View the Exhibit to inspect the boot environment Information displayed within a non global zone on your system.
Which two options describe the solaris-1 boot environment?
A.
The solaris-1 boot environment is not bootable.
B.
The solaris-1 boot environment is incomplete.
C.
The solaris-1 boot environment was created automatically when the non global zone was created.
D.
The solaris-1 boot environment was created in the non-global zone using the beadm create command.E. The solaris-1 boot environment is associated with a non active global zone boot environment.
Explanation:
A: The – of the Active Column indicates that this boot environment is inactive, and hence not bootable.
Note: The values for the Active column are as follows:
R – Active on reboot.
N – Active now.
NR – Active now and active on reboot.
“-” – Inactive.
“!” – Unbootable boot environments in a non-global zone are represented by an exclamation point.
D: beadm create
Creates a new boot environment name, beName.
Note: beadm list
Lists information about the existing boot environment, which is be Name, or lists information for all boot
environments if be Name is not provided.
Note: Using beadm Utility (Tasks)
You can use the beadm utility to create and manage snapshots and clones of your boot environments.
Note the following distinctions relevant to boot environment administration:
* A snapshot is a read-only image of a dataset or boot environment at a given point in time. A snapshot is not
bootable.
* A boot environment is a bootable Oracle Solaris environment, consisting of a root dataset and, optionally,
other datasets mounted underneath it. Exactly one boot environment can be active at a time.
* A clone of a boot environment is created by copying another boot environment. A clone is bootable.