9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Solaris
Hi Guys,
I am doing L1 Level support for Solaris Platform. Eg. User Management, File system , Print management and Job monitoring.
I recently completer my IBM Aix 7 Administration certification. Issue is that my manager is asking me do full time unix / linux patch management work for new... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: Nats
5 Replies
2. HP-UX
HI all,
As per the audit policy, patch has to be apply periodically, but in my scenerio, it has been applied lastly in the year 2010.
Using HP UX 11.11, 11.21 and 11.31
I would like to know, how to identify the patches which are need to update, what will be the procedure to update, how to... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: selvaforum
5 Replies
3. Red Hat
Hello
I have been asked to provide a security patch analysis of servers in my environment. For HPUX and Solaris there are tools wich can be loaded onto the servers to do this. However I do not know of one for Redhat . At this point I must mentioned that the Redhat servers are behind a firewall... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: dmsmith32
2 Replies
4. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
We have a mix of AIX, HP-UX, Linux (RHEL and SLES), and Solaris in our environment. Currently we have seperate patch management systems for each platform (NIM, SD, Spacewalk, etc), but have started looking for a centralized patch management solution that would work for most, if not all, of our... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: kknigga
0 Replies
5. Solaris
Hello Friends..
I have not tried anything related to Solaris patch and wish to learn more about it. I just wanted to try the patchadd and patchrm commands and how they work, just for educational purpose. I tried to download Solaris 10 patches, it asked me to register at sunsolve.com and i... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: saagar
5 Replies
6. Red Hat
I've inherited about 10 RHEL 3 boxes that are located in Europe behind a corporate firewall with no access to rhn.redhat.com
I've been tasked with patching all of these systems but I ask, Does redhat issue patch bundles? In AIX, there are maintenance levels and Sun has patch clusters available... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: Steelysteel
4 Replies
7. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
Does anyone know of any tools that manage the rollout of patches across multiple types of Unix platform ( eg Solaris, Aix etc ).
I am looking for something that does a similiar job to SMS or WSUS in the Windows world (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: jimthompson
3 Replies
8. Linux
Does anyone know who to centrally manage the distribution and application of patches to multiple Linux platforms ? Is there software for this ? (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: jimthompson
0 Replies
9. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
I have a suse linux 9(SLES 9)
I have configured "YOU" (yast online update) and it all working fine, synchronising on a daily base with http://sdb.suse.de/download but I would like to know if they is a tools or scripts that inform you of any patches that has not been applied and notify you via... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: hassan1
0 Replies
STG-UNCOMMIT(1) StGit Manual STG-UNCOMMIT(1)
NAME
stg-uncommit - Turn regular git commits into StGit patches
SYNOPSIS
stg uncommit <patch-name-1> [<patch-name-2> ...]
stg uncommit -n NUM [<prefix>]
stg uncommit -t <committish> [-x]
DESCRIPTION
Take one or more git commits at the base of the current stack and turn them into StGIT patches. The new patches are created as applied
patches at the bottom of the stack. This is the opposite of stg commit.
By default, the number of patches to uncommit is determined by the number of patch names provided on the command line. First name is used
for the first patch to uncommit, i.e. for the newest patch.
The -n/--number option specifies the number of patches to uncommit. In this case, at most one patch name may be specified. It is used as
prefix to which the patch number is appended. If no patch names are provided on the command line, StGIT automatically generates them based
on the first line of the patch description.
The -t/--to option specifies that all commits up to and including the given commit should be uncommitted.
Only commits with exactly one parent can be uncommitted; in other words, you can't uncommit a merge.
OPTIONS
-n NUMBER, --number NUMBER
Uncommit the specified number of commits.
-t TO, --to TO
Uncommit to the specified commit.
-x, --exclusive
Exclude the commit specified by the --to option.
STGIT
Part of the StGit suite - see linkman:stg[1]
StGit 03/13/2012 STG-UNCOMMIT(1)