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Firmware Provisioning and Reports
Provisioning not only automates provisioning at a single chassis or system level, but it also automates the provisioning of your data centers. The provisioning process is similar, regardless of the hardware, operating system, or underlying technology that you are deploying.
Firmware provisioning enables you to install firmware updates on a server by using firmware images and firmware profiles.
At a high level, provisioning firmware involves the following steps:
1. Create a firmware image by importing a firmware file with the associated meta data.
2. Create a firmware profile based on one or more firmware images.
3. Provision the firmware based on the firmware profile and its associated firmware images.
The first two steps are typically one-time tasks for each collection of firmware that you want to update.
See the Supported Systems Matrix to determine the minimum firmware version and the recommended firmware version for the supported Sun systems.
Managing Firmware Images
A firmware image is a copy of a particular system firmware with associated meta data. The firmware image allows you to update the firmware in an automated way through the use of firmware profiles. The firmware meta data helps determine compatibility between a firmware image and a target system. The required meta data includes the firmware type, what system or systems the firmware is for, the version of the firmware, and any dependent firmware (other firmware that the firmware depends on).
This section describes how to create, edit, view, and delete firmware images as well as how to determine firmware meta data and locating the default image location on the Enterprise Controller.
| Content | Description |
|---|---|
| Changing the Default Location of Firmware Image | Describes how to change the default location of the firmware image. |
| Determining Metadata for Firmware Images | Describes how to obtain meta data for your firmware image. |
| Creating Firmware Images | Describes how to create a firmware image. |
| Editing Firmware Images | Describes how to edit the firmware images. |
| Viewing Firmware Images | Describes how to view the firmware images. |
| Deleting Firmware Images | Describes how to delete the firmware images. |
Managing Firmware Profiles
A firmware profile is a collection of one or more firmware images and policies that defines how to update one or more firmware images on a system. A firmware profile can contain any set of unique firmware images. In addition, a firmware profile cannot contain different versions of the same firmware image. You can also use a firmware profile to generate compliance reports for a set of servers. This section describes how to create, edit, view, and delete firmware profiles.
| Content | Description |
|---|---|
| Creating Firmware Profiles | Describes how to create a firmware profile. |
| Editing Firmware Profiles | Describes how to edit a firmware profile. |
| Viewing Firmware Profiles | Describes how to view your firmware profiles. |
| Deleting Firmware Profiles | Describes how to delete your firmware profiles. |
Updating Firmware
Firmware profiles are used to update your firmware. See Creating Firmware Profiles for more information. Most firmware updates to the Service Processor require that the server be shut down prior to the firmware update. If the firmware image has the power off option selected, this is a hard shutdown of the system and you must gracefully bring down the OS prior to attempting updating the firmware.
| Updating Firmware | Describes how to update your firmware and chassis firmware. |
| Viewing the Updated Firmware Version | Describes how to view the updated firmware version in the BUI. |
| Updating Firmware For a SPARC Enterprise M-Series Server | Describes how to update M-series firmware |
| Firmware Compliance Report | Describes how to run a Firmware Compliance Report. Firmware Compliance Reports can be used to update your firmware. |




