Documentation Home
> System Administration Guide: Advanced Administration
System Administration Guide: Advanced Administration
Book Information
Index
Numbers and Symbols
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
About This Book
Chapter 1 Managing Printing Services Topics
Chapter 2 Managing Printing Services (Overview)
What's New in Printing?
Changes to LP Scheduler (lpsched)
USB Printer Support
Managing Printer Information With LDAP
Where to Find Printer Tasks
Printing in the Solaris Operating Environment
Solaris Print Manager
Printing Support in the Name Service Switch
Choosing a Method to Manage Printers
The LP Print Service
Managing Network Printers
Administering Printers
Setting Definitions for Printers
Administering Character Sets, Filters, Forms, and Fonts
Customizing the LP Print Service
The Solaris Print Client-Server Process
The Print Client Process
Using Print Clients
What Is a Print Client?
Printer Configuration Resources
How the Print Software Locates Printers
Using Print Servers
The BSD Printing Protocol
Where to Go From Here
Chapter 3 Planning Printers on Your Network (Overview)
Where to Find Printer Tasks
Distributing Printers on the Network
Assigning Print Servers and Print Clients
Print Server Requirements and Recommendations
Spooling Space
Disk Space
Memory
Swap Space
Hard Disk
Planning for Printer Setup
Setting Definitions for Printers
Printer Name
Printer Description
Printer Port
Printer Type
Printer Names in the terminfo Database
Selecting a Printer Type
Selecting a File Content Type
Frequently Used Printers
Chapter 4 Setting Up Printers (Tasks)
Setting Up Printing (Task Map)
Setting Up Printing With Solaris Print Manager
Setting Up a Printer With Solaris Print Manager
Solaris Print Manager and Special Characters
Starting Solaris Print Manager
How to Start Solaris Print Manager
Setting Up a Print Server
How to Add a New Attached Printer With Solaris Print Manager
Example—Adding a New Attached Printer With LP Commands
Where to Go From Here
Setting Up a Print Client
How to Add Printer Access With Solaris Print Manager
Example—Adding Printer Access With LP Commands
Setting Up a .printers File
How to Set Up a .printers File
Adding a Network Printer
Printer Vendor Supplied Software for Network Printers
Sun Support for Network Printers
Invoking the Network Printer Support
Selecting the Protocol
Selecting the Printer Node Name
Selecting the Destination (or Network Printer Access) Name
Example 1—Destination (or Network Printer Access Name) With Port Designation (Number)
Example 2—Destination (or Network Printer Access Name) With Port Designation (Name)
Example 3—Destination (or Network Printer Access Name) With No Port Designation
Setting the Timeout Value
Managing Network Printer Access
How to Add a Network Printer With Printer Vendor Supplied Tools
How to Add A Network Printer With LP Commands
Example—Adding A Network Printer With LP Commands
Converting Printer Configuration Information
Converting Printer Configuration Information (Task Map)
Converting Existing Printer Configuration Information
How to Convert Printer Information For a System Running the Solaris 2.5.1 Release
How to Convert Printer Information For a System Running an lpd-based Print Server
Chapter 5 Administering Printers (Tasks)
Managing Printers and the Print Scheduler
Deleting Printers and Printer Access
How to Delete a Printer and Remote Printer Access
Example—Deleting a Printer and Remote Printer Access
Checking Printer Status
How to Check the Status of Printers
Examples—Checking the Status of Printers
Restarting the Print Scheduler
How to Stop the Print Scheduler
How to Restart the Print Scheduler
Setting or Resetting Miscellaneous Printer Definitions
How to Add a Printer Description
Example—Adding a Printer Description
Setting Up a Default Printer Destination
How to Set a System's Default Printer
Example—Setting a System's Default Printer
Printing Banner Pages
How to Make Banner Pages Optional
Example—Making Banner Pages Optional
How to Turn Off Banner Pages
Example—Turning Off Printing Banner Pages
Setting Up Printer Classes
How to Define a Class of Printers
Example—Defining a Class of Printers
Setting Up Printer Fault Alerts
How to Set Fault Alerts for a Printer
Examples—Setting Fault Alerts for a Printer
Setting Up Printer Fault Recovery
How to Set Printer Fault Recovery
Example—Setting Printer Fault Recovery
Limiting User Access to a Printer
How to Limit User Access to a Printer
Examples—Limiting User Access to a Printer
Managing Print Requests
How to Check the Status of Print Requests
