Chapter 6. Installing the Solaris 9 Software


When installing the operating system onto a machine, you’ll be performing one of two types of installations: initial or upgrade.

You’ll perform an initial installation either on a system that does not have an existing Solaris operating system already installed on it or when you want to completely wipe out the existing operating system and reinstall it.

An upgrade is performed on a system that is already running Solaris 2.6, Solaris 7, Solaris 8, or a previous release of Solaris 9. An upgrade will save as many modifications as possible from the previous version of Solaris that is currently running on your system.

Another option when upgrading your system is to take advantage of the Solaris live upgrade, which enables an upgrade to be installed while the operating system is running. The process involves creating a duplicate boot environment on an unused disk slice and upgrading the duplicate boot environment. When you’re ready to switch and make the upgraded boot environment active, you simply activate it and reboot. The old boot environment remains available as a fallback to the original boot environment by quickly reactivating and rebooting the old environment.

Caution

You cannot upgrade your system to a software group that is not currently installed on the system. For example, you cannot upgrade to the Developer Solaris Software group if you previously installed the End User Solaris Software group. You can, however, add software to a system that is not currently part of the installed software group.


Regardless of whether you are going to perform an initial installation or an upgrade, you need to first determine whether your hardware meets the minimum requirements to support the Solaris 9 environment.

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