HP Integrity Virtual Server Manager 6.2 User Guide
Table Of Contents
- HP Integrity Virtual Server Manager 6.2 User Guide
- Contents
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Installing Integrity Virtual Server Manager
- 3 Accessing and Navigating Integrity Virtual Server Manager
- 4 Using Integrity Virtual Server Manager views and tabs
- 5 Using Integrity Virtual Server Manager menus
- 6 Working with VMs or vPars
- Working with VMs
- Planning VMs
- Creating VMs
- Modifying VMs
- Starting VMs
- Stopping VMs
- Restarting VMs
- Deleting VMs
- Migrating VMs
- Suspending VMs
- Resuming VMs
- Moving suspend files
- Creating virtual switches
- Starting, stopping, and deleting virtual switches
- Deleting network or storage devices
- Opening iLO console
- Opening virtual iLO remote console
- Deleting virtual iLO remote console
- Deleting DIOs
- Adding DIOs
- Replacing DIO H/W path
- Replacing DIO MAC address
- Working with vPars
- Creating vPars
- Modifying vPars
- Booting vPars
- Stopping vPars
- Resetting vPars
- Creating virtual switches
- Starting, stopping, and deleting virtual switches
- Deleting network or storage devices
- Deleting vPars
- Opening iLO console
- Opening virtual iLO remote console
- Deleting virtual iLO remote console
- Adding DIOs
- Replacing DIO H/W path
- Replacing DIO MAC address
- Deleting DIOs
- Working with VMs
- 7 Collecting and viewing utilization data
- 8 Viewing logs and version information
- 9 Support and other resources
- Information to collect before contacting HP
- How to contact HP
- Security bulletin and alert policy for non-HP owned software components
- Subscription service
- Registering for software technical support and update service
- How to use your software technical support and update
- HP authorized resellers
- New and changed information in this edition
- Related information
- Typographic conventions
- 10 Documentation feedback
- A Error messages, status indicators, and troubleshooting
- Glossary
- Index
host The VSP, which is the controlling operating system that allows multiple vPars (VMs) to be
booted on a single server or nPartition.
1.
2. A system or partition that is running an instance of an operating system.
Integrity VM HP Integrity VM. The HP product that allows you to install and run multiple systems (virtual machines
or virtual partitions) on the same physical host system.
legacy addressing The storage device addressing model that uses the device special file (DSF) path as defined in
HP-UX 11i v2 and earlier versions. In contrast to the agile addressing model introduced with
HP-UX 11i v3, the legacy device special file (DSF) is bound to a specific hardware path to a
storage device. For this reason, a device with multiple paths is represented by several legacy
DSFs. If the physical storage device is reconnected to a host through a different host bus adapter
(HBA) or a different target port, the address represented by the DSF is affected, requiring
reconfiguration of applications, volume managers, or file systems. Likewise, if additional paths
are offered to a given LUN (through the addition of a new SCSI controller or new SCSI target
paths), an equal number of additional DSFs are required to address them.
See also agile addressing.
localnet A vswitch created by default when Integrity VM is installed on a VSP. The local network created
by this vswitch can be used for communications among guests but not for communication between
the VSP and any guest or between any external system and a VM guest.
managed node A system running under HP Systems Insight Manager/HP Matrix Operating Environment. Systems
become managed nodes through the Systems Insight Manager discovery mechanism.
managed system See managed node.
MSE group Multiserver Environment group. A set of Integrity VM servers can be grouped into an Integrity
VM MSE group, as required when a set of Integrity VM servers is also configured as a
Serviceguard cluster.
NIC Network interface card. Also called LAN card, LAN adapter, or PPA.
nPartition A partition in a cell-based server that consists of one or more cells, and one or more I/O chassis.
Each nPartition operates independently of other nPartitions and either runs a single instance of
an operating system or is further divided into vPars.
nPartitions can be used as compartments managed by Global Workload Manager (gWLM) as
long as several requirements are met. Refer to the gWLM online help for a description of nPartition
requirements.
processor Also referred to as the central processor unit (CPU), a processor is the hardware component in
a computer that processes instructions and plugs into a processor socket. A processor can contain
more than one core.
See also core.
Serviceguard HP Serviceguard. A product that allows you to create high-availability clusters of HP 9000 or HP
Integrity servers. By installing Serviceguard on an HP Integrity VSP system, Serviceguard can
manage Integrity VM virtual machines or virtual partitions as Serviceguard packages. A
Serviceguard package groups application services (individual HP-UX processes) together and
maintains them on multiple nodes in the cluster, making them available for failover. When the
VSP system fails, the guests automatically fail over to another node in the Integrity VM multiserver
environment (MSE group). By installing Serviceguard on HP Integrity guests, each guest becomes
a Serviceguard cluster node. When a virtual machine or virtual partition fails, the guest applications
can fail over to another guest configured as a Serviceguard node or to another server or partition.
shared vswitch A vswitch that can be used by more than one active virtual machine or virtual partition.
Utilization Provider The WBEM services provider for real-time utilization data from managed systems.
virtual CPU See CPU.
virtual machine A software entity provided by HP Integrity VM. This technology allows a single server or nPartition
to act as a VSP for multiple individual VMs, each running its own instance of an operating system
(referred to as a guest OS). VMs are managed systems under Matrix Operating Environment for
HP-UX. Other providers of VMs include VMware ESX, VMware ESXi, or Microsoft Hyper-V.
142 Glossary