SmartOS

SmartOS is a free and open-source SVR4 hypervisor based on the UNIX operating system that combines OpenSolaris technology with Linux's KVM virtualization.[2] Its core kernel contributed to the illumos project.[3] It features several technologies: Crossbow, DTrace, KVM, ZFS, and Zones.[4][5] Unlike other illumos distributions, SmartOS employs NetBSD pkgsrc package management.[6] SmartOS is designed to be particularly suitable for building clouds and generating appliances.[7] It is developed for and by Joyent, but is open-source and free for anyone to use.

SmartOS
SmartOS banner and console login
DeveloperJoyent
Written inC
Working stateCurrent
Source modelOpen source, on GitHub[1]
Available inEnglish
Package managerpkgsrc
Platformsx86-64
Kernel typeMonolithic
LicenseCDDL
Official websitewww.joyent.com/smartos

SmartOS is an in-memory operating system and boots directly into random-access memory. It supports various boot mechanisms such as booting from USB thumbdrive, ISO Image, or over the network via PXE boot. One of the many benefits of employing this boot mechanism is that operating system upgrades are trivial, simply requiring a reboot from a newer SmartOS image version.[8]

SmartOS follows a strict local node storage architecture. This means that virtual machines are stored locally on each node and do not boot over the network from a central SAN or NAS. This helps ensure that network latency issues are eliminated as well as to preserve node independence. Multi-node SmartOS clouds can be managed via the open-source[9] Joyent Triton DataCenter[10] (formerly known as SmartDataCenter[11]) cloud orchestration suite or via the Project Fifo[12] Open Source SmartOS Cloud management platform built on Erlang.

SmartOS types of zones

SmartOS has several types of zones, also referred to as containers. The typical zone is UNIX, using pkgsrc as a package manager. KVM, which allows running arbitrary other operating systems using hardware virtualization, also runs inside a zone, albeit with minimal privileges to further increase security.[4] Another type is LX, which can run many different popular Linux distributions without the overhead of KVM, by supporting the Linux syscall table.[13]

In 2012, Joyent and MongoDB Inc. (formerly 10gen) partnered to improve the scalability of SmartOS.[14]

gollark: Well, firstly, stop saying "your wifi".
gollark: gnunobody DEFINITELy knows WHAT yEs means!
gollark: well, if you actually have a static IP that is weirder.
gollark: > We cooperate with Right Holders, Law Offices, Internet Service Providers, Advertising Agencies and National Police. We provide information about sharing/downloading content via Bittorrent Network all over the world. Hmm, these people are quite bees indeed, oh yes.
gollark: Basically, you likely do not have a fixed external IP and may even be sharing your external IP with others.

References

  1. "Smart OS live", Joyent, GitHub.
  2. Frommel, Oliver. "SmartOS Weds Open Solaris to Linux KVM Virtualization". Admin magazine. Retrieved 31 December 2012.
  3. illumos-joyent, April 2015
  4. SmartOS.
  5. Miller, Colleen (Aug 15, 2014). "Joyent Open Sources SmartOS for the Cloud". Data Center Knowledge. Retrieved January 1, 2013.
  6. "Joyent Packages Documentation - Home".
  7. "SmartOS brings KVM to the Solaris kernel". H online.
  8. Trent, Slater. "SmartOS Fundamentals". SmartCore. Retrieved 27 February 2012.
  9. "Joyent open-sources its core technology". Infoworld. Nov 6, 2014. Retrieved Sep 20, 2015.
  10. Triton, Sep 3, 2014
  11. Triton: Docker and the “best of all worlds”, March 24, 2015
  12. Gies, Heinz. "Project FiFo SmartOS Project". Project FiFo. Retrieved 6 June 2014.
  13. Running Linux containers on an illumos kernel.
  14. "Joyent and 10gen Strengthen Partnership Around MongoDB and SmartOS". Finance. Yahoo!. Oct 16, 2012. Retrieved January 1, 2013.
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