Solaris 10 is a Unix-like operating system that is used by many businesses and organizations. It has been in development for over 20 years, and it is considered one of the most reliable and popular Unix systems. There are a number of ways to get Solaris 10 uptime information. One way is to use the command line tool, ps, to get information about the system’s status. Another way is to use the Solaris 10 System Monitor tool, which can be found in the tools section of the Solaris 10 installation media. Both tools can provide information about the system’s health and performance. The System Monitor tool can also show you how long each process has been running on the system, as well as how much memory and disk space are available. The System Monitor tool can also show you how many processes are using CPU time, memory, or disk space. The command line tool ps can be used to get more detailed information about a specific process on a Solaris 10 system. To do this, you need to know the pid of the process you want to examine. You can use this pid in ps -p to get all of that process’s information.
uptime
The uptime command shows how long a system has been running.
Example:
who -b
The who -b command will tell you exactly when the system was last started up, as opposed to telling you how long it’s been up. Saves you some math.
Example: