< CID and OS/2 Warp July 9, 1998 OS/2 Fix Distribution Network Computing Software Austin, Tx (c) Copyright International Business Machines Corporation, 1997. All rights Reserved. July 9, 1998 - Warp CID July 9, 1998 - Warp CID CONTENTS 1.0 Installing FixPaks via CID . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 1.1 CID Server Setup . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 1.2 Create a Response File . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 1.3 Executing FSERVICE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 1.3.1 The /T: Parameter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 1.4 Whether to Run SEMAINT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 1.5 Removing an Installed FixPak . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 1.6 Some Troubleshooting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 1.7 Using NvDM/2 and LCU . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 1.8 SERVICE/FSERVICE Differences . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 Contents ii July 9, 1998 - Warp CID FIGURES Figure 1. RESPONSE.FIL for Installing OS/2 FixPak . . . . . . . . . 1 Figure 2. FSERVICE Parameters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Figure 3. Invoking FSERVICE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Figure 4. NvDM/2 Profile Example . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 Figure 5. LCU REXX Example . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 Figures iii July 9, 1998 - Warp CID 1.0 INSTALLING FIXPAKS VIA CID Kicker diskettes are required for installing OS/2 FixPaks and LAN Server (LS) Customer Service Diskettes (which are called FixPaks here). This includes installing these FixPaks via IBM's Configuration Installation Distribution (CID) process. This README assumes that you can do a standard manual installation of a FixPak on your system, before you set up a complex CID installation and then find that the FixPak does not work on your system. The installation kicker diskettes are different from the FixPak data diskettes. The same kicker diskettes can be used to install several different FixPaks, including all current OS/2 and LAN Server FixPaks, and certain other products such as DCAF and NetView. The following information describes how to use these kicker diskettes to install the FixPaks. 1.1 CID SERVER SETUP Ž On the CID server, create a new directory for the FixPak. Here, let's name the directory FIXPAK. Ž Use the XCOPY command with the /S parameter to copy all of the FixPak data diskettes (for either OS/2 or LAN Server) into the FIXPAK directory. Ž XCOPY the single LS kicker diskette into the FIXPAK directory. (You can XCOPY the second OS/2 FixPak kicker diskette into the FIXPAK directory if you do not have the LS kicker diskette.) 1.2 CREATE A RESPONSE FILE Ž To install an OS/2 FixPak, create an FSERVICE response file, using the contents of RESPONSE.FIL in the FIXPAKS directory as the basis (see Figure 1). ‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘ :LOGFILE \OS2\INSTALL\SERVICE.LOG :FLAGS REPLACE_PROTECTED REPLACE_NEWER :SOURCE A:\ :SERVICE :SYSLEVEL \OS2\INSTALL\SYSLEVEL.OS2 :ARCHIVE \ARCHIVE Figure 1. RESPONSE.FIL for Installing OS/2 FixPak ‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘ Installing FixPaks via CID 1 July 9, 1998 - Warp CID When modifying RESPONSE.FIL, be very careful not to resequence any of the statements. Incorrect sequencing is a common cause of problems. To service a product that resides in a specific partition, the response file keyword :SYSLEVEL is used. For example, :SYSLEVEL D:\OS2\INSTALL\SYSLEVEL.OS2 will only service the OS/2 product that already resides in the D: partition. There is no need to change the :SOURCE statement, because the /S: command-line parameter used for the FSERVICE invocation overrides the :SOURCE keyword in the response file. Also, the /L1: command-line parameter overrides the :LOGFILE keyword. It is okay to remove or remark out the :LOGFILE statement, but the :SOURCE statement must always be present, even if it is not used. The default OS/2 response file does not assign drive letters to :SYSLEVEL and :ARCHIVE. This will cause the FSERVICE exec to search all partitions to locate the OS/2 product, and update all partitions where it finds a version of OS/2 that is the correct version for the FixPak. If you remove the parameter from :SYSLEVEL then FSERVICE will service all products found in the FixPak on all partitions where the products exist. 1.3 EXECUTING FSERVICE Ž Execute FSERVICE to install the FixPak. Figure 2 lists the parameters that can be used. ‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘ /S: the source path pointing to the FIXPAKS directory on the CID server. /R: drive:\path\filename of the response file /L1: drive:\path\filename of the log file /T: (optional) drive:\path to be used if booted from the SEMAINT environment; should be set to the same parameter value used in the SEMAINT call /CID (optional) to be used for unattended installation /SF: do not use for CID install Figure 2. FSERVICE Parameters ‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘ Figure 3 on page 3 gives an example of invoking the FSERVICE exec. Depending on what the response file contains, the call in Figure 3 on page 3 could be used to install a FixPak, back out a FixPak, or commit a Installing FixPaks via CID 2 July 9, 1998 - Warp CID FixPak (so that the FixPak cannot be backed out once it is installed). All code in Figure 3 must be on a single command line. ‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘ x:\csd\fixpak\fservice /s:x:\csd\fixpak /r:x:\csd\fixpak\response.fil /cid /t:c:\service /l1:x:\log\fixpak\service.log Figure 3. Invoking FSERVICE ‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘ 1.3.1 THE /T: PARAMETER If you boot OS/2 from a hard drive and the environment variable REMOTE_INSTALL_STATE is set to 0 or 1, you must use the /T: parameter. If you boot from a hard drive and the REMOTE_INSTALL_STATE environment variable is not defined, you should not use the /T: parameter. If you boot from diskette, /T: is ignored. FSERVICE uses the /T: parameter to decide whether a file should be updated. If the first part of the path to a file is equal to the /T: parameter, then FSERVICE will not update that file, because files in the maintenance directory (created by SEMAINT) should not be updated. 