System Administration Guide, Volume I

Standalone Systems

A networked standalone system can share information with other systems in the network, but it could continue to function if detached from the network.

A standalone system can function autonomously because it has its own hard disk containing the root (/), /usr, and /export/home file systems and swap space. The standalone system thus has local access to operating system software, executables, virtual memory space, and user-created files.


Note -

A standalone system requires sufficient disk space to hold the four necessary file systems.


A non-networked standalone system is a standalone system with all the characteristics listed above except it is not connected to a network.