H06.27 Software Installation and Upgrade Guide

cat3 cat6 whatis
/usr/share/man:
After you run merge_whatis, the directory contains a file named whatis, containing the
database. If you have previously installed OSS, a file named whatis_old is present, containing
the previous version of the database.
Configure Specific Products (Post-System Load)
This section contains information about the configuration of various products such as OSS and
SMF. See product-specific documentation for more information on installation and configuration.
Update NonStop TCP/IP Configuration Files
NOTE: You must have all the NonStop TCP/IP configuration files in your $SYSTEM.ZTCPIP
subvolume. Otherwise, applications dependent on proper network connections will fail.
Alerts:
See “Back Up (Copy) Files in the $SYSTEM.ZTCPIP Subvolume (Best Practice)” (page 110).
Keep your current PROTOCOL file in your $SYSTEM.ZTCPIP subvolume. Update it (if necessary)
with the new lines from the sample PROTOCOL file (SMPLPROT).
Step 1: Copy the Sample TCP/IP Files Into $SYSTEM.ZTCPIP (Optional)
You need to copy the sample files if you do not have any of the following NonStop TCP/IP
configuration files in your $SYSTEM.ZTCPIP subvolume:
HOSTS
PROTOCOL
NETWORKS
PORTCONF
RESCONF
SERVICES
Perform a FUP DUP operation to rename the sample configuration files from this RVU SUT to the
real file name.
NOTE: Copy these configuration files only if you do not already have versions of these files.
Depending on your applications, if you copy the configuration files, you might have to insert
previous network port information into each individually copied file.
The sample configuration files are named:
SMPLHOST
SMPLPROT
SMPLNETW
SMPLPORT
SMPLRESC
SMPLSERV
To copy the sample files:
>FUP DUP $SYSTEM.ZTCPIP.SMPLHOST, $SYSTEM.ZTCPIP.HOSTS
>FUP DUP $SYSTEM.ZTCPIP.SMPLPROT, $SYSTEM.ZTCPIP.PROTOCOL
126 Resuming Normal Operations