07-02-2008
you can check the current patch level by doing uname -a
See if your kernel level is lower of that is shown from
Sun Microsystems
Solaris 8, 9 and 10 have diff latest kernel patch levels.
7 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Solaris
Hi,
how do you check that the latest service packs/patches are installed on the server, When i look at the OS Modules file, all i see is these numbers like 117176-02 etc, what is currently the latest patch level for sunOS 5.9?
thnaks (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: narik007
1 Replies
2. Solaris
required Solaris 5.10 Kernel patch 137111-03
required Solaris 5.10 Fibre Channel Device Driver patch 125184-08
I want to know about the descriptions and what the patches will do. I searched www.sun.com (patches/updates) but don't see I am looking for. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Y4Net
1 Replies
3. Linux
Hi
Do let me know how to find OS Patch 's installed on Linux server ?
Thanks
~ SPai (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: sbanala
3 Replies
4. AIX
Hi,
How to find out patch level in AIX and what patches are installed on AIX box?
As per my knowledge oslevel -s will give service and maintanance level description , but regarding patch level any command is there?
Regards,
Manoj (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: manoj.solaris
1 Replies
5. Solaris
I have a Solaris 10 OS having kernal patch level 138888-03 on several servers but recenlty I upgraded it into 142900-12 on some T-Series servers & v890 server after install them my syslog is increasing at a rate of 1GB on average on all servers . I believe its a bug, can somebody help me in... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: sb200
1 Replies
6. Solaris
how can i know the patch level in solaris 10?
is there a command to know what patchs installed in my solaris?
i mean is there any tool i can run to know that other than pkginfo | more?
i need to make an inventory of all my SUN servers.
i can run explorer in all the machines but unfortunately i... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: q8devilish
3 Replies
7. Solaris
Hi,
Anyone able to advise on how to find the kernel patch level of an ABE?
showrev and uname -a will provide kernel patch details of the running environment, but how can I run these commands against the ABE or where do these commands get their information from i.e. is the kernel patch level... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: CiCa
3 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
stg-import
STG-IMPORT(1) StGit Manual STG-IMPORT(1)
NAME
stg-import - Import a GNU diff file as a new patch
SYNOPSIS
stg import [options] [<file>|<url>]
DESCRIPTION
Create a new patch and apply the given GNU diff file (or the standard input). By default, the file name is used as the patch name but this
can be overridden with the --name option. The patch can either be a normal file with the description at the top or it can have standard
mail format, the Subject, From and Date headers being used for generating the patch information. The command can also read series and mbox
files.
If a patch does not apply cleanly, the failed diff is written to the .stgit-failed.patch file and an empty StGIT patch is added to the
stack.
The patch description has to be separated from the data with a --- line.
OPTIONS
-m, --mail
Import the patch from a standard e-mail file.
-M, --mbox
Import a series of patches from an mbox file.
-s, --series
Import a series of patches from a series file or a tar archive.
-u, --url
Import a patch from a URL.
-n NAME, --name NAME
Use NAME as the patch name.
-p N, --strip N
Remove N leading slashes from diff paths (default 1).
-t, --stripname
Strip numbering and extension from patch name.
-i, --ignore
Ignore the applied patches in the series.
--replace
Replace the unapplied patches in the series.
-b BASE, --base BASE
Use BASE instead of HEAD for file importing.
--reject
Leave the rejected hunks in corresponding *.rej files.
-e, --edit
Invoke an editor for the patch description.
-d, --showdiff
Show the patch content in the editor buffer.
-a "NAME <EMAIL>", --author "NAME <EMAIL>"
Use "NAME <EMAIL>" as the author details.
--authname AUTHNAME
Use AUTHNAME as the author name.
--authemail AUTHEMAIL
Use AUTHEMAIL as the author e-mail.
--authdate AUTHDATE
Use AUTHDATE as the author date.
--sign
Add a "Signed-off-by:" to the end of the patch.
--ack
Add an "Acked-by:" line to the end of the patch.
STGIT
Part of the StGit suite - see linkman:stg[1]
StGit 03/13/2012 STG-IMPORT(1)