HP-UX Virtual Partitions Administrator's Guide (includes A.03.05 and A.04.05)

The ls command-line options are the same as the Unix shell lsoptions. For detailed
explanations, see the ls(1M) manpage. In brief:
all entries
-a
long listing
-l
numerical UIDs and GIDs
-n
inode
-i
appends a character after the entry, depending on the file type, such as a / (slash) for a directory-F
For example, to view the listing of files in winona2s /stand directory:
MON> ls /stand
lost+found ioconfig bootconf system
system.d vmunix dlkm.vmunix.prevbuild
kernrel rootconf vpdb vpmon.dmp
vmunix.backup system.prev vmunix.prev dlkm
vpdb.backup vpmon
monadmin controls the vPars flexible administrative capability feature, as described in
Chapter 11: “vPars Flexible Administrative Capability (vPars A.03.03, A.03.04, vPars A.04.02,
A.04.03, A.05.01)” (page 285). For usage information, see monadmin” (page 288).
scan lists all hardware discovered by the Monitor and indicates which virtual partition
owns each device.
settime [MM DD YYYY hh mm ss] sets the system's real time clock. Acceptable date
range is 1-1-1970 00:00:00 to 12-31-2034 23:59:59.
threads controls the use of hyperthreading on servers with dual core Intel Itanium
processors. For usage information, see “CPU: Hyperthreading ON/OFF (HT ON/OFF)”
(page 202).
time displays system real time clock and OS time of all the virtual partitions in GMT
(Greenwich Mean Time). The OS time displayed will consider the RTC and clock drift for
the virtual partition. However, if the partition is up, there may be difference in the OS time
displayed.
toddriftreset resets the drifts of the real-time clock. Use this command if you reset
the real-time clock of the hard partition at the BCH prompt. For brief information, see
“Real-time clock (RTC)” (page 25).
vparinfo[partition_name] This command is for HP internal use only.
Monitor: Using the Monitor Commands from ISL or EFI
You can specify any of the Monitor commands either at the Monitor prompt (MON>) or at the
ISL prompt (ISL>). If you are at ISL or EFI, use the desired command as the argument for the
Monitor /stand/vpmon.
For example, to run the command vparload -p winona1 from the Monitor prompt, use
MON> vparload -p winona1
To run the same command from ISL or EFI, use
ISL> hpux /stand/vpmon vparload -p winona1
Shell> fs0:efi\hpux\hpux boot vpmon vparload -p winona1
where the command (vparload -p winona) is the argument for the Monitor
(/stand/vpmon).
130 Monitor and Shell Commands