Installing Sun Solaris 10
by Jeff Hunter, Sr. Database Administrator
Contents
This article documents installing the 6/06 (June 2006) release of Solaris 10
from CD-ROM. For the purpose of this example, I will be installing Solaris 10
on a Sun Blade 150 with the following configuration:
- Sun Blade 150 (UltraSPARC-IIe 650MHz), No Keyboard, OpenBoot 4.6
- 1,792 MB RAM Memory
- Two – 40 GB IDE Western Digital Hard Drives – (/dev/dsk/c0t0d0 and /dev/dsk/c0t2d0)
- Built-in Ethernet – (eri0)
- CDROM – (/dev/dsk/c0t1d0)
Installing Solaris 10 will require 5 CDs found in the
Solaris media kit labeled “Solaris 10 Software”
or downloaded from
http://www.sun.com/software/solaris/ – (Solaris 10 6/06).
Before starting the
installation process, ensure that you have noted the following items:
- Determine the host name of the system you are installing
- Determine the language and locales you intend to use on the system
- If you intend to include the system in a network, gather the following information:
- Host IP address
- Subnet mask
- Type of name service (DNS, NIS, or NIS+, for example)
- Domain name
- Host name of server
- Host IP address of the name server
Using Serial / Console Connection
For a complete discussion of connecting to a Sun
serial console from Linux, see article
“Using Serial Consoles – (Sun Sparcs)“.For this particular installation, I will NOT be using a VGA monitor connected to the
built-in frame-buffer (video card). The installation will be done using the serial
port of the Sun Blade as a console. A serial cable (null modem) will be connected from
the serial port of a Linux machine to the serial port of the Sun Blade. Keep in mind
that you will not be able to make use of the serial console of the Sun Blade if it
was booted with the keyboard/mouse plugged in. In order to make use of the serial console,
you will need to disconnect the keyboard/mouse and reboot the Sun server. On the Sun Blade
100/150, if the keyboard/mouse are plugged in during the boot phase, all console output will
be redirected to the VGA console.From the Linux machine, you can use a program called minicom. Start it up with the command
“minicom“. Press “Ctrl-A Z” to get to the main menu.
Press “o” to configure minicom. Go to “Serial port setup” and make
sure that you are set to the correct “Serial Device” and that the speed on line
E matches the speed of the serial console you are connecting to. (In most
cases with Sun, this is 9600.) Here are the settings I made when using
Serial A / COM1 port on the Linux machine:+-----------------------------------------------------------------------+ | A - Serial Device : /dev/ttyS0 | | B - Lockfile Location : /var/lock | | C - Callin Program : | | D - Callout Program : | | E - Bps/Par/Bits : 9600 8N1 | | F - Hardware Flow Control : Yes | | G - Software Flow Control : No | | | | Change which setting? | +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+After making all necessary changes, hit the ESC key to go back to
the “configurations” menu. Now go to “Modem and dialing“.
Change the “Init string” to “~^M~“. Save the settings
(as dflt), and then restart Minicom. You should now see a console login prompt.[root@bertha1 root]# minicom Welcome to minicom 2.00.0 OPTIONS: History Buffer, F-key Macros, Search History Buffer, I18n Compiled on Feb 17 2004, 04:52:10. Press CTRL-A Z for help on special keys alex console login: root Password: Last login: Tue Nov 4 18:55:41 on console Nov 7 12:17:24 alex login: ROOT LOGIN /dev/console Sun Microsystems Inc. SunOS 5.8 Generic Patch October 2001 # # init 0 INIT: New run level: 0 The system is coming down. Please wait. System services are now being stopped. Print services stopped. Nov 7 12:17:38 alex syslogd: going down on signal 15 The system is down. syncing file systems... done Program terminated ok
The installation process starts at the ok prompt. The previous
section of this document provides the steps required to not only gain
access to the console port of the Sun SPARC server, but also how to get the
server to an ok prompt. If when logging on, the machine is already
booted into the O/S, (you have a console login like the following: “alex console login:“),
you will need to bring the machine to its EEPROM (ok prompt) by initiating
init 0 like in the
Using Serial / Console Connection
section above.The first step in installing Solaris 10 is to boot the machine from
Disk 1 of the Solaris 10 Software CDs. You will need to
get the machine to the ok prompt. You can do this by shutting the system
down using init 0. Once at the ok prompt,
type in boot cdrom. (Or in some cases, you can use
reboot cdrom). From here, the installation program prompts
you for system configuration information that is needed to complete
the installation.
If you were performing a
network installation, you would type:ok boot netIn almost all cases, you will be installing the Solaris 10 software
on a new system where it will not be necessary to preserve any data
already on the hard drive. Using this assumption, I will
partition the first single 40 GB IDE hard drive (/dev/dsk/c0t0d0)
as the system disk.
Let’s start the installation process! Put the Solaris 10 Software
(Disk 1 of 5) in the CDROM tray and boot to it:
Solaris Installation Boot Screen ok boot cdrom Resetting ... Sun Blade 150 (UltraSPARC-IIe 650MHz), No Keyboard Copyright 1998-2002 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved. OpenBoot 4.6, 1792 MB memory installed, Serial #52928138. Ethernet address 0:3:ba:27:9e:8a, Host ID: 83279e8a. Rebooting with command: boot cdrom Boot device: /pci@1f,0/ide@d/cdrom@1,0:f File and args: SunOS Release 5.10 Version Generic_118833-17 64-bit Copyright 1983-2005 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved. Use is subject to license terms. Configuring devices. Using RPC Bootparams for network configuration information. Attempting to configure interface eri0... SUNW,eri0 : 100 Mbps full duplex link up Configured interface eri0 Beginning system identification... Searching for configuration file(s)... Search complete. Discovering additional network configuration...The boot process may take several minutes to complete, but once done,
you will start answering a series of prompts.The following section will walk you through many of the screen prompts
from the installation.The first two prompts are from the command line interface (CLI) and
are used to specify the language and terminal. Use English for the Language.
As for a terminal setting, I commonly telnet to a Linux server
(that is connected from the serial port of the Linux server to the serial
port of the Sun machine). From the Linux server, I use “minicom” to
connect from the Linux server to the Sun server. The best terminal
for this type of installation is “DEC VT100“:Language : English What type of terminal are you using? : 3) DEC VT100
You should be able to use a terminal type of “DEC VT100”
or “X Terminal Emulator (xterms)”.
Depending on the terminal being used for installation
while using the command line interface, it may be required
to precede any of the function key responses
(i.e. F2_Continue) with the ESC key (i.e. ESC – F2_Continue).
For the purpose of this installation, I am using minicom 2.0
and configured the installation to use a DEC VT100 terminal.
Given this configuration I did not have to precede any
of the function key responses with the ESC key.Many of the screens to follow will ask you about networking information.
When asked if the system will be connected to a network, answer Yes.
Many of the screens should be easy to complete except for the
“Names Services” section. In almost all cases, you will want to use
DNS naming services, but if your machine is not currently configured within DNS,
this section will fail and no information entered about Names Services will be stored
and configured.If this is the case, you will need to select None under the Names Services
section. The network configuration will then need to be completed after the installation process
by updating certain network files on the local hard drive.
This will be documented in the “Post Installation Procedures” of this document.
Screen 1 : The Solaris Installation Program
This is the Solaris Installation Welcome screen.
Hit F2 to continue
Screen 2 : Identify This System
This screen informs you about how you will need to identify the computer as it applies to network connectivity.
Hit F2 to continue
Screen 3 : Network Connectivity
Networked --------- [X] Yes [ ] NoHit F2 to continue
Screen 4 : DHCP
Use DHCP -------- [ ] Yes [X] NoHit F2 to continue
Screen 5 : Host Name for eri0
Enter the host name which will identify this system on the network.
For the purpose of this example, I will use the host name “alex“.Host name for eri0: alexHit F2 to continue
Screen 6 : IP Address for eri0
Enter the Internet Protocol (IP) address for this network interface.
IP address for eri0: 192.168.1.102Hit F2 to continue
Screen 7 : Subnet for eri0
On this screen you must specify whether this system is part of a
subnet. For the purpose of this example, this interface will be
part of a subnet.System part of a subnet ----------------------- [X] Yes [ ] NoHit F2 to continue
Screen 8 : Netmask for eri0
Netmask for eri0: 255.255.255.0Hit F2 to continue
Screen 9 : IPv6 for eri0
In this example, I will not be enabling IPv6.
Enable IPv6 for eri0 -------------------- [ ] Yes [X] NoHit F2 to continue
Screen 10 : Set the Default Route for eri0
I will manually specify the IP address of my router.
Default Route for eri0 ---------------------- [ ] Detect one upon reboot [X] Specify one [ ] NoneHit F2 to continue
Screen 11 : Default Route IP Address for eri0
Router IP Address for eri0: 192.168.1.1Hit F2 to continue
Screen 12 : Confirm Information for eri0
This is a confirmation screen. Verify all data is correct.
Host name: alex IP address: 192.168.1.102 System part of a subnet: Yes Netmask: 255.255.255.0 Enable IPv6: No Default Route: Specify one Router IP Address: 192.168.1.1Hit F2 to continue
Screen 13 : Configure Security Policy
Configure Kerberos Security --------------------------- [ ] Yes [X] NoHit F2 to continue
Screen 14 : Confirm Information
This is a confirmation screen. Verify all data is correct.
Configure Kerberos Security: NoHit F2 to continue
Screen 15 : Name Service
Name service ------------ [ ] NIS+ [ ] NIS [X] DNS [ ] LDAP [ ] NoneHit F2 to continue
Screen 16 : Domain Name
Host name: idevelopment.infoHit F2 to continue
Screen 17 : DNS Server Addresses
Server's IP address: 63.67.120.23 Server's IP address: 63.67.120.14 Server's IP address:Hit F2 to continue
Screen 18 : DNS Search List
Search domain: Search domain: Search domain: Search domain: Search domain: Search domain:Hit F2 to continue
Screen 19 : Confirm Information
This is a confirmation screen. Verify all data is correct.
Name service: DNS Domain name: idevelopment.info Server address(es): 63.67.120.23 63.67.120.14Hit F2 to continue
Screen 20 : Time Zone
Continents and Oceans --------------------- [ ] Africa [X] Americas [ ] Antarctica [ ] Arctic Ocean [ ] Asia [ ] Atlantic Ocean [ ] Australia [ ] Europe [ ] Indian Ocean [ ] Pacific Ocean [ ] other - offset from GMT [ ] other - specify time zone fileHit F2 to continue
Screen 21 : Country or Region
Countries and Regions --------------------- [X] United States [ ] Anguilla [ ] Antigua & Barbuda [ ] Argentina [ ] Aruba [ ] Bahamas [ ] Barbados [ ] Belize [ ] Bolivia [ ] Brazil [ ] Canada [ ] Cayman Islands [ ] Chile [ ] Colombia [ ] Costa Rica [ ] Cuba [ ] Dominica [ ] Dominican Republic [ ] Ecuador [ ] El Salvador [ ] French Guiana [ ] Greenland [ ] Grenada [ ] Guadeloupe [ ] Guatemala [ ] Guyana [ ] Haiti [ ] Honduras [ ] Jamaica [ ] Martinique [ ] Mexico [ ] Montserrat [ ] Netherlands Antilles [ ] Nicaragua [ ] Panama [ ] Paraguay [ ] Peru [ ] Puerto Rico [ ] St Kitts & Nevis [ ] St Lucia [ ] St Pierre & Miquelon [ ] St Vincent [ ] Suriname [ ] Trinidad & Tobago [ ] Turks & Caicos Is [ ] Uruguay [ ] Venezuela [ ] Virgin Islands (UK) [ ] Virgin Islands (US)Hit F2 to continue
Screen 22 : Time Zone
Time zones ---------- [X] Eastern Time [ ] Eastern Time - Michigan - most locations [ ] Eastern Time - Kentucky - Louisville area [ ] Eastern Time - Kentucky - Wayne County [ ] Eastern Standard Time - Indiana - most locations [ ] Eastern Standard Time - Indiana - Crawford County [ ] Eastern Standard Time - Indiana - Starke County [ ] Eastern Standard Time - Indiana - Switzerland County [ ] Central Time [ ] Central Time - Michigan - Wisconsin border [ ] Central Time - North Dakota - Oliver County [ ] Mountain Time [ ] Mountain Time - south Idaho & east Oregon [ ] Mountain Time - Navajo [ ] Mountain Standard Time - Arizona [ ] Pacific Time [ ] Alaska Time [ ] Alaska Time - Alaska panhandle [ ] Alaska Time - Alaska panhandle neck [ ] Alaska Time - west Alaska [ ] Aleutian Islands [ ] HawaiiHit F2 to continue
Screen 23 : Date and Time
Date and time: YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM Year (4 digits) : <enter year> Month (1-12) : <enter month> Day (1-31) : <enter day> Hour (0-23) : <enter hour> Minute (0-59) : <enter minute>Hit F2 to continue
Screen 24 : Confirm Information
This is a confirmation screen. Verify all data is correct.
