|
|||
New Features in Solaris Express Developer Edition 1/08 New Features in Solaris Express Developer Edition 9/07 New Features in Solaris Express Developer Edition 5/07 New Features in Solaris Express Developer Edition 2/07 New Features in Solaris Express 12/06 New Features in Solaris Express 11/06 New Features in Solaris Express 10/06 New Features in Solaris Express 9/06 New Features in Solaris Express 8/06 New Features in Solaris Express 7/06 New Features in Solaris Express 6/06 New Features in Solaris Express 5/06 New Features in Solaris Express 4/06 New Features in Solaris Express 3/06 New Features in Solaris Express 2/06 New Features in Solaris Express 1/06 New Features in Solaris Express 11/05 New Features in Solaris Express 10/05 New Features in Solaris Express 9/05 New Features in Solaris Express 8/05 New Features in Solaris Express 7/05 New Features in Solaris Express 6/05 New Features in Solaris Express 4/05 New Features in Solaris Express 3/05 |
New Features in Solaris Express 12/05This section describes all features that are new or have been enhanced in the Solaris Express 12/05 release. The ZFS File SystemThis file system enhancement is new in the Solaris Express 12/05 release. This Solaris Express release includes ZFS, a new 128-bit file system. ZFS provides simple administration, transactional semantics, end-to-end data integrity, and immense scalability. ZFS is not an incremental improvement to existing technology. Rather, ZFS is a fundamentally new approach to data management. ZFS uses a pooled-storage model that completely eliminates the concept of volumes. Thus, ZFS eliminates the associated problems of partition management, provisioning, and growing file systems. Thousands of file systems can all draw from a common storage pool. Each system consumes only as much space as actually needed. The combined I/O bandwidth of all devices in the pool is available to all file systems at all times. All operations are “copy-on-write” transactions, so the on-disk state is always valid. Every block has a checksum, so silent data corruption is impossible. In addition, the data is self-healing in replicated configurations. This feature means that if one copy is damaged, ZFS detects the damage and uses another copy to repair the damaged copy. ZFS is Easy to AdministerFor system administrators, the greatest improvement of ZFS over traditional file systems is the ease of administration. ZFS takes a single command to set up a mirrored storage pool and file system. For example: # zpool create home mirror c0t1d0 c1t2d0 The above command creates a mirrored storage pool named home and a single file system named home. The file system is mounted at /home. With ZFS, you can use whole disks instead of partitions to create the storage pool. Then, you can use the /home file system hierarchy to create any number of file systems beneath /home. For example: # zfs create home/user1 For more information, see the zpool(1M) and zfs(1M) man pages. In addition, ZFS provides the following administration features:
For more information, see the ZFS Administration Guide. ZFS Command Improvements and ChangesThe following section describes recent improvements and changes to the ZFS command interface in the Solaris Express release.
For more information about these improvements and changes, see the ZFS Administration Guide. ZFS Web-Based ManagementThe Solaris Express 1/06 release includes the ZFS web-based management tool, which enables you to perform much of the administration that you can do with the ZFS command line interface. You can perform the following administrative tasks with the ZFS Administration console:
You can access the ZFS Administration console through a secure web browser at the following URL: https://system-name:6789 If you type the appropriate URL and are unable to reach ZFS Administration console, the server might not be started. To start the server, run the following command: # /usr/sbin/smcwebserver start If you want the server to run automatically when the system boots, run the following command: # /usr/sbin/smcwebserver enable ZFS and Solaris ZonesThe Solaris Zones partitioning technology supports ZFS components, such as adding ZFS file systems and storage pools into a zone. For example, the file system resource type in the zonecfg command has been enhanced as follows: zonecfg:myzone> add fs zonecfg:myzone:fs> set type=zfs zonecfg:myzone:fs> set dir=/export/share zonecfg:myzone:fs> set special=tank/home zonecfg:myzone:fs> end For more information, see the zonecfg(1M) man page and the ZFS Administration Guide. Solaris Installation Tool Support of ZFS File SystemsIn this release, the following Solaris installation tool support is provided:
New Solaris ACL ModelZFS implements a new ACL model. Previous versions of the Solaris OS only supported an ACL model that was primarily based on the POSIX ACL draft specification. The POSIX-draft based ACLs are used to protect UFS files. A new model that is based on the NFSv4 specification is used to protect ZFS files. The main features of the new ACL model are as follows:
