sysidtool, sysidnet, sysidns, sysidsys, sysidroot, sysidpm, sysidnfs4, sysidkbd - system configuration
/usr/sbin/sysidnet
/usr/sbin/sysidns
/usr/sbin/sysidsys
/usr/sbin/sysidroot
/usr/sbin/sysidpm
/usr/sbin/sysidnfs4
/usr/sbin/sysidkbd
sysidtool is a suite of programs that configure a new system, or one that has been unconfigured with sys-unconfig(1M). The sysidtool programs run automatically at system installation, or during the first boot after a machine has been successfully unconfigured.
These programs have no effect except at such times, and should never be run manually.
The sysidtool programs set up the appropriate information in the machine's configuration files, in the kernel, and on the machine's network interface. The following list shows the available commands and the information for which each of the commands lists.
sysidnet: network configuration
sysidns: name service configuration
sysidsys: miscellaneous system configuration
sysidroot: control superuser information
sysidpm: power management configuration
sysidnfs4: NFSv4 domain configuration
sysidkbd: keyboard layout configuration
sysidconfig: host- or platform-specific configuration
The sysidtool programs attempt to obtain system configuration information from various name service databases, for example, NIS, or from the sysidcfg(4) file, and you are prompted to provide the information if it cannot be found. However, you can avoid one or more of the prompts by preconfiguring the appropriate configuration information in the name service databases or in the sysidcfg(4) file.
To preconfigure the information in the name service databases, you must use the name service commands or the Solstice AdminSuite tools. See for more details about how to preconfigure the system configuration information.
The machine's configuration information is set up in its /etc and /var files.
If a system has more than one network interface, you can use sysidtool to configure all interfaces on the system.
You cannot use the name service databases or the sysidcfg(4) file to suppress the Power Management configuration prompt. However, you can suppress it by creating either the /autoshutdown or /noautoshutdown file before installation reboot. Accordingly, the auto-shutdown feature is silently configured. The /autoshutdown or /noautoshutdown files are removed by sysidpm before it exits.
sysidnfs4 installs the /etc/.NFS4inst_state.domain file upon the successful configuration of the NFSv4 domain name. If this file is present during system reboot, the sysidnfs4 program is run but no prompts are displayed. The suppression of prompts is intended for system upgrades, in which a system configuration typically stays unchanged. The stability level of this interface is obsolete
sysidkbd prompts for the keyboards with zero-bCountryCode and then sets the keyboard layout string in the /etc/default/kbd file. If the sysidkbd gets the valid keyboard layout string, the string will be set into the entry "LAYOUT=" in the file.
/etc/passwd
/etc/shadow
/etc/inet/hosts
/etc/inet/netmasks
/var/nis/NIS_COLD_START
/var/yp/aliases
/var/yp/binding/*/ypservers
/etc/.sysIDtool.state
/etc/power.conf
/etc/.PM_RECONFIGURE
/etc/.NFS4inst_state.domain
/etc/default/kdb
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
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powerd(1M), sys-unconfig(1M), sysidconfig(1M), passwd(4), power.conf(4), shadow (4), sysidcfg(4), attributes(5)
NIS+ might not be supported in future releases of the Solaris Operating system. Tools to aid the migration from NIS+ to LDAP are available in the current Solaris release. For more information, visit http://www.sun.com/directory/nisplus/transition.html.
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