Thank you everyone :-) Bob Dobbs Srinivasa Cherukuri Christopher L. Barnard Connolly, Michael Mike Salehi Wanderley, Alex William Enestvedt Paul.Sagneri Rich Teer Michael Horton Edwin Zoeller Weiss, Jeffrey Murdock, Matt Ryan Krenzischek Anthony D'Atri Rich Kulawiec Gold Sun Question: Can Solaris 9 patches be installed on a production system (a Oracle server) without taking it to single user mode? Answers: What I did: 1) Stop Oracle services on the system. 2) Load the patches even though the README files require it to be done on single user mode. 3) Reboot the system. 4) Working fine. Bill R. Williams: Warning: This is pretty much opinion. Opinion from years of experience with various operating systems, but opinion none the less. I presume that you are referring to applying a patch clusetr rather than one or two specific patches. With that assumption.. Possible? Yes. Good idea? No. In addition to the recommendation that patches be installed in single user mode, you most likely will find that more than one of the patches is going to require a reboot. The gist of it is that if your system is running you are going to be replacing things that are in use. (Binaries, libraries, etc.) The new software will replace all sorts of things including those which affect device handling. IOW: the running system will end up a mixed-bag of library call parameters and API changes, etc. It's just not a good idea if you can possibly help it. Since you are going to have to re-boot to bring all the modified software online, it's best to just wait until you can take the thing down and follow the recommended procedure of patching in single-user mode. Especially if you are running Oracle. It can be fussy and prone to tantrums. Free Tip: Read the READMEs! From what an instructor at a Solaris class once said, the biggest cause of problems after applying a patch cluster is failure to find the gotchas in the README files! Wolfgang Schwurack: I've been patching my servers - 70+ for over 5 year. Most are production systems 24x7, I never take it to a single user mode when doing patches. I've never had a problem patching when the servers are in production mode, this includes oracle servers. Weiss, Jeffrey: Generally you can do this UNLESS it is a kernel patch or for an OS critical driver, or a large cluster containing a kernel patch. The readme in the patch does say whether single user is required. Applying a patch when a system really should be in single user leaves that system unstable and prone to spontaneous panic. Not a good thing for an Oracle box! I made this mistake years ago. Only once. Paul.Sagneri: You're probably going to be bombarded with the same answer, but here you go...you can definitely load the patches to a prod system without taking it to single user, I've done it a million times, but depending on the app and the patches, some may not load, or some may not load correctly and you risk getting stuck having to reload the patches after the fact anyway. I've even ran across an instance on a Sun Cluster environment where the SSP's had problems after the patch cluster install because they were not in single user mode. Better safe than sorry. You'll probably need to reboot the server anyway for the patches to take affect. Good luck. Wanderley, Alex: It all depends what kind of patch are you installing. Take a look at the README file which comes with the patch. There you'll see if it has to be installed in single user or not. Christopher L. Barnard: sure. Just read the README of the patch carefully first. If it says in there that you need to reboot after installing or install in single-user, then you have to. But if it does not explicitly specify that, just take a look at the files that will be changed and make sure that you are not going to use that file when applying the patch. Melissa Young UNIX System Admin __________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Make Yahoo! your home page http://www.yahoo.com/r/hs _______________________________________________ sunmanagers mailing list sunmanagers@sunmanagers.org http://www.sunmanagers.org/mailman/listinfo/sunmanagersReceived on Mon May 16 12:23:41 2005
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