The recently revised chmod(1) man page adds many new examples that demonstrate usage with ZFS. The acl(5) man page has an overview of the new ACL model. In addition, the ZFS Administration Guide provides extensive examples of using ACLs to protect ZFS files. IPv6 for IP FilterThis security enhancement is new in the Solaris Express 12/05 release. Solaris IP Filter has been enhanced to include IPv6 packet filtering. IPv6 packet filtering can filter based on the source IPv6 address, destination address, poolsl containing IPv6 addresses, and IPv6 extension headers. The -6 option has been added to the ipf command for use with IPv6. Use the -6 option to load and flush IPv6 packet filtering rules. The ipstat command also has a -6 option, which is used to display IPv6 statistics. Although there is no change to the command line interface for the ipmon and ippool commands, these commands also support IPv6. The ipmon command has been enhanced to accommodate the logging of IPv6 packets. The ippool command supports the creation of IPv6 pools. You can use the ipf6.conf file to create packet filtering rule sets for IPv6. By default, the ipf6.conf configuration file is included in the /etc/ipf directory. As with the other filtering configuration files, the ipf6.conf file loads automatically during the boot process when it is stored in the /etc/ipf directory. For further information about Solaris IP, see the System Administration Guide: IP Services. Support for Descriptive Names in Solaris Volume ManagerThis system administration enhancement is new in the Solaris Express 12/05 release. Descriptive names for both volumes and hot spare pools enable system administrators to name volumes and hot spare pools by using any name that follows the naming guidelines. Additionally, the -D option has been added to the metstat command. This option enables the user to list volumes and to list hot spare pools with descriptive names. For more information, see the Solaris Volume Manager Administration Guide. PKCS #11 v2.20 Support in the Solaris Cryptographic FrameworkThis security enhancement is new in the Solaris Express 12/05 release. This feature adds RSA PKCS #11 v2.20 support to the Solaris Cryptographic Framework, including the stronger SHA2 algorithms. For a list of mechanisms that v2.20 provides, see the pkcs11_softtoken(5) man page. For a list of mechanisms that are available to users, see the digest(1) and mac(1) man pages. UDP and TCP Performance EnhancementThis networking enhancement is new in the Solaris Express 12/05 release. Performance of both the TCP protocol and the UDP protocol has been enhanced in this release. The enhancements result in lower latency and higher throughput for both transmit and receive performance. Network applications yield better performance due to system performance improvements. In particular, those applications which heavily transmit and receive UDP packets or utilize TCP loopback connections show greatest benefit. For more information, see the ip(7P), tcp(7P), and udp(7P) man pages. See also the Solaris Tunable Parameters Reference Manual. Zone Rename Feature in Solaris Containers TechnologyThis system resources enhancement is new in the Solaris Express 12/05 release. The zone name is now an attribute that can be set through the zonecfg command. See the zonecfg(1M) man page for the procedure to change the name of a zone. Only zones in the configured state or the installed state can be renamed. For information about zones states, see the zones(5) man page. Advanced DDI Interrupt FrameworkThis device management enhancement is new in the Solaris Express 12/05 release. The Solaris OS provides a new DDI interrupt framework for registering interrupts and for deregistering interrupts. Support for Message Signaled Interrupts (MSIs) is also provided. Management interfaces enable you to manipulate priorities and capabilities, to perform interrupt masking, and to obtain pending information. For a list of the new interfaces, see Interrupt Functions in Writing Device Drivers. For a list of interrupt functions that are obsolete and should not be used, see the “B-3 Deprecated Interrupt Functions” table within this section. For more information, see Chapter 8, Interrupt Handlers, in Writing Device Drivers. See also the individual man pages for the interfaces. All man pages for these interfaces are in the 9F man page section. VLAN Support with xge 10Gb Ethernet DriverThis networking enhancement is new in the Solaris Express 12/05 release. VLAN support with xge enables system administrators to configure Virtual LAN over a 10-Gbyte Ethernet. This enhancement is the first VLAN implementation with 10-Gbyte Ethernet driver in the Solaris OS. The dladm command can be used to configure VLAN with great flexibility. For further information and VLAN configuration instructions, see the dladm(1M) man page. Core Kerberos Mechanism Resync with MIT 1.4This security enhancement is new in the Solaris Express 12/05 release. The Kerberos_V5 GSS mechanism library has been synced with MIT Kerberos 1.4.0. This version includes fine-grained multithread support. SPARC: Adobe Acrobat Reader 7.0.1This desktop enhancement is new in the Solaris Express 12/05 release. In this release, Adobe® Acrobat Reader is updated from version 5.0 to version 7.0.1. Adobe Reader enables you to view, navigate, and print Portable Document Format (PDF) files. This enhancement is for the SPARC platform. rge DriverThis driver support is new in the Solaris Express 12/05 release. The rge driver provides support for Realtek RTL8169S/8110S Gigabit Ethernet devices. For further information, refer to the rge(7D) man page. New UTF-8 LocalesThis language support enhancement is new in the Solaris Express 12/05 release. Over 50 new UTF-8 locales have been introduced in this release. As a result, Unicode support is now provided for all European, Middle Eastern, and Asian (EMEA) locales which lack a UTF-8 charset variant. Furthermore, locales for Cyprus, Luxembourg, and Malta are now available for the first time. Therefore, locales for all 25 European Union (EU) member states are now supported. |
||
|