Which three statements describe the current state of the system?

A server has a nonglobal zone named zoneA. The following boot environments are listed in the global zone.

Which three statements describe the current state of the system?

A server has a nonglobal zone named zoneA. The following boot environments are listed in the global zone.

Which three statements describe the current state of the system?

A.
The BE1 boot environment cannot be activated from the nonglobal zone.

B.
The nonglobal zone cannot be booted to solaris-1 BE at this time.

C.
The solaris-1 BE cannot be activated from the nonglobal zone.

D.
To boot the nonglobal zone to the solaris-1 BE, the global zone must first be booted to the
solaris-1 BE.

E.
The solaris-1 BE has been activated in the nonglobal zone.

F.
The nonglobal zone solaris-1 BE is not bootable and must be repaired.

Explanation:
C: You cannot activate an unbootable BE in a nested BE.
BE solaris-1 is marked with !R.
Unbootable BEs inside of a nested BE are represented by an exclamation point (!)
BF: BE solaris-1 is marked with !R.
Unbootable BEs inside of a nested BE are represented by an exclamation point (!)
Incorrect:
Not A: BE1 can be activated. It is bootable (not marked with a !)
Not D: Different BEs can be used in the two zones.
Not E: BE solaris-1 is not marked with an N. The Active field indicates whether the boot
environment is active now, represented by N



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bigsur

bigsur

u’r wrong guys: B,C,D
after a global zone reboot on solaris-1BE:
BE Flags Mountpoint Space Policy Created
— —– ———- —– —— ——-
solaris !R – 727.47M static 2015-11-10 21:37
solaris-1 NR / 4.26M static 2015-11-15 14:00

riverPlate

riverPlate

B C D

https://docs.oracle.com/cd/E23824_01/html/E21801/unbootable.html

Unbootable Boot Environments

Both global zones and non-global zones contain boot environments. Each boot environment in a non-global zone is associated with a parent boot environment in the global zone, so that, if a global zone boot environment is inactive, the related non-global zone boot environment is unbootable. However, if you boot into that parent boot environment in the global zone, the related boot environment in the non-global zone becomes bootable.

Note – If the boot environment is unbootable, it is marked with an exclamation point (!) in the Active column in the beadm list output.