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Full Discussion: Dual Boot on HP-UX
Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users Dual Boot on HP-UX Post 28026 by Kelam_Magnus on Wednesday 11th of September 2002 11:35:19 AM
Old 09-11-2002
Only cell based systems support partitioning, but it is diff that dual booting a PC

To my knowledge, this can only be done if you have one of the new boxes, either the Superdome SD26000, Matterhorn RP7410, Keystone RP8400 servers which have the ability to have multiple partitions each with an instance of the Same or Different OSs on them. It is called "cell-based" technology and is new architecture to these 3 systems. You can learn more about it by going to http://docs.hp.com website and search for "Cell" or "superdome" to see the docs that are there. HP posts virtually all of its documentation on this site for public consumption.

None of the previous versions of Hardware before support this partitioning.

However, These versions mentioned above of HP Systems only support 11.0 or 11.i, 11.20 versions of the HPUX operating system.

So with that in mind, the answer to your question is "no".

You could have 2 different disks on the same box that you could boot from one or the other but you would have to specify the hardware path each time you would manually boot up. I don't think you can create an autoboot function to have a window to select one or the other. You would have to boot and manually change the path each time.

Smilie
 

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BOOTCTL(1)							      bootctl								BOOTCTL(1)

NAME
bootctl - Control the firmware and boot manager settings SYNOPSIS
bootctl [OPTIONS...] status bootctl [OPTIONS...] list bootctl [OPTIONS...] update bootctl [OPTIONS...] install bootctl [OPTIONS...] remove DESCRIPTION
bootctl checks, updates, installs or removes the boot loader from the current system. bootctl status checks and prints the currently installed versions of the boot loader binaries and all current EFI boot variables. bootctl list displays all configured boot loader entries. bootctl update updates all installed versions of systemd-boot, if the current version is newer than the version installed in the EFI system partition. This also includes the EFI default/fallback loader at /EFI/BOOT/BOOT*.EFI. A systemd-boot entry in the EFI boot variables is created if there is no current entry. The created entry will be added to the end of the boot order list. bootctl install installs systemd-boot into the EFI system partition. A copy of systemd-boot will be stored as the EFI default/fallback loader at /EFI/BOOT/BOOT*.EFI. A systemd-boot entry in the EFI boot variables is created and added to the top of the boot order list. bootctl remove removes all installed versions of systemd-boot from the EFI system partition, and removes systemd-boot from the EFI boot variables. If no command is passed, status is implied. OPTIONS
The following options are understood: -h, --help Print a short help text and exit. --version Print a short version string and exit. --path= Path to the EFI System Partition (ESP). If not specified, /efi, /boot, and /boot/efi are checked in turn. It is recommended to mount the ESP to /boot, if possible. -p, --print-path This option modifies the behaviour of status. Just print the path to the EFI System Partition (ESP) to standard output and exit. --no-variables Do not touch the EFI boot variables. EXIT STATUS
On success, 0 is returned, a non-zero failure code otherwise. SEE ALSO
Boot loader specification[1] systemd boot loader interface[2] NOTES
1. Boot loader specification https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Specifications/BootLoaderSpec 2. systemd boot loader interface https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd/BootLoaderInterface systemd 237 BOOTCTL(1)
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