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Operating Systems Solaris Lost /var/sadm/install/contents file and /var/sadm/pkg Post 302427117 by ronin42 on Friday 4th of June 2010 02:41:09 AM
Old 06-04-2010
Lost /var/sadm/install/contents file and /var/sadm/pkg

Hello, I recently found that my /var/sadm/install/contents, ~/admin/default, /var/spool/patch and /var/spool/pkg files were empty.
This broke the pkginfo, pkgchk and other package related tools.
The pkgmap no longer points to where the applications have been installed.
I have replaced the contents and default files with ones from an older copy of the drive as our drives are cloned.
This restored the missing files but of course did nothing to address the files that were once installed on the system but are no longer.
Is there a tool that I can use to tell the system to "recrawl" and discover what has been installed?
It's looking more and more like no since the /var/sadm/install/contents file is considered the registry of Solaris systems and anything that was installed should have a folder there.
Some of the things I tried, not in this order, have been:

1. Mount the cloned drive's /var partion and Re-run the pkgadd program on all the SUNW? files replaced in the pkg directory. I recieved some errors from pkgadd resulting in a failed attempt.
pkgadd - /rescue/sadm/pkg -s /var/spool/pkg.

2. Mount the cloned drive's /var partition and manually copy the SUNW? files over to the /var/sadm/pkg directory and run pkgadd. This result was the same as above, the program worked, listed all the packages and after using CTRL-D allowed me to select "all" for my choice of install. This failed on the very first package stating it couldn't find it.

3. Mount the cloned drives /var partiton and from in that mounted partition run pkgadd and pkgadd -d <filename>. This returned an error:
pkgadd: Error: attempt to process datastream failed
- open of <filename> failed, errno =2
pkgadd: ERROR: could not process datastream from <filename>

Any one know a way to get the system to recognize what's installed on it if the "contents" file has been replaced?

ej
 

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pkginfo(1)							   User Commands							pkginfo(1)

NAME
pkginfo - display software package information SYNOPSIS
pkginfo [-q | -x | -l] [-p | -i] [-r] [-a arch] [-v version] [-c category]... [pkginst]... pkginfo [-d device] [-R root_path] [-q | -x | -l] [-a arch] [-v version] [-c category]... [pkginst]... DESCRIPTION
pkginfo displays information about software packages that are installed on the system (with the first synopsis) or that reside on a par- ticular device or directory (with the second synopsis). Without options, pkginfo lists the primary category, package instance, and the names of all completely installed and partially installed packages. It displays one line for each package selected. OPTIONS
The -p and -i options are meaningless if used in conjunction with the -d option. The options -q, -x, and -l are mutually exclusive. -a arch Specify the architecture of the package as arch. -c category Display packages that match category. Categories are defined with the CATEGORY parameter in the pkginfo(4) file. If more than one cat- egory is supplied, the package needs to match only one category in the list. The match is not case specific. -d device Defines a device, device, on which the software resides. device can be an absolute directory pathname or the identifiers for tape, floppy disk, removable disk, and so forth. The special token spool may be used to indicate the default installation spool directory (/var/spool/pkg). -i Display information for fully installed packages only. -l Specify long format, which includes all available information about the designated package(s). -p Display information for partially installed packages only. -q Do not list any information. Used from a program to check whether or not a package has been installed. -r List the installation base for relocatable packages. -R root_path Defines the full path name of a directory to use as the root_path. All files, including package system information files, are relocated to a directory tree starting in the specified root_path. -v version Specify the version of the package as version. The version is defined with the VERSION parameter in the pkginfo(4) file. All compatible versions can be requested by preceding the version name with a tilde (~). Multiple white spaces are replaced with a single white space during version comparison. -x Designate an extracted listing of package information. The listing contains the package abbreviation, package name, package architec- ture (if available) and package version (if available). OPERANDS
pkginst A package designation by its instance. An instance can be the package abbreviation or a specific instance (for example, inst.1 or inst.2). All instances of a package can be requested by inst.*. The asterisk character (*) is a special character to some shells and may need to be escaped. In the C-Shell, "*" must be surrounded by single quotes (') or preceded by a backslash (). EXIT STATUS
0 Successful completion. >0 An error occurred. FILES
/var/spool/pkg default installation spool directory ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability |SUNWcsu | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ SEE ALSO
pkgtrans(1), pkgadd(1M), pkgask(1M), pkgchk(1M), pkgrm(1M), pkginfo(4), attributes(5), largefile(5) Application Packaging Developer's Guide NOTES
Package commands are largefile(5)-aware. They handle files larger than 2 GB in the same way they handle smaller files. In their current implementations, pkgadd(1M), pkgtrans(1) and other package commands can process a datastream of up to 4 GB. SunOS 5.11 30 Oct 2007 pkginfo(1)
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