HP Integrity Virtual Machines 4.3: Installation, Configuration, Administration

In addition to the guest calculation, Integrity VM reserves
processing power for essential system functions such as
logging, networking, and file system daemons.
The -e and the -E options are mutually exclusive.
NOTE: If you change from -e percent to -E cycles on a
guest that previously had a maximum configured and do
not specify a maximum, then the default maximum value
is chosen.
-E cycles[:maximum_cycles]
Specifies the virtual machine's CPU entitlement in CPU
cycles and optionally specifies the maximum cycles or
entitlement cap. The default entitlement cap is the total
maximum cycles supported by the physical CPU.
The cycles are expressed as an integer, followed by one of
the following letters to specify units:
M (megahertz)
G (gigahertz)
If no letter is specified, the default unit is megahertz.
The -e and the -E options are mutually exclusive.
NOTE: If you change from -E cycles to -e percent on a
guest that previously had a maximum configured and do
not specify a maximum, then the default maximum value
is chosen.
-F
Suppresses all resource conflict checks and associated
warning messages (force mode). Force mode is provided
for scripts and other noninteractive applications. Note that
you will receive no notification of potential resource
problems for a virtual machine modified with the -F
option.
The -F and -s options are mutually exclusive.
The -F option is deprecated in Integrity Virtual Machines
commands.
-i package-name
Specifies whether the virtual machine is managed by
Serviceguard or gWLM (or both). For the argument, specify
the Serviceguard package name or gWLM, both, or NONE.
This option is used by Integrity VM software; do not use
this option without explicit instruction from HP.
-j {0 | 1}
Specifies whether the virtual machine is a distributed guest
(that is, managed by Serviceguard and can be failed over
to another cluster member). This option is used by Integrity
VM software; do not use this option without explicit
instruction from HP.
-l vm-label
Specifies a descriptive label for the virtual machine, which
can be useful in identifying a specific virtual machine in
the hpvmstatus verbose display. The label can contain
up to 256 alphanumeric characters, including A-Z, a-z, 0-9,
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