LVM/VxVM and vPars sx2000 Upgrade

7
CPU Num Num Memory Granularity
Virtual Partition Name Min/Max CPUs IO ILM CLM
============================== ======= ==== ==== ========== ==========
vpar1 1/ 14 1 4 128 128
vpar2 1/ 14 1 2 128 128
vpar3 1/ 14 1 2 128 128
Memory (MB)
ILM CLM
# User # User
Virtual Partition Name Ranges/MB Total MB Ranges/MB Total MB
============================== ====================== ======================
vpar1 0/ 0 3072 0/ 0 0
vpar2 0/ 0 3072 0/ 0 0
vpar3 0/ 0 4096 0/ 0 0
2.4.3. If the virtual partition state is not “Up”, you must boot it because you will need to access it later:
# vparboot –p <vpar_name>
2.4.4. Save and print the vPars detailed configuration output from vparstatus -v:
# vparstatus –v
3. Are these nPartitions running multiple HP Virtual Machines?
3.1. Log onto each of the previously found nPartitions and perform the following:
3.2. Check if HPVM is installed:
# swlist | grep T2767AC
3.3. If the output is empty, this nPartition is a single OS instance
3.3.1. Write it down as a single OS instance.
3.3.2. Check the next nPartition (step 3.1), or go to step 4 after you checked all partitions from 1.3.
3.4. If the output shows the HPVM product, e.g.,
# swlist | grep T2767AC
T2767AC A.01.20.%BL05_060120a Integrity VM
Write it down as a HP Virtual Machine Host.
3.5. Check the virtual machines:
# hpvmstatus
[Virtual Machines]
Virtual Machine Name VM # OS Type State # vCPUs # Devs # Nets Memory
==================== ===== ======= ======== ======= ====== ====== ===========
hpvm0014 204 WINDOWS Off 1 1 1 2 GB
hpvm0012 2 HPUX On 2 2 2 1 GB
hpvm0011 3 HPUX On 2 2 1 1 GB
efiboot 18 HPUX Off 1 1 2 1 GB
3.6. Log on the virtual machines that are in the “On” state and shut them down. For HP-UX Virtual Machines:
# shutdown –h now
4. How is this OS instance configured? Is the root filesystem configured in an LVM or VxVM volume group? Is
X.25 configured in this OS?
4.1. Log onto each of the previously found OS instances and perform the following:
4.2. Find the boot path:
Primary bootpath : 4/0/4/1/0.10.0
HA Alternate bootpath : <none>
Alternate bootpath : <none>
Autoboot is ON (enabled)
4.3. Find and write the hardware and EFI (ACPI) paths for the boot disk:
# ioscan -efunH 4/0/4/1/0.10.0
Class I H/W Path Driver S/W State H/W Type Description
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