6.1 is at TL6 as of now. Probably it would be a good idea to update your system prior to installing Oracle.
To update your system go to IBMs FixDist Central, select your own level, the desired level and download what the packager program suggests. Alternatively you could ask your IBM SR to get you an upgrade disk set.
If you have a NIM server you should put the files there, create lpp_sources and install from there. If not, put all the upgrades in a temporary directory, make it your PWD and run
Hi all
I am using HPUX11.00
i want to know how to see all installed PATCHES ..and also to see any perticular patch has been installed or not
solaris showrev -p does not work in HPUX
please suggest any command
thanks
praful (1 Reply)
How can I tell when Sco Openserver 5.0.5 was installed on a server? Is there a file somewhere that will have a date that the installation took place?
Thanks,
Stufine (0 Replies)
Hi Unix Experts,
I'm told to install WebSphere MQ on Sun 5.9 box. Before I install it, my task is to find out what OS patches have already installed on the box.
I tried pkginfo -i command but it gives all of the packages installed.
I want to find out a specific patch has been installed or... (1 Reply)
Hey there,
i run 1: on my server (RHEL 6) and getting response that the libodbc is not installed. If i use yum for installation, it tells me, there is no package like this ( 2: ). Since in the description of Definiens is mentioned that the Run-time dependency is unixODBC (libodbc.so.1), I assume... (2 Replies)
Hi Folks,
I am getting the following error when trying to see installed patches on my Solaris 9 system :wall:
# patchadd -p
No patches installed
#
Any help will be much appreciated
Thanks in advance (1 Reply)
I need to find out list of installed patches from given list of patches.
I have tried using instfix -f <File containing list of patches> -i -c
But I was not able to understand the output of this command. It was like below.
bos.perf.tools: :0.0.0.0:?:
bos.rte.libc: :0.0.0.0:?: ... (4 Replies)
Does anyone know of a command that would show the list of patches installed and the date it was installed? My understanding is that "showrev -p" would show patches but not the date they were installed. I'm looking for this on a Solaris 10 server. Thanks. (2 Replies)
Hello Forum,
I'm issuing a one line bash command to look for the version of an installed application and saving the result to a variable like so:
APP=application --version
But if the application is not installed I want to return to my variable that the Application is not installed. So I'm... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: greavette
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
show-installed
show-installed(1)show-installed(1)NAME
show-installed - show installed RPM packages and descriptions
SYNOPSIS
show-installed [options]
DESCRIPTION
show-installed gives a compact description of the packages installed (or given) making use of the comps groups found in the repositories.
OPTIONS -h, --help
show this help message and exit
-f FORMAT, --format=FORMAT
yum, kickstart or human; yum gives the result as a yum command line; kickstart the content of a %packages section; "human" readable
is default.
-i INPUT, --input=INPUT
File to read the package list from instead of using the rpmdb. - for stdin. The file must contain package names only separated by
white space (including newlines). rpm -qa --qf='%{name}
' produces proper output.
-o OUTPUT, --output=OUTPUT
File to write the result to. Stdout is used if option is omitted.
-q, --quiet
Do not show warnings.
-e, --no-excludes
Only show groups that are installed completely. Do not use exclude lines.
--global-excludes
Print exclude lines at the end and not after the groups requiring them.
--global-addons
Print package names at the end and not after the groups offering them as addon.
--addons-by-group
Also show groups not selected to sort packages contained by them. Those groups are commented out with a "# " at the begin of the
line.
-m, --allow-mandatories
Check if just installing the mandatory packages gives better results. Uses "." to mark those groups.
-a, --allow-all
Check if installing all packages in the groups gives better results. Uses "*" to mark those groups.
--ignore-missing
Ignore packages missing in the repos.
--ignore-missing-excludes
Do not produce exclude lines for packages not in the repository.
Florian Festi 21 October 2010 show-installed(1)