Time zone: Eastern Time (US/Eastern) Date and time: 2006-11-26 15:11:00Hit F2 to continue
Screen 25 : Solaris Interactive Installation
There are two ways to install your Solaris software: “Standard” or “Flash“.
Choose the “Standard” method (F2_Standard).Hit F2 to continue
Screen 26 : Eject a CD/DVD Automatically?
During the installation of Solaris software, you may be using one or more
CDs/DVDs. You can choose to have the system eject each CD/DVD automatically
after it is installed or you can choose to manually eject each CD/DVD.[X] Automatically eject CD/DVD [ ] Manually eject CD/DVDHit F2 to continue
Screen 27 : Reboot After Installation?
After Solaris software is installed, the system must be rebooted. You can
choose to have the system automatically reboot, or you can choose to
manually reboot the system if you want to run scripts or do other
customizations before the reboot. You can manually reboot a system by using
the reboot(1M) command.[X] Auto Reboot [ ] Manual RebootHit F2 to continue
Screen 28 : Solaris Interactive Installation
This screen recognizes if a previous version of Solaris is installed and whether you would
like to upgrade or not. Always select the install option (F4_Initial).Hit F4 to continue
Screen 29 : Initializing
The system is being initialized.
Loading install media, please wait…
Screen 30 : License
Read through the software license agreement.
Hit F2 to accept the license and continue
Screen 31 : Select Geographic Regions
Select the geographic regions for which support should be installed. -------------------------------------------------------------------- > [ ] Australasia > [ ] Asia > [ ] Eastern Europe > [ ] Northern Europe > [ ] Northern Africa > [ ] Middle East > [ ] Southern Europe > [ ] South America > [ ] Central America > [ ] Central Europe V [/] North America [ ] Canada-English (ISO8859-1) [ ] Canada-French (ISO8859-1) [ ] French [ ] Mexico (ISO8859-1) [ ] Spanish [X] U.S.A. (UTF-8) [X] U.S.A. (en_US.ISO8859-1) > [ ] Western EuropeHit F2 to continue
Screen 32 : Select System Locale
Select the initial locale to be used after the system has been installed. ------------------------------------------------------------------------- [X] POSIX C ( C ) North America [ ] U.S.A. (UTF-8) ( en_US.UTF-8 ) [ ] U.S.A. (en_US.ISO8859-1) ( en_US.ISO8859-1 ) [ ] U.S.A. (en_US.ISO8859-15) ( en_US.ISO8859-15 )Hit F2 to continue
Screen 33 : Select Products
Select the products you would like to install. ---------------------------------------------- V [X] Solaris 10 Extra Value Software................. 87.26 MB [X] Sun Validation Test Suite 6.2................... 69.92 MB [X] Sun Install Check 2.0.2......................... 17.34 MB > [ ] Java Enterprise System.......................... 0.00 MBHit F2 to continue
Screen 34 : Additional Products
To scan for additional products, select the location you wish to scan.
