HP Integrity Virtual Machines 4.2: Installation, Configuration, and Administration

is allocated the minimum percentage of 5%. The default is
10%.
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.
-E cycles[:max-cycles]
For offline migration, specifies the virtual machine's CPU
entitlement in CPU cycles.
The cycles are expressed as an integer, followed by one of
these units:
M (megahertz)
G (gigahertz)
If no letter is specified, the default unit is megahertz.
The -e and the -E options are mutually exclusive.
-F
Forces the migration of a guest, whether or not there are
resource validation errors (such as resource conflict,
resource nonexistence, and so forth). Use the -F option
only rarely and with caution. This option ignores all
resource validation errors, including oversubscribing of
resources. It is important to note that these errors can
prevent the virtual machine from booting on the target VM
Host. Any validation errors are logged in the Integrity VM
command log.
-h target-host-alisas-or-IP-addr
Specifies the host alias or IP address of a network
connection to the target VM Host machine to which the
virtual machine is being migrated. The target machine
must be a valid VM Host and must be accessible by the
source VM Host. Almost all forms of the hpvmmigrate
command require the -h option. For online migration,
the parameter for the -h option should specify a private,
dedicated, high-speed network link to the target VM Host.
If you specify a simple non-qualified host name, the
hpvmmigrate command appends hpvm-migr to the
name and checks if a host alias has been defined for a
private network corresponding to the simple name. Online
VM Migration does not check to ensure that the link is
private, but using a private network is important for
efficient and secure online migrations and to preserve the
bandwidth of the regular site network.
-H Displays the usage of the hpvmmigrate command.
-k
Creates the virtual machine on the target VM Host and
marks it Not Runnable, but does not change the virtual
machine on the source VM Host.
-l new-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,
the dash (—), the underscore (_), and the period (.). To
specify white space, the label must be quoted (" ").
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