- Solaris 10 5/09 Installation. - What's New in the Solaris 10 10/08 Release for Installation. - What's New in the Solaris 10 8/07 Release for Installation. - Upgrading the Solaris OS When Non-Global Zones Are Installed. - What's New in the Solaris 10 11/06 Release for Installation. - What's New in the Solaris 10 1/06 Release for Solaris Installation. - What's New in the Solaris 10 3/05 Release for Solaris Installation. - Task Map: Installing or Upgrading the Solaris Software. - How to Find the Version of the Solaris OS That Your System Is Running. - This chapter describes new features in the Solaris installation programs. - This chapter describes system requirements to install or upgrade to the Solaris OS. - To view features for all of the Solaris OS, see Solaris 10 What’s New. - “What's New in the Solaris 10 8/07 Release for Installation” on page 16. - “What's New in the Solaris 10 11/06 Release for Installation” on page 20. - “What's New in the Solaris 10 1/06 Release for Solaris Installation” on page 21. - “What's New in the Solaris 10 3/05 Release for Solaris Installation” on page 24. - “What's New in the Solaris 10 10/08 Release for Installation” on page 15. - Starting with the Solaris 10 10/08 release, you can install and boot a ZFS root file system.. - Starting with the Solaris 10 8/07 release, you can upgrade the Solaris OS when non-global zones are installed without most of the limitations found in previous releases.. - Chapter 8, “Upgrading the Solaris OS on a System With Non-Global Zones Installed,” in Solaris 10 5/09 Installation Guide: Solaris Live Upgrade and Upgrade Planning. - and Advanced Installations Upgrading with the Solaris installation interactive. - For SPARC, starting with the Solaris 10 10/06 release. - For x86, starting with the Solaris 10 8/07 release. - Chapter 2, “Installing With the Solaris Installation Program For UFS File Systems (Tasks. - in Solaris 10 5/09 Installation Guide: Basic Installations What's New in the Solaris 10 11/06 Release for Installation. - Starting with the Solaris 10 11/06 release, Solaris Trusted Extensions provides multilevel security for the Solaris OS. - Starting with the Solaris 10 1/06 release and if you are running a system with non-global zones installed, you can use standard Solaris upgrade programs to upgrade. - You can use either the Solaris interactive installation program or custom JumpStart to upgrade. - You cannot use the Solaris Software CDs to upgrade a system. - For details on using the Solaris interactive installation program, see Solaris 10 5/09 Installation Guide: Basic Installations. - The boot archive is used to boot the Solaris OS.. - Starting with the Solaris 10 1/06 release, you can upgrade the Solaris OS from the Solaris 8, 9, or 10 releases. - Upgrades from the Solaris 7 release are not supported.. - This section describes the following new installation features in the Solaris 10 3/05 release.. - The Solaris Installation CD no longer exists.. - Note – The (noninteractive) Solaris custom JumpStart installation method has not changed.. - These packages do not have to be a part of the Solaris OS distribution.. - Starting with the Solaris 10 3/05 release, a new feature in the Solaris installation program is a boot-disk partition layout. - “Task Map: Installing or Upgrading the Solaris Software” on page 29. - TABLE 3–1 Task Map: Installing or Upgrading the Solaris Software. - TABLE 3–1 Task Map: Installing or Upgrading the Solaris Software (Continued). - The Solaris OS provides several programs for installation or upgrade. - Allocate disk space on your system for the components of the Solaris OS that you want to install.. - For the Solaris installation program, see either of the following documents:. - (Optional) Prepare to install the Solaris software from the network.. - If you chose to install the Solaris software from the network, complete the following tasks.. - Use the Solaris installation method that you chose to install or upgrade the Solaris software.. - You can use all of the Solaris installation methods to install a system from the network.. - Installing the Solaris software from the network requires initial setup. - An initial installation overwrites the system's disk with the new version of the Solaris OS. - You can use any of the Solaris installation methods to perform an initial installation. - You can upgrade the Solaris OS by using two upgrade methods: standard and Solaris Live Upgrade. - For a few systems, use the Solaris interactive installation program.. - “How to Find the Version of the Solaris OS That Your System Is Running” on page 53. - By default, the Solaris installation methods create only root. - Conditions for Space Allocations Description The Solaris software group you. - If you are using the Solaris installation program or custom Jumpstart to plan disk space, see. - The Solaris software groups are collections of Solaris packages. - You can upgrade a system that has non-global zones installed with the Solaris installation program, Solaris Live Upgrade or JumpStart. - Live Upgrade from the Solaris 8 or 9 OS. - Management Facility (SMF), and other enhancements in the Solaris 10 OS. - You cannot use the Solaris Live Upgrade procedure in the previous procedure.. - Using Solaris Live Upgrade reduces the downtime that is required to upgrade the Solaris OS. - The Solaris installation program. - The Solaris software group that is currently installed on the system contains new software in the new release. - Starting with the Solaris 10 10/08 release, the restart. - “Installing With the Solaris Installation Program For UFS File Systems (Tasks. - The Solaris installation program uses a default boot-disk partition layout. - Use the following checklist to gather the information that you need to install the Solaris OS. - You can let the Solaris installation program detect an IP address. - Select disks On which disks do you want to install the Solaris software?. - Note – The Solaris installation GUI lays out file systems automatically by default.. - Review the Solaris 10 5/09 Release Notes on. - Use the following checklist to gather the information that you need to upgrade the Solaris OS.. - Solaris Live Upgrade You can use the Solaris Live Upgrade feature to perform the following tasks:. - Nor can you use the Solaris Flash keywords.. - Starting with the Solaris 10 10/08 release for a SPARC based system, you can boot a ZFS root file system in a ZFS pool. - The first entry is the Solaris OS entry. - The preferred method is to install the Solaris OS on the boot disk. - A non-global zone is a virtualized operating system environment created within a single instance of the Solaris OS.. - After the Solaris OS is installed, you can install and configure non-global zones. - You can upgrade the Solaris OS when non-global zones are installed. - Starting with the Solaris 10 8/07 release, changes to accommodate systems that have non-global zones installed are the following:. - “Upgrading the Solaris OS on a System With Non-Global Zones Installed,” in Solaris 10 5/09 Installation Guide:. - Additional changes, starting with the Solaris 10/8/07 release, that accommodate systems with non-global zones installed include the following:. - instructions on using Solaris Live Upgrade when non-global zones are installed, see Chapter 8, “Upgrading the Solaris OS on a System With Non-Global Zones Installed,” in Solaris 10 5/09 Installation Guide:. - The Solaris custom JumpStart and Solaris Live Upgrade installation methods use the Solaris. - The custom JumpStart installation method and Solaris Live Upgrade support a subset of the features that are available in the Solaris Volume Manager software. - The Solaris installation program cannot be used to install RAID-1 volumes with a Solaris Flash archive.. - Starting with the Solaris 10 10/08 release, only the full volume name can be entered. - The boot archive that is used to boot the Solaris OS on a system. - boot environment A collection of mandatory file systems (disk slices and mount points) that are critical to the operation of the Solaris OS. - critical file systems File systems that are required by the Solaris OS. - A miniroot consists of the Solaris software that is required to install and upgrade systems. - patch analyzer A script that you can run manually or as part of the Solaris installation program. - When you install the Solaris software on a system that complies with Version 2 of the U.S. - A boot archive that is used to boot the Solaris OS on a system. - software group A logical grouping of the Solaris software (clusters and packages). - upgrade option An option that is presented by the Solaris installation program . - The WAN boot miniroot contains a subset of the software in the Solaris miniroot
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