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Resource Management and Oracle Solaris Zones Developer's Guide Oracle Solaris 11 Express 11/10 |
1. Resource Management in the Oracle Solaris Operating System
3. Using the C Interface to Extended Accounting
4. Using the Perl Interface to Extended Accounting
7. Design Considerations for Resource Management Applications in Oracle Solaris Zones
This guide describes how to write applications that partition and manage system resources and discusses which APIs to use. This book provides programming examples and a discussion of programming issues to consider when writing an application.
This book is for application developers and ISVs who write applications that control or monitor operating system resources on the Oracle Solaris 11 Express release.
For a detailed overview of resource management and Solaris Zones, see the System Administration Guide: Oracle Solaris Zones, Oracle Solaris 10 Containers, and Resource Management.
This guide is organized as follows:
Chapter 1, Resource Management in the Oracle Solaris Operating System introduces the Solaris 10 Resource Manager product.
Chapter 2, Projects and Tasks provides information about the projects and tasks facilities.
Chapter 3, Using the C Interface to Extended Accounting describes the C interface to the extended accounting facility.
Chapter 4, Using the Perl Interface to Extended Accounting describes the Perl interface to the extended accounting facility.
Chapter 5, Resource Controls discusses resource controls and their use.
Chapter 6, Resource Pools covers dynamic resource pools.
Chapter 7, Design Considerations for Resource Management Applications in Oracle Solaris Zones describes the precautions that need to be taken for applications to work in Solaris zones.
Chapter 8, Configuration Examples provides configuration examples for the /etc/project file.
See the following web sites for additional resources:
Training – Click the Sun link in the left navigation bar.
Oracle Technology Network offers a range of resources related to Oracle software:
Discuss technical problems and solutions on the Discussion Forums.
Get hands-on step-by-step tutorials with Oracle By Example.
Download Sample Code.
The following table describes the typographic conventions that are used in this book.
Table P-1 Typographic Conventions
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The following table shows the default UNIX system prompt and superuser prompt for shells that are included in the Oracle Solaris OS. Note that the default system prompt that is displayed in command examples varies, depending on the Oracle Solaris release.
Table P-2 Shell Prompts
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