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

CPU, Memory, and I/O Resources (A.04.xx)
CPU: Syntax, Rules, and Notes
Chapter 7
265
CPU: Syntax, Rules, and Notes
vparstatus
When a virtual partition is down, vparstatus does not show any CPU assigned as the boot processor. The
boot processor is not assigned until the virtual partition is actually booted.
If a virtual partition is down and assigned only one CPU, a CPU will be reserved by the vPars Monitor,
making it unavailable. The specific CPU reserved is not determined until boot time. As a result, while the
virtual partition is down, vparstatus -A, which shows available resources, will show all the possible
paths of unassigned CPUs but the count of available CPUs will be one less. The count reflects the actual
number of available CPUs because one CPU is reserved for the down virtual partition.
Counts Summary
At all times, the rule of min<=total<=max is enforced.
When adding by CLP, the total count changes whether the partition is up or down.
When adding by hardware path, the total count changes only when the partition is up. The total does not
change if the specified CPU is already assigned to the partition.
When adding by hardware path and the partition is down, you cannot have the number of CPUs added by
hardware path exceed the current total value.
Deleting CPUs Summary
You can delete any CPU, except the current boot processor, by specifying its hardware path.
If you want to control which CPU is deleted (rather than leaving it up to the Monitor), use the same
method—by CLP, by hardware path, or by count—on your deletion command line that you used on your
addition command line.
The current boot processor can not be deleted from a virtual partition. (Use vparstatus -v to determine
the current boot processor.) You will need to shutdown the virtual partition and delete the desired CPU.