pkgrm man page on SunOS

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pkgrm(1M)		System Administration Commands		     pkgrm(1M)

NAME
       pkgrm - remove a package from the system

SYNOPSIS
       pkgrm [-nv] [-a admin] [ [-A | -M] -R root_path]
	    [-V fs_file]
	    [pkginst... | -Y category[,category...]]

       pkgrm -s spool
	    [pkginst... | -Y category[,category...]]

DESCRIPTION
       pkgrm will remove a previously installed or partially installed package
       from the system. A check is made to determine  if  any  other  packages
       depend  on  the	one  being removed. If a dependency exists, the action
       taken is defined in the admin file.

       The default state for the command is in interactive mode, meaning  that
       prompt  messages are given during processing to allow the administrator
       to confirm  the	actions	 being	taken.	Non-interactive	 mode  can  be
       requested with the -n option.

       The  -s	option can be used to specify the directory from which spooled
       packages should be removed.

       Certain unbundled and third-party packages are no longer entirely  com‐
       patible	with  the latest version of pkgrm. These packages require user
       interaction throughout the removal and not just at the very beginning.

       To remove these older packages (released prior to Solaris 2.4), set the
       following  environment  variable:NONABI_SCRIPTS=TRUE pkgrm permits key‐
       board interaction throughout the removal as long	 as  this  environment
       variable is set.

OPTIONS
       The following options are supported:

       -a admin

	   Use	the  installation  administration file, admin, in place of the
	   default admin file. pkgrm first looks in the current working direc‐
	   tory	 for  the administration file. If the specified administration
	   file is not in the current working directory, pkgrm	looks  in  the
	   /var/sadm/install/admin directory for the administration file.

       -A

	   Remove the package files from the client's file system, absolutely.
	   If a file is shared with other packages, the default behavior is to
	   not remove the file from the client's file system.

       -M

	   Instruct pkgrm not to use the $root_path/etc/vfstab file for deter‐
	   mining the client's mount points. This  option  assumes  the	 mount
	   points  are	correct on the server and it behaves consistently with
	   Solaris 2.5 and earlier releases.

       -n

	   Non-interactive mode. If there is a need for interaction, the  com‐
	   mand will exit.

	   Use	of  this option requires that at least one package instance be
	   named upon invocation of the command. Certain conditions must exist
	   for	a package to be removed non-interactively or a non-restrictive
	   admin file needs to be used.

       -R root_path

	   Defines the full path name of a directory to use as the  root_path.
	   All	files,	including  package system information files, are relo‐
	   cated to a directory tree starting in the specified root_path.

	   Note -

	     The root file system of any non-global zones must not  be	refer‐
	     enced with the -R option. Doing so might damage the global zone's
	     file system, might compromise the security of  the	 global	 zone,
	     and might damage the non-global zone's file system. See zones(5).

       -s spool

	   Remove  the	specified  package(s)  from  the  directory spool. The
	   default directory for spooled packages is /var/sadm/pkg.

       -v

	   Trace all of the scripts that get executed by pkgrm, located in the
	   pkginst/install  directory.	This  option is used for debugging the
	   procedural and non-procedural scripts.

       -V fs_file

	   Specify an alternative fs_file to map the  client's	file  systems.
	   Used	 in  situations	 where	the $root_path/etc/vfstab file is non-
	   existent or unreliable.

       -Y category

	   Remove packages based on the value of the CATEGORY parameter stored
	   in  the  installed or spooled package's pkginfo(4) file. No package
	   with the CATEGORY value of system can removed from the file	system
	   with this option.

OPERANDS
       The following operand is supported:

       pkginst

	   Specifies  the  package  to be removed. The format pkginst.* can be
	   used to remove all instances of a package.

	   The asterisk character (*) is a special character  to  some	shells
	   and	may need to be escaped. In the C-Shell, "*" must be surrounded
	   by single quotes (') or preceded by a backslash (\).

EXAMPLES
       Example 1 Removing All Instances of SUNWjunk from client1

       The following example removes all instances of SUNWjunk from client1:

	 example% pkgrm -R /export/root/client1 SUNWjunk*

       Note the caveat on the use of the -R option in the description of  that
       option, above.

EXIT STATUS
       The following exit values are returned:

       0

	   Successful completion.

       1

	   Fatal error.

       2

	   Warning.

       3

	   Interruption.

       4

	   Administration.

       10

	   Reboot after removal of all packages.

       20

	   Reboot after removal of this package.

ATTRIBUTES
       See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:

       ┌─────────────────────────────┬─────────────────────────────┐
       │      ATTRIBUTE TYPE	     │	    ATTRIBUTE VALUE	   │
       ├─────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┤
       │Availability		     │SUNWcsu			   │
       └─────────────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────┘

SEE ALSO
       pkginfo(1),    pkgmk(1),	   pkgparam(1),	   pkgproto(1),	  pkgtrans(1),
       installf(1M),   pkgadd(1M),   pkgask(1M),   pkgchk(1M),	  removef(1M),
       admin(4), pkginfo(4), attributes(5), largefile(5)

NOTES
       Package	commands are largefile(5)-aware. They handle files larger than
       2 GB in the same way they handle smaller files. In their current imple‐
       mentations,  pkgadd(1M),	 pkgtrans(1)  and  other  package commands can
       process a datastream of	up to 4 GB.

SunOS 5.10			  30 Oct 2007			     pkgrm(1M)
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