swinstall patches

January 26, 2007

swinstall
patches
:

For 11.X:

  • Either, from the command line (non-interactively):

        # swinstall –x autoreboot=true -x
    patch_match_target=true -s
    /tmp/PHxxx_yyy.depot

  • OR, from the swinstall interface/tui/gui:
  • Select Actions-> Manage Patch Selection
  • Leave the first item selected ( ‘Include patches with selected
    (marked) software from the source.
    ‘)

  • Click/Select second item ( Automatically select patches for
    software installed on the target.
  • then click/select ‘OK’.
  • You will be told “Patches
    for software installed on the target will now be automatically
    marked.  Only patches that pass the filter will be marked.
  • And then you will be asked ‘Do you wish to continue and have patches
    automatically marked?
    ‘,

    • click/select
      ‘YES’ .
  • Select Actions ->  Install…
  • After Analysis has completed
    •  press ‘OK’ to proceed (to actual installation of patches)


    For 10.X

    • Either, from the command line (non-interactively):

          # swinstall –x
      autoreboot=true -x match_target=true
      -s /tmp/PHxxx_yyy.depot

    • OR, from the swinstall interface/tui/gui:
    • Actions -> Match What Target
      Has …

    • Actions -> Install (analysis)…
    • After Analysis has completed, press ‘OK’ to proceed

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    Obituary: Sculptor Herberholz forged love of art at CSUS - My Dad

    January 22, 2007

    Obituary: Sculptor Herberholz forged love of art at CSUS

    By Robert D. Dávila - Bee Staff Writer

    ————————————————————————————
    (Originally published as http://www.sacbee.com/101/story/96768.html)
    ————————————————————————————


    Published 12:00 am PST Friday, December 22, 2006
    Story appeared in METRO section, Page B4

    Donald W. Herberholz, a renowned metal sculptor who became a nationally
    recognized expert on training elementary art teachers at California
    State University, Sacramento, died Sunday. He was 83.

    He died at his Gold River home after a two-year battle with prostate and bone cancer, said his wife, Barbara Herberholz.

    Mr. Herberholz was a prolific sculptor of welded metal, including
    fountains, wall art and smaller objects. He sold works to private
    collections and received commissions for public art, including an
    African animal scene at the Carmichael Library and wall sculptures at
    Arden Christian Church. He exhibited at the Crocker Art Museum and won
    top prizes at the Nut Tree scarecrow contest in Vacaville.

    Besides abstract pieces, he created whimsical sculptures reflecting his wry
    sense of humor, friends said, including rabbits dancing under a carrot
    tree. His trademark works were owls, including a 4-foot-tall figure he
    fashioned from hammered copper and named “Henry George.”

    “He was just born inspired,” said his wife, a retired CSUS art professor.
    “He loved to make art, and the only thing that slowed him down was
    macular degeneration he had the last few years.”

    Mr. Herberholz was an art education professor for 35 years at CSUS, where
    he co-wrote several textbooks with his wife. In 1964, the couple
    published “Artworks for Elementary Teachers,” which became the leading
    text for art education students at U.S. and Canadian colleges,
    colleagues said. The book, now in its ninth edition, has been in print
    longer than any other of its kind and sold more than 500,000 copies,
    CSUS officials said.

    Mr. Herberholz was a strong proponent of
    art education who decried school curriculums that emphasize “left
    brain” subjects — including reading, writing and math — at the
    expense of art lessons that help children think creatively with their
    “right brain,” colleagues said.

    He supported the CSUS Barrio Arts Program, which introduces future art teachers to different cultures, and was honored by state and national professional groups for his support of art education.

    “We’ve lost the last of the
    pioneers on the importance of art education in the schools,” said Jose
    Montoya, a retired CSUS art professor. “The books that he and his wife
    put together were crucial to the whole notion of developing creativity
    in young people.”

    Mr. Herberholz was born to German immigrants in 1923 in Detroit and grew up on a farm.

    He earned a bachelor’s degree in art from Michigan State University in
    1946 and a master’s degree from the University of New Mexico in 1954.
    He taught art at schools in Michigan, Colorado and New Mexico and at
    Bloomsburg State Teachers College in Pennsylvania for two years and
    married Barbara Bailey in 1954.

    He joined CSUS in 1956 and served three years as art department chairman before retiring in 1991.
    He received the California Art Education Association’s Award of Merit
    in 1981 and 1988 and was named 1985 California art educator of the year
    by the National Art Education Association.

    “Students really liked him,” said Maria Winkler, Sacramento artist and CSUS professor.
    “He was extremely knowledgeable about art and really loved talking to
    students.”

    Mr. Herberholz enjoyed combing flea markets for art
    books, collecting American Indian and Mexican folk art and traveling
    with his wife to Europe and Mexico. Friends said he was a warm, caring
    man with an offbeat sense of humor who loved puns and wore a red clown
    nose while making Sunday pancakes for his family.

    “He was like an onion,” said John Lopez, a Sutter Creek gallery owner. “He
    had many layers to his personality, with a definite bent on art.”

        About the writer:

            * The Bee’s Robert D. Dávila can be reached at (916) 321-1077 or bdavila@sacbee.com.


    Donald W. Herberholz

    Born: July 2, 1923

    Died: Dec. 17, 2006

    Remembered
    for: Renowned sculptor of welded metal artworks; national expert on art
    education and art professor for 35 years at California State
    University, Sacramento; co-author of leading college textbook on art
    education; served on the Crocker Art Museum board of directors

    Survived
    by: Wife, Barbara Herberholz of Gold River; daughters, Amy Scherschligt
    of Carmichael and Heidi Grasty of Gold River; son, Eric Herberholz of
    Rocklin; sisters, Louise Sielski and Virginia Collins, both of
    Michigan; and eight grandchildren

    Memorial service: 2 p.m. Jan. 10 at Christ Unity Church, 9249 Folsom Blvd., Sacramento

    Remembrances: In lieu of flowers, donations in memory of Mr. Herberholz
    may be made to Futures for Children, 9600 Tennyson St. NE, Albuquerque,
    N.M., 87122.

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    Internet Explorer was unsafe for 284 days in 2006

    January 12, 2007

    Internet Explorer was unsafe for 284 days in 2006. By contrast, Firefox experienced a total of nine days’ worth of insecurity last year<http://www.boingboing.net/2007/01/04/internet_explorer_wa.html>

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