Oracle Certified Professional, Oracle Solaris 10 System Administrator

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Oracle Certified Professional, Oracle Solaris 10 System Administrator

This certification is for system administrators tasked with performing essential system administration procedures on the Solaris Operating System (Solaris OS) and technical application support staff responsible for administering a networked server running on the Solaris OS

Duration : 2 Months

Oracle Solaris 10 System Administrator Certified Professional Exam, Part I (1Z0-877)

  • Section 1: Install Software

Explain the Solaris 10 OS installation and upgrade options for CD / DVD, including how to provide Minimal Installations for SPARC, x64, and x86-based systems.

Perform an OS installation from CD / DVD for SPARC, x64, and x86- based systems.

  • Section 2: Manage File Systems

Explain the Solaris 10 OS directory hierarchy, including root subdirectories, file components, and file types, and create and remove hard and symbolic links.

Explain disk architecture including the UFS file system capabilities and naming conventions for devices for SPARC, x64, and x86-based systems.

Use the prtconf and format commands to list devices, explain critical issues of the /etc/path_to_inst file and reconfigure devices by performing a reconfiguration boot or using the devfsadm command for SPARC, x64, and x86-based systems.

Given a scenario, partition a disk correctly using the appropriate files, commands, and options, and manage disk labels using SMI and EFI labels as they relate to disk sets.

Explain the Solaris 10 OS file system, including disk-based, distributed, devfs, and memory file systems related to SMF, and create a new UFS file system using options for (1Tbyte and ) 1Tbyte file systems.

Given a scenario, check and resolve Solaris 10 OS file system inconsistencies using fsck, and monitor file system usage using the command line (df, du, and quot commands).

Perform mounts and unmounts on a Solaris 10 OS file system, and use volume management to access mounted diskettes and CD-ROMs, restrict access, troubleshoot volume management problems, and explain access methods without volume management.

Perform Solaris 10 OS package administration using command-line interface commands and manage software patches for the Solaris OS, including preparing for patch administration, and installing and removing patches using the patchadd and patchrm commands.

  • Section 3: Perform System Boot and Shutdown Procedures for SPARC, x64, and x86-based systems.

Given a scenario, explain boot PROM fundamentals, including OpenBoot Architecture Standard, boot PROM, NVRAM, POST, Abort Sequence, and displaying POST to serial port for SPARC.

Given a scenario, explain the BIOS settings for booting, abort sequence, and displaying POST, including BIOS configuration for x64 and x86-based system.

Execute basic boot PROM commands for a SPARC system.

Perform system boot and shutdown procedures, including identifying the system's boot device, creating and removing custom device aliases, viewing and changing NVRAM parameters, and interrupting an unresponsive system.

Explain the Service Management Facility and the phases of the boot process.

Use SMF or legacy commands and scripts to control both the boot and shutdown procedures.

Describe the purpose , functions and features of the Grand Unified Bootloader (GRUB), including how to modify x86 system boot behavior, manage GRUB boot archives, boot a system in the GRUB-based boot environment and interrupt an unresponsive system.

  • Section 4: Perform User and Security Administration

Explain and perform Solaris 10 OS user administration, and manage user accounts and initialization files.

  • Section 5: Manage Network Printers and System Processes

Control system processes by viewing the processes, clearing frozen processes, and scheduling automatic one-time and recurring execution of commands using the command line.

  • Section 6: Perform System Backups and Restores

Given a scenario, develop a strategy for scheduled backups, and backup an unmounted file system using the appropriate commands.

Perform Solaris 10 OS file system restores using the appropriate commands, including restoring a regular file system, the /usr file system, the /(root) file system, and performing interactive and incremental restores for SPARC, x64, and x86 based systems.

Backup a mounted file system by creating a UFS snapshot and performing a backup of the snapshot file.

Restore data from a UFS snapshot and delete the UFS snapshot.

  • Section 7: Installation and Upgrade

Describe how install, configure, and patch Solaris systems using jumpstart, Live Upgrade, and iSCSI.

  • Section 8: Describe Network Basics

Control and monitor network interfaces including MAC addresses, IP addresses, network packets, and configure the IPv4 interfaces at boot time.

Explain the client-server model and enable/disable server processes.

  • Section 9: Manage Virtual File Systems and Core Dumps

Implement patch management using Sun Connection Services including the Update Manager client, the smpatch command line, and Sun Connection hosted Web application.

  • Section 10: Manage Storage Volumes

Describe the Solaris ZFS file system, create new ZFS pools and file systems, modify ZFS file system properties, mount and unmount ZFS file systems, destroy ZFS pools and file systems, work with ZFS snapshots and Clones, and use ZFS datasets with Solaris Zones.

Oracle Solaris 10 System Administrator Certified Professional Exam, Part II (1Z0-878)

  • Section 1: Manage Virtual File Systems and Core Dumps

Explain virtual memory concepts and given a scenario, configure, and manage swap space.

Manage crash dumps and core file behaviors.

Explain NFS fundamentals, and configure and manage the NFS server and client including daemons, files, and commands.

Troubleshoot various NFS errors.

Explain and manage AutoFS and use automount maps (master, direct, and indirect) to configure automounting.

  • Section 2: Manage Storage Volumes

Analyze and explain RAID (0,1,5) and SVM concepts (logical volumes, soft partitions, state databases, hot spares, and hot spare pools).

Create the state database, build a mirror, and unmirror the root file system.

  • Section 3: Control Access and Configure System Messaging

Configure role-based access control (RBAC) including assigning rights profiles, roles, and authorizations to users.

Analyze RBAC configuration file summaries and manage RBAC using the command line.

Explain syslog function fundamentals, and configure and manage the /etc/syslog.conf file and syslog messaging.

  • Section 4: Naming Services

Explain naming services (DNS, NIS, NIS+, and LDAP) and the naming service switch file (database sources, status codes, and actions)

Configure, stop and start the Name Service Cache Daemon (nscd) and retrieve naming service information using the getent command.

Configure naming service clients during install, configure the DNS client, and set up the LDAP client (client authentication, client profiles, proxy accounts, and LDAP configurations) after installation.

  • Section 5: Managing Solaris Zones

Explain consolidation issues, features of Solaris zones, and decipher between the different zone concepts including zone types, daemons, networking, command scope, and given a scenario, create a Solaris zone.

Given a zone configuration scenario, identify zone components and zonecfg resource parameters, allocate file system space, use the zonecfg command, describe the interactive configuration of a zone, and view the zone configuration file.

Given a scenario, use the zoneadm command to view, install, boot, halt, reboot, and delete a zone.

Explain custom jumpstart configuration including the boot, identification, configuration, and installation services.

  • Section 6: Managing LDAP, Jumpstart, and Live Upgrade

Explain custom Jumpstart configuration including the boot, identification, configuration, and installation services.

Configure a Jumpstart including implementing a Jumpstart server, editing the sysidcfg, rules and profile files, and establishing Jumpstart software alternatives (setup, establishing alternatives, troubleshooting, and resolving problems).

Explain Flash, create and manipulate the Flash archive and use it for installation.

Given a PXE installation scenario, identify requirements and install methods, configure both the install and DHCP server, and boot the x86 client.

Configure a WAN Boot Installation and perform a Live Upgrade Installation.

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