Web Start Ready product scan location: -------------------------------------- [X] None [ ] CD/DVD [ ] Network File SystemHit F2 to continue
Screen 35 : Select Software
Select the Solaris software to install on the system. ----------------------------------------------------- [ ] Entire Distribution plus OEM support ....... 5641.00 MB [X] Entire Distribution ........................ 5593.00 MB [ ] Developer System Support ................... 5468.00 MB [ ] End User System Support .................... 4452.00 MB [ ] Core System Support ........................ 958.00 MB [ ] Reduced Networking Core System Support ..... 916.00 MBHit F2 to continue
Screen 36 : Select Disks
You must select the disks for installing Solaris software. If there
are several disks available, I always install the Solaris software
on the boot disk c0t0d0. NOTE: ** denotes current boot disk---------------------------------------------------------- Disk Device Available Space =============================================== [X] ** c0t0d0 38162 MB (F4 to edit) [ ] c0t2d0 38162 MB Total Selected: 38162 MB Suggested Minimum: 4319 MB
I generally select F4 to edit the c0t0d0 disk to ensure that the
root directory is going to be located on this disk.---------------------------------------------------------- On this screen you can select the disk for installing the root (/) file system of the Solaris software. Original Boot Device : c0t0d0 Disk ============================== [X] c0t0d0 (F4 to select boot device)
On this screen, I typically select F4 to select boot device
to ensure the root file system will be located on slice zero, c0t0d0s0.---------------------------------------------------------- On this screen you can select the specific slice for the root (/) file system. If you choose Any of the Above, the Solaris installation program will choose a slice for you. Original Boot Device : c0t0d0s0 [X] c0t0d0s0 [ ] c0t0d0s1 [ ] c0t0d0s2 [ ] c0t0d0s3 [ ] c0t0d0s4 [ ] c0t0d0s5 [ ] c0t0d0s6 [ ] c0t0d0s7 [ ] Any of the AboveHit F2 to after selecting Disk Slice
Hit F2 to continue with your Boot Disk selection
Screen 37 : Reconfigure EEPROM?
Do you want to update the system’s hardware (EEPROM) to always boot from c0t0d0?
Hit F2 to Reconfigure EEPROM and Continue
Screen 38 : Preserve Data?
Do you want to preserve existing data? At least one of the disks you’ve selected for
installing Solaris software has file systems or unnamed slices that you may want to save.Hit F2 to continue
Screen 39 : Automatically Layout File Systems?
Do you want to use auto-layout to automatically layout file systems?
Manually laying out file systems requires advanced system administration
skills.I typically perform an “Auto” File System Layout (F2_Auto Layout).
Hit F2 to Perform Auto Layout.
Screen 40 : Automatically Layout File Systems
On this screen you must select all the file systems you want auto-layout to
create, or accept the default file systems shown.File Systems for Auto-layout ======================================== [X] / [ ] /opt [ ] /usr [ ] /usr/openwin [ ] /var [X] swapHit F2 to continue
Screen 41 : File System and Disk Layout
The summary below is your current file system and disk layout, based on the
information you’ve supplied.NOTE: If you choose to customize, you should understand file systems, their
intended purpose on the disk, and how changing them may affect the operation
of the system.File sys/Mnt point Disk/Slice Size ============================================================= / c0t0d0s0 5267 MB swap c0t0d0s1 513 MB overlap c0t0d0s2 38162 MB /export/home c0t0d0s7 32381 MB
I generally select F4 (F4_Customize) to
edit the partitions for disk c0t0d0. If this is a workstation,
I make only three partitions:
- / : I often get the sizes for the individual filesystems
(/usr, /opt, and /var) incorrect.
This is one reason I typically create only one partition as /
that will be used for the entire system (minus swap space). In most
cases, I will be installing additional disks for large applications
like the Oracle RDBMS, Oracle Application Server, or other J2EE application
servers.
- overlap : The overlap partition represents entire disk and is slice s2 of the disk.
- swap : The swap partition size depends on the size of RAM in the system.
