vparstatus2.1m (2010 09)
v
vparstatus2(1M)
For OA Based Partition Management Systems
vparstatus2(1M)
Note that the boot processor, if any, is either user assigned or system assigned. There
are no other CPU categories. If a CPU is shown as the boot processor, the CPU is not
shown in either of the other lists. This is so that the sum of processors in the three lists
always represents the total CPU allocation of the virtual partition.
CPU count information is also shown in three lists:
• The count of user assigned CPUs, always in the non-socket-specific category.
• The count of non-socket-specific, system assigned CPUs.
• A list of counts, by socket, of CPUs designated to be assigned from a specific socket.
Since counts do not represent specific paths, they are valid for all virtual partitions,
whether
UP or DOWN.
Memory resources are listed by type (ILM or SLM), total megabytes, and granularity.
-w Displays the local virtual partition name (the one in which the command is executed) in a
full sentence. The -M option restricts the display to just the name of the virtual parti-
tion. This options is not supported when the command is invoked from the OA.
-A Displays information about available resources (that is, those not assigned to any virtual
partition) in the current virtual partition database. Resources are displayed one per line.
The nPartition must be active in vPars mode for this option to work.
-M Displays resource information, the local virtual partition name, or the revisions of parti-
tion management in a machine-readable format.
Individual fields are separated by one of four delimiters. Examples are shown following
the delimiter descriptions:
• The colon (
:) separates each major field or section, including resource types.
• The semicolon (;) separates subfields of a resource type.
• The comma (,) separates individual items in a list of similar items.
• The slash (/) separates all other related items.
There are three resource machine-readable formats, one for virtual partition
configurations (
-M alone), one for available resources (-A used with -M
), and one for
CPU configuration (
-d used with -M).
• Virtual partition configurations: The full list of major fields, and their order, is:
name, number, run-state , state , CPU resources , I/O resources , memory resources .
Each virtual partition is displayed on a separate line, regardless of length.
An example of a virtual partition configuration in machine-readable format is (line
breaks are artificial):
vpar1;1:DOWN;Inactive ::::5/10;1/1/0/1;;;;1;2;:
5/1/0/1/2;5/1/4:;;3072;1024;;; 1/1/0 4096;1024:
where each subfield is interpreted as follows:
vpar1: Virtual partition name.
1: Virtual partition number.
DOWN: Virtual partition run-state.
Inactive: Virtual partition state.
5/10: The minimum and maximum CPUs configured for the virtual partition.
1/1/0/1: The path(s) of all user assigned CPUs.
(empty): The path of the boot processor. This virtual partition is Down, so this field
is empty.
1: The count of user assigned CPUs.
2: The count of non-socket-specific system assigned CPUs.
5/1/0/1/2: rootport(s) of all user assigned I/O.
5/1/4: ioslot(s) of all user assigned I/O.
3072: The total base ILM memory assigned to the virtual partition.
4 Hewlett-Packard Company − 4 − HP-UX 11i Version 3: September 2010