JavaScript is required to for searching.
Skip Navigation Links
Exit Print View
Creating and Administering Oracle Solaris 11.1 Boot Environments     Oracle Solaris 11.1 Information Library
search filter icon
search icon

Document Information

Preface

1.  Introduction to Managing Boot Environments

2.  beadm Zones Support

3.  Creating Boot Environments and Snapshots

4.  Administering Boot Environments

Listing Existing Boot Environments and Snapshots

Viewing Boot Environment Specifications

Viewing Specifications 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

Creating Additional Datasets for Boot Environments

You can create additional private datasets for an existing boot environment by using the zfs command to create a dataset located hierarchically under the root dataset of the boot environment.

This new dataset will not be automatically cloned to existing, associated zone boot environments. Also, because the new dataset is under the root dataset of a boot environment, the new dataset will be private to that boot environment. The new dataset will not be a shared dataset.

Once this new dataset has been created under the root dataset, if you then clone that whole boot environment, the new dataset would be included in the new, cloned boot environment.


Note - When creating additional datasets for boot environments, the canmount ZFS property of the dataset must be set to noauto. The dataset's mountpoint is inherited from the boot environment's root dataset and hence should be mounted at /myfs when this boot environment is in use.


For example, to create a new, non-shared dataset mounted at /myfs for the boot environment, BE1:

# zfs create -o canmount=noauto rpool/ROOT/BE1/myfs

For further information, see the zfs(1M) man page.