Solaris 9 Installation Guide

Upgrade

An upgrade merges the new version of the Solaris operating environment with the existing files on the system's disk. An upgrade saves as many modifications as possible that you have made to the previous version of the Solaris operating environment.

You can upgrade any system that is running the Solaris 2.6, Solaris 7, or Solaris 8 software. Type the following command to see the version of Solaris software that is running on your system:


$ uname -a

You can use any of the installation methods to upgrade the Solaris operating environment. For limitations on upgrading with Solaris Live Upgrade, see "Solaris Live Upgrade System Requirements".


Note -

Use the smosservice patch to upgrade diskless clients. For detailed instructions, refer to System Administration Guide: Basic Administration or to smosservice(1M).


You cannot upgrade your system to a software group that is not installed on the system. For example, if you previously installed the End User Solaris Software Group on your system, you cannot use the upgrade option to upgrade to the Developer Solaris Software Group. However, during the upgrade you can add software to the system that is not part of the currently installed software group.

If you are already running the Solaris 9 operating environment and have installed individual patches, upgrading to a Solaris 9 Update release causes the following:

You can use the Patch Analyzer to determine which patches, if any, will be removed by upgrading to the Solaris 9 Update release. For detailed instructions about using the Patch Analyzer, refer to "Upgrading to a Solaris Update Release".