Solaris 9 12/03 Installation Guide

Solaris Live Upgrade Requirements

Solaris Live Upgrade System Requirements

Solaris Live Upgrade is included in the Solaris 9 software. If you want to upgrade by using Solaris Live Upgrade, you need to install the Solaris Live Upgrade packages on your current operating environment. You can upgrade a boot environment to a release of the Solaris Operating Environment that is the same as the release of the Solaris Live Upgrade packages installed on your machine. For example, if on your current Solaris 8 operating environment, you installed Solaris 9 Live Upgrade packages, you could upgrade a boot environment to the Solaris 9 marketing or update release.

Table 31–1 lists releases that are supported by Solaris Live Upgrade.

Table 31–1 Supported Solaris Releases

Platform 

Release You Are Upgrading From 

Release You Are Upgrading To 

SPARC based system 

Solaris 2.6, Solaris 7, or Solaris 8 operating environment 

Solaris 8, operating environment 

SPARC based system 

Solaris 2.6, Solaris 7, or Solaris 8 operating environment 

Solaris 9 operating environment 

x86 based system 

Solaris 7 operating environment 

Solaris 8 operating environment 

x86 based system 

Solaris 7 or Solaris 8 operating environment 

Solaris 9 operating environment 


Note –

You cannot upgrade to the Solaris 7 operating environment.


You can install the Solaris Live Upgrade packages from the following:

For instructions on installing the Solaris Live Upgrade software, see To Install Solaris Live Upgrade.

Solaris Live Upgrade Disk Space Requirements

Follow general disk space requirements for an upgrade. See Chapter 5, System Requirements and Guidelines (Planning).

To estimate the file system size that is needed to create a boot environment, start the creation of a new boot environment. The size is calculated. You can then abort the process.

The disk on the new boot environment must be able to serve as a boot device. Some systems restrict which disks can serve as a boot device. Refer to your system's documentation to determine if any boot restrictions apply.

The disk might need to be prepared before you create the new boot environment. Check to make sure the disk is formatted properly:

Solaris Live Upgrade Requirements If Creating RAID-1 Volumes (Mirrors)

Solaris Live Upgrade uses Solaris Volume Manager technology to create a boot environment that can contain file systems that are RAID-1 volumes (mirrors). To use the mirroring capabilities of Solaris Live Upgrade, you must create at least one state database and at least three state database replicas. A state database stores information on disk about the state of your Solaris Volume Manager configuration. The state database is a collection of multiple, replicated database copies. Each copy is referred to as a state database replica. When a state database is copied, the replica protects against data loss from single points of failure. For procedures about creating a state database, see “State Database (Overview)” in Solaris Volume Manager Administration Guide.

Solaris Live Upgrade does not implement the full functionality of Solaris Volume Manager. Solaris Live Upgrade supports only a RAID-1 volume (mirror) with single-slice concatenations on the root (/) file system. A mirror can be comprised of a maximum of three concatenations. For guidelines on creating mirrored file systems, see Guidelines for Selecting Slices for Mirrored File Systems.