JASS - upgrading from Sol 9 to Sol 10


 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Operating Systems Solaris JASS - upgrading from Sol 9 to Sol 10
# 1  
Old 06-30-2011
JASS - upgrading from Sol 9 to Sol 10

Do I need to reinstall/rerun JASS after upgrading from Sol9 to Sol10?

Just wondered if the upgrade procedure overwrote any of the settings etc?
Login or Register to Ask a Question

Previous Thread | Next Thread

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Solaris

sol 10 sparc cant join dns

Hi I would like to ask if somehow i missed some files in configuration of joining a domain below is the procedure i take: modify /etc/nsswitch.conf host: file dns modify /etc/resolv.conf nameserver ipaddress nameserver ipaddress domain ft.domain.com search... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: jao_madn
3 Replies

2. Solaris

GCC for X86 on SOL 10

Need help with GCC package. I did downloaded the same from sunfreeware.com for i86, however after doing the unzip I am unable to add the same with pkgadd as I am unable to get the sun standard format as SUNWgcc on my system. Thanks (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: kumarmani
4 Replies

3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

luupgrade: Sol 8 -> Sol 10 u7 (5/09)

Greetings Forumers! I ran into an issue after running luupgrade on v880 running Solaris 8. I want to upgrade to Solaris 10. When I rebooted the system I noticed the file systems listed as such: # df -h Filesystem size used avail capacity Mounted on /dev/dsk/c1t1d0s0 ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: bluescreen
2 Replies

4. Solaris

Need help with mail service on Sol 10

Hello All: I am trying to configure mail service on Solaris 10 and I am unable to send using mailx. It appears the server may not be listening on port 25: bash-3.00# mconnect connecting to host localhost (127.0.0.1), port 25 connect: Connection refused services is configured to use port... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: hoo5091
7 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Login Prompt - Sol 10

Hello When I login as root - my prompt is # I want to change this and I understand the setting (PS1=) needs to go into a file called .profile, but I don't know where this file is for the root user. The root users home folder is / when I type env. Should I be creating a home folder for the... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: deedaz
4 Replies

6. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Sol 10 Sendmail issue

We have a Spark Solaris 10 box running behind a Pix 501 firewall, we are running NAT and I have mapped access to it from the outside world. Anyway, we can receive mail no problem just can't send. I receive this message bounce: The original message was received at Thu, 10 Jan 2008 17:04:29 -0600... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: varlania
1 Replies

7. Solaris

config v120(sol 8) as a router

Hello all I'm trying to configure a v120 (sol8) as router. The exact setup is: 2900 switch | | eri0 eri1 (node1 v120 sol8)----------------------> eri0 (node2 v120 sol8) so node1 eri1 is connected to node2 eri0. Also, on node1... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: sashah
1 Replies

8. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

kernel parameter in SOL

Hello everbody: I have Sol9, and I need to check its kernekl parameters, do you know how to list them or in which file they can be found. Thanks in Advance (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: aladdin
3 Replies

9. Solaris

Chinese characters on Sol 2.7

Hi there, I need to get a Chinese disclaimer attached to an email on a Solaris 2.7 box. The disclaimer we use is in English and stored as a text file although I've been asked to see if we can add the Chinsese one? Is it simply just a matter of adding the Chinese locale to the OS or is there... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Hayez
1 Replies

10. Filesystems, Disks and Memory

Move a disk to Sol. 2.6

I removed an external Sun disk (with data on it) from an old 2.6 system and added the disk to another 2.6 system. The new system seems to recognize the system (verified by the format command). When try to mount I am getting, I got the error: mount: /dev/dsk/c1t1d0s6 is not this fstype. I... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: sunshine
3 Replies
Login or Register to Ask a Question
vxupgrade(1M)															     vxupgrade(1M)

