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emgr Command Purpose

Starts the interim fix manager, which installs, removes, lists, and checks system interim fixes.
Syntax

emgr -l [ -L Label | -n interim fixNumber | -u VUID ] [-v{1|2|3} ] [ -X ] [-a path] emgr -e interim fixPackage | -f ListFile [w Directory ] [ -b | -k | -I ] [ -p ] [ -q ] [ -m ] [ -o ] [ -X ] [-a path] emgr -i interim fixPackage | -f ListFile [ w Directory ] [ -C ] [ -p ] [ -q ] [ -X ] [ -a path ] emgr -C -i interim fixPackage | -f ListFile [ w Directory ] [ -p ] [ -q ] [ -X ] [ -a path ] emgr -C -L Label [ -p ] [ -q ] [ -X ] emgr -r -L Label | -n interim fixNumber | u VUID | -f ListFile [-w Directory ] [-a path] [ -b | k | -I ] [ -p ] [ -q ] [ -X ] emgr -c [ -L Label | -n interim fixNumber | u VUID | -f ListFile ] [ -w Directory ] [-a path] [v{1|2|3} ] [ -X ] emgr -M | -U [ -L Label | -n interim fixNumber | u VUID | -f ListFile ] [ -w Directory ] [-a path] [ -X ] emgr -R interim fixLabel [ -w Directory ] [-a path] [ -X ] emgr -P [ Package ] [-a path] [ -X ]

emgr -d -e interim fixPackage | -f ListFile [w Directory ] [-v{1|2|3} ]


Description

The emgr (interim fix manager) command can be used to install and manage system interim fixes. The interim fix manager installs packages created with the epkg command and maintains a database containing interim fix information. The emgr command performs the following operations:

interim fix-package installation interim fix removal interim fix listing interim fix checking interim fix mounting interim fix unmounting package locks displaying installed interim fix forced removal

Note: If an attempt is made to update a fileset (using the installp, install_all_updates, or smit update_all command) that has been locked by the interim fix manager, a notice will be displayed indicating which filesets are locked. In some cases, there is no notice to indicate why a fileset was prevented from being installed.

The lslpp command shows that any locked filesets are in the IFIXLOCKED state. Any library or executable program updated by an interim fix or service update which is in use by an active process will not be reflected in that process unless it is restarted. For example, an update that changes the ksh will not have the changes reflected in any ksh processes that are already running. Likewise, an update to the libc.a library will not be reflected in any process that is already running. In addition, any process that is using a library and does a dlopen operation of the same library after the library has been updated could experience inconsistencies if it is not restarted.

Referencing an Ifix The ways to reference an interim fix are as follows: Reference by Label Each interim fix that is installed on a given system will have a unique interim fix label. This is the unique key that binds all of the different database objects. To reference an interim fix by label, pass the label as a parameter to the L flag. For example, to run a check operation on an interim fix with label ABC123, enter:
emgr -cL ABC123

Reference by Ifix ID Each interim fix that is installed on a given system has an interim fix ID. The interim fix ID is

simply the order number in which the interim fix is listed in the interim fix database. Using this option may be convenient if you are performing operations on interim fixes based on interim fix listings. The emgr command will convert the interim fix ID into an interim fix label before performing the given operation. To reference an interim fix by ID, pass the ID as an parameter to the -n flag. Note: Ifix IDs can change as interim fixes are removed and added. Always verify the current interim fix ID number by using the -l flag to list the specific interim fix or all interim fixes. For example, to run a check operation on the first interim fix with ID equal to 1, enter:
emgr -cn1

Reference by VUID Because interim fix-packages are not formally tracked by any entity, it is possible that the same interim fix label could be used for more than one interim fix-package. However, the emgr command does not accept the installation of more than one interim fix with the same interim fix label at the same time. The VUID (Virtually Unique ID) can be used to differentiate packages with the same interim fix label. The emgrcommand converts the VUID into an interim fix label before performing the given

operation. For example, to list an installed interim fix with VUID equal to 000775364C00020316020703, enter:
emgr -l -u 000775364C00020316020703

Note: The VUID is displayed in the preview phase of interim fix installation and removal. The VUID is also displayed when listing with verbosity level set to 3 with the -v flag. Ifix Logging The following operations are logged to the emgr command log file, /var/adm/ras/emgr.log:

Installation Removal Checking Mounting Unmounting Forced Removal

Enabling Automatic Interim Fix Removal by installp An interim fix can be packaged by the epkg command to contain an APAR reference file containing APAR reference numbers. An APAR reference number will allow installp to map an interim fix back to the APARs for all the Technology

Levels where the fix was shipped. If installp determines that the interim fix is contained in the Technology Level, Service Pack, or PTF being applied, installp will automatically remove the interim fix prior to applying the updates. If an interim fix is enabled for automatic removal, the emgr command will display the following message during the installation of the interim fix:
ATTENTION: Interim fix is enabled for automatic removal by installp.

