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Originally Posted by gdunn
AIX Power5 / Power6 is an open architecture.
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AIX is closed source, non free and proprietary.
Power architecture is indeed open as being backed by a independant organization. However, I doubt the specifications are free to implement without some sort of royalties so it's still proprietary to me.
For an Open Source Initiative compliant CPU architecture (GPL'd), have a look there:
http://www.opensparc.net/
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PowerVM Lx86. you can actually load an off the shelf RHEL OS.
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Correct
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Solaris linux is built into the Sun OS.
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Indeed, and that is one of its strenghts as it can benefit some Solaris kernel features not available under the Linux one, like dtrace and ZFS.
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Sun Linux Kernal support is only at Red Hat Enterprise 3.
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But it is known to run several other Gnu/Linux distributions.
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again, the dependency for Sun and SLA with ISV's is something I want to stay away from.
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Using PowerVM Lx86 is a more vendor dependant solution in my opinion.
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From the books it looks good - once you get under the covers, lots of grey.
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Looks fud to me.
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if you need L Kenrel 2.6 or greater Sun is not your choice.
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Kernel 2.6 support with brandz is a work in progress:
http://opensolaris.org/os/community/...odo/linux_2_6/
Moreover, LX Branded zones aren't the only solution to run Linux binaries in or along a Solaris environment.
You can run Linux kernel 2.6.23 and newer at native CPU speed (not like Lx86 bytecode translation) with UltraSPARC T based LDoms.
You can run Linux distributions under Xen (xVM).
All of these technologies a freely downloadable, are free for personal, educational and commercial use and are open sourced.
All but LDoms do run on cheap no-name PCs.
The alternative solution you promote is far from that.
Moreover, you'll soon be able to run Linux under VirtualBOX on top of Solaris too. Beta available here:
http://www.virtualbox.org/wiki/Downloads