If you are not sure of its size, make it double the amount of RAM in your system.
I typically like to make swap 2GB.
------------------------------------------------- Boot Device: c0t0d0s0 ================================================= Slice Mount Point Size (MB) 0 / 36112 1 swap 2049 2 overlap 38162 3 0 4 0 5 0 6 0 7 0 ================================================= Capacity: 38162 MB Allocated: 38161 MB Rounding Error: 1 MB Free: 0 MBHit F2 to continue
This is what the File System and Disk Layout screen looks like now.
File sys/Mnt point Disk/Slice Size ============================================================= / c0t0d0s0 36112 MB swap c0t0d0s1 2049 MB overlap c0t0d0s2 38162 MB
Hit F2 to continue
Screen 42 : Mount Remote File Systems?
Do you want to mount software from a remote file server? This may be
necessary if you had to remove software because of disk space problems.
Hit F2 to continue
Screen 43 : Profile
This is a confirmation screen. Verify all data is correct.
Installation Option: Initial Boot Device: c0t0d0 Client Services: None Locales: U.S.A. (UTF-8) U.S.A. (en_US.ISO8859-1) System Locale: C ( C ) Software: Solaris 10, Entire Distribution File System and Disk Layout: / c0t0d0s0 36112 MB swap c0t0d0s1 2049 MB Products: Solaris 10 Extra Value Sof ...> 87.26 MB Sun Validation Test Suite 6 69.92 MB Sun Install Check 2.0.2 17.34 MB
Hit F2 to Begin the Installation
Screen 44 : Initial Installation Progress
Afterwards it starts configuring disks, making partitions, and installing software indicating the progress.
Preparing system for Solaris install Configuring disk (c0t0d0) - Creating Solaris disk label (VTOC) Creating and checking UFS file systems - Creating / (c0t0d0s0) ================================================================== Solaris Initial Install MBytes Installed: 422.08 MBytes Remaining: 3648.09 Installing: JavaVM run time environment ***** | | | | | | 0 20 40 60 80 100 ================================================================== Solaris 10 software installation succeeded Customizing system files - Mount points table (/etc/vfstab) - Unselected disk mount points (/var/sadm/system/data/vfstab.unselected) - Network host addresses (/etc/hosts) - Network host addresses (/etc/hosts) - Environment variables (/etc/default/init) Cleaning devices Customizing system devices - Physical devices (/devices) - Logical devices (/dev) Installing boot information - Installing boot blocks (c0t0d0s0) Installation log location - /a/var/sadm/system/logs/install_log (before reboot) - /var/sadm/system/logs/install_log (after reboot) Install of CD 1 complete. Executing SolStart postinstall phase... Executing finish script "patch_finish"... Finish script patch_finish execution completed. Executing JumpStart postinstall phase... The begin script log 'begin.log' is located in /var/sadm/system/logs after reboot. The finish script log 'finish.log' is located in /var/sadm/system/logs after reboot. Pausing for 90 seconds at the "Reboot" screen. The wizard will continue to the next step unless you select "Pause". Enter 'p' to pause. Enter 'c' to continue. [c] syncing file systems... done rebooting... Resetting ... Sun Blade 150 (UltraSPARC-IIe 650MHz), No Keyboard Copyright 1998-2002 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved. OpenBoot 4.6, 1792 MB memory installed, Serial #52928138. Ethernet address 0:3:ba:27:9e:8a, Host ID: 83279e8a. Rebooting with command: boot Boot device: /pci@1f,0/ide@d/disk@0,0:a File and args: SunOS Release 5.10 Version Generic_118833-17 64-bit Copyright 1983-2005 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved. Use is subject to license terms. Hostname: alex Configuring devices. SUNW,eri0 : 100 Mbps full duplex link up Loading smf(5) service descriptions: 91/91 Creating new rsa public/private host key pair Creating new dsa public/private host key pair This system is configured with NFS version 4, which uses a domain name that is automatically derived from the system's name services. The derived domain name is sufficient for most configurations. In a few cases, mounts that cross different domains might cause files to be owned by "nobody" due to the lack of a common domain name. Do you need to override the system's default NFS version 4 domain name (yes/no) ? [no] : no For more information about how the NFS version 4 default domain name is derived and its impact, refer to the man pages for nfs(4) and nfsmapid(1m), and the System Administration Guide: Network Services. Starting Solaris Install Launcher in Command Line Mode.
Screen 45 : Continue Installation (Part 2)
After the system reboots, the installer will start the Solaris Install
Launcher in command line mode. You will then be asked for disk 2 of 5.
==================================================================
Please specify the media from which you will install Solaris 10 Software 2 for
SPARC Platforms.
Alternatively, choose the selection for "Skip" to skip this disc and go on to
the next one.
Media:
1. CD/DVD
2. Network File System
3. Skip
Media [1]: 1
Please insert the CD/DVD for Solaris 10 Software 2 for SPARC Platforms.
After you insert the disc, please press Enter.
Enter S to skip this disc and go on to the next one.
To select a different media, enter B to go Back.
<Replace disk 1 with disk 2 and hit ENTER to continue>
Reading Solaris 10 Software 2 for SPARC Platforms.... /
Launching installer for Solaris 10 Software 2 for SPARC Platforms. Please
Wait...
The following items will be installed:
Product: Solaris 10 packages (part 2)
Location: /
Size: 887.16 MB
-------------------------------------
Solaris 10 packages (part 2) 887.16 MB
Ready to Install
1. Install Now
2. Start Over
3. Exit Installation
What would you like to do [1]? 1
Solaris 10 packages (part 2)
|-1%--------------25%-----------------50%-----------------75%--------------100%|
Pausing for 30 seconds at the "Summary" screen. The wizard will continue to
the next step unless you select "Pause". Enter 'p' to pause. Enter 'c' to
continue. [c]
Screen 46 : Continue Installation (Part 3)
You will then be asked for disk 3 of 5.
Please specify the media from which you will install Solaris 10 Software 3 for
SPARC Platforms.
Alternatively, choose the selection for "Skip" to skip this disc and go on to
the next one.
Media:
1. CD/DVD
2. Network File System
3. Skip
Media [1]: 1
Please insert the CD/DVD for Solaris 10 Software 3 for SPARC Platforms.
After you insert the disc, please press Enter.
Enter S to skip this disc and go on to the next one.
To select a different media, enter B to go Back.
[]
<Replace disk 2 with disk 3 and hit ENTER to continue>
Reading Solaris 10 Software 3 for SPARC Platforms.... /
Launching installer for Solaris 10 Software 3 for SPARC Platforms. Please
Wait...
The following items will be installed:
Product: Solaris 10 packages (part 3)
Location: /
Size: 726.4 MB
-------------------------------------
Solaris 10 packages (part 3) 726.4 MB
Ready to Install
1. Install Now
2. Start Over
3. Exit Installation
What would you like to do [1]? 1
Solaris 10 packages (part 3)
|-1%--------------25%-----------------50%-----------------75%--------------100%|
Pausing for 30 seconds at the "Summary" screen. The wizard will continue to
the next step unless you select "Pause". Enter 'p' to pause. Enter 'c' to
continue. [c]
Screen 47 : Continue Installation (Part 4)
You will then be asked for disk 4 of 5.
Please specify the media from which you will install Solaris 10 Software 4 for
SPARC Platforms.
Alternatively, choose the selection for "Skip" to skip this disc and go on to
the next one.
Media:
1. CD/DVD
2. Network File System
3. Skip
Media [1]: 1
Please insert the CD/DVD for Solaris 10 Software 4 for SPARC Platforms.
After you insert the disc, please press Enter.
Enter S to skip this disc and go on to the next one.
To select a different media, enter B to go Back.
[]
<Replace disk 3 with disk 4 and hit ENTER to continue>
Reading Solaris 10 Software 4 for SPARC Platforms.... /
Launching installer for Solaris 10 Software 4 for SPARC Platforms. Please
Wait...
Java Accessibility Bridge for GNOME loaded.
The following items will be installed:
Product: Solaris 10 packages (part 4)
Location: /
Size: 557.77 MB
-------------------------------------
Solaris 10 packages (part 4) 557.77 MB
Ready to Install
1. Install Now
2. Start Over
3. Exit Installation
What would you like to do [1]? 1
Solaris 10 packages (part 4)
|-1%--------------25%-----------------50%-----------------75%--------------100%|
Pausing for 30 seconds at the "Summary" screen. The wizard will continue to
the next step unless you select "Pause". Enter 'p' to pause. Enter 'c' to
continue. [c]
Screen 48 : Continue Installation (Part 5)
You will then be asked for disk 5 of 5.
Please specify the media from which you will install Solaris 10 Software 5 for
SPARC Platforms.
Alternatively, choose the selection for "Skip" to skip this disc and go on to
the next one.
Media:
1. CD/DVD
2. Network File System
3. Skip
Media [1]: 1
Please insert the CD/DVD for Solaris 10 Software 5 for SPARC Platforms.
After you insert the disc, please press Enter.
Enter S to skip this disc and go on to the next one.
To select a different media, enter B to go Back.
[]
<Replace disk 4 with disk 5 and hit ENTER to continue>
Reading Solaris 10 Software 5 for SPARC Platforms.... /
Launching installer for Solaris 10 Software 5 for SPARC Platforms. Please
Wait...
Java Accessibility Bridge for GNOME loaded.
The following items will be installed:
Product: Solaris 10 packages (part 5)
Location: /
Size: 733.65 MB
-------------------------------------
Solaris 10 packages (part 5) 733.65 MB
Product: Sun Validation Test Suite 6.2
Location: /opt
Size: 58.84 MB
--------------------------------------
Test binaries 44.77 MB
Man Pages and Documentation 8.69 MB
Core Framework 5.39 MB
Product: Sun Install Check 2.0.2
Location: /opt
Size: 17.06 MB
--------------------------------
SUNWinck - Sun Install Check 256.6 KB
SUNWeke - Embedded Knowledge Engine 4.29 MB
SUNWicisr - Sun Install Check Input Source (Root) 9.76 MB
SUNWicis - Sun Install Check Input Source 2.78 MB
SUNWinckr - Sun Install Check (Root) 785 bytes
Ready to Install
1. Install Now
2. Start Over
3. Exit Installation
What would you like to do [1]? 1
Solaris 10 packages (part 5)
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Installing Sun Validation Test Suite 6.2
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Installing Sun Install Check 2.0.2
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Pausing for 30 seconds at the "Summary" screen. The wizard will continue to
the next step unless you select "Pause". Enter 'p' to pause. Enter 'c' to
continue. [c]
Launching installer. Please Wait...
Java Accessibility Bridge for GNOME loaded.
Installing Additional Software
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Pausing for 30 seconds at the "Summary" screen. The wizard will continue to
the next step unless you select "Pause". Enter 'p' to pause. Enter 'c' to
continue. [c]
Pausing for 90 seconds at the "Reboot" screen. The wizard will continue to
the next step unless you select "Pause". Enter 'p' to pause. Enter 'c' to
continue. [c]
Nov 26 17:43:40 alex reboot: rebooted by root
Nov 26 17:43:41 alex syslogd: going down on signal 15
syncing file systems... done
rebooting...
Resetting ...
After successfully installing the Solaris operating platform
software, there may be several tasks that need to be performed
depending on your configuration.
- Networking: If you will be using networking database files
for your TCP/IP networking configuration, several files
will need to be manually created and/or modified.
I provided a step-by-step document on how to manually
configure TCP/IP networking files to manually enable
TCP/IP networking using files:Configuring TCP/IP on Solaris – TCP/IP Configuration Files – (Quick Config Guide)- Solaris 10 Patch Cluster: It is advisable to install the latest Sun Solaris Patch Cluster
to ensure a stable operating environment.
<!– Created by: Jeff Hunter
–>
Last modified on: Tuesday, 13-May-2014 02:30:16 EDT
Page Count: 136029