Steve, You can create a RAC environment on SUN if you
get can get the necessary software. The hardware for
SUN is easy to get if you purchase it for eBay but the
clustering software is whole other story.

You need Sun Cluster 3.0 and and a LVM for the disks.
Getting SC3.0 may be easy but the LVM usually require
a license and most people use the Veritas Cluster
Volume Manager which requires a license key to
activate. 

or

You can use Veritas DBE/AC 3.5 on Sun but this still
requires a license Key. In some cases Veritas may give
you Demo License Key but it would only be valid for a
few months at most.

All you need is 2 Ultra 2's or 2 ultra 60's 4 NIC
cards ( veritas and SC3.0 require a minium of 2 NIC
devices for the interconnect) and a shared disk array
(preferably a D1000) to make a basic cluster. 

You can usually get an Ultra 2 with a 1 gig of memory,
2 300 mhz CPU's and at least a 9G HD drive for about
$300-$500 a similar configuration for the Ultra 60
will cost you about $600-$1000 depending on the CPU
speed.

The NIC cards for Ultra2 SBUS are around $30-$50
apiece but NIC cards for PCI SUN's run about $80-$100
apiece.

The D1000 disk array costs about $500-$700 with 12 9G
10000rpm SCSI drives. You also need to purchase 2 SCSI
HVD Cards for your ultras. The SBUS cards are usually
under $100 but the PCI cards usually won't sell for
much less that $150 apiece. 

Linux is the easiest becuase Oracle provides a cluster
manager and will provdide a CFS for linux in the
upcoming months. Oracle's Cluster manager only
requires 1 NIC card for the interconnect and you can
use the public NIC card if needed. You would also need
a SCSI card for the 2 intel machines. The SCSI card
should be newer so you can access the bios to change
the SCSI-initiator-ID on one of the machines. 2
machines can't access that same SCSI array if they
have the same SCSI-initiator-ID (Usually 7 for most
cards). You need an external SCSI disk array. These
external disk arrays are relatively inexpensive and
can purchased at some of the more technically oriented
computers stores. 

The other alternitive is using NFS but NFS could pose
some unexpected I/O issues that could become annoying
even in a test environment. NFS has some unusual
affects on the "gsd" process as well as the config
file required srvconfig and srvctl commands. You also
will have to use 920 if plan using files instead of
raw devices for "gsd" and the srv commands. 901
doesn't support regular files(raw devices only) for
srv commands while 920 does support files. The last
issue is that 9201 with Linux requires watchdog and
9202 does not. Oracle has re-written the cluster
manager with 9202 and you no longer need watchdog to
setup the cluster manager.

Hope some of this information helps,

Scott

--- Steve Rospo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> 
> If I wanted to put together a cheap RAC for "play"
> purposes what sort of
> HW/SW would I need?  I'm not talking about a
> production-level solution
> here, just taking some older-HW I might have laying
> around and turning it
> into a RAC with a minimal investment for sandbox
> purposes.
> 
> Could I do it with 2+ Sun boxes w/ Solaris 8 (or 2+
> Intel boxes w/ Linux),
> some sort of shared SCSI array (A1000 or JBOD) and
> standard 100 Mb
> ethernet?  Is this enough or do I need to spend
> $$$$? (gigabit ethernet,
> fibre channel SAN, Veritas, etc)
> 
> S-
> 
> -- 
> Please see the official ORACLE-L FAQ:
> http://www.orafaq.com
> -- 
> Author: Steve Rospo
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