HP Integrity Virtual Server Manager 6.3 User Guide

virtual CPUs, memory, disk I/O, or network I/O; this feature is not provided when using
Integrity Virtual Server Manager from HP SMH.
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Lists authorization information.
Screen details
VM or vPar Configuration Information
VM or vPar Name: The VM or vPar name. If the VM or vPar is configured as a Serviceguard
package, the package icon ( ) appears next to the VM or vPar name. (If the Virtual Server
Manager is being managed by another VSP, the HW field indicates so.)
VM or vPar Network Identity: The VSP name of the operating system (OS) running on the VM
or vPar. The VSP name is discovered by communicating with the VM or vPar, or if the VM or
vPar is not active, the VSP name stored in the VM or vPar configuration is used. The VM or
vPar must have booted an OS at least once for a VSP name to be stored in the VM or vPar
configuration. If the VSP name is not known, a question mark (?) is displayed.
VSP(s): The name of the VSP on which this VM or vPar is configured. This is a hyperlink to the
VSP view. If the VSP is an nPartition, the label “(contained in nPartition)” is displayed and
“nPartition” is a hyperlink to Partition Manager for that nPartition.
If the VM or vPar is managed by HP Serviceguard and is hosted on multiple VSPs, all of the
VSPs are listed here.
VM or vPar Description: The description of the VM or vPar, if the description is available.
Virtual Hardware Status: This indicates the status of the virtual hardware of a VM or vPar. For
a description of the status, position the cursor over the icon.
If the VM has migrated to another VSP, the hardware status of the VM is indicated as Not
Runnable ( Not Runnable). The Virtual Server Manager Configuration Information section
includes two additional lines of information explaining the cause of the Not Runnable status,
as described below.
If the VM or vPar is an HP Serviceguard package that is managed by another VSP, this field
also displays a status icon ( ) that indicates so. Flyover text shows the status of the hardware
(On) and the name of the VSP currently managing the VM or vPar (Serviceguard guest
package).
Operating System: Indicates the last OS type to be booted on this VM or vPar. If the VM or
vPar has never been booted, this field contains the value that was supplied when the VM or
vPar was created.
OS Status: Indicates the OS status for a VM or vPar, such as Up, Down, Initializing (indicating
that the VM or vPar has just been started and is being initialized — the OS is not yet active),
or In EFI (indicating that the VM or vPar is in the firmware interface and an OS has not yet
been booted). If the VM is migrating, an icon indicates the direction of migration ( indicates
migration to another VSP; indicates migration from another VSP). If the VM is waiting to
migrate (when multiple VMs are selected to migrate, only one is migrated at a time), an
hourglass icon ( ) indicates so; to view changes in migration status, click Refresh Data. For
a description of the status, position the cursor over the icon.
Boot Attribute: Indicates the hardware startup attribute for a VM or vPar, which determines
its startup behavior (that is, whether the VM or vPar is started automatically when the VM or
vPar boots or whether it must be manually started). To use Integrity Virtual Server Manager to
modify this attribute, click Modify Hardware Auto Start.
Graceful Stop Timeout: If supported by the version of Integrity Virtual Server Manager running
on the VSP, this specifies the amount of time HP Integrity Virtual Server Manager waits for
64 Using Integrity Virtual Server Manager views and tabs