Examples—Checking the Status of Print Requests
Enabling or Disabling a Printer From Printing
How to Enable or Disable a Printer
Examples—Enabling or Disabling a Printer
Accepting or Rejecting Print Requests
How to Accept or Reject Print Requests for a Printer
Examples—Accepting or Rejecting Print Requests for a Printer
Canceling a Print Request
How to Cancel a Print Request
Examples—Canceling a Print Request
How to Cancel a Print Request From a Specific User
Examples—Canceling a Print Request From a Specific User
Moving a Print Request
How to Move Print Requests to Another Printer
Example—Moving Print Requests to Another Printer
Changing the Priority of Print Requests
How to Change the Priority of a Print Request
Example—Changing the Priority of a Print Request
Chapter 6 Managing Character Sets, Filters, Forms, and Fonts (Tasks)
Managing Character Sets
Selectable Character Sets
Hardware-Mounted Character Sets
Tracking Print Wheels
Alerts for Mounting Print Wheels or Cartridges
How to Define a Print Wheel or Font Cartridge
Example—Defining a Print Wheel
How to Unmount and Mount a Print Wheel or Font Cartridge
Example—Unmounting and Mounting a Print Wheel
How to Set an Alert to Mount a Print Wheel or Font Cartridge
Examples—Setting an Alert to Mount a Print Wheel or Font Cartridge
How to Set Up an Alias for a Selectable Character Set
Example—Setting Up an Alias for a Selectable Character Set
Managing Print Filters
Creating Print Filters
Adding, Changing, Removing, and Restoring Print Filters
How to Add a Print Filter
Example—Adding a Print Filter
How to Delete a Print Filter
Example—Deleting a Print Filter
How to View Information About a Print Filter
Examples—Viewing Information About a Print Filter
Managing Forms
Adding, Changing, or Deleting Forms
Mounting Forms
Tracking Forms
Defining Alerts for Mounting Forms
Checking Forms
Limiting Access to Forms
How to Add a Form
Example—Adding a Form
How to Delete a Form
Example—Deleting a Form
How to Unmount and Mount a Form
Examples—Unmounting and Mounting a Form
How to Set an Alert to Mount a Form
Examples—Setting an Alert to Mount a Form
How to View Information About a Form
Examples—Viewing Information About a Form
How to View the Current Status of a Form
Example—Viewing the Current Status of a Form
How to Limit User Access to a Form
Examples—Limiting User Access to a Form
How to Limit Printer Access to a Form
Examples—Limiting Printer Access to a Form
Managing Fonts
Managing Printer-Resident Fonts
Downloading Host-Resident Fonts
Installing and Maintaining Host-Resident Fonts
How to Install Downloaded PostScript Fonts
How to Install Host-Resident PostScript Fonts
Chapter 7 Customizing the LP Print Service (Tasks)
Adjusting Printer Port Characteristics
How to Adjust the Printer Port Characteristics
Examples—Adjusting the Printer Port Characteristics
Adding a terminfo Entry for an Unsupported Printer
How to Add a terminfo Entry for an Unsupported Printer
Customizing the Printer Interface Program
The Standard Printer Interface Program
Customizing stty Modes
Exit Codes
Fault Messages
Using a Customized Printer Interface Program
How to Set Up a Custom Printer Interface Program
Examples—Setting Up a Custom Printer Interface Program
Creating a New Print Filter
Writing a Print Filter Program
Types of Filters
Converting Files
Handling Special Printing Modes
Detecting Printer Faults
Requirements for a Print Filter Program
Creating a Print Filter Definition
Command
Input Types
Output Types
Printer Types
Printers
Filter Type
Options
Defining Print Filter Options With Templates
How to Create a New Print Filter
Examples—Creating a New Print Filter
Creating a New Printer Form
How to Create a New Form Definition
Chapter 8 LP Print Service (Reference)
Where to Find Printer Tasks
The LP Print Service
The Structure of the LP Print Service
LP Print Service Directories
LP Print Service Configuration Files
The terminfo Database
Daemons and LP Internal Files
LP Print Service Log Files
Print Queue Logs
History Logs
Spooling Directories
LP Print Service Commands
Functions of the LP Print Service
How LP Administers Files and Schedules Local Print Requests
Scheduling Network Print Requests
Filtering Print Files
What the Printer Interface Program Does
How the lpsched Daemon Tracks the Status of Print Requests
Cleaning Out Log Files
How to Change Frequency of Printer Request Log Rotation
How Local Printing Works
How Remote Printing Works
Chapter 9 Managing Terminals and Modems Topics
Chapter 10 Managing Terminals and Modems (Overview)
What's New in Managing Terminals and Modems?