Concurrent Updates The emgr command supports the installation of a new kind of interim fix called a concurrent update. This form of interim fix contains a modification to the AIX kernel, or one of its kernel extensions, that can be applied directly to the system memory and does not require the system to be rebooted. This direct patching to the system memory allows you to safely evaluate and test a kernel modification without modifying the file containing the system's current kernel on the disk. Any concurrent update applied to the system memory will not persist after a system reboot unless you choose to commit the changes introduced by the concurrent update to the disk using the -C flag. You can apply a concurrent update directly over another patch for the same module. You do not need to remove the previous patch. However, there must be only one version of the module loaded. Also, you cannot run any concurrent update operations (in-memory or on disk) for interim fixes in the REBOOT_REQUIRED state until the system is rebooted.

The emgr command supports the apply of in-memory concurrent updates on NIM thin servers (diskless or dataless clients). Since thin servers share operating system files with other clients (/usr directory is readonly), the emgr option to commit a concurrent update to disk (-C flag) is not valid on a thin servers. Note: If the shared operating system files of a thin server need to be patched to disk, an interim fix may be applied to the SPOT resource on the NIM master that serves the thin server. Please refer to the Installing an Interim Fix into a SPOT resource section of Installation Guide or the/usr/lpp/bos.sysmgt/nim/README file (NIM IFIX/EMGR section) on your NIM master for details on installing an interim fix into a SPOT. The emgr database will be located in the /var/emgrdata directory on thin servers, since the /usr file system is read-only on thin servers. Certain emgr operations can not be supported in a thin server environment, such as bosboot and file system expansion. As a result, the followingemgr flags are not supported in a thin server environment: -C, -e, -I, -k, and -X. Also, the -b flag, which skips the bosboot process for interim fixes that require rebooting, will always be utilized when applicable since the bosboot operation cannot be supported for thin servers.
Flags
-a path Specifies an alternative directory path for installation. Note:

The -a flag works during the removal of an interim fix only if the e and -a flags of the emgr command were used during the installation of the interim fix. If the interim fix was not installed by using the e and -a flags, the emgrcommand does not completely remove an interim fix from the alternative directory path. As a workaround, use the following command to remove an interim fix that was installed in the alternative directory: chroot /alt_inst /usr/sbin/emgr -r -L efix_label Causes the emgr command to skip the usual AIX bosboot process for interim fixes that require rebooting. Specifies the check operation. Instructs the emgr command to run a check operation on the specified interim fix or interim fixes. Commits an interim fix containing concurrent updates to the disk. This option must be used along with the -i option, or can be used after an interim fix has been applied with the -i option. This causes the concurrent updates to persist across system reboots. After a concurrent update has been committed, removal will result in the module being restored to its original un-patched state, regardless of whether other patches for the module exist or not. All prior patches for the module are removed at the time the commit is performed. -d -e interim fixPackage Displays the contents and topology. This option is useful with the v flag in displaying verbosity output. Specifies the path of the interim fix-package file, and installs the interim fix-package. The interim fix-package file must be created with the epkg command and must end with the 16-bit compression extension, .Z. Specifies a file that contains one of the following: A list of package locations for the installation operation (one per line) -f ListFile A list of interim fix labels for the remove, mount, unmount, and check operations (one per line) The emgr command ignores any blank lines or lines where the first non-white-space character is the # character. Specifies the path of an interim fix-package file containing a concurrent update, and applies the concurrent update to the system memory. The update does not persist across system reboots unless the -C flag is used.

-b -c

-C

-i interim fixPackage

You can also use the -i flag to apply one concurrent update over another for the same module. Such a concurrent update is termed a "follow-on". Runs the low-level debugger for AIX bosboot by using the bosboot command's -I flag. Loads the low-level debugger during AIX bosboot using -k the bosboot command's -D flag. Instructs the emgr command to run the list operation on the specified -l interim fix or interim fixes. -L Label Selects the interim fix for this operation by interim fix label. Instructs the emgr command to perform a mount installation. When -m and interim fix is mount-installed, the interim fix files are mounted over the target files. Instructs the emgr command to mount an interim fix or interim fixes that have been mount-installed by using the -m flag. The -M flag can -M be used to mount an interim fix that was installed using the -m flag and has been unmounted by the -Uflag or by some other means, such as rebooting the system. -n interim Selects the interim fix for this operation by specifying the interim fix fixID ID. Specifies that the interim fix installation can overwrite an existing -o package. Instructs the emgr command to perform a preview for either -p installation or removal. The preview runs all of the check operations, but does not make any changes. Specifies the package-view operation, which displays all packages that -P [ Package are locked by the interim fix manager, their installer, and the locking ] label or labels. -q Suppresses all output other than errors and strong warnings. Instructs the emgr command to run a remove operation on the specified interim fix or interim fixes. -I -r Removal of an active patch reinstates any prior patch for the module, provided one exists. If no prior patch exists, the module is restored to its original un-patched state. -R Label Instructs the emgr command to run a force-remove operation. This option removes interim fix data and package locks associated with the interim fix label without actually removing interim fix files, running any remove scripts, or boot processing. This option can be used for only one interim fix at a time. The interim fix label is required to identify the target interim fix. Attention: This method of interim fix removal should be considered an emergency procedure. Because this method can create inconsistencies on the target system, the force remove method should be used only if

