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Solaris 11 introduced very useful command that you can use for checking and to set all data links –dladm.
Let’s assume you need to find out ethernet (MAC) addresses of all network interfaces on your Solaris box.
Issuing the dladm command with option -m you will get the list of factory MAC addresses, their slot identifiers and their availability.
$ dladm show-phys -m
LINK SLOT ADDRESS INUSE CLIENT
net0 primary 8:0:27:4:7c:5e yes net0
LINK SLOT ADDRESS INUSE CLIENT
net0 primary 8:0:27:4:7c:5e yes net0
Solaris 10 and older:This command however does not work on older releases of Solaris. In order to see ethernet address of the network interface even though it is not plumed you can use the following:
This should include driver-name and instance to associate an block to a specific network interface and the local-mac-address to get the mac address of that entry.
Other option valid for all versions of Solaris is to use the netstat command:
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- Oracle Solaris is the best enterprise operating system for Oracle Database and Java applications. Focused enhancements across CPU, memory, file system, I/O, networking, and security deliver the best database, middleware, and application performance for Oracle workloads.
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My original testbed was a Late 2005 2.3 GHz Power Mac G5 Dual with 3 GB of RAM and two hard drives, one with OS X 10.4 Tiger, the other with OS X 10.5 Leopard.It’s my most powerful PowerPC Mac, so I figured it would be a good way to take Linux for a spin.
Solaris For Ms
$ netstat -pn