System Administration Guide: Devices and File Systems is part of a set that includes a significant part of the SolarisTM system administration information. This guide contains information for both SPARC® based and x86 based systems.
This book assumes you have completed the following tasks:
Installed the SunOS 5.11 Operating System
Set up all the networking software that you plan to use
For the Solaris Express releases, new features of interest to system administrators are covered in sections called What's New in ... ? in the appropriate chapters.
This Solaris release supports systems that use the SPARC and x86 families of processor architectures: UltraSPARC®, SPARC64, AMD64, Pentium, and Xeon EM64T. The supported systems appear in the Solaris 10 Hardware Compatibility List at http://www.sun.com/bigadmin/hcl. This document cites any implementation differences between the platform types.
In this document these x86 terms mean the following:
“x86” refers to the larger family of 64-bit and 32-bit x86 compatible products.
“x64” points out specific 64-bit information about AMD64 or EM64T systems.
“32-bit x86” points out specific 32-bit information about x86 based systems.
For supported systems, see the Solaris 10 Hardware Compatibility List.
Sun is not responsible for the availability of third-party web sites mentioned in this document. Sun does not endorse and is not responsible or liable for any content, advertising, products, or other materials that are available on or through such sites or resources. Sun will not be responsible or liable for any actual or alleged damage or loss caused by or in connection with the use of or reliance on any such content, goods, or services that are available on or through such sites or resources.
This book is intended for anyone responsible for administering one or more systems running the Solaris Solaris 10 release. To use this book, you should have 1–2 years of UNIX® system administration experience. Attending UNIX system administration training courses might be helpful.
Here is a list of the topics that are covered by the volumes of the System Administration Guides.
Book Title |
Topics |
---|---|
User accounts and groups, server and client support, shutting down and booting a system, managing services, and managing software (packages and patches) |
|
Terminals and modems, system resources (disk quotas, accounting, and crontabs), system processes, and troubleshooting Solaris software problems |
|
Removable media, disks and devices, file systems, and backing up and restoring data |
|
TCP/IP network administration, IPv4 and IPv6 address administration, DHCP, IPsec, IKE, Solaris IP filter, Mobile IP, and IPQoS |
|
System Administration Guide: Naming and Directory Services (DNS, NIS, and LDAP) |
DNS, NIS, and LDAP naming and directory services, including transitioning from NIS to LDAP and transitioning from NIS+ to LDAP |
System Administration Guide: Naming and Directory Services (NIS+) |
NIS+ naming and directory services |
System Administration Guide: Network Interfaces and Network Virtualization |
Networking stack, NIC driver property configuration, network interface configuration, administration of VLANs and link aggregations, IP networking multipathing (IPMP), WiFi wireless networking configuration, and virtual NICs (VNICs). |
Web cache servers, time-related services, network file systems (NFS and Autofs), mail, SLP, and PPP |
|
Auditing, device management, file security, BART, Kerberos services, PAM, Solaris Cryptographic Framework, privileges, RBAC, SASL, and Solaris Secure Shell |
|
System Administration Guide: Virtualization Using the Solaris Operating System |
Resource management features, which enable you to control how applications use available system resources; zones software partitioning technology, which virtualizes operating system services to create an isolated environment for running applications; and virtualization using SunTM xVM hypervisor technology, which supports multiple operating system instances simultaneously |
Solaris CIFS service, which enables you to configure a Solaris system to make CIFS shares available to CIFS clients; and native identity mapping services, which enables you to map user and group identities between Solaris systems and Windows systems |
|
ZFS storage pool and file system creation and management, snapshots, clones, backups, using access control lists (ACLs) to protect ZFS files, using ZFS on a Solaris system with zones installed, emulated volumes, and troubleshooting and data recovery |
|
System installation, configuration, and administration that is specific to Solaris Trusted Extensions |
|
Solaris printing topics and tasks, using services, tools, protocols, and technologies to set up and administer printing services and printers |
The Sun web site provides information about the following additional resources:
Sun is interested in improving its documentation and welcomes your comments and suggestions. To share your comments, go to http://docs.sun.com and click Feedback.
The following table describes the typographic conventions used in this book.
Table P–1 Typographic Conventions
Typeface or Symbol |
Meaning |
Example |
---|---|---|
AaBbCc123 |
The names of commands, files, and directories; on screen computer output |
Edit your .login file. Use ls -a to list all files. machine_name% you have mail. |
AaBbCc123 |
What you type, contrasted with on screen computer output |
machine_name% su Password: |
AaBbCc123 |
Command-line placeholder: replace with a real name or value |
To delete a file, type rm filename. |
AaBbCc123 |
Book titles, new words or terms, or words to be emphasized |
Read Chapter 6 in User's Guide. These are called class options. Do not save changes yet. |
The following table shows the default system prompt and superuser prompt for the C shell, Bourne shell, and Korn shell.
Table P–2 Shell Prompts
Shell |
Prompt |
---|---|
C shell prompt |
machine_name% |
C shell superuser prompt |
machine_name# |
Bourne shell and Korn shell prompt |
$ |
Bourne shell and Korn shell superuser prompt |
# |
Be aware of the following conventions used in this book:
When following steps or using examples, be sure to type double-quotes ("), left single-quotes (`), and right single-quotes (') exactly as shown.
The key referred to as Return is labeled Enter on some keyboards.
The root path usually includes the /sbin, /usr/sbin, /usr/bin, and /etc directories. So, the steps in this book show the commands in these directories without absolute path names. Steps that use commands in other, less common, directories show the absolute paths in the examples.
The examples in this book are for a basic SunOS software installation without the Binary Compatibility Package installed and without /usr/ucb in the path.
If /usr/ucb is included in a search path, it should always be at the end of the search path. Commands such as ps or df are duplicated in /usr/ucb with different formats and options from the SunOS commands.