Solaris 10 Iso Image Torrent Download
I'm trying to install Solaris 10to a computer without an optical CD/DVD/Blu-ray drive.
Continue reading 'Download of the day: Solaris 10 update 8/07 CD. Download Sun Solaris 10 UNIX CD / DVD ISO. The nixCraft takes a lot of my time and hard work. Popular Topics in Sun Microsystems Hardware. You can download the ISO for Solaris. The Solaris 10 image contains a graphical interactive installer that.
Here is what I have now:
- Solaris 10 ISO got from the sun site (grub installed).
- A running ArchLinux x86_64 installation.
- A running Windows 7 x86 installation with Cygwin (Though I guess it may be not that useful?)
And here is what I have tried but failed:
- unetbootin (a tool that write Linux ISO’s to a USB flash drive, Solaris is not on its support list). After boot from the USB drive, I got some “corrupted kernel” error from the GRUB.
- Manually extract files from ISO to vfat-formatted USB flash disk, and try to install GRUB (0.97) on it under Linux. But GRUB says some “bad stage1/stage2” stuff.
Solaris 10 Downloads
Did someone succeed such thing? I mean, write the content of ISO to USB disk, and install Solaris using it.
Hints/tips/advices are also welcome.
3 Answers
After having a lot of failures with unetbootin (I haven't the foggiest why people still recommend it), I found that with some work you can actually does this pretty easily.
You'll need a program capable of exactly copying a partition or drive, bit for bit, including the Master Boot Record. Some are included with Windows that supposedly work, I use a complicated VMWare method, and there are plenty of others (free and not) available. Just Google 'disk drive cloners' (sorry, I don't have any recommendations).
You'll also need a program capable of mounting an ISO as a disc drive. Daemon Tools Lite (an early version without ads) works perfectly.
All you need to do is mount the disc image as a drive and clone that drive/partition to your flash drive. Works perfectly most of the time and is lightning fast (not as fast as unetbootin, but then again, it works).
Html input type file filter. I've tested the method on Windows, DOS, Ubuntu, Puppy Linux, GPartEd and CloneZilla, and Mac OS X. Worked great on all of them. As long as your system can boot from USB, it should work. There may be issues if it isn't capable of reading a CD filesystem in the BIOS, but if the BIOS can boot from CD and USB (but no CD hardware exists), you should still be fine.
However, you may want to check and make sure your Solaris image is valid. A corrupt kernel error is often the result of a bad disc image. It's not a big deal on flash drives you can re-write, but if nothing works and you keep getting the error, double-check the image.
I would say that this would work, I have seen it work on a couple of Linux distros. Here are Linux Instructions (not sure for what distro exactly, I dont do much with Linux), and here are Windows Instructions.
They seem to be simple generic ISO to Flash Drive programs, so its basically the same as writing it to a CD. Cant say I've ever tried it with Solaris though.
Rufus to make bootable USB's from ISO's. I think it was written by someone just as frustrated with ISO=->USB creation as you are at the moment.
In my own experiencs when UNETBOOTIN failed, it was always Rufus that worked and became my sole bootable ISO --> USB maker.
It's fast, it formats the USB drive for you and it has superb boot loader detection and also self updates itself or just versions of Syslinux if it detects a possible incompatibility.
protected by JakeGouldDec 5 '17 at 0:26
Thank you for your interest in this question. Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).
Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?
Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged usbinstallationsolaris-10 or ask your own question.
now that solaris 10 has gone open source, sun has made the operating system available as a free download. the company only requires you to register all the machines you install the operating system on to receive an entitlement document. sun java desktop system release 3 is a part of solaris 10, as well as its developer and management tools.sun is offering a sparc version as well as an x64/x86 version of solaris 10 on its website. the company has also given users a choice to either download the cd version of the software, which will fit on several cds, or a dvd version, which will fit on a single dvd.
read more from sun's get solaris 10 website.
brian's opinion
first, who can ever argue when something is free? i really like the fact that sun made a dvd version available as well. with the wide availability of dvd drives it's much easier to put the operating system on a single dvd than having to burn and carry around multiple cds to install the operating system. of course, you do need access to a dvd burner.
sun is making a great move by making solaris 10 open source. the money is in the support, which is why companies that distribute linux make money. it's no surprise that below the download options for solaris 10 there is a solaris service plans link. a basic service plan starts at us$120 and is what you need if you want solaris 10 updates. that's not a bad deal when you figure that's for up to 8 physical processors. best of all, multi-core processors are still counted as a single processor.
user comments 30 comment(s)
yay!(9:20am est wed feb 02 2005) open source is the future…. – by cd |
too late(9:22am est wed feb 02 2005) everyone is there already. i wish i had downloaded it last night. – by rax |
hw support(9:40am est wed feb 02 2005) is there a link for what hardware it supports? does it support nvidia 6800 gts? does not make sense to download if it wont run. – by link please |
hw support?(9:48am est wed feb 02 2005) who needs hardware support, you have the magic source code. with enough time and effort, you *may* be able to get it to work. it's not like it's actually costing you anything. – by jqp |
link please?(9:54am est wed feb 02 2005) are you kidding? if you can't find that hardware compatibility lists what are you doing messing around with the os? have you tried looking for it? – by cd |
it will cost me my precious time(9:55am est wed feb 02 2005) you twit – by grown up |
sun/solaris(9:56am est wed feb 02 2005) these are still the fastest most reliable and most secure computers i have ever had. rock-solid. – by thank you! |
sun has it right…(10:00am est wed feb 02 2005) this is the way to do “open source”. one large overseer maintains the product, keeps it running properly, while anyone and everyone is free to change it, and perhaps submit changes to sun, who we trust will properly review the submitted code and ensure that the os is still secure. if it runs maya, and 3ds max i might consider putting on a comp at some point. – by neat stuff |
a lot of free power(10:30am est wed feb 02 2005) no one should underestimate the power of the solaris oe either…. and that makes it even more amazing that they are offering it for free download. solaris has capabilities that most other os's can only dream of. |
re: sun has it right(12:04pm est wed feb 02 2005) it's too early to tell. whether they have it “right” or not will depend to a large extent on the contributions made by others. if noone contributes, all they've succeeded in doing is exposing any features that made solaris unique and might have given it a marketplace advantage. in any case, look for these things to start showing up in linux real soon. side note to “grown up”: i guess the sarcasm didn't come through? – by jqp |
oh man i'm jealous(12:08pm est wed feb 02 2005) if i get my approval for a new sun blade server i'm gonna have to try this. i need it to run solaris 9 but, but, but… oh man i must try 10. that's it, i'll just have to get the x86 version for now and save the negotiating for later. – by spook |
ha(12:16pm est wed feb 02 2005) hehehehe still trying to install solaris 8. shit, have 56k modem. gonna order the thing. – by bla |
ho-hum(12:25pm est wed feb 02 2005) i'm a big os geek, like most readers here probably are. i've installed countless linux distributions… every flavor of windows and beos… my osx box is just kick ass. but i find it very hard to get excited about solaris… maybe it's just because of their ever-annoying scott mcnealy, or maybe it's due to all the fud they've spread over the years, but i really doubt that this will ever be downloaded by myself, let alone installed. i'm sure that this is going to sound like any other mac user raving uncontrollably, but since i've gotten my (dual 2ghz) osx box, i find myself spending less and less time checking out the latest linux developments, let alone the latest windows updates (even though i still have to work on windows a lot, it's via remote desktop on osx). osx truly is what i've been looking for all along, i feel. someone else put it best: “osx allows me to tinker when i want to tinker. but when i need to get work done, it just works, with no tinkering required.” it wasn't until i really started spending a lot of time in osx that i realized just how much of my time had been spent tinkering with linux and windows, just to get them to work the way i wanted them to. osx just does it. ok… now all the kids who can't afford macs can start with their mac bashing (overpriced, underpowered, blah blah blah). – by a mac convert |
