Upgrading an installation in linux, In solaris – Dell Emulex Family of Adapters User Manual
Page 67

OneCommand™ Manager Application
P010066-01A Rev. A
2. Installing and Uninstalling OneCommand Manager Application Components
Installing the OneCommand Manager Application
67
“OneCommand Manager Secure Management Configuration Requirements” on
page 85 for configuration instructions.
To view the options for unattended installation, type
./install -h
or
./install --help
Upgrading an Installation in Linux
The OneCommand Manager application supports the following upgrade paths:
You can upgrade from an earlier Core Kit to a later Enterprise Kit.
You can upgrade from an earlier Enterprise Kit to a later Enterprise Kit.
See “Attended Installation in Linux” on page 65 or “Unattended Installation in Linux”
on page 66 for instructions.
In Solaris
The following must be installed for the utilities to function properly:
The Solaris FC/FCoE inbox driver version emlxs 2.80.8.0 or later or the
out-of-box driver version elxfc 2.85.xx.xx must be installed for FC/FCoE
management.
The NIC inbox driver version oce 4.4.173.9.3S or later or the out-of-box driver
version elxnic 4.1.xx.xx must be installed for UCNA management.
Note: If Emulex UCNAs or CFAs are installed on the system, the NIC driver
must be installed and reporting all NIC ports. Otherwise, the
OneCommand Manager application cannot manage UCNAs or CFAs.
To install the OneCommand Manager application in Solaris:
1. Copy the Solaris utility kit to a temporary directory on your system.
2. Untar the utility kit:
tar xvf elxocm-solaris-
3. Change to the newly created elxocm-solaris-
cd ./elxocm-solaris-
Note: Prior to installation, OneCommand groups must be configured on the LDAP
network or the local host machine for Secure Management operation. See
“OneCommand Manager Secure Management Configuration Requirements” on
page 85 for configuration instructions.
4. Execute the install script to begin installation. If the HBAnyware utility,
OneCommand Manager Core or OneCommand Manager Enterprise applications or
the Solaris driver utilities are already present on the system, the install script
attempts to remove them first:
./install