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Sun Server CLI Tools and IPMItool User's Guide

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Document Information

Preface

Related Books

About This Documentation (PDF and HTML)

Related Third-Party Web Site References

Sun Welcomes Your Comments

Change History

Installing Components

Getting Started

Prerequisites

Getting the Software

Sun SSM Component Manager Overview

(Linux and Solaris Operating Systems) Using Component Manager

(Linux and Solaris Operating Systems) How to Install Component Manager

(Linux and Solaris Operating Systems) Using Component Manager in Interactive Mode

(Linux and Solaris Operating Systems) How to Install Interactively Using Component Manager

(Linux and Solaris Operating Systems) How to Uninstall Interactively Using Component Manager

(Linux and Solaris Operating Systems) Using Component Manager in Unattended Mode

(Linux and Solaris Operating Systems) How to Install Using Component Manager in Unattended Mode

(Linux and Solaris Operating Systems) How to Uninstall using Component Manager in Unattended Mode

(Windows Operating Systems) Using Component Manager

(Windows Operating Systems) How to Install Using Component Manager

(Windows Operating Systems) How to Uninstall Using Component Manager

BIOS Configuration Tool

BIOSconfig Dependencies

BIOSconfig Terminology

Using BIOSconfig

BIOSconfig Command Overview

What Changes the Boot List

Important Notes on Devices

Configuring the Device Boot Order

BIOS CMOS Configuration

Configuring Individual CMOS Settings

Failure Return Codes

Commands Produce Unrelated, Innocuous, Extra Output

BIOSconfig for Solaris OS

How to View BIOSconfig Commands in Solaris OS

How to Obtain the BMC Driver

BIOSconfig for Windows

BIOSconfig for Windows Known Issues

BIOSconfig Error Messages

IPMItool for Windows

IPMItool Overview

Sun IPMI System Management Driver 2.1

How to Install Sun IPMI System Management Driver 2.1 Manually

How to Perform Unattended Installation of the Sun IPMI System Management Driver 2.1

How to Verify IPMItool Installation

Index

(Linux and Solaris Operating Systems) Using Component Manager in Unattended Mode

Component Manager provides an unattended mode that enables you to work with Hardware Management Pack components from the command-line.

On Linux and Solaris operating systems Component Manager provides the following command line options.

Options and Actions
Functionality
-h
Display help on using the Component Manager.
-v
Display the Component Manager's version information.
-d directory
Specify a custom directory for the component packages. The default option is to search for component packages in the current directory.
-l log
Specify a custom file for logging.
-s
Disable service manipulation (start, restart, or stop) during component installation and uninstallation.
-C
Print information on both the already installed and available components.
-D
Print detailed information on both the already installed and available components.
-I COMPONENT1:COMPONENT2
Install components. Component names are separated by a colon (:). If “ALL” is given as the component list, all available components are installed.
-U COMPONENT1:COMPONENT2
Uninstall components. Component names are separated by a colon (:). If “ALL” is given as the component list, all available components are installed.

When using the -I or -U options to list components to install or uninstall, you should separate the component names using the colon (:) character. Component names are shown when using the -C or -D options and are listed in square brackets.