Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Sysidcfg file question
Operating Systems Solaris Sysidcfg file question Post 302736653 by cjashu on Tuesday 27th of November 2012 04:31:29 PM
Old 11-27-2012
Sysidcfg file question

Hi guys,
i am studying custom jumpstart and i am confused. My question is this:
If you want to jumstart several machines with different host names, can you still use the same sysidcfg file? or do you have to use make sysidcfg file for each machine?

Thanks guys
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Newbie question about difference between executable file and ordinary file

Hi, I am newbie in unix and just started learning it. I want to know what is the difference between an executable file and a file (say text file). How to create executable file? What is the extension for that? How to differentiate ? How does it get executed? Thanks (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Balaji
1 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

sysidcfg

Where is this executable sysidcfg file located in Solaris? (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: dookeobih
5 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

file question

without using a file stream editor such as sed, is there a way to echo the value of a variable to a specific location in a file (i.e. if the file has 20 lines, can I add a new line with the contents of the variable FOO at line 1?) ? I should add that the file will be created during run time. The... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: google
7 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Post Shell programming: Question about source a file and read data from the file

This is shell programming assignment. It needs to create a file called .std_dbrc contains STD_DBROOT=${HOME}/class/2031/Assgn3/STD_DB (which includes all my simple database files) and I am gonna use this .std_dbrc in my script file (read the data from the database files) like this: .... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: ccwq
3 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

mk file question

In a makefile when you specify something like.... xxx-xx: -$(yyy) $(zzz) What does the"-" (hyphen) before the "$" mean? (assuming xxx-xx is the target name) (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: felixmat1
2 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Question regarding lm file

How to know where a ln file point to.ln files is soft link which point to some file. I want to get the absolute path of that file which my lm files pointing to. (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: mr_deb
5 Replies

7. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Batch file question

EDIT: Is this wrong thread? Hi I am on an Apple Mac and I am trying to run this batch file on my Mac and was wondering if anyone could tell me what a script that will make this run and work on my Mac. I was hoping that you could tell me the script in the shell format? So here's the batch... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Billy5555100
4 Replies

8. Solaris

Solaris 10 Jumpstart goes to interactive mode instead of using sysidcfg

Ever since I have started using Solaris 10 images, I have had a problem I can not find a solution for. I have a Solaris 10 image that I created from a Solaris 10 DVD. The sysidcfg file has been created and set up in the bootparams file. I have no issues in Solaris 8 or 9. In Solaris 10, the... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: rsherry
5 Replies

9. Solaris

Multiple sysidcfg files on jumpstart server

Hello, I 've a jumpstart configured, its working fine .. i can build servers from this jumpstart server but i want to build 2-3 servers from the same jumpstart server simultaneously, and since i have only one sysidcfg i can only build 1 server at a time. My question is which file i shuld use for... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: fugitive
4 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Question about File Processing

I have a file with the format CKF,23G ckf,234M CKF,2356K DFK,4589M DFK,343K dfk,3434M DFK,34G DFK,34343M, DFK,3476G FGK,34k KLK,43G KLK,3G I would like to group by the 3-letter code in the beginning of the file and sum up the second column in giga bytes and output a file like... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: inditopgun
3 Replies
sysidtool(1M)						  System Administration Commands					     sysidtool(1M)

