Solaris 10 System Administration Exam Prep 2 (Exam Cram 2) 
The Solaris 10 System Administrator Certification Exam Prep 2 is the ideal book for both new and seasoned system administrators. This book will give you the insight you need into the newest certification exams for system administrators, the 310-200 and the 310-202. It offers classroom-style training by one of the best and well-known authors in the Solaris world, Bill Calkins. It will equip you with vital knowledge for success on exam day plus it acts a reference guide that will come in handy after the test. The content addresses all the new exam objectives in detail and will show you how to apply this knowledge to real-world scenarios.
The included CD features ExamGear's innovative test engine, which will be an effective tool for preparing for the Solaris 10 exam. It provides you with five different ways to test yourself, random questions and order of answers, detailed explanations of correct and incorrect answers, and it pays special attention to exam objectives. Also included on the CD is a PDF of the complete text of the book.
Reviews
If you intend to pass the SCSA for Solaris 10 exam or not, you may find it a useful book.
First, note some RED FLAGS:
1. Four reviews which were highly critical of this book have suddenly disappeared. Looks like the publisher has managed to get rid of them. This is a BIG red flag.
2. When a review critical of this book appears, it is opposed with a propaganda sounding positive review.
This makes me think that almost all the positive reviews on this page are either propaganda by the publisher or for the publisher.
Now, about the book:
If you are planning to take the SCSA exams, this book is not going to be very helpful. It's just a dump of lots of information. Scores of options for commands, pages of outputs of commands without explanation, and so on...
There is very little effort to help the reader understand the topics and make sense of them. As another reviewer said, the information is being thrown on you from all directions...brutal. The book is not called Exam Cram but the presentation style makes it exactly that: exam cram, nevertheless...and I doubt it that you can cram 1100 pages...So, I agree and sympathize with another reviewer (Dave Mali).
On the other hand, if you just want to read about Solaris 10, or on some selective topics on Soalris 10, sure, go ahead, buy the book...There arn't many Soalris 10 books any way. But do not count on this book alone if you want to pass the SCSA exam or if you want to learn Solaris 10 System Administration.
Dave's review below is a perfect example- he's looking for a "cram for an exam" with lots of visuals and pictures. Readers get disappointed when they pick up a real reference book, with text and command line examples, where they might actually "learn" something about managing a server from a console. I also don't think taking away the screen output generated by commands is a good idea. I need to see the command line as well as the output generated. Dave (a previous reviewer), maybe you should look at Wiley's "Teach Yourself Visually" series of books for a Solaris reference, but don't beat on this book for more graphics.
I DON'T WANT another one of those style books. I appreciate a good Solaris admin reference and appreciate the format that the author/publisher has used in this book. O'Reilly's sys admin books tend to follow the same type of format. The mix of graphics and textual output is perfect. As a Unix Administrator, you need to know command line stuff and not the GUI tools. You need LOTS of examples. You NEED to see the ouput generated by the use of specific command options. I don't want to wade through more pictures of directory hierarchies, or look at graphics of disk drive architecture, or read more on the history of Unix, etc. Who started this stuff in the Unix Admin books? There are other books for that. In a Unix Admin reference book, where we tend to perform tasks from ASCII terminals, telnet, VT100's etc., the screen output is necessary to learning the task at hand.
As you can see, I don't share Dave Mali's comments and think the format of this book is perfectly fine. I also don't feel it was full of errors- in fact, they are very low for a book of this size and style (errata was complete). (I hate when reviewers say a book is full of errors yet lack to point them out for the benefit of other readers).
I'm not one to typically write a review, but I plead to the publisher - DON'T CHANGE THE FORMAT OF THIS BOOK. This is my Opinion - I really don't know if this is the forum to bring it up. If not- it's ok to strike my review.
