hi may be someone ask before, the answer is no can one use s10 jumpstart to install s11x? TIA
On 12/8/2010 4:49 PM, [email protected] wrote:
Send caiman-discuss mailing list submissions to [email protected] To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit http://mail.opensolaris.org/mailman/listinfo/caiman-discuss or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to [email protected] You can reach the person managing the list at [email protected] When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific than "Re: Contents of caiman-discuss digest..." Today's Topics: 1. Re: RFE: Finish Script hook (Scott Dickson) 2. Re: RFE: Finish Script hook (Ethan Quach) 3. Re: RFE: Finish Script hook (Shawn Walker) 4. Re: Logging AI progress to the console? (Seth Goldberg) 5. Re: RFE: Finish Script hook (Dave Miner) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Message: 1 Date: Wed, 08 Dec 2010 16:32:46 -0500 From: Scott Dickson<[email protected]> To: Dave Miner<[email protected]> Cc: caiman-discuss<[email protected]> Subject: Re: [caiman-discuss] RFE: Finish Script hook Message-ID:<[email protected]> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"; Format="flowed" On 12/ 8/10 03:21 PM, Dave Miner wrote:On 12/ 8/10 02:48 PM, Scott Dickson wrote:Looking at AI (and even bootable AI), finish scripts are sort of a hassle. It appears that if I want to have my own finish scripts, there's a lot of overhead: I have to bundle it all up into a package, complete with SMF manifest and activations, put it into my own repository, make sure I install that package, and *then* do whatever I wanted the finish script to do. Seems a lot. What about having an almost empty package that I can add, for the sake of discussion service/finish-script, that includes the SMF infrastructure to make it execute at first boot (and only first boot), along with a named exit that I can use for the payload. So, this package provides a null script called /etc/init.d/finish-script, for example. I can then either put my code there or make it call my code. This really reduces the overhead in terms of development for adoption. Having do build my own packages, using the distro constructor, or anything like that is way too burdensome. Or have I missed something really simple here?Scott, we've been discussing ways we might make this process easier. One thing I don't understand is how you're proposing to deliver the contents of your hypothetical /etc/init.d/finish-script to an AI client? Constructing an SMF manifest and IPS package is really not that difficult, though I agree it's daunting at first to figure it out from the pretty general documentation that SMF and pkg provide. I'm looking to provide a pretty simple cookbook approach real soon that should shorten the distance to happiness while we consider enhancements that could make thisA lot of the customers I talk to already have an NFS infrastructure that they use to deliver the finish scripts, the packages they load, etc. But that doesn't really help here. Clearly, I had no thought through the entire process. I suppose my notion was that I would want to leverage existing infrastructure as much as possible. I guess this very quickly gets to a chicken& egg scenario. Even with a well known name for the hook, as you asked, how to get that content to the system. And presuming the NFS world or something strange like that is almost always going to fail to suffice. This really isn't an easy problem. Folks often have very complicated scenarios. Perhaps an easy, canned cookbook to set up a minimal repo on whatever system they would have used for their finish scripts would be the best bet. The thing I keep coming back to is the simpler this is, the more it wears down the adoption hurdle. If I have to figure out all of this just to install a server in my environment, it's going to really slow down folks adoption. --SCotteasier. Dave
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