NAME
vxupgrade - upgrade the disk layout of a mounted VxFS file system SYNOPSIS
new_version] rawdev] mount_point DESCRIPTION
prints the current disk layout version number for a VxFS file system or upgrades the file system to a new disk layout. operates on file systems mounted for read/write access: mount_point must be a mounted VxFS file system. You cannot upgrade directly from the oldest disk layout version to the newest disk layout version; you must upgrade to the next level disk layout first. You cannot upgrade directly from the oldest disk layout version to the newest disk layout version; you must upgrade to the next level disk layout first. Only a privileged user can query or upgrade a VxFS file system. When invoked with the option, upgrades the disk layout to the specified version. When invoked without the option, prints the disk layout version number of the file system. To perform an upgrade, freezes the file system, allocates and initializes the new structures, frees the space used by the old structures, and then thaws the file system. This process should not keep the file system frozen for more than a few seconds. employs a lock file on the file system to ensure that only one instance of is running at any time. and cannot run simultaneously, so the lock file also ensures that does not run while a file system reorganization is in progress. When is invoked for an upgrade, it opens the lock file in the root of the file system specified by mount_point. If the lock file doesn't exist, it is created. The fcntl(2) system call is used to obtain a write lock on the file. If the write lock fails, fails, assuming that another or an is running. NOTES Disk layout versions cannot be downgraded. Upgrading to disk layout Version 6 changes all inodes in the file system. A file system with disk layout Version 5 can be mounted and upgraded to Version 6 disk layout. To upgrade from Version 4 disk layout to Version 6, you must upgrade to Version 5 first. This requires two separate invocations of the The upgrade may fail due to lack of free space at each step (see below). Optionally, prior to upgrading a file system to disk layout Version 6, delete all existing Storage Checkpoints. A Storage Checkpoint cre- ated on a file system with a disk layout prior to Version 6 stores a complete copy of the inodes at the time it was taken. Thus, a file system with one Storage Checkpoint takes approximately twice as long to upgrade as a file system without Storage Checkpoints. Conversely, a Storage Checkpoint created on a file system with disk layout Version 6 or later stores only the inodes of files whose data blocks were modified. As a result, the time required to upgrade the disk layout Version in the future is less affected by the number of Storage Check- points on the file system. DIAGNOSTICS returns an exit value of 0 if the upgrade is successful. returns 1 if the upgrade fails due to insufficient free space, returns 32 if the specified mount point is not a VxFS file system, and returns 2 if the upgrade fails for another reason. Options recognizes the following options: Upgrade disk layout to new_version. new_version can be 5 or 6. Use the pathname rawdev as the raw device. This option can be used when cannot determine which raw device corresponds to the mount_point (when is corrupted, for example). Operands recognizes the following operand: mount_point A mounted VxFS file system. Free Space Requirement requires free space on the file system to perform the upgrade; the upgrade may fail if there is not enough free space. It is difficult to determine the exact amount of space required to upgrade a VxFS file system, however, you can estimate the maximum space required. Typically, upgrading a disk layout Version 4 file system to disk layout Version 5 does not require much extra disk space. The space and time required to complete the upgrade increases with the number of extended attributes or hard links in the file system. Typical maximum space to convert to a Version 6 disk layout is at least two additional inodes with one block for every inode. The number of inodes is the sum total of inodes across all filesets in the file system (see the manual page for information on how to obtain the num- ber of inodes in a fileset). Allow at least ten minutes to upgrade for every million inodes in the file system. To ensure that there are 8K extents available, defragment the file system (see the manual page for information on how to obtain the number of free extents in a file system and how to defragment a file system). You cannot upgrade a Version 4 disk layout to Version 6 directly. You must first upgrade from Version 4 to a Version 5 disk layout, and then upgrade to Version 6. The upgrade may fail due to a lack of space at each step. Once a file system has been upgraded to Version 4, it is no longer mountable on HP-UX 10.01 and 10.10. Once a file system has been upgraded to Version 4, it is no longer mountable on: o HP-UX 10.x o HP-UX 11.0 without JFS 3.3 from Application CD Version 4 file systems are mountable on: o HP-UX 11.0 with JFS 3.3 from Application CD o HP-UX 11.1x o HP-UX 11.2x o HP-UX 11.31 You cannot upgrade the root or file systems to Version 4 on an 11.0 system running JFS 3.3 from the Application CD. Additionally, we do not advise upgrading the or file systems to Version 4 on an 11.0 system. These core file systems are crucial for system recovery. The HP- UX 11.0 kernel and emergency recovery media were built with an older version of JFS that does not recognize the Version 4 disk layout. If these file systems were upgraded to Version 4, your system would fail to boot with the 11.0 kernel as delivered or the emergency recovery media. You can, however, upgrade these core file systems to Version 4 on an HP-UX 11.1x system. Disk layout versions cannot be downgraded, for example, you cannot change a file system from disk layout version 4 to disk layout version 3. A file system cannot be upgraded from a Version 3 disk layout to a Version 4 disk layout if its intent log size is less than 256 kilobytes. After upgrading from a Version 2 disk layout, run to convert the inode format to allow growth beyond a two-gigabyte offset. RETURN VALUE
returns the following values: Successful completion. Upgrade failed due to lack of disk space. Some other error occurred. Specified mount_point is not a VxFS file system. FILES
Lock file External quotas file WARNINGS
The HP-UX 11i boot loader requires the boot filesystem (if a vxfs filesystem) to be on disk layout version 5 or less. The boot file system, usually mounted under or , contains the HP-UX kernel you boot from. You must NOT vxupgrade the boot file system to version 6 or above even though your system is running a VxFS version which supports these newer disk layout versions. Otherwise, your system will be unbootable. When you vxupgrade other core file systems such as , , , , care should be taken to ensure that the OE media for system recovery supports a VxFS version that can recognize the new disk layouts. Otherwise, you may not be able to repair these file systems in a recovery shell. SEE ALSO
fsadm_vxfs(1M), mkfs_vxfs(1M), quotaon(1M), vxfsconvert(1M), fcntl(2), fs_vxfs(4), vxfsio(7). vxupgrade(1M)