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Oracle Server CLI Tools and IPMItool 2.1 User's Guide
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Document Information

Preface

Documentation and Feedback

About This Documentation (PDF and HTML)

Change History

Oracle Hardware CLI Tools Overview

Installing Components Using the Oracle Hardware Management Pack Installer

Getting Started

Prerequisites

Installation Issues

Getting the Software

Installing Hardware Management Pack Components Using Installer

CLI Tools Command Syntax and Conventions

CLI Tools Command Syntax

CLI Tools Device-Naming Convention

Using the biosconfig Tool

biosconfig Dependencies

biosconfig Terminology

Using biosconfig

biosconfig for Solaris OS

biosconfig for Windows

biosconfig Command Overview

What Changes the Boot List

Important Notes on Devices

Configuring the Device Boot Order

BIOS CMOS Configuration

Commands That Produce Unrelated, Innocuous, Extra Output

Using the fwupdate Tool

fwupdate Command-Line Interface

update Subcommand

list Subcommand

reset Subcommand

Device-Naming Convention

Execution Summary

Using the raidconfig Tool

raidconfig Overview

raidconfig Command Overview

list Subcommand

create raid Subcommand

delete raid Subcommand

add spare Subcommand

remove spare Subcommand and Options

modify Subcommand

export Subcommand

raidconfig export Options

import Subcommand

Using the ilomconfig Tool

ilomconfig Overview

ilomconfig Commands

Using ipmitool for Windows

ipmitool Overview

Sun IPMI System Management Driver 2.1

Using ipmitool for Configuration Tasks

CLI Tools Error Codes

Common Error Codes

biosconfig Error Codes

raidconfig Error Codes

ilomconfig Error Codes

fwupdate Error Codes

Index

Using the biosconfig Tool

biosconfig is an application that runs on the host’s OS and configures that host’s BIOS CMOS settings, host boot order, and some service processor settings.

biosconfig allows you to manipulate BIOS configurations from the OS command line. Due to the nature of this utility, it must be run with administrative access. You should also close all other applications and quiesce your system when running biosconfig. The configuration files and command-line interfaces are compatible with the Solaris, Windows, and Linux versions. Solaris biosconfig can be used to configure the BIOS settings.

biosconfig enables you to configure settings across multiple like systems where distributions of biosconfig spans multiple like systems. biosconfig enables you to configure BIOS CMOS settings on like machines using the same XML file. However, if the configuration that is being modified refers to a peripheral or component that is not on both systems, then you need to customize the XML file.

This section shows sample XML configurations and specific configurations needed to change BIOS or BIOS CMOS settings. These XML configurations can be used to make changes to your configuration using biosconfig. The XML files are edited by the editor of your choice, such as vi.

biosconfig is supported on several operating systems on various platforms with common functionality. For more information, see: Installing Components Using the Oracle Hardware Management Pack Installer.

This section covers the following topics: