Patches, i.e. partial packages bundles, as they were available with Solaris 10 and older are no more built or available with IPS (Image Packaging System) introduced with Solaris 11 Express (and OpenSolaris before). The new way is to replace full packages.
A system can be updated to the latest version (or SRUs service repository updates) with the pkg update command.
You can fetch patches with the pkg command. However, you first need to add a repository and certificate. Your Oracle rep will no doubt provide you with information on how to do this.
Patches are not available without a support contract, which is the reason there is per definition an Oracle rep involved...
The documentation from Oracle is your best friend when it comes to Solaris questions.
The short answer is that pkg update or pkg update --accept will update Solaris to the most recent packages available from the IPS repositories you have enabled on your system.
The long answer:
For Solaris 11+, software has moved from SVR4 packages and patches to IPS repositories. Similar to YUM or apt-get, IPS repositories host packages which replace older packages during updates. The pkg command is the general-purpose client utility for IPS repos. IPS repositories are also integrated with Solaris 11 boot environments to easily rollback if issues arise (check out man beadm, the Solaris 11 improvement on live upgrading)
To list publishers:
$ pkg publisher
PUBLISHER TYPE STATUS P URI
solaris origin online T http://pkg.oracle.com/solaris/release/
solaris origin online T https://pkg.oracle.com/solaris/support/
Now, most of my experience is with pre-built images so I don't know which repositories are enabled by default on a 100% fresh install. If you don't have any or the correct repositories, adding a repository (in this case, the public release repository) is as easy as
# pkg set-publisher -g http://pkg.oracle.com/solaris/release/ solaris
To get access to the support repository where Oracle publishes their Support Repository Updates, you'll need to get a certificate and key from Oracle. If you have a My Oracle Support login associated with a valid Support Identifier you can get these yourself. Directions to use a key/cert to enable the support repository are here, which contains a link to the certificate generation page. I'd post a link to the cert page directly, but my reputation only allows 2 links; documentation and instruction trump the convenience of a saved mouseclick.
In short once you have the key and certificate you can add the support IPS repository thusly
From here you can pkg update or pkg update --accept as above.
A final gotcha: If you're using the Oracle support repositories and want to keep your system in an Oracle supported configuration, you'll want to specifically update the entire consolidation package. The entire consolidation forces all relevant packages to stay on version configurations that have been tested and verified by Oracle. For that, you can use pkg update entire --accept which will selectively update packages to an exact supported configuration.
I know that previously under Sun from the GUI, updatemanager could be used. However, this is only a suggestion as I have not tried Solaris 11 or systems under the Oracle brand.
Patches, i.e. partial packages bundles, as they were available with Solaris 10 and older are no more built or available with IPS (Image Packaging System) introduced with Solaris 11 Express (and OpenSolaris before). The new way is to replace full packages.
A system can be updated to the latest version (or SRUs service repository updates) with the
pkg update
command.http://blogs.oracle.com/observatory/entry/srus
You can fetch patches with the
pkg
command. However, you first need to add a repository and certificate. Your Oracle rep will no doubt provide you with information on how to do this.Patches are not available without a support contract, which is the reason there is per definition an Oracle rep involved...
The documentation from Oracle is your best friend when it comes to Solaris questions.
The short answer is that
pkg update
orpkg update --accept
will update Solaris to the most recent packages available from the IPS repositories you have enabled on your system.The long answer: For Solaris 11+, software has moved from SVR4 packages and patches to IPS repositories. Similar to YUM or apt-get, IPS repositories host packages which replace older packages during updates. The
pkg
command is the general-purpose client utility for IPS repos. IPS repositories are also integrated with Solaris 11 boot environments to easily rollback if issues arise (check outman beadm
, the Solaris 11 improvement on live upgrading)To list publishers:
Now, most of my experience is with pre-built images so I don't know which repositories are enabled by default on a 100% fresh install. If you don't have any or the correct repositories, adding a repository (in this case, the public release repository) is as easy as
To get access to the support repository where Oracle publishes their Support Repository Updates, you'll need to get a certificate and key from Oracle. If you have a My Oracle Support login associated with a valid Support Identifier you can get these yourself. Directions to use a key/cert to enable the support repository are here, which contains a link to the certificate generation page. I'd post a link to the cert page directly, but my reputation only allows 2 links; documentation and instruction trump the convenience of a saved mouseclick.
In short once you have the key and certificate you can add the support IPS repository thusly
From here you can
pkg update
orpkg update --accept
as above.A final gotcha: If you're using the Oracle support repositories and want to keep your system in an Oracle supported configuration, you'll want to specifically update the
entire
consolidation package. Theentire
consolidation forces all relevant packages to stay on version configurations that have been tested and verified by Oracle. For that, you can usepkg update entire --accept
which will selectively update packages to an exact supported configuration.I know that previously under Sun from the GUI, updatemanager could be used. However, this is only a suggestion as I have not tried Solaris 11 or systems under the Oracle brand.