Overview

For some time the Desktop Athena SPARC/Solaris configuration from Sun Microsystemshas been under review. It has reached the point where the costs of maintaining a second Athena desktop configuration are no longer justified by the incremental value of having Solaris as a second Athena desktop.

Over the summer of 2008 the Athena General Use Cluster number of Sun Solaris systems fell to 44. Through FY09 outreach will be made to customers to assist appropriately in dealing with the end of life of the Athena Desktop Solaris platform.

Status

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1) "End of Life" in this context means almost all public student lab/cluster Solaris Athena machines are pulled and replaced with Linux Athena systems; all centrally DLC purchased Solaris Athena machines are either handed over to the DLC for local support and transition to vendor Solaris, replaced with Linux Athena systems, or decommissioned

Areas of exposure

Additionally, we need to account for the impact on servers built from Athena Solaris. We need to identify the count of Solaris servers in the field and determine if migration or continuing to do security updates is the best approach. Note that the cost of Solaris support still drops even if only the desktop applications and services are discontinued initially, and if OS security updates are continued for a little while.

Solaris EOL Customer Options:

  1. Switch to Linux Athena hardware
  2. Migrate to work-alike software
  3. Go it alone and work directly with Sun for support

Plan of action

  1. Create Desktop Athena Solaris EOL Details web site telling users the timeline, rationale and what to do
  2. Create public Solaris Athena EOL letter for the remaining Solaris Athena community
  3. Directly deliver letter to known deliberate users
  4. Socialize EOL date for cluster Solaris Athena with OEIT, ACCORD, and other key stakeholders
  5. Establish MOTD messages to warn customers of Solaris Athena End of Life
  6. Display signs on machines in clusters warning of Solaris Athena End of Life
  7. Obtain list of faculty with Suns on their desks and get Hotline to begin migrating them ASAP. Let them forward problem customers to appropriate folks internally: othomas on point, alexp, amb, wdsouza for specific issues and resolutions
  8. Utilize mailing lists and beginning-of-term coordinated events to contact TAs and identify as many at-risk courses and course lockers as we can
  9. Make a list of the courses with Solaris-only exposure, and identify what to do
  10. Create a Solaris-sunset email list with members: othomas, jdreed, jmhunt, gettes, bowser and an OEIT representative to receive calls for help
  11. Quietly keep the 8 Solaris systems in 38-332 through the Fall term for classes that fall through the cracks
  12. Quietly keep Solaris dialups and x.dialup through Fall term for classes that fall through the cracks