You are commenting using your Facebook account. Notify me of new comments via email. Notify me of new posts via email. Skip to content Description: Patch Clusters and Patch Bundles are popular collections of patches providing specific functionality. The patches contained in this patch cluster are considered the most important and highly recommended patches for Solaris They provide the least amount of change required to address known security, data corruption and availability issues.
The Recommended Cluster comprises: The latest revision of the patch and package utility patches that ensure correct patching operations. The minimum revision of Solaris Operating System patches which address security and Sun Alert data corruption and availability issues. Any patch that is required to correctly install the above patches.
When new patches are released that meet the above criteria, the patch cluster is updated. If there is insufficient space, installation is halted. The standard practice of Oracle is to release a CPU once every quarter. The EIS patch baseline has additional patches included by Oracle field engineers for additional products and to address issues that do not meet the criteria for inclusion in the recommended patch cluster.
Search Scope:. Document Information About This Book 1. Managing User Accounts and Groups Overview 5. Managing User Accounts and Groups Tasks 6. Managing Client-Server Support Overview 7. Managing Diskless Clients Tasks 8. Introduction to Shutting Down and Booting a System 9. Shutting Down and Booting a System Overview Shutting Down a System Tasks Booting an Oracle Solaris System Tasks Working With Oracle Configuration Manager Managing Services Overview Managing Services Tasks Managing Software Overview In MOS, if a patch is marked "obsolete," the patch has been withdrawn from the release.
All rights reserved. The package that I was unzip'ing contained a lot more than just the entries that I showed that errored out and the rest of it created the necessary directories and files just fine. Any thoughts on how to debug this? This is sounding more and more like permissions issues. I have mapped root and a non-privledged user. I was able to mount the NFS share as root and access it via the non-privledged user.
I could disable root squash on the NFS share and allow root access as well. Check your user maps in SFU and make sure you are mapping correctly. You can also use mapadmin command line tool to list them out and post them here if you like.
I guess I'm a little hazy as to why this would be a permission problem when the ENTIRE rest of the contents of the Solaris package unzip's just fine, just not the man pages with the :: embedded in the filenames. Anyway, I will attempt to unzip this file as a regular user in a regular user directory and see what happens and let you know. Browse Community. Turn on suggestions. Auto-suggest helps you quickly narrow down your search results by suggesting possible matches as you type.
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