c0t0d0
).
This is the boot media and overwriting it will make the machine not boot
anymore).If you already have SmartOS installed, see Upgrading SmartOS.
Once you’ve downloaded an image, please read the Quick Start and Getting Started guides for information on getting up to speed quickly and refer to one of the following pages applicable to your preferred installation type:
There is a new build, on average, every 2 weeks. SmartOS builds do not have a version number, rather they have a timestamp in the form: 20120809T221258Z (in this example, the date is: 08/09/2012 at 22:12:58 UTC)
For any given build, there will be 5 files available:
platform-*(timestamp)*.tgz
: The raw kernel and boot_archive;
this is most commonly used for PXE bootingsmartos-*(timestamp)*.iso
: Live Image ISOsmartos-*(timestamp)*-usb.img.bz2
: Live Image USB image for booting
real hardware. This is the preferred installation method for productionsmartos-*(timestamp)*.vmwarevm.tar.bz2
: VMware Image (VMX Format)
Note: Make sure nested virtualization is enabled if you want to use
KVM or BHYVE.SINGLE_USER_ROOT_PASSWORD.*(timestamp)*.txt
: Contains the
default root password for the live image (needed only when booting
without mounting the zpool)For a full list of changes in each build, please refer to the SmartOS Change Log.
SmartOS source is freely available and can be accessed on Github.
For more information on SmartOS Development, please refer to the SmartOS Developers Guide