System Types

System Type 

Local File Systems 

Local Swap Space? 

Remote File Systems 

Network Use 

Relative Performance 

Server 

root (/)

/usr

/home

/opt

/export/home

 

Available 

Not available 

High 

High 

Stand-alone system 

root (/)

/usr

/export/home

Available 

Not available 

Low 

High 

OS Server 

/export/root

       

Diskless client 

Not available 

Not available 

root (/)

swap 

/usr

/home

High 

 

 

 

 

 

 

High 

Low 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Low 

Appliance 

Not available 

Not available 

Not available 

High 

High 

Description of a Server

A server system contains the following file systems:

Servers can also contain the following software to support other systems:

Stand-Alone Systems

A networked stand-alone system can share information with other systems in the network. However, it can continue to function if detached from the network.

A stand-alone system can function autonomously because it has its own hard disk that contains the root (/), /usr, and /export/home file systems and swap space. Thus, the stand-alone system has local access to OS software, executables, virtual memory space, and user-created files.


Note –

A stand-alone system requires sufficient disk space to hold its necessary file systems.


A non-networked stand-alone system is a stand-alone system with all the characteristics just listed, except it is not connected to a network.

Diskless Clients

A diskless client has no disk and depends on a server for all its software and storage needs. A diskless client remotely mounts its root (/), /usr, and /home file systems from a server.

A diskless client generates significant network traffic due to its continual need to procure OS software and virtual memory space from across the network. A diskless client cannot operate if it is detached from the network or if its server malfunctions.

For more overview information about diskless clients, see Diskless Client Management Overview.

Description of an Appliance

An appliance, such as the Sun Ray appliance, is an X display device that requires no administration. There is no CPU, fan, disk, and very little memory. An appliance is connected to a Sun display monitor. However, the appliance user's desktop session is run on a server and displayed back to the user.

The X environment is set up automatically for the user and has the following characteristics:

Guidelines for Choosing System Types

You can determine which system types are appropriate for your environment by comparing each system type based on the following characteristics:

Disk space usage

How much disk space is required to effectively deploy this configuration?

This table describes how each system type scores in terms of each characteristic. A ranking of 1 is most efficient. A ranking of 4 is least efficient.

Table 6–2 Comparison of System Types

System Type 

Centralized Administration 

Performance 

Disk Space Usage 

Stand-alone system 

Diskless client 

Appliance