It works great for me so far, as I've had to reboot a few times to test BIOS settings.
The only thing to remember of course is to ensure that the permissions on the script in /etc/init.d/ are correct.
My simple script above was originally from a copied napp-it startup/shutdown script, so the permissions and +x executable permission was already set upon the copied script.
I might have to re-test with the Solaris 11 driver modification for vmware tools that you mentioned, and see if the CPU usage or throughput is better.
Here's my hardware:
Supermicro SC846BA-R920B
Supermicro X10SRL-F (single proc)
32GB RAM DDR4 2133 Mhz - 16 GB given to OmniOS VM.
1x Intel Xeon E5-2620v3 - 6 core
100GB - Intel S3700 SSD SLOG
2x 480 GB Intel S3500 SSD
4x WD RE4 SATA 7200rpm
The only thing to remember of course is to ensure that the permissions on the script in /etc/init.d/ are correct.
My simple script above was originally from a copied napp-it startup/shutdown script, so the permissions and +x executable permission was already set upon the copied script.
I might have to re-test with the Solaris 11 driver modification for vmware tools that you mentioned, and see if the CPU usage or throughput is better.
Here's my hardware:
Supermicro SC846BA-R920B
Supermicro X10SRL-F (single proc)
32GB RAM DDR4 2133 Mhz - 16 GB given to OmniOS VM.
1x Intel Xeon E5-2620v3 - 6 core
100GB - Intel S3700 SSD SLOG
2x 480 GB Intel S3500 SSD
4x WD RE4 SATA 7200rpm
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