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Oracle Solaris 11.1 Administration: Oracle Solaris Zones, Oracle Solaris 10 Zones, and Resource Management Oracle Solaris 11.1 Information Library |
Part I Oracle Solaris Resource Management
1. Introduction to Resource Management
2. Projects and Tasks (Overview)
3. Administering Projects and Tasks
4. Extended Accounting (Overview)
5. Administering Extended Accounting (Tasks)
6. Resource Controls (Overview)
7. Administering Resource Controls (Tasks)
8. Fair Share Scheduler (Overview)
9. Administering the Fair Share Scheduler (Tasks)
10. Physical Memory Control Using the Resource Capping Daemon (Overview)
11. Administering the Resource Capping Daemon (Tasks)
13. Creating and Administering Resource Pools (Tasks)
14. Resource Management Configuration Example
15. Introduction to Oracle Solaris Zones
16. Non-Global Zone Configuration (Overview)
17. Planning and Configuring Non-Global Zones (Tasks)
18. About Installing, Shutting Down, Halting, Uninstalling, and Cloning Non-Global Zones (Overview)
Zone Installation and Administration Concepts
About Shutting Down, Halting, Rebooting, and Uninstalling Zones
19. Installing, Booting, Shutting Down, Halting, Uninstalling, and Cloning Non-Global Zones (Tasks)
20. Non-Global Zone Login (Overview)
21. Logging In to Non-Global Zones (Tasks)
22. About Zone Migrations and the zonep2vchk Tool
23. Migrating Oracle Solaris Systems and Migrating Non-Global Zones (Tasks)
24. About Automatic Installation and Packages on an Oracle Solaris 11.1 System With Zones Installed
25. Oracle Solaris Zones Administration (Overview)
26. Administering Oracle Solaris Zones (Tasks)
27. Configuring and Administering Immutable Zones
28. Troubleshooting Miscellaneous Oracle Solaris Zones Problems
Part III Oracle Solaris 10 Zones
29. Introduction to Oracle Solaris 10 Zones
30. Assessing an Oracle Solaris 10 System and Creating an Archive
31. (Optional) Migrating an Oracle Solaris 10 native Non-Global Zone Into an Oracle Solaris 10 Zone
32. Configuring the solaris10 Branded Zone
33. Installing the solaris10 Branded Zone
Cloning allows you to copy an existing configured and installed zone on your system to rapidly provision a new zone on the same system. Note that at a minimum, you must reset properties and resources for the components that cannot be identical for different zones. Thus, the zonepath must always be changed. In addition, for a shared-IP zone, the IP addresses in any net resources must be different. For an exclusive-IP zone, the physical property of any net resources must be different. Application-specific configurations generally must be re-configured in the clone. For example, if you have a database instance in a zone and you clone that zone, you might have to reconfigure the database instance in the clone so that it recognizes itself as a different instance.
Cloning a zone is a faster way to install a zone.
The new zone will include any changes that have been made to customize the source zone, such as added packages or file modifications.
When the source zonepath and the target zonepath both reside on ZFS and are in the same pool, the zoneadm clone command automatically uses ZFS to clone the zone. When using ZFS clone, the data is not actually copied until it is modified. Thus, the initial clone takes very little time. The zoneadm command takes a ZFS snapshot of the source zonepath, and sets up the target zonepath. The zonepath of the destination zone is used to name the ZFS clone.
Note - You can specify that a ZFS zonepath be copied instead of ZFS cloned, even though the source could be cloned in this way.
See Cloning a Non-Global Zone on the Same System for more information.