HP-UX Virtual Partitions Administrator's Guide (includes A.05.02)

CPU, Memory, and I/O Resources (A.03.xx)
I/O: Concepts
Chapter 8
276
I/O: Concepts
Acronyms
LBA Local Bus Adapter
SBA System Bus Adapter
System, Cells, SBA, LBA, Devices and Relationships
On a server, an I/O device communicates to the system through the LBA and SBA. The path looks like
Figure 8-1 System to I/O Device Relationship
This corresponds to the ioscan hardware path output for an I/O device of sba/lba/ ... /device.
A LBA actually owns all the devices attached to it. In the example below, all the I/O devices attached to LBA
0 are owned by LBA 0, and the hardware paths of those I/O devices begin with 0/0 (sba/lba). (Cells are
discussed later and would change the hardware path to cell_ID/sba/lba.)
Figure 8-2 LBA owns Multiple I/O Devices
It is at the LBA level where vPars assigns I/O. In the example below, this means that LBA 0 can be assigned
to at most one virtual partition. If LBA 0 is assigned to vparN, it is implied that all I/O devices attached to
LBA 0 are assigned to vparN.
Figure 8-3 vPars allocates I/O at the LBA Level
A SBA has multiple LBAs attached to it; it is a hierarchical relationship. Nevertheless, assignments in vPars
remain at the LBA level, and each LBA can be assigned to a different virtual partition.
NOTE Regarding syntax and how vPars commands interpret what is specified on the command line,
see “I/O: Allocation Notes” on page 280. Even if there are shortcuts in assigning LBAs, vPars
assigns per LBA.
In the example below, each LBA (shown in brackets) can be assigned to a different virtual partition.