I have built and maintained Sun hardware like SunFire v490's E250's & E5500's.  
E6600's.  (Although it's been a few years since I opened a 6600 "fridge" [as we 
called them at Nike]).

I know well what they are.  They expand to seat 30 processors?  I am interested 
to know the specs (how many and which procs).  These are fine Sun hardware 
(although EOLife) UltraSparc processors and therefore would be great for many 
uses.  

They would make fine Solaris 10 zone/container multi-zone DNS, Mail, and 
development servers: Glassfish or Weblogic (requires UltraSparc processors 
under Solaris), or Apache/Continuium/Maven/Tomcat/Ant can all run fast and 
furious (depending on memory and J2EE code).  And yes Oracle 10g would install 
fine in ONE zone, protected via SFC.  

How much disk space?  Can you throw in an extra fiber channel 2540, so we can 
build up a respectable N1 cluster with multipath I/O to backend my SERIOUS web 
app farm?

They would also make a fine Solaris 10 zone container test farm, whereby the 
SFC could limit processing and other resources for development of J2EE.   We 
could run a /jumpstart to /kickstart Linux/Solaris build in one zone, a DNS 
server in another, sendmail in another, web systems however it goes or whatever 
J2EE we are testing that week!

Heck we could even run a Doom wad on them (sourceforge.net has C source version 
that should build under Solaris 10?)  

We can run blastwave.org packages and install a fine Wiki, awstats, pretty much 
anything they have for Sun4u Ultra.

Imagine screaming fast rock solid Linux but with a much deeper tcp/ip stack and 
actual swapping proc rather than rather than paging memory!

Oh, and did I mention dtrace tools?

Charles Jones <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:        I don't think they would work 
as game servers. They are Sun servers, they are not x86. even if you could get 
sparc-linux installed on them, no game server binaries would run on them.
 
 I've been flooded with requests for the servers, mostly for the wrong reasons, 
from everything from using them for wireless network testing, to using them for 
a "media center", to "just want to play with one".
 
 I think folks aren't realizing exactly what these are...they are literally 
700+lbs cabinets that require 220v power. They will not fit in the trunk of a 
car, or an SUV. The actual server component is rack mounted inside and could be 
removed or powered seperately via 110v (the 220v is for the cabinet which 
includes integrated fans etc).
 
 I've been too busy since I posted to give more info, but I will try to hook 
them up soon to verify the RAM and CPU specs, as well as post some pics of them 
so you know what you are getting into.
 
 These would probably make a good Oracle database server, but its definitely 
not something you would want to plug in on your kitchen table just to play 
with...well maybe in the winter time, as they do make good space heaters :)
 
 -Charles
 
 
 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:    
Er...  Put me on the list, if it's still empty enough.  I'm having visions of 
co-lo'ed game servers.


---- Charles Jones <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: 
  
        
We have some spare Sun 6500's (basically a 4500/5500 racked in its own 
cabinet).  If anyone is interested in them, let me know and I will find 
out the specs.  Hans can probably provide pictures of them. They are in 
a full Sun cabinet, so don't plan on putting one in the trunk of your car :)

-Charles
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-- 
___________________________
Charles R. Jones II
Senior Systems Engineer
Cisco Learning Institute IT Dept
work: 602.343.1534  cell: 602.738.9993
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
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