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Oracle Solaris Administration: Basic Administration Oracle Solaris 10 1/13 Information Library |
1. Oracle Solaris Management Tools (Road Map)
2. Working With the Solaris Management Console (Tasks)
3. Working With the Oracle Java Web Console (Tasks)
4. Managing User Accounts and Groups (Overview)
5. Managing User Accounts and Groups (Tasks)
6. Managing Client-Server Support (Overview)
7. Managing Diskless Clients (Tasks)
8. Introduction to Shutting Down and Booting a System
9. Shutting Down and Booting a System (Overview)
Fundamentals of the Oracle Solaris Boot Design
Understanding the New SPARC Boot Architecture
Packing and Unpacking the Miniroot
Software Installation and Upgrades
Installation Memory Requirements
Changes to the Network Boot Server Setup Process
Support for Booting Multiple Kernels
x86: Administering the GRUB Bootloader
GRUB Support for findroot Command
Booting From an Oracle Solaris ZFS Root File System
Installation Requirements for Oracle Solaris ZFS
How Booting From an Oracle Solaris ZFS Root File System Works
SPARC: Options That Support Booting From an Oracle Solaris ZFS Root File System
x86: Options That Support Booting From a ZFS Root File System
10. Shutting Down a System (Tasks)
11. Modifying Oracle Solaris Boot Behavior (Tasks)
12. Booting an Oracle Solaris System (Tasks)
13. Managing the Oracle Solaris Boot Archives (Tasks)
14. Troubleshooting Booting an Oracle Solaris System (Tasks)
15. x86: GRUB Based Booting (Reference)
16. x86: Booting a System That Does Not Implement GRUB (Tasks)
17. Working With Oracle Configuration Manager
18. Managing Services (Overview)
20. Managing Software (Overview)
21. Managing Software With Oracle Solaris System Administration Tools (Tasks)
22. Managing Software by Using Oracle Solaris Package Commands (Tasks)
The boot archives, previously only available on the x86 platform, are now an integral part of the SPARC boot architecture.
The bootadm command has been modified for use on the SPARC platform. This command functions the same as it does on the x86 platform. The bootadm command handles the details of archive update and verification. On the x86 platform the bootadm command updates the GRUB menu during an installation or system upgrade. You can also use the bootadm command to manually manage the boot archives.
The boot archive service is managed by the Service Management Facility (SMF). The service instance for the boot archive is svc:/system/boot-archive:default. To enable, disable, or refresh this service use the svcadm command. For information about managing services by using SMF, see Chapter 18, Managing Services (Overview).
On supported Solaris releases, for both SPARC and x86 based systems, there are two kinds of boot archives:
Primary boot archive
Failsafe boot archive
The files that are included in the SPARC boot archives are located in the /platform directory.
The contents of the /platform directory is divided into two groups of files:
Files that are required for a sun4u boot archive
Files that are required for sun4v boot archive
For information about managing the boot archives, see Managing the Oracle Solaris Boot Archives (Task Map).