HP-UX 11i June 2002 Release Notes

Whats New at a Glance
Whats New in the Original 11i Release?
Chapter 2
33
Chapter 7: I/0 and Networking Cards (see page 135)
Online Addition and Replacement (OLAR) enables the adding and replacing of PCI
I/O cards (adapters) while a system is running. (See Online Addition and
Replacement of I/O Adapters on page 136.)
By eliminating driver installation and combining multiple drivers into one, the
set-up or upgrade of networking and I/O products has been made easier. (See
Network Drivers on page 137.)
Gigabit Ethernet (PCI, HSC) provides the means for interfacing to a 1000Base-SX
multimode fiber network. (See HSC and PCI 1000Base-SX/T (Gigabit Ethernet) on
page 142.)
Although EISA interface cards are supported on the HP-UX 11i 32-bit operating
system, they are not supported on HP-UX 11i 64-bit operation. (See EISA Interface
Cards Are Not 64-bit Compatible on page 148.)
HSC FDDI driver enhanced. (See Performance Enhancements to the HSC FDDI
Driver on page 147.)
Chapter 8: Installation (see page 151)
Cold install changed to support new media and the new Operating Environments.
(See Cold Install Changed on page 152.)
Ignite-UX version B requires at least 64MB of RAM and no longer supports 10.01
and 10.10 machines for 11i. (See Ignite-UX Changed for 11i on page 153.)
Update-UX command replaces swgettools to perform OS updates and add
Operating Environments. (See Update-UX on page 155.)
Software Distributor changed in multiple ways, including enablement of multiple
target management capability and POSIX enhancements. (See Software Distributor
(SD-UX) on page 156.)
SD Patch Installation changed to provide more control over patch management. (See
SD-UX Changes to Patch Installation on page 159.)
Chapter 9: General System Administration and Performance Monitoring (see page
163)
System Administration Manager (SAM) enhanced to support new devices and
features. (See Changes to System Administration Manager (SAM) on page 168.)
HP Distributed Print Service deprecated. (See HP Distributed Print Service
Deprecated on page 174.)
Event Monitoring System (EMS) Hardware Monitors enabled to monitor the
operation of a wide variety of hardware products. (See Diagnostics: EMS Hardware
Monitors on page 175.)
The command ioscan improved to provide clearer descriptions for most common PCI
devices. (See Improved ioscan Description Field for PCI Devices on page 176.)
Chapter 10: Process, Threads, Memory, and Kernel Parameters (see page 179)
Gang scheduling for MPI applications and multi-threaded processes enabled. (See
HP-UX Gang Scheduling on page 180.)