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Storage Foundation 7.4.1 Configuration and Upgrade Guide - Solaris
Last Published:
2019-06-18
Product(s):
InfoScale & Storage Foundation (7.4.1)
Platform: Solaris
- Section I. Introduction and configuration of Storage Foundation
- Section II. Upgrade of Storage Foundation
- Planning to upgrade Storage Foundation
- About the upgrade
- Supported upgrade paths
- Preparing to upgrade SF
- Using Install Bundles to simultaneously install or upgrade full releases (base, maintenance, rolling patch), and individual patches
- Upgrading Storage Foundation
- Performing an automated SF upgrade using response files
- Upgrading SF using Boot Environment upgrade
- Performing post-upgrade tasks
- Optional configuration steps
- Recovering VVR if automatic upgrade fails
- Resetting DAS disk names to include host name in FSS environments
- Upgrading disk layout versions
- Upgrading VxVM disk group versions
- Updating variables
- Setting the default disk group
- Upgrading the Array Support Library
- Converting from QuickLog to Multi-Volume support
- Verifying the Storage Foundation upgrade
- Planning to upgrade Storage Foundation
- Section III. Post configuration tasks
- Section IV. Configuration and Upgrade reference
- Appendix A. Installation scripts
- Appendix B. Configuring the secure shell or the remote shell for communications
- About configuring secure shell or remote shell communication modes before installing products
- Manually configuring passwordless ssh
- Setting up ssh and rsh connection using the installer -comsetup command
- Setting up ssh and rsh connection using the pwdutil.pl utility
- Restarting the ssh session
- Enabling and disabling rsh for Solaris
Changing root user into root role
On Oracle Solaris 11, you need to create root user to perform installation. This means that a local user cannot assume the root role. After installation, you may want to turn root user into root role for a local user, who can log in as root.
Log in as root user.
Change the root account into role.
# rolemod -K type=role root
# getent user_attr root
root::::type=role;auths=solaris.*;profiles=All;audit_flags=lo\ :no;lock_after_retries=no;min_label=admin_low;clearance=admin_high
Assign the root role to a local user who was unassigned the role.
# usermod -R root admin
For more information, see the Oracle documentation on Oracle Solaris 11 operating system.