Getting started with HP-UX Workload Manager

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HP Integrity Virtual Machines (Integrity VM) hosts
Resource partitions, which can be:
Whole-core: HP-UX processor sets (pSets)
Sub-core: Fair Share Scheduler (FSS) groups (WLM creates FSS groups using HP Process
Resource Manager (PRM))
Note
As of WLM A.03.01, PRM is no longer included with the WLM bundle. If
PRM C.03.00 or later is already on the machine on which you are
installing or upgrading WLM, you can continue to manage FSS and pSet-
based workload groups (just as if PRM had been installed with WLM). If
you are installing WLM for the first time on a machine, you can use a
strictly host-based configuration (no FSS or pSet workload groups).
However, to manage FSS and pSet-based workload groups, you must
install PRM (C.03.00 or later) separately.
To have WLM migrate resources among workloads as needed, you create one or more SLOs for each
workload. In defining an SLO, you specify its relative level of importance (priority), and typically, you
also specify a usage goal to attain a targeted resource usage. If a performance measure (metric) is
available, you can specify a metric goal. As the applications run, WLM compares the application
usage or metrics against the goals. To achieve the goals, WLM then automatically adjusts CPU
allocations for the workloads.
To manage your systems more effectively, you can use WLM with several HP products, such as:
Virtual partitionsFor systems with partitions, WLM provides a global arbiter that takes input from
the WLM instances on the individual partitions. The global arbiter then moves cores among
partitions, if needed, to better achieve the SLOs specified in the WLM configuration files that are
active in the partitions.
nPartitionsThe WLM global arbiter also takes input from the WLM instances on individual
nPartitions. For nPartitions with Instant Capacity software installed, WLM can simulate the
movement of cores among partitions, deactivating unneeded cores in one or more partitions and
then activating cores on the partitions where CPU resources are most needed. WLM can be
integrated with HP Serviceguard to reallocate resources in a failover situation according to defined
priorities. For more information on integrating with HP Serviceguard, see the white papers “HP-UX
Workload Manager overviewand “More efficient high availability and resource utilization
through manageability (integrating HP-UX Clustering, Instant Capacity, HP-UX Workload Manager)
available from the information library at:
http://www.hp.com/go/wlm
Virtual machinesHP Integrity Virtual Machines is a robust soft partitioning and virtualization
technology that provides operating systems isolation, shared CPU resources (with sub-core
granularity), shared I/O, and automatic dynamic resource allocation. It is available for HP-UX 11i
v2 and later, running on HP Integrity servers. Each virtual machine is similar to a virtual partition but
emulates a generic server. Each virtual machine runs its own operating system. HP Integrity Virtual
Machines can be used within hard partitions. You can run WLM both on the Integrity VM host and
in an Integrity VM (guest), with each WLM running as an independent instance:
On the Integrity VM host, run WLM with a strictly host-based configuration designed
exclusively for moving cores across partitions or activating Temporary Instant Capacity
(TiCAP) or Pay per use (PPU) cores.
Inside any Integrity VM (guest), run WLM to manage resources of the guest HP-UX
resources. You cannot use Instant Capacity, PPU, and vPar integration; however,
WLM does take advantage of cores added to the Integrity VM host by Instant
Capacity and PPU.