re: a mac convert(12:41pm est wed feb 02 2005) no, we won't say a word about the macs… but, do you feel like doing “artsy” stuff? buying new draperies? or maybe, kissing a man now? just wondering…. – by woz raskin |
how rude convert(12:47pm est wed feb 02 2005) “ok… now all the kids who can't afford macs can start with their mac bashing (overpriced, underpowered, blah blah blah)” the nerve, going to a solaris article and posting about frickin mac osx, then ending your post with a pre-emptive personal attack against the poeple who prefer another os… like say solaris. rude, unseemly and distasteful. well done. – by cynical bastard |
mac convert(1:40pm est wed feb 02 2005) what windows tinkering can you possibly need to get work done? don't be a flame baiter….or a pillow biter either. – by poopchute |
a mac convert(1:51pm est wed feb 02 2005) i pity you. solaris 10 has a lot of great features that the mac os may never have. zfs is a feature that is cool enough for me to want to load it. now all the file management can be done from the os and if it works the way they say it will, i can stop paying thousands to veritas. here is what my sun rep sent me: “solaris 10 is now officially a production release. download it today all you have to do is download solaris 10 – the cost is free. “ – by rax |
yea!!!!(1:54pm est wed feb 02 2005) i am download disk iso 1 of 4. – by rax |
bittorrent(2:39pm est wed feb 02 2005) has anyone posted this on bittorrent yet? why doesn't sun distribute this way? it will take forever to get it from their one west coast server. – by mrreload |
rax(4:43pm est wed feb 02 2005) what requirements are you going to use? i've been looking at the hcl. $220 seem like a lot of money for it's own test server. have you looked at using vpc? i'm thinking of a w2k server we run a test w2k3 server in vpc. – by tech |
looks like a nice os(4:36am est thu feb 03 2005) this is a couple of screenshots of solaris 10 and the java desktop. looks simple and nice. wonder how well it runs. – by caliber fx |
heh(10:09am est thu feb 03 2005) i first got there and saw the grey screen with prompt and was like, yep, thats pretty damn simple… seriously though, the os is nice looking, wonder if that java desktop is really worth a damn though. – by wondering about java |
cool(11:02pm est fri feb 04 2005) i got this triple booting on my laptop with windows and linux and it runs pretty nice. i like the java desktop. just waiting for my ultra 60 from anysystem.com and i can have my sparc solaris box. i hope the full version is out soon so i can test out the native linux app support on my x86. – by techy78 |
i want solaries 10(1:39am est sun feb 06 2005) very argent needed – by mic.lincoln |
zfs(4:31am est wed feb 09 2005) anyone found it on solaris 10? – by predrag |
jds and sol10(6:52am est sat feb 19 2005) the java desktop system is nothing special, just suse desktop system rehashed, better off with suse9.2 imho for enterprise desktop. but at least sun are trying to get a desktop os with the linux tag out there. havnt tried solaris 10 yet, am getting my ultra60 in a couple of days but man it looks usefull. project janus on x86 platforms looks very handy indeed. just need to see if it will keep me from installing freebsd on my sun4u :) – by toms |
sol 10 is greaaaat!!!(5:52am est sat mar 12 2005) solaris 10 is damn great… that's all what i can say!!! – by mina |
damm !!!(6:05am est fri mar 18 2005) i downloaded all the 4 iso's and they worked fine except the third . i downloaded the third iso twice using dap 7.2 but when i try to open it the winzip say it is damaged . i'm trying now to download it using sun download manager … is there any one managed to download it ? – by mon |
open source and cheap sun hardware(11:42am est wed may 04 2005) with solaris now open source, everyone can really experience the beauty of a mature unix system. combine that with cheap sun hardware in the secondary market, and anyone can set up a killer machine. i buy most of my equipement from xerxes. check them out at – by noodleboy |
cc(9:10pm est thu apr 13 2006) – by cc |
Comments are closed.