all other methods of removing the interim fix are unsuccessful. -u VUID Selects the interim fix for this operation by specifying the VUID. Instructs the emgr command to unmount an interim fix or interim -U fixes that have been mount-installed by using the -mflag. Specifies the verbosity level for the listing operation or the verification -v{1|2|3} level for the check operation. Valid levels are 1, 2, and 3. Instructs the emgr command to use the specified working directory -w Directory instead of the default /tmp directory. Attempts to expand any file systems where there is insufficient space to perform the requested emgr operation. This option expands file systems based on available space and size estimates that are provided by the interim fix-package and the emgr command. Notes:

1. It is possible to exhaust available disk space during an


-X installation even if the -X flag is used. This is more likely if other files are being created or expanded in the same file systems during an installation.

2. Remote file systems cannot be expanded by


the emgr command.

Exit Status

0 All of the emgr command operations completed successfully. >0 An error occurred.
Security

System administrators or users with the aix.system.install authorization can run the emgr command on a multi-level secure (MLS) system. Ifix data, saved files, and temporary files are accessible only by the root user.

The emgr command looks for a supported MD5 generating command on the system. If one is located, the emgr command displays the MD5 checksum to the user. The user can then cross check this MD5 sum with a secured source. If an MD5 generating command is not located, theemgr command takes no further action. The user can force set the path to an MD5 command by exporting the EMGR_MD5_CMD shell variable. This variable should contain the absolute path to the MD5 generating command. Note: This feature is not supported in the original release of interim fix management. It is recommended that the user updates to the latest level of interim fix management by updating bos.rte.install to the latest level.
Examples 1. To

preview the installation of an interim fixpackage called games.020303.epkg.Z, enter:


emgr -p -e games.020303.epkg.Z

2. To

install the interim fix-package called games.020303.epkg.Z and automatically expand file systems if additional space is needed, enter:
emgr -X -e games.020303.epkg.Z

3.

To list all interim fixes on the system, enter:


emgr -l

4. To

do a level 3 listing of interim fix label games, enter:


emgr -lv3 -L games

5. To

remove the interim fix with label games, enter:


emgr -r -L games

6. To

preview the removal of the interim fix labels in file /tmp/myfixes, enter:
emgr -rp -f /tmp/myfixes

7. To check all interim fixes with verification level 2, enter:


emgr -cv2

8. To check interim fix ID number 3 with verification level 1 (the default verification level), enter:
emgr -c -n3

9. To

check interim fix with VUID of 000775364C00020316020703 and verification level 3, enter:
emgr -u 000775364C00020316020703 -c -v3

10. To list all locked packages and their interim fix labels, enter:
emgr -P

To list all interim fix labels that have locked the installp package bos.rte.lvm, enter:
11.

emgr -P bos.rte.lvm

To mount-install the interim fix-package called games.020303.epkg.Z and suppress AIX bosboot, enter:
12.
emgr -e games.020303.epkg.Z -mb

To mount all interim fix files that have been mount-installed on the system by using the m option, enter:
13.
emgr -M

To unmount all interim fix files associated with interim fix label games, enter:
14.
emgr -U -L games

To apply an interim fix-package called kernelmod.031007.epkg.Z with concurrent updates to the system memory, enter:
15.
emgr -i kernelmod.031007.epkg.Z

To commit the concurrent updates associated with the interim fix label kernelmod to the disk, enter:
16.
emgr -C -L kernelmod

To apply an interim fix-package called kernelmod2.031007.epkg.Z with concurrent updates to the system memory, and also to commit the concurrent updates to the disk, enter:
17.
emgr -i kernelmod2.031007.epkg.Z -C

To display level 3 verbosity output on interim fix-package test.102403.epkg.Z, enter:


18.
emgr -v3 -d test.102403.epkg.Z

Files
/usr/sbin/emgr /usr/emgrdata/DBS/ifix.db /usr/emgrdata/DBS/files.db /usr/emgrdata/DBS/pkglck.db /usr/emgrdata/DBS/prereq.db /usr/emgrdata/DBS/e2eprereq.db /usr/emgrdata/DBS/aparref.db Contains Contains Contains Contains Contains Contains Contains the the the the the the the emgr command interim fix header database interim fix files database package locks database prerequisite database interim fix prerequisite database APAR reference file database

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