Terminals, Modems, Ports, and Services
Terminals
Modems
Ports
Services
Port Monitors
Tools for Managing Terminals and Modems
Serial Ports Tool
Service Access Facility
Chapter 11 Setting Up Terminals and Modems (Tasks)
Setting Up Terminals and Modems with Serial Ports Tool
Setting Up Terminals
Setting Up Modems
How to Set Up a Terminal
How to Set Up a Modem
How to Initialize a Port
Troubleshooting Terminal and Modem Problems
Chapter 12 Managing Serial Ports With the Service Access Facility (Tasks)
Using the Service Access Facility
Overall SAF Administration (sacadm)
Service Access Controller (SAC Program)
SAC Initialization Process
Port Monitor Service Administration (pmadm)
ttymon Port Monitor
Port Initialization Process
Bidirectional Service
TTY Monitor and Network Listener Port Monitors
TTY Port Monitor (ttymon)
ttymon and the Console Port
ttymon-Specific Administrative Command (ttyadm)
Network Listener Service (listen)
Special listen-Specific Administrative Command (nlsadmin)
Administering ttymon Port Monitors
How to Add a ttymon Port Monitor
How to View ttymon Port Monitor Status
Example—Viewing ttymon Port Monitor Status
How to Stop a ttymon Port Monitor
How to Start a ttymon Port Monitor
How to Disable a ttymon Port Monitor
How to Enable a ttymon Port Monitor
How to Remove a ttymon Port Monitor
Administering ttymon Services
How to Add a Service
How to View the Status of a TTY Port Service
Example—Viewing the Status of a TTY Port Monitor Service
How to Enable a Port Monitor Service
How to Disable a Port Monitor Service
Service Access Facility Administration (Reference)
Files Associated With SAF
The /etc/saf/_sactab File
The /etc/saf/pmtab/_pmtab File
Service States
Port Monitor States
Port States
Chapter 13 Managing System Resources Topics
Chapter 14 Managing System Resources (Overview)
What's New in Managing System Resources?
New df, du, and ls Options
Changing System Parameters
Solaris Resource Management
High-Level View of Managing System Resources (Task Map)
Chapter 15 Displaying and Changing System Information (Tasks)
Displaying System Information
How to Determine If a System Can Run the 64–bit Solaris Operating Environment
How to Determine If a System Has 64-bit Solaris Capabilities Enabled
Examples—Determining If a System Has 64–bit Solaris Capabilities Enabled
How to Display Solaris Release Information
How to Display General System Information
Example—Displaying General System Information
How to Display General System Information
Example—Displaying General System Information
How to Display a System's Host ID Number
Example—Displaying a System's Host ID Number
How to Display a System's Installed Memory
Example—Displaying a System's Installed Memory
How to Display the Date and Time
Example—Displaying the Date and Time
Changing System Information
How to Set a System's Date and Time Manually
Example—Setting a System's Date and Time Manually
How to Set Up a Message-of-the-Day
Example—Setting Up a Message-of-the-Day
How to Change a System's Host Name
Chapter 16 Managing Disk Use (Tasks)
Displaying Information About Files and Disk Space
How to Display Information About Files and Disk Space
Examples—Displaying Information About File Size and Disk Space
Checking the Size of Files
How to Display the Size of Files
Examples—Displaying the Size of Files
How to Find Large Files
Example—Finding Large Files
How to Find Files That Exceed a Specified Size Limit
Example—Finding Files That Exceed a Specified Size Limit
Checking the Size of Directories
How to Display the Size of Directories, Subdirectories, and Files
Examples—Displaying the Size of Directories, Subdirectories, and Files
How to Display the User Ownership of Local UFS File Systems
Example—Displaying the User Ownership of Local UFS File Systems
Finding and Removing Old or Inactive Files
How to List the Newest Files
Example—Listing the Newest Files
How to Find and Remove Old or Inactive Files
Example—Finding and Removing Old or Inactive Files
How to Clear Out Temporary Directories
Example—Clearing Out Temporary Directories
How to Find and Delete core Files
Example—Finding and Deleting core Files
How to Delete Crash Dump Files
Example—Deleting Crash Dump Files
Chapter 17 Managing Quotas (Tasks)
What Are Quotas?
Using Quotas
Setting Soft Limits and Hard Limits for Quotas
The Difference Between Disk Block and File Limits
Setting Up Quotas
Guidelines for Setting Up Quotas
Setting Up Quotas (Task Map)
How to Configure File Systems for Quotas
Where to Go From Here
Examples—Configuring File Systems for Quotas
How to Set Up Quotas for a User
Examples—Setting Up Quotas for a User
How to Set Up Quotas for Multiple Users
Example—Setting Up Prototype Quotas for Multiple Users
How to Check Quota Consistency
Example—Checking Quota Consistency
How to Turn On Quotas
Example—Turning On Quotas
Checking Quotas
How to Check for Exceeded Quotas
Example—Checking for Exceeded Quotas
How to Check Quotas on a File System
Example—Checking Quotas on a File System
Changing and Removing Quotas
How to Change the Soft Time Limit Default
Examples—Changing the Soft Time Limit Default
How to Change Quotas for a User
Examples—Changing Quotas for a User
How to Disable Quotas for a User
Examples—Disabling Quotas for a User
How to Turn Off Quotas
Example—Turning Off Quotas
Chapter 18 Scheduling System Tasks (Tasks)
Ways to Automatically Execute System Tasks
For Scheduling Repetitive Jobs: crontab
For Scheduling a Single Job: at
Scheduling a Repetitive System Task (cron)
Inside a crontab File
How the cron Daemon Handles Scheduling
Syntax of crontab File Entries
Creating and Editing crontab Files
How to Create or Edit a crontab File
Example—Creating or Editing a crontab File
How to Verify a crontab File
Displaying crontab Files
How to Display a crontab File
Example—Displaying a crontab File
Removing crontab Files
How to Remove a crontab File
Example—Removing a crontab File
Controlling Access to the crontab Command
How to Deny crontab Access
How to Limit crontab Access to Specified Users
Examples—Limiting crontab Access to Specified Users
How to Verify Limited crontab Access
Scheduling a Single System Task (at)
Description of the at Command
Controlling access to the at Command
How to Create an at Job
Examples—Creating an at Job
How to Display the at Queue
How to Verify an at Job
How to Display at Jobs
Example—Displaying at Jobs
How to Remove at Jobs
Example—Removing at Jobs
How to Deny Access to the at Command
Example—Denying at Access
How to Verify that at Access Is Denied
Chapter 19 Managing System Accounting (Tasks)
What is System Accounting?
How System Accounting Works
System Accounting Components
Connect Accounting
Process Accounting
Disk Accounting
Calculating User Fees
How Daily Accounting Works
What Happens if the System Shuts Down
Setting Up System Accounting
How to Set Up System Accounting
Examples—Setting Up Accounting
Billing Users
How to Bill Users
Example—Billing Users
Maintaining Accounting Information
Fixing Corrupted Files and wtmpx Errors
How to Fix a Corrupted wtmpx File
Fixing tacct Errors
How to Fix tacct Errors
Restarting the runacct Script
How to Restart the runacct Script
Stopping and Disabling System Accounting
How to Temporarily Stop System Accounting
How to Permanently Disable System Accounting
Chapter 20 System Accounting (Reference)
The runacct Script
Daily Accounting Reports
Daily Report
Daily Usage Report
Daily Command Summary
Monthly Command Summary
Last Login Report
Looking at the pacct File With acctcom
System Accounting Files
Files Produced by the runacct Script
Chapter 21 Managing System Performance Topics
Chapter 22 Managing System Performance (Overview)
What's New in Managing System Performance?
DNLC Improvements
The pargs and preap Commands
Performance Tool
New Fair Share (FSS) and Fixed (FX) Schedulers
Where to Find System Performance Tasks
System Performance and System Resources
Processes and System Performance
About Monitoring Performance
Monitoring Tools
Chapter 23 Managing System Processes (Tasks)
Commands for Managing System Processes (Overview)
The ps Command
How to List Processes
Example—Listing Processes
The /proc File System and Commands
Managing Processes With /proc Process Commands
How to Display Information About Processes
Example—Displaying Information About Processes
How to Control Processes
Example—Controlling Processes
Killing a Process (pkill)
How to Kill a Process
Managing Process Class Information
Changing the Scheduling Priority of Processes (priocntl)
How to Display Basic Information About Process Classes (priocntl)
Example—Getting Basic Information About Process Classes (priocntl)
How to Display the Global Priority of a Process (priocntl)
Example—Displaying the Global Priority of a Process (priocntl)
How to Designate a Process Priority (priocntl)
Example—Designating a Process Priority (priocntl)
How to Change Scheduling Parameters of a Timesharing Process (priocntl)
Example—Changing Scheduling Parameters of a Timesharing Process (priocntl)
How to Change the Class of a Process (priocntl)
Example—Changing the Class of a Process (priocntl)
Changing the Priority of a Timesharing Process (nice)
How to Change the Priority of a Process (nice)
Troubleshooting Problems With System Processes
Chapter 24 Monitoring System Performance (Tasks)
What's New in Monitoring System Performance?
Displaying Virtual Memory Statistics (vmstat)
How to Display Virtual Memory Statistics (vmstat)
Example—Displaying Virtual Memory Statistics
How to Display System Event Information (vmstat -s)
How to Display Swapping Statistics (vmstat -S)
How to Display Cache Flushing Statistics (vmstat -c)
How to Display Interrupts Per Device (vmstat -i)
Example—Displaying Interrupts Per Device
Displaying Disk Utilization Information (iostat n)
How to Display Disk Utilization Information (iostat)
Example—Displaying Disk Utilization Information
How to Display Extended Disk Statistics (iostat -xtc)
Displaying Disk Space Statistics (df)
How to Display Disk Space Information (df)
Example—Displaying File System Information
Monitoring System Activities (sar)
How to Check File Access (sar -a)
How to Check Buffer Activity (sar -b)
Example—Checking Buffer Activity
How to Check System Call Statistics (sar -c)
Example—Checking System Call Statistics
How to Check Disk Activity (sar -d)
Examples—Checking Disk Activity
How to Check Page-Out and Memory (sar -g)
Example—Checking Page-Out and Memory
How to Check Kernel Memory Allocation (sar -k)
Example—Checking Kernel Memory Allocation (sar)
How to Check Interprocess Communication (sar -m)
Example—Checking Interprocess Communication
How to Check Page-In Activity (sar -p)
Example—Checking Page-In Activity
How to Check Queue Activity (sar -q)
Example—Checking Queue Activity
How to Check Unused Memory (sar -r)
Example—Checking Unused Memory
How to Check CPU Utilization (sar -u)
Example—Checking CPU Utilization
How to Check System Table Status (sar -v)
Example—Checking System Table Status
How to Check Swapping Activity (sar -w)
Example—Checking Swap Activity
How to Check Terminal Activity (sar -y)
Example—Checking Terminal Activity
How to Check Overall System Performance (sar -A)
Collecting System Activity Data Automatically (sar)
Running the sadc Command When Booting
Running the sadc Command Periodically With the sa1 Script
Producing Reports With the sa2 Shell Script
Setting Up Automatic Data Collection (sar)
How to Set Up Automatic Data Collection
Chapter 25 Troubleshooting Solaris Software Topics
Chapter 26 Troubleshooting Software Problems (Overview)
What's New in Troubleshooting Software Problems?