NAME
sysidtool, sysidnet, sysidns, sysidsys, sysidroot, sysidpm, sysidnfs4 - system configuration SYNOPSIS
/usr/sbin/sysidnet /usr/sbin/sysidns /usr/sbin/sysidsys /usr/sbin/sysidroot /usr/sbin/sysidpm /usr/sbin/sysidnfs4 DESCRIPTION
sysidtool is a suite of programs that configure a new system, or one that has been unconfigured with sys-unconfig(1M). The sysidtool pro- grams run automatically at system installation, or during the first boot after a machine has been successfully unconfigured. These programs have no effect except at such times, and should never be run manually. The sysidtool programs set up the appropriate information in the machine's configuration files, in the kernel, and on the machine's network interface. The following list shows the available commands and the information for which each of the commands lists. sysidnet: network configuration Machine's default locale. Machine's console type. Machine's host name. Machine's IP address. sysidns: name service configuration Name service choice: NIS, NIS+, DNS, LDAP, or none. Machine's IP subnet mask (if no NIS/NIS+ server can automatically be located on the machine's sub-network. Domain name for chosen name service. Hostname and IP address of name server(s). DNS search list (DNS name ser- vice only) sysidsys: miscellaneous system configuration Machine's IP subnet mask (if an NIS/NIS+ server was automatically located on the machine's sub-network). Machine's time zone. Date and time. sysidroot: control superuser information Machine's root password. sysidpm: power management configuration Auto-shutdown confirmation if the system is Energystar-V2 compliant, that is, a new system model shipped after October 1, 1995. sysidnfs4: NFSv4 domain configuration Domain name to be used by NFSv4 client(s) and server(s) to transmit user and group id's as strings of the general form "[user|group]@domain". sysidconfig: host- or platform-specific configuration This command controls specification and execution of custom configuration applications that can be specified for a particular host or a particular platform. See sysidconfig(1M). The sysidtool programs attempt to obtain system configuration information from various name service databases, for example, NIS, or from the sysidcfg(4) file, and you are prompted to provide the information if it cannot be found. However, you can avoid one or more of the prompts by preconfiguring the appropriate configuration information in the name service databases or in the sysidcfg(4) file. To preconfigure the information in the name service databases, you must use the name service commands or the Solstice AdminSuite tools. See Solaris 10 Installation Guide: Basic Installations for more details about how to preconfigure the system configuration information. The machine's configuration information is set up in its /etc and /var files. If a system has more than one network interface, you can use sysidtool to configure all interfaces on the system. You cannot use the name service databases or the sysidcfg(4) file to suppress the Power Management configuration prompt. However, you can suppress it by creating either the /autoshutdown or /noautoshutdown file before installation reboot. Accordingly, the auto-shutdown feature is silently configured. The /autoshutdown or /noautoshutdown files are removed by sysidpm before it exits. sysidnfs4 installs /etc/.NFS4inst_state.domain upon successful configuration of the NFSv4 domain name. Existence of this file suppresses any further prompting. FILES
/etc/.UNCONFIGURED /etc/nodename /etc/hostname.??[0-9] /etc/default/init /etc/defaultdomain /etc/passwd password file. See passwd(4). /etc/shadow shadow password file. See shadow(4). /etc/inet/hosts /etc/inet/netmasks /var/nis/NIS_COLD_START /var/yp/aliases /var/yp/binding/*/ypservers /etc/.sysIDtool.state /etc/power.conf Power Management configuration file. See power.conf(4). /etc/.PM_RECONFIGURE If this file is present during system reboot, the sysidpm program is run. This file is removed by sysidpm. /etc/.NFS4inst_state.domain This file is created upon successful configuration of the NFSv4 domain. If this file is present during system reboot, the sysidnfs4 program is run but no prompts are displayed. The suppression of prompts is intended for system upgrades, in which a system configura- tion typically stays unchanged. Stability level of this interface: Obsolete ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability |SUNWadmap, SUNWpmu | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ SEE ALSO
powerd(1M), sys-unconfig(1M), sysidconfig(1M), passwd(4), power.conf(4), shadow(4), sysidcfg(4), attributes(5) Solaris 10 Installation Guide: Basic Installations NOTES
NIS+ might not be supported in future releases of the Solaris operating system. Tools to aid the migration from NIS+ to LDAP are available in the Solaris 9 operating environment. For more information, visit http://www.sun.com/directory/nisplus/transition.html. SunOS 5.10 21 Oct 2004 sysidtool(1M)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 09:24 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy