Critical and noncritical patches

HP-UX patches are considered to be either critical or noncritical. You can determine whether a patch is labeled as critical by looking at the Critical field on the patch details page or in the patch text file for the patch. This field identifies newly delivered critical content.

HP considers a patch to be critical if the patch provides a fix for a critical problem. Examples include patches that provide fixes for the following problems:

System panic or hang

Process abort, hang, or failure

Data corruption

Severe performance degradation

Application-specific critical issues

HP considers a patch to be noncritical if the patch provides fixes for only noncritical problems. Examples of noncritical problems include the following:

Extraneous debug, warning, or error messages

Failure to address all documented issues

Minor regressions in behavior

A patch is considered critical if it contains any critical fixes, even if they were introduced in earlier (superseded) patches. The Critical field for such a patch contains the following text:

"No (superseded patches were critical)"

In addition, the field gives the ID of the patch that introduced the critical fix. The Critical field for patch PHSS_30011 is shown in the following screen. It shows that superseded patch PHSS_29735 actually introduced the critical fix.

Critical:No (superseded patches were critical)

PHSS_29735: CORRUPTION

Critical patches have a critical category tag. The category tags (and swlist command used to acquire the category tags) for patch PHSS_30011 are shown in the following screen. See “Category tags” (page 20) for more information.

$ swlist -l product -a category_tag PHSS_30011

#Initializing...

#Contacting target "some_system"...

#Target: some_system:/

#PHSS_30011 patch defect_repair general_release critical enhancement corruption manual_dependencies

Finding information for a specific patch

The best place to obtain information about a specific patch is the patch's patch details page on the ITRC.

Patch documentation

All patches have a patch details page, a patch text file, and readme information. The patch details page should be your first choice for obtaining information because it contains the most up-to-date information available. This is not always true for the patch text file or the patch readme.

You can find the documentation at the following resources:

See Chapter 6: “Using the IT Resource Center” (page 55). For the patch details page, go to the ITRC website at http://itrc.hp.com.

The patch text file will be in the downloaded file after you download a patch from the ITRC. See Chapter 6: “Using the IT Resource Center” (page 55).

The patch readme will be on the system after you install the patch.

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HP UX Patch Management Critical and noncritical patches, Finding information for a specific patch, Patch documentation