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Date:      Thu, 9 Aug 2012 19:02:16 +0400
From:      cronfy <cronfy@gmail.com>
To:        freebsd-security@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: getting the running patch level
Message-ID:  <CAJVM2mpitfhTQfSOaqG3x_9fHdkOMT7gEonDJE6T_XUBtLUe6w@mail.gmail.com>
In-Reply-To: <3FB858A6-807A-45E7-880B-F27D9C884827@gmail.com>
References:  <5023a174.c4df440a.09cc.ffffd3d2SMTPIN_ADDED@mx.google.com> <3FB858A6-807A-45E7-880B-F27D9C884827@gmail.com>

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>> Hi all,
>> I would like to know if there is a command or a way to retrieve the "pat=
ch
>> level" (the handbook defines it "builds names" like 7.0-RELEASE-p1) of t=
he
>> running system: just an example, if I run:
>> # freebsd-update fetch
>> No updates needed to update system to 9.0-RELEASE-p4
>> or:
>> ...
>> The following files will be updated as part of updating to 9.0-RELEASE-p=
4:
>> ...
>> but this give me no info about the current system; I tried a brief searc=
h in
>> config file but no luck;
>> again the question is:
>> is there a way to determine for a running server which "patch level" is
>> currently at ?
> uname -a

Unfortunately there is no trivial way. uname -a will show you correct
patch level only if kernel was changed at this patch level.

So the only way is to see what updates freebsd-update offers to you
and try to guess, on which patch level you are on now.

--=20
=D0=9E=D0=BB=D0=B5=D0=B3 =D0=9F=D0=B5=D1=82=D1=80=D0=B0=D1=87=D0=B5=D0=B2



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