New System Log Rotation
New Fall Back Shell for root Account
Where to Find Software Troubleshooting Tasks
Troubleshooting a System Crash
What to Do if the System Crashes
Gathering Troubleshooting Data
Troubleshooting a System Crash Checklist
Viewing System Messages
How to View System Messages
Example—Viewing System Messages
Customizing System Message Logging
How to Customize System Message Logging
Example—Customizing System Message Logging
Enabling Remote Console Messaging
Using Auxiliary Console Messaging During Run Level Transitions
Using the consadm Command During an Interactive Login Session
How to Enable an Auxiliary (Remote) Console
Example—Enabling an Auxiliary (Remote) Console
How to Display a List of Auxiliary Consoles
How to Enable an Auxiliary (Remote) Console Across System Reboots
Example—Enabling an Auxiliary (Remote) Console Across System Reboots
How to Disable an Auxiliary (Remote) Console
Example—Disabling an Auxiliary (Remote) Console
Chapter 27 Managing Core Files (Tasks)
Managing Core Files (Task Map)
Managing Core Files Overview
Configurable Core File Paths
Expanded Core File Names
Setting the Core File Name Pattern
Enabling setuid Programs to Produce Core Files
How to Display the Current Core Dump Configuration
How to Set a Core File Name Pattern
How to Enable a Per-Process Core File Path
How to Enable a Global Core File Path
Troubleshooting Core File Problems
Examining Core Files
Example—Examining Core Files With proc Tools
Chapter 28 Managing System Crash Information (Tasks)
Managing System Crash Information (Task Map)
System Crashes (Overview)
System Crash Dump Files
Saving Crash Dumps
The dumpadm Command
How the dumpadm Command Works
Dump Devices and Volume Managers
Managing System Crash Dump Information
How to Display the Current Crash Dump Configuration
How to Modify a Crash Dump Configuration
Example—Modifying a Crash Dump Configuration
How to Examine a Crash Dump
Example—Examining a Crash Dump
How to Recover From a Full Crash Dump Directory (Optional)
How to Disable or Enable Saving Crash Dumps
Example—Disabling the Saving of Crash Dumps
Example—Enabling the Saving of Crash Dumps
Chapter 29 Troubleshooting Miscellaneous Software Problems (Tasks)
What to Do If Rebooting Fails
SPARC: Troubleshooting 64–bit Solaris Boot Problems
What to Do if You Forgot Root Password
SPARC: Example—What to Do if You Forgot Root Password
x86: Example—What to Do if You Forgot Root Password
What to Do if a System Hangs
What to Do if a File System Fills Up
File System Fills Up Because a Large File or Directory Was Created
A TMPFS File System is Full Because the System Ran Out of Memory
What to Do if File ACLs Are Lost After Copy or Restore
Troubleshooting Backup Problems
The root (/) File System Fills Up After You Back Up a File System
Make Sure the Backup and Restore Commands Match
Check to Make Sure You Have the Right Current Directory
Interactive Commands
Chapter 30 Troubleshooting File Access Problems (Tasks)
Solving Problems With Search Paths (Command not found)
How to Diagnose and Correct Search Path Problems
Example—Diagnosing and Correcting Search Path Problems
Solving File Access Problems
Changing File and Group Ownerships
Recognizing Problems With Network Access
Chapter 31 Troubleshooting Printing Problems (Tasks)
Tips on Troubleshooting Printing Problems
Troubleshooting No Output (Nothing Prints)
Check the Hardware
Check the Network
Check the LP Print Service
Troubleshooting Incorrect Output
Check the Printer Type and File Content Type
Check the stty Settings
Wrong Baud Settings
Wrong Parity Setting
Wrong Tab Settings
Wrong Return Setting
Troubleshooting Hung LP Commands
Troubleshooting Idle (Hung) Printers
Check the Print Filters
Check Printer Faults
Check Network Problems
Print Requests Backed Up in the Local Queue
Print Requests Backed Up in the Remote Queue
Troubleshooting Conflicting Status Messages
Troubleshooting Printing Problems
How to Troubleshoot No Printer Output
How to Check the Printer Hardware
How To Check the Printer Network Connections
How to Check the Basic Functions of the LP Print Service
How to Check Printing From a Solaris Print Client to a Solaris Print Server
How to Troubleshoot Incorrect Output
How to Unhang the LP Print Service
How to Troubleshoot an Idle (Hung) Printer
How to Check That the Printer is Ready to Print
How to Check for Print Filtering
How to Resume Printing After a Printer Fault
How to Send Print Requests to a Remote Printer When They Back Up in the Local Queue
How to Free Print Requests From a Print Client That Back Up in the Print Server Queue
How to Resolve Conflicting Printer Status Messages
Chapter 32 Resolving UFS File System Inconsistencies (Tasks)
fsck Error Messages
General fsck Error Messages
Initialization Phase fsck Messages
Phase 1: Check Blocks and Sizes Messages
Phase 1B: Rescan for More DUPS Messages
Phase 2: Check Path Names Messages
Phase 3: Check Connectivity Messages
Phase 4: Check Reference Counts Messages
Phase 5: Check Cylinder Groups Messages
Cleanup Phase Messages
Chapter 33 Troubleshooting Software Package Problems (Tasks)
Troubleshooting Software Package Symbolic Link Problems
Specific Software Package Installation Errors
General Software Package Installation Problems
© 2010, Oracle Corporation and/or its affiliates