HP Instant Capacity User's Guide for Versions 8.x

Temporary Instant Capacity (TiCAP)
You can purchase an amount of temporary processing capacity for your Instant Capacity system.
Temporary Instant Capacity, or TiCAP, is purchased in units of processing days. TiCAP allows
one or more cores beyond the count allowed by the available usage rights to be activated for up
to the specified period of prepaid minutes without requiring the purchase of additional usage
rights.
You can activate and deactivate cores as you wish until the activation time equals your prepaid
temporary capacity duration. For example, with a prepaid duration of 30 days of temporary
capacity, you can activate one core for 30 days or four cores for one hour a day for 180 days (or
any combination that totals 43,200 minutes).
NOTE: Temporary Instant Capacity cannot be used to activate cores in inactive Instant Capacity
cell boards.
Your TiCAP balance is decreased only when you are using more cores than normally allowed
by your available core usage rights. The charge against temporary capacity is not associated with
specific cores or partitions. That is, if you have activated one core in partition A using temporary
capacity, and then deactivate any core in partition B, the complex will stop using temporary
capacity.
The Instant Capacity software uses the debiting of TiCAP to track the non-compliance of a system,
as described in “Instant Capacity Compliance and Enforcement” (page 39), so even if the system
has had no TiCAP applied to it, the TiCAP balance can be negative, meaning the system has
gone out of compliance.
TiCAP can be added to an Instant Capacity system by purchasing and applying a temporary
capacity codeword (available from the Utility Pricing Solutions portal) using the icapmodify -C
command/option.
The icapstatus command provides information on the amount of temporary capacity time
remaining on the complex.
See Chapter 5: “Temporary Instant Capacity” (page 73) for more information. Also see Chapter 7
for a discussion of temporary capacity in a Global Instant Capacity group.
38 Getting Started