HP-UX Secure Resource Partitions (SRP) A.02.01 Administrator's Guide

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For example, the prmlist -g -s command displays configuration information for PRM groups (-
g) and the PRM group for each Security Containment compartment (-s):
# prmlist -g -s
PRM configured from file: /etc/prmconf
File last modified: Tue Oct 14 12:57:58 2008
CPU CPU LCPU
PRM Group PRMID Entitlement Max Attr
__________________________________________________________________
EntDir 2 29.17% 80%
MktDB 65536 12.50%
MktWeb 3 21.88% 45%
OTHERS 1 21.88%
SRP2 4 14.58% 25%
Compartment Default PRM Group
_____________________________________________
EntDir EntDir
MktDB MktDB
MktWeb MktWeb
SRP2 SRP2
The prmmonitor utility displays statistics for each PRM group.
# prmmonitor
PRM configured from file: /etc/prmconf
File last modified: Tue Oct 14 12:57:58 2008
HP-UX habs B.11.31 U ia64 10/14/08
Tue Oct 14 13:03:11 2008 Sample: 1 second
CPU scheduler state: Enabled
CPU CPU CPU LCPU
PRM Group PRMID Entitle Max Used State
________________________________________________________________________
OTHERS 1 21.88% 3.06%
EntDir 2 29.17% 80% 24.10%
MktWeb 3 21.88% 45% 12.36%
SRP2 4 14.58% 25% 22.88%
MktDB 65536 12.50% 12.46%
PRM application manager state: Enabled (polling interval: 30 seconds)
17.1.5 Verifying Network Data
Use the netstat -in and netstat -rn commands to verify the compartment interface and route
entries.
The output for the netstat -in command lists the IP interfaces configured on the system. An
asterisk next to the interface name indicates that the interface is configured, but its state is down. In
the following example, the state for lan1, lan1:1 and lo0 is up, but the state for lan1:1 is down.
# netstat -in
Name Mtu Network Address Ipkts Ierrs Opkts Oerrs
Coll
lan1 1500 10.0.0.0 10.0.0.1 460732 0 279522 0 0
lan1:1 1500 192.0.2.0 19.0.2.1 32890 0 51537 0 0
lan1:2* 1500 192.0.2.0 19.0.2.2 0 0 0 0 0
lo0 32808 127.0.0.0 127.0.0.1 890170 0 890178 0 0