Installing Oracle® Solaris 11.2 Systems

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Updated: July 2014
 
 

Installing With the Text Installer

    When installing the Oracle Solaris operating system, consider the following information:

  • See System Requirements for Live Media and Text Installations.

  • If you are installing Oracle Solaris on an x86 based system that will have more than one operating system installed in it, you can partition your disk during the installation process.

    You also have the option to use an open-source or third-party partitioning tool to create a new partition or make adjustments to pre-existing partitions prior to an installation. See Guidelines for Partitioning a System Prior To Installation.

  • The Oracle Solaris installers cannot upgrade your operating system. However, after you have installed the Oracle Solaris operating system, you can update all of the packages on your system that have available updates by using the Image Packaging System. See Adding and Updating Software in Oracle Solaris 11.2 .

  • You can use the text installer to install the Oracle Solaris operating system onto an iSCSI target if the iSCSI target can act as a boot disk and if the system has the necessary support for iSCSI booting. If your system supports autodiscovery of iSCSI disks, the installer provides that option. Alternately, you can manually enter values to specify the iSCSI target in the installation screens. To use iSCSI, the network interface for the system must be configured with a static IP address before starting the installation process.

    For further information, see How to Perform a Text Installation. Also, see the iscsiadm (1M) man page.

  • The text installer can perform an initial installation on the whole disk, an Oracle Solaris x86 partition, or a SPARC slice.


    Caution

    Caution  -  The installation overwrites all of the software and data on the targeted device.


  • Live Media contains a set of software that is appropriate for a desktop or laptop. The text installer installs a smaller set of software that is more appropriate for a general-purpose server system. In particular, the text installer does not install the GNOME desktop. To install additional packages after an installation performed with the text installer, see Adding Software After a Text Installation.