Your company’s security policy prohibits access to the Internet. You already installed an instance
of Oracle Solaris 11 on an M-series server for base testing. You used the text install media to
install the system. You also installed a package repository on the same system.
There are 10 M-series servers that have just been installed on the local network.
Can you immediately install an AI server on your testing machine order to install Oracle Solaris 11
on these 10 servers?
A.
Yes, by using the existing Solaris 10 Jumpstart server.
B.
Yes, by using the text install media for the AI software.
C.
Yes, by using the Installed package repository.
D.
No, you must download the AI .iso image from Oracle first.
E.
No, the Solaris large-server group must be installed because it contains the AI setup tools.
F.
No, the Solaris 11 full n repository must be installed on the AI server.
G.
No, you must have a prebuilt image that was created by the distribution constructor.
Explanation:
Ensure that the install server can access an IPS software package repository. AI
requires the install/installadm package.
Note:
* To use AI, you must first set up a server on your network. When a client system boots, the
system gets installation specifications from the server, retrieves software packages from an Oracle
Solaris package repository, and the software is installed on the client system.
D
In the course manual says (advance system administrator):
“Be sure to download the Automated Install image and not the LiveCD image or the text install
image to the ZFS root pool file system that you created earlier.”
D
C
# installadm create-service -y
0% : Creating service from: pkg:/install-image/solaris-auto-install
0% : Using publisher(s):
0% : solaris: http://pkg.oracle.com/solaris/release/
5% : Refreshing Publisher(s)
7% : Startup Phase
15% : Planning Phase
61% : Download Phase
90% : Actions Phase
91% : Finalize Phase
91% : Creating i386 service: solaris11_2-i386
91% : Image path: /export/auto_install/solaris11_2-i386
91% : Setting “solaris” publisher URL in default manifest to:
91% : http://pkg.oracle.com/solaris/release/
91% : DHCP is not being managed by install server.
91% : Creating default-i386 alias
91% : Setting “solaris” publisher URL in default manifest to:
91% : http://pkg.oracle.com/solaris/release/
91% : DHCP is not being managed by install server.
91% : No local DHCP configuration found. This service is the default
91% : alias for all PXE clients. If not already in place, the following should
91% : be added to the DHCP configuration:
91% : Boot server IP: 10.80.239.2
91% : Boot file(s):
91% : bios clients (arch 00:00): default-i386/boot/grub/pxegrub2
91% : uefi clients (arch 00:07): default-i386/boot/grub/grub2netx64.efi
91% :
100% : Created Service: ‘solaris11_2-i386’
100% : Refreshing SMF service svc:/system/install/server:default
C because question was about AI server (I think install service) not about installing M10 machines. To install another M10 servers you need AI iso but you do not need AI iso to create service.
Wrote Solaris 11 1Z0-822 exam recently and passed with a good score of 85% (the passing score is 70% now)!
I had 80 questions in total, questions were mainly on SMF, IPS, ZFS, Configuring the Network, Securing the Oracle Solairs 11 O/S, Installing Oracle Solaris 11 on multiple hosts and so on.
The 1Z0-822 exam has been revised since 2016, I do recommend you to learn the latest 1Z0-822 dumps here:
http://www.oraclebraindump.com/?s=1Z0-822
(Those are part of PassLeader 1Z0-822 dumps, suggest to get its full version 1Z0-822 dumps with VCE and PDF.)
Good Luck!