1.4 WHETHER TO RUN SEMAINT The best and safest way to install an OS/2 FixPak is in a maintenance mode. You can install an OS/2 FixPak while booted in normal OS/2 PM mode, but problems may occur. If you install the FixPak while in the OS/2 PM mode you must reboot the system as soon as possible after the FixPak install completes. If you install two FixPaks in a row then reboot the system the locked file device driver will not work correctly. There are two standard ways to enter maintenance mode -- you can use SEMAINT to generate a maintenance boot environment, or you can boot from diskette. If you are going to install several fixes at one time, using SEMAINT will save time because it requires fewer reboots and no processing of locked files. To use SEMAINT, you must make changes to the way you invoke FSERVICE. FSERVICE cleans up a maintenance directory created by SEMAINT if the /T: parameter is used and the system is booted from a hard drive. Installing FixPaks via CID 3 July 9, 1998 - Warp CID You should only use the /T: parameter in the first FSERVICE call you make. You need to remove or not use the /T: parameter in all other calls to FSERVICE. This is necessary because the /T: parameter may cause a file that was already updated to be restored to the original level. If you use SEMAINT, do not use the /S2: parameter. The /S2: parameter should only be used if installing OS/2 ServicePak XR_6200 or XR_6300. 1.5 REMOVING AN INSTALLED FIXPAK To back out a FixPak that has already been installed, use the response file shown below. :LOGFILE C:\OS2\INSTALL\SERVICE.LOG :TARGET ARCHIVE :BACKOUT :SYSLEVEL C:\OS2\INSTALL\SYSLEVEL.OS2 When backing out a FixPak, the FSERVICE parameter /S: should point to the FIXPAK directory on the CID server, because FSERVICE needs to find the product information files for the FixPak that it will back out. 1.6 SOME TROUBLESHOOTING If problems occur during a FixPak installation, it may be necessary to delete or rename the LOGF0000.??? and the LOGFSTART.??? files from the target client system and to remove the ARCHIVE directory. These steps are frequently needed when a previous FixPak installation started but failed to finish. The current OS/2 FixPak boot diskettes are based on OS/2 Warp code. The system can be booted from either OS/2 2.11 or OS/2 Warp to install the FixPak; however, a problem may occur if the system was booted with OS/2 2.11 when you apply a FixPak. The problem occurs if FSERVICE finds the OS/2 Warp file SHPIINST.DLL from the FixPak boot diskette. The fix for this problem is to replace the SHPIINST.DLL file in the FixPak directory with an OS/2 2.11 version. When installing a FixPak for LS 4.0 or some other product, you may need to change the response file keyword :SYSLEVEL to point to the correct SYSLEVEL.??? file for that product. You may need to remove or remark out the response file keyword :ARCHIVE if archiving is turned off for the FixPak. This is the case for many LS FixPaks. Installing FixPaks via CID 4 July 9, 1998 - Warp CID You can archive to a LAN drive. You can archive files for different products to the same directory. You must always use the same archive directory for the same product. If you install an OS/2 FixPak and a previous OS/2 FixPak was installed on the system, you must use the same archive directory as used before. You can change the archive directory with a special response file keyword, :REDIRECT. To update several products, you may need several pairs of :SERVICE and :SYSLEVEL parameters for each product. 1.7 USING NVDM/2 AND LCU Users of NetView Distribution Manager for OS/2 (NvDM/2), IBM's premier CID process, should refer to Figure 4 for a sample profile. For users of LAN CID Utility (LCU), the standard CID process, see the REXX command file product definition example in Figure 5 on page 6. ‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘ TargetDir = "C:\SERVICE" CompNameLen = 4 Section Catalog Begin ObjectType = SOFTWARE GlobalName = FIXPAK.WARP.17.C.REF.1.0 Description = WARP FixPak 17 on C: End Section Install Begin Program = SA:\IMG\FIXW17\FSERVICE.EXE Parms = "/S:$(SourceDir) /T:$(TargetDir) /R:$(SA)\IMG\FIXW17\SERVICEC.RSP /L1:$(Logfile1)" SourceDir = SA:\IMG\FIXW17 LogFile1 = SB:\LOGS\OS2\$(WorkStatName).FIX End Figure 4. NvDM/2 Profile Example ‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘ Installing FixPaks via CID 5 July 9, 1998 - Warp CID ‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘ x.fixpak = 9 x.9.name='WARP FixPak 17' x.9.statevar = 'CAS_' || x.9.name x.9.instprog = 'x:\img\fixw17\fservice.exe ', '/S:x:\img\fixw17 ', '/L1:y:\logs\os2\' || client || '.fix ', '/CID ', '/R:' x.9.rspdir = 'x:\img\fixw17' x.9.default = 'response.fil' Figure 5. LCU REXX Example ‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘‘ 1.8 SERVICE/FSERVICE DIFFERENCES The Fixtool utility SERVICE will not work from a LAN drive. This is working as designed. SERVICE will only work from "removable" media such as floppy diskette and CDROM. FSERVICE is designed to work from floppy diskette, CDROM, hard drive, LAN drive, etc. Installing FixPaks via CID 6