A few weeks ago I collected some more Sun hardware from a friend of mine who seems to know the location of the best dumpsters in town. It was quite a collection: a pair of Ultra 60s, a Ultra 2, a pair of Ultra 1s, a Sun 8mm tape drive and a StorEdge L280 DLT changer.

One of the Ultra 60s had a single 360Mhz CPU, 1GiB RAM, a 9GiB disk, gigabit Ethernet and a pair of Creator3Ds. The other had a single 360Mhz CPU, 512MiB RAM, a pair of 18GiB drives and a single Creator3D. The Ultra 2 only had a single 200Mhz CPU, but had 512MiB RAM. The Ultra 1s were pretty low end – both had 143Mhz CPUs, 64MiB RAM and a quad fast ethernet and one had a 2GiB disk, the other being diskless.

I’ve given the one Ultra 60 and the Ultra 2 to Jonathan Groll and the Ultra 1s will probably be given to some deserving homes amongst CLUG members. My Ultra 60 is already running NetBSD-current (currently 4.99.4 kernel and userland) and working well, but more on that in a later post.

It’s incredible, but a few years ago it was impossible to get any moderately decent Sun hardware locally, but these days it seems to be falling from the sky. At rough count I currently have 13 unused Sun machines (6×32-bit, 7×64-bit). Now I just need to get myself a nice Blade 1000, 2000 or 2500 and I’ll be a very happy camper. Of course NetBSD still needs to get working sparc64 SMP and UltraSPARC-III CPU support, but that’s minor stuff :-)

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