oracle home
Creating and Administering Oracle
®
Solaris 11.2 Boot Environments
Exit Print View
Search Term
Search Scope:
This Document
Entire Library
» ...
Documentation Home
»
Oracle Solaris 11.2 Information Library
»
Creating and Administering ...
»
Index A
Updated: July 2014
Creating and Administering Oracle
®
Solaris 11.2 Boot Environments
Document Information
Using This Documentation
Product Documentation Library
Access to Oracle Support
Feedback
Chapter 1 Introduction to Managing Boot Environments
About Boot Environments and Datasets
Advantages to Maintaining Multiple Boot Environments
About the beadm Command
Chapter 2 beadm Zones Support
beadm in Non-Global Zones
Unbootable Boot Environments
Zones and Shared Datasets
Chapter 3 Creating Boot Environments and Snapshots
Creating a Boot Environment
beadm create Command Options
How to Clone a Boot Environment
Examples of Cloning Boot Environments
Creating and Copying Snapshots
Creating a Snapshot of a Boot Environment
Cloning a Boot Environment From an Existing Snapshot
How to Clone a Boot Environment From a Snapshot
Chapter 4 Administering Boot Environments
Listing Existing Boot Environments and Snapshots
Viewing Information About Boot Environments
Viewing Information About Boot Environments in Machine-Parsable Output
Viewing Snapshot Specifications
Changing the Default Boot Environment
Mounting and Updating an Inactive Boot Environment
How to Mount and Update a Boot Environment
Unmounting Boot Environments
Destroying a Boot Environment
Creating Custom Names for Boot Environments
Creating Additional Datasets for Boot Environments
Index
Index A
Index B
Index C
Index D
Index I
Index L
Index M
Index N
Index R
Index S
Index U
Index V
Index Z
Language:
English
Index
A
Active column in boot environment listing
Viewing Information About Boot Environments
administering boot environments
Administering Boot Environments
advantages to maintaining multiple boot environments
Advantages to Maintaining Multiple Boot Environments
Previous
Next