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Nice example for the power of boot environmentsTuesday, October 4. 2011Trackbacks
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How much of the original environment is actually left? Years ago I did this, and once it deleted libc.so (which was fairly fast because it seemed to be deleting by inode number, and that library was a pretty low inode number) that is when the system "freezes". Boot off of a cd/dvd and surprisingly most of the data is still there and accessible.
On a related note, I updated my OpenSolaris b134 image to OpenIndiana b148 while using the system to write some code during the installation. And I can boot back and forth. Pretty cool.
Unfortunately Oracle Solaris builds don't play as nicely. It appears b173 breaks with the past -- you can't upgrade from Express to Early Adopter, or if you can I haven't figured out how. In other news, http://pkg.opensolaris.org was recently killed without warning. I guess no single playground is good enough for all the children...
You can not upgrade from Solaris 11 Express to b173, but the real Solaris 11 will allow this. And to upgrade from OpenSolaris to Solaris 11, too.
This is one of the features I miss from Solaris' ZFS on FreeBSD, there are 'side' projects like 'manageBE' that allow BE on FreeBSD, but its PITA to properly setup BE on FreeBSD currently, maybe after some GSoC project ... ;p
That is pretty impressive, copy on write file systems are the way to go for sure and zfs seems to be miles ahead of the pack.
I would guess that this means the luadmin (live upgrade) suite of commands will no longer be needed.
Minimal offtopic, aber: wo geht man denn derzeit hin wenn man ein aktuelles Solaris11 Express / OpenSolaris / whatever zum Experimentieren will? Auf opensolaris.org gibts ja nur noch die paar halbtoten abgeleiteten Projekte (schilix, belenix etc), und auf oracle.com verlinkt S11 Express auf eine Live-CD vom letzten Jahr. Sowas antikes wollte ich mir eigentlich nicht antun. Oder soll ich gleich aufs Release von S11 warten? Sollte ja jetzt bald soweit sein
Ich habe es in mit einer Solaris 11 EA - Installation in einer Guest LDOM getestet. Der rm Befehl kam irgendwann zurück (nach vielen Fehlermeldungen weil er u.a. im /proc und /dev* nicht alles löschen konnte. Danach ging nichts mehr. Die LDOM konnte nicht mehr booten, da das Boot-Archiv fehlte - wohl auch vom rm gelöscht worden. Da hilft dann auch kein Boot-Enviroment. ;-((
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+1The LKSF bookThe book with the consolidated Less known Solaris Tutorials is available for download here
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