Keith Mitchell wrote:
> entire is installed by default. It's a special package type called an
> incorporation, used to track upgrades. When you upgrade "entire," what
> really happens is that any packages you have installed that are part of
> "entire" are upgraded. So yes, you do need a new boot en
Got it, thanks for the explanations.
--
This message posted from opensolaris.org
* Danek Duvall (Danek.Duvall at Sun.COM) wrote:
> On Thu, Aug 06, 2009 at 10:56:52AM -0700, Glenn Lagasse wrote:
>
> > * Aaron Epps (epps.aaron at mayo.edu) wrote:
> > > What is it and why isn't it installed by default? After doing a clean
> > > install of OpenSolaris 2009.06 I'm immediately told
On Thu, Aug 06, 2009 at 10:56:52AM -0700, Glenn Lagasse wrote:
> * Aaron Epps (epps.aaron at mayo.edu) wrote:
> > What is it and why isn't it installed by default? After doing a clean
> > install of OpenSolaris 2009.06 I'm immediately told to install this
> > update; when I do it creates an entire
* Aaron Epps (epps.aaron at mayo.edu) wrote:
> What is it and why isn't it installed by default? After doing a clean
> install of OpenSolaris 2009.06 I'm immediately told to install this
> update; when I do it creates an entirely new boot environment. What
> happens when I install the "entire" pack
entire is installed by default. It's a special package type called an
incorporation, used to track upgrades. When you upgrade "entire," what
really happens is that any packages you have installed that are part of
"entire" are upgraded. So yes, you do need a new boot environment to
upgrade entir
What is it and why isn't it installed by default? After doing a clean install
of OpenSolaris 2009.06 I'm immediately told to install this update; when I do
it creates an entirely new boot environment. What happens when I install the
"entire" package? Do I really need a whole new boot environment