User's Manual

Checking the Status of your Instant Capacity System
You can use the icapstatus command to view the status of your Instant Capacity system. The
icapstatus command, issued without options, provides the following information:
Version number of the Instant Capacity software
System identification information (system ID, serial number, product number, unique ID)
System contact email address
Instant Capacity From: email address
Asset reporting status (on or off)
Temporary capacity warning period (in days)
Exception status (indicates if complex is in an exception state)
If a member of a GiCAP group, membership information and borrow/loan status of usage
rights
Local virtual partition status (if applicable):
Total number of assigned cores
Number of active assigned cores
Number of inactive assigned cores
Additional cores that can be assigned with current usage rights
Number of cores that could be assigned with additional usage rights
Number of cores that can be assigned with temporary capacity
Number of cores currently unavailable for assignment
Local nPartition status (if not a virtual partition):
Date and time the command was issued
Total number of configured cores
Number of intended active cores
Number of active cores
Number of inactive cores
Additional cores that can be activated with current usage rights
Number of cores that could be activated with additional usage rights
Number of cores that can be activated with temporary capacity
Number of cores that are deconfigured or attached to inactive cells
Instant Capacity resource summary:
Number of cells without usage rights
Number of inactive cells
Amount of memory without usage rights
Amount of inactive memory
Number of cores without usage rights
Number of inactive cores
Number of cores using temporary capacity
Number of cores that must be deactivated (insufficient usage rights)
Temporary capacity available
Projected temporary capacity expiration
Allocation of Instant Capacity resources among hard partitions:
nPar ID
Total cores
Intended active cores
Actual active cores
Inactive cores
52 Using Instant Capacity to Manage Processing Capacity