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Special Forums News, Links, Events and Announcements HP-UX Boot Camp | HPE Executive Keynotes and Breakout Sessions Added Post 302967963 by Connect_Kelly on Tuesday 1st of March 2016 05:16:25 PM
Old 03-01-2016
HP HP-UX Boot Camp | HPE Executive Keynotes and Breakout Sessions Added

Several breakout sessions have been approved for Boot Camp! The Call for Papers is open until March 15th, and the final schedule will be released in April 2016. Check the official HP-UX Boot Camp website frequently as sessions are announced.

HPE EXECUTIVE KEYNOTES

DAY 1 : Integrity & HP-UX for Mission-critical environments
Jeff Kyle, Hewlett Packard Enterprise - Director, HPE MCS Product Management

DAY 2 : Engineering HP-UX for Mission-critical environments
Ranga Nadiger, Hewlett Packard Enterprise - Director, MCS HP-UX Engineering

NEW BREAKOUT SESSIONS

ROUNDTABLE : HP-UX System Administration Round Table
Patrick Wallek and Bill Hassell, Service IT Direct

BREAKOUT SESSION : Infrastructure: Virtualization for Mission-critical environments
Santosh Abraham, Hewlett Packard Enterprise - HP-UX Architect

BREAKOUT SESSION : Manageability: Simplifying Management
Leo Demers, Hewlett Packard Enterprise - HP-UX Planner Architect

CDA BREAKOUT SESSION : HP-UX / Integrity Roadmap (*CDA Required)
Leo Demers, Hewlett Packard Enterprise, HP-UX Planner Architect
Ranga Nadiger, Hewlett Packard Enterprise, Director, HPE MCS HP-UX Engineering

