Syntax Notes
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| CAUTION: Using vPars A.03.01 or earlier, LBAs must
be explicitly specified (included in the hardware path). Specifying only the SBA is not supported. If specifying only an
SBA, the commands will not assume that all LBAs
under the SBA are to be assigned; the system may actually panic. |
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Beginning with
vPars A.03.02, you
can specify only the SBA. The vPars commands will assume
the change applies to all LBAs under the specified SBA.
The
exception are boot disks; boot disks are specified
using the full hardware path.
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| NOTE: When assigning I/O, if you specify a path below
the LBA level (for example, cell/sba/lba/.../device, vPars automatically assign the LBA to the virtual partition. For
example, if you specify -a io:0/0/0/2/0.6.0 where 0/0/0 is the cell/sba/lba, the lba
of 0/0/0 is assigned to the virtual partition. Further, this LBA assignment
implies that all devices using 0/0/0 are
assigned to the virtual partition. The assignment rules of LBAs remain applicable:
the LBA can only be owned by one virtual partition. For example, once
the LBA at 0/0/0 is assigned to one virtual partition, it cannot be
simultaneously assigned to any other virtual partition. Thus, if the
device at 0/0/0/2/0.6.0 is assigned to a
virtual partition, the LBA at 0/0/0 is assigned to that virtual partition,
so the device at 0/0/0/2/0.6.0 cannot be
assigned to a different virtual partition. |
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LBA Example
The vparcreate command on a
non-nPartitionable system looks like:
#vparcreate -p vpar1 -a cpu::1 -a cpu:::1
-a mem::1024 -a io:0.0 -a io:0.0.2.0.6.0:BOOT
where the I/O assignment is specified using the
LBA level (-a io:0.0) and the boot disk is
specified using the full hardware path (-a io:0.0.2.0.6.0).
For an nPartitionable system, the vparcreate command would look like:
# vparcreate -p vpar1 -a cpu::1 -a cpu:::1 -a mem::1024 -a io:0.0.0 \
-a io:0.0.0.2.0.6.0:BOOT |
where the I/O assignment is specified using the
LBA level (-a io:0.0.0.) and the boot disk
is specified using the full hardware path (-a io:0.0.0.2.0.6.0).
For information on using the LBA level on nPartitionable
systems, also see “Planning, Installing, and Using vPars with an nPartitionable
Server”.