Sponsored Content
Operating Systems Solaris Unable to get help from man page Post 302150389 by ezsurf on Tuesday 11th of December 2007 09:37:18 AM
Old 12-11-2007
Quote:
Originally Posted by DukeNuke2
which software-cluster do you use during install? please post the output of:

# cat /var/sadm/system/admin/CLUSTER

greets,
DN2
I am not using any cluster, simply install developer custom package, the output are as:

# cat /var/sadm/system/admin/CLUSTER
CLUSTER=SUNWCuser
 

8 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. News, Links, Events and Announcements

Usefull HP-UX Man Page Online

Usefull HP-UX Man Page Online Link LINK: HP-UX Man Page http://www.doc.ic.ac.uk/~mac/manuals/hpux-manual-pages/hpux.man1.html (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: killerserv
0 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

how do you create a man page?

i've never done this before. i created a script that I placed in /usr/bin, but want to create a man page for it. i'm clueless thanks (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: theDirtiest
3 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

adding a man page

I was wonderiong if ther is a way for a user to add a man page specific to thier account. similar to copying the .1 or .1.gz to /usr/share/man/man1 "cp *.1.gz /usr/share/man/man1". Except for using another folder as I don't have access to /usr/share/man/man1. I would think that this might involve... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: jacob358
1 Replies

4. Red Hat

scp-1.2.27 man page

Hi Guys, I'm looking for the man page for scp version 1.2.27 I have an old redhat server that has a few large scripts that use this version and I want to know what the -A flag does and the man page is not on there. (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Tornado
4 Replies

5. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

man page issue

Man page is not working my system. It is giving the following the following error > man ls gdbm fatal: read error with debug option > man -d ls ... .... ... ... using less as pager checking for locale en_US add_nls_manpath(): processing /usr/local/man:/usr/share/man:/usr/X11R6/man... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: praveenkumar_l
4 Replies

6. Solaris

man page question

What does the last change means in man page .. does that this man page has not been updated since 2003 or something else ? newfs-options The options are documented in the newfs man page. SunOS 5.10 Last change: 9 Dec 2003 1 System... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: fugitive
2 Replies

7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Changing Man page output

I've been asked to come up with a command to display a man page that will continuously scrol (i.e. not hitting space/enter)l. Is there a way do this? I'm stumped. Thank you for your help. (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: Opy99
8 Replies

8. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

How to write a UNIX man page

I realise that with GNU 'info' a lot of developers become, dare I say it, quite lazy when it comes to providing a well written man page - and some argue they're not needed at all. But I find, in the products that I develop, that man pages are used more often for quick reference, and therefore the... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: cambridge
1 Replies
clustertoc(4)                                                                                                                        clustertoc(4)

NAME
clustertoc - cluster table of contents description file The cluster table of contents file, .clustertoc, is an ASCII file that describes a hierarchical view of a software product. A .clustertoc file is required for the base OS product. The file resides in the top-level directory containing the product. The hierarchy described by .clustertoc can be of arbitrary depth, although the initial system installation programs assume that it has three levels. The hierarchy is described bottom-up, with the packages described in .packagetoc at the lowest layer. The next layer is the cluster layer which collects packages into functional units. The highest layer is the meta-cluster layer which collects packages and clus- ters together into typical configurations. The hierarchy exists to facilitate the selection or deselection of software for installation at varying levels of granularity. Interacting at the package level gives the finest level of control over what software is to be installed. Each entry in the .clustertoc file is a line that establishes the value of a parameter in the following form: PARAM=value A line starting with a pound-sign, ``#'', is considered a comment and is ignored. Parameters are grouped by cluster or meta-cluster. The start of a cluster description is defined by a line of the form: CLUSTER=value The start of a meta-cluster description is defined by a line of the form: METACLUSTER=value There is no order implied or assumed for specifying the parameters for a (meta-)cluster with the exception of the CLUSTER or METACLUSTER parameter, which must appear first and the END parameter which must appear last. The following parameters are mandatory: CLUSTER The cluster identifier (for example, SUNWCacc). The identifier specified must be unique within the package and cluster identifier namespace defined by a product's .packagetoc and .clustertoc files. The identifiers used are subject to the same constraints as those for package identifiers. These constraints are (from pkginfo(4)): All characters in the abbreviation must be alphanumeric and the first may not be numeric. The abbreviation is limited to a maximum length of nine characters. install, new, and all are reserved abbreviations. A cluster must be described before another cluster or meta-cluster may refer to it. DESC An informative textual description of the (meta-)cluster's contents. The length of the description supplied may not exceed 256 charac- ters. The text should contain no newlines. METACLUSTER The metacluster identifier (for example, SUNWCprog). The identifier specified must be unique within the package and cluster identifier namespace defined by a product's .packagetoc and .clustertoc files. The identifiers used are subject to the same constraints as those for package identifiers. These constraints are (from pkginfo(4)): All characters in the abbreviation must be alphanumeric and the first may not be numeric. The abbreviation is limited to a maximum length of nine characters. install, new, and all are reserved abbreviations. Meta-clusters can not contain references to other meta-clusters. NAME The full name of the (meta-)cluster. The length of the name string supplied may not exceed 256 characters. SUNW_CSRMEMBER Indicates that the package or cluster is a part of the (meta-) cluster currently being described. The value specified is the identifier of the package or cluster. There may be an arbitrary number of SUNW_CSRMEMBER parameters per (meta-)cluster. VENDOR The name of the (meta-)cluster's vendor. The length of the vendor string supplied may not exceed 256 characters. VERSION The version of the (meta-)cluster. The length of the version string supplied may not exceed 256 characters. The following parameters are optional: DEFAULT Specifies which metacluster within a .clustertoc file should be selected or installed by default. Only one metacluster can be the default. HIDDEN Specifies whether a metacluster should be hidden by applications. A hidden metacluster cannot be DEFAULT. REQUIRED Specifies which metacluster is required. A required metacluster implies that all of its cluster and package members are not de- selectable (must be installed). SUNW_CSRMBRIFF Indicates that the package is to be included dynamically in the (meta-)cluster currently being described. The value of this parameter must follow the following format: SUNW_CSRMBRIFF=(test test_arc)package This line is converted into a SUNW_CSRMEMBER entry at media installation time if the test provided matches the platform on which the media is being installed. There may be zero or more SUNW_CSRMBRIFF parameters per (meta-)cluster. SUNW_CSRMBRIFF=(test value)package where the test is either the builtin test of "platform" or a shell script which returns shell true(0) or shell false(1) depending on the tests being performed in the script. value is passed to the test as the first argument and can be used to create a script that tests for multiple hardware objects. Finally package is the package that is included in the final .clustertoc file as a SUNW_CSRMEMBER. See parse_dynamic_clustertoc(1M) for more information about the scripts. Example 1: A Cluster Description The following is an example of a cluster description in a .clustertoc file. CLUSTER=SUNWCacc NAME=System Accounting DESC=System accounting utilities VENDOR=Sun Microsystems, Inc. VERSION=7.2 SUNW_CSRMEMBER=SUNWaccr SUNW_CSRMEMBER=SUNWaccu END Example 2: A Meta-cluster Description The following is an example of a meta-cluster description in a .clustertoc file. METACLUSTER=SUNWCreq NAME=Core System Support DESC=A pre-defined software configuration consisting of the minimum required software for a standalone, non-networked workstation. VENDOR=Sun Microsystems, Inc. VERSION=2.x SUNW_CSRMEMBER=SUNWadmr SUNW_CSRMEMBER=SUNWcar SUNW_CSRMEMBER=SUNWCcs SUNW_CSRMEMBER=SUNWCcg6 SUNW_CSRMEMBER=SUNWCdfb SUNW_CSRMEMBER=SUNWkvm SUNW_CSRMEMBER=SUNWCnis SUNW_CSRMEMBER=SUNWowdv SUNW_CSRMEMBER=SUNWter END Example 3: A Meta-cluster Description With a Dynamic Cluster Entry The following is an example of a meta-cluster description with a dynamic cluster entry as indicated by the use of the SUNW_CSRMBRIFF param- eter entries. METACLUSTER=SUNWCprog NAME=Developer System Support DESC=A pre-defined software configuration consisting of the typical software used by software developers. VENDOR=Sun Microsystems, Inc. VERSION=2.5 SUNW_CSRMEMBER=SUNWCadm SUNW_CSRMBRIFF=(smcc.dctoc tcx)SUNWCtcx SUNW_CSRMBRIFF=(smcc.dctoc leo)SUNWCleo SUNW_CSRMBRIFF=(smcc.dctoc sx)SUNWCsx ... END parse_dynamic_clustertoc(1M), cdtoc(4), order(4), packagetoc(4), pkginfo(4) The current implementation of the initial system installation programs depend on the .clustertoc describing three required meta-clusters for the base OS product: SUNWCall Contains all of the software packages in the OS distribution. SUNWCuser Contains the typical software packages for an end-user of the OS distribution. SUNWCreq Contains the bare-minimum packages required to boot and configure the OS to the point of running a multi-user shell. 18 Feb 2003 clustertoc(4)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 04:06 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy