HP-UX Virtual Partitions Administrator Guide (includes A.05.07) (5900-1229, September 2010)

vparenv rather than vparcreate if you have more than one database with differing
granularities, and wish to switch to a database with different granularity during the next vPar
Monitor boot.
CAUTION: The granularity values in firmware must match those in the vPars database used
during the next boot of the vPars Monitor. If the granularity values in firmware do not match
those in the vPars database, the virtual partitions of that database will not boot.
vparcreate
# vparcreate -p vpar1_name [-g ILM:unit[:y]][-g CLM:unit[:y]]
If you specify the above command without the :y, vparcreate only writes the unit granularity
value to the vPars database; it does not write the value to firmware.
If you specify the above command with the :y, vparcreate writes the unit granularity value
to both the vPars database and to firmware.
When using this method, note that the -g option must be performed when creating the vPars
database (in other words, when performing the initial vparcreate command). If you choose
not to set a value, or if you set the value incorrectly using the initial vparcreate command,
you cannot adjust it later. You must re-create the vPars database.
Usage Scenarios
vparcreate with the :y option The following is a scenario where you would want to use
vparcreate with the -g option and the:yspecification:
1. In nPars mode, you create your first virtual partition with a 256 MB granularity value for
ILM. The command is
# vparcreate -g ILM:256:y -p keira1 ...
2. This writes the ILM granularity value to both the vPars database and to firmware. Since the
default CLM granularity value is 128, this also writes the CLM granularity value of 128 to
both the vPars database and to firmware. Because the values in both the vPars database and
firmware match, you can boot this vPars database immediately after setting the nPartition
for vPars mode and rebooting the nPartition.
# vparenv -m vPars
1
# shutdown -r
2
1
Set the mode for the next nPartition reboot.
2
Reboot the system.
vparcreate without the :y option and vparenv The following is a scenario where you would
want to use vparcreate with the -g option but without the :yspecification. It also shows where
you need to use vparenv to set the granularity value in the firmware. Note that this scenario
would only occur on Integrity systems.
1. You are in a vPars environment, running the default vPars database of /stand/vpdb that
uses the 128 MB granularity values for ILM and CLM. Because the virtual partitions have
198 CPU, Memory, and I/O Resources (A.05.xx)