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Oracle Solaris 10 1/13 Installation Guide: Planning for Installation and Upgrade     Oracle Solaris 10 1/13 Information Library
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Document Information

Preface

Part I Overall Planning of an Oracle Solaris Installation or Upgrade

1.  Where to Find Oracle Solaris Installation Planning Information

2.  Oracle Solaris Installation and Upgrade Roadmap

3.  System Requirements, Guidelines, and Upgrade Information

System Requirements and Recommendations

Allocating Disk and Swap Space

General Disk Space Planning and Recommendations

Disk Space Recommendations for Software Groups

Upgrade Planning

Upgrade Programs

Upgrading and Patching Limitations

Installing a Flash Archive Instead of Upgrading

Creating an Archive That Contains Large Files

Upgrading With Disk Space Reallocation

Using the Patch Analyzer When Upgrading

Backing Up And Restarting Systems For an Upgrade

Planning Network Security

Restricted Security Specifics

Revising Security Settings After Installation

Locale Values

Platform Names and Groups

x86: Partitioning Recommendations

Default Boot-Disk Partition Layout Preserves the Service Partition

How to Find the Version of the Oracle Solaris OS That Your System Is Running

4.  Gathering Information Before an Installation or Upgrade

Part II Understanding Installations Related to ZFS, Booting, Oracle Solaris Zones, and RAID-1 Volumes

5.  ZFS Root File System Installation Planning

6.  SPARC and x86 Based Booting (Overview and Planning)

7.  Upgrading When Oracle Solaris Zones Are Installed on a System

8.  Creating RAID-1 Volumes (Mirrors) During Installation (Overview)

9.  Creating RAID-1 Volumes (Mirrors) During Installation (Planning)

Glossary

Index

Planning Network Security

Starting with the Solaris 10 11/06 release, you have the option during an initial installation to change the network security settings so that all network services except Secure Shell are disabled or restricted to respond to local requests only. This option minimizes the potential vulnerabilities a remote attacker might try to exploit. In addition, this option provides a base for customers to enable only the services they require. This security option is only available during an initial installation, not during an upgrade. An upgrade maintains any set services that were previously set. If necessary, you can restrict network services after an upgrade by using the netservices command.

Depending on the installation program you are using, you can select to restrict network services or keep the services enabled by default:

Restricted Security Specifics

If you choose to restrict network security, numerous services are fully disabled. Other services are still enabled, but these services are restricted to local connections only. The Secure Shell remains fully enabled.

The following table lists network services that for the Solaris 10 11/06 release are restricted to local connections.

Table 3-4 Solaris 10 11/06 SMF Restricted Services

Service
FMRI
Property
rpcbind
svc:/network/rpc/bind
config/local_only
syslogd
svc:/system/system-log
config/log_from_remote
sendmail
svc:/network/smtp:sendmail
config/local_only
smcwebserver
svc:/system/webconsole:console
options/tcp_listen
WBEM
svc:/application/management/wbem
options/tcp_listen
X server
svc:/application/x11/x11-server
options/tcp_listen
dtlogin
svc:/application/graphical-login/cde-login
dtlogin/args
ToolTalk
svc:/network/rpccde-ttdbserver:tcp
proto=ticotsord
dtcm
svc:/network/rpccde-calendar-manager
proto=ticits
BSD print
svc:/application/print/rfc1179:default
bind_addr=localhost

Revising Security Settings After Installation

With the restricted network security feature, all of the affected services are controlled by the Service Management Framework (SMF). Any individual network service can be enabled after an initial installation by using the svcadm and svccfg commands.

The restricted network access is achieved by invoking the netservices command from the SMF upgrade file found in /var/svc/profile. The netservices command can be used to switch the service startup behavior.

To disable network services manually, run the following command:

# netservices limited

This command can be used on upgraded systems, where no changes are made by default. This command can also be used to re-establish the restricted state after enabling individual services.

Similarly, default services can be enabled as they were in previous Oracle Solaris releases by running the following command:

# netservices open

For further information about revising security settings, see How to Create an SMF Profile in Oracle Solaris Administration: Basic Administration. See also the following man pages: