|
|||
Part I Upgrading With Solaris Live Upgrade 1. Where to Find Solaris Installation Planning Information 2. Solaris Live Upgrade (Overview) 3. Solaris Live Upgrade (Planning) 4. Using Solaris Live Upgrade to Create a Boot Environment (Tasks) 5. Upgrading With Solaris Live Upgrade (Tasks) 6. Failure Recovery: Falling Back to the Original Boot Environment (Tasks) 7. Maintaining Solaris Live Upgrade Boot Environments (Tasks) 8. x86: Locating the GRUB Menu's menu.lst File (Tasks) 9. Upgrading the Solaris OS on a System With Non-Global Zones Installed 10. Solaris Live Upgrade (Examples) 11. Solaris Live Upgrade (Command Reference) Problems With Setting Up Network Installations Problems With Booting a System To Continue Upgrading After a Failed Upgrade System Panics When Upgrading With Solaris Live Upgrade Running Veritas VxVm To Install Software From a Network Installation Image or From the Solaris Operating System DVD To Install From the Solaris Software - 1 CD or From a Network Installation Image |
Initial Installation of the Solaris OSInitial installation fails Solution:If the Solaris installation fails, you must restart the installation. To restart the installation, boot the system from the Solaris Operating System DVD, the Solaris Software - 1 CD, or from the network. You cannot uninstall the Solaris software after the software has been partially installed. You must restore your system from a backup or begin the Solaris installation process again. /media/cdrom/SUNWxxxx/reloc.cpio: Broken pipe Description:This error message is informational and does not affect the installation. The condition occurs when a write on a pipe does not have a reading process. Solution:Ignore the message and continue with the installation. WARNING: CHANGE DEFAULT BOOT DEVICE (x86 based systems only) Cause:This is an informational message. The default boot device set in the system's BIOS might be set to a device that requires you to use the Solaris Device Configuration Assistant to boot the system. Solution:Continue with the installation and, if necessary, change the system's default boot device specified in the BIOS after you install the Solaris software to a device that does not require the Solaris Device Configuration Assistant. x86 only - If you are using the locale keyword to test a custom JumpStart profile for an initial installation, the pfinstall -D command fails to test the profile. For a workaround, see the error message “could not select locale,” in the section, Upgrading the Solaris OS. x86: To Check IDE Disk for Bad BlocksIDE disk drives do not automatically map out bad blocks like other drives supported by Solaris software. Before installing Solaris on an IDE disk, you might want to perform a surface analysis on the disk. To perform surface analysis on an IDE disk, follow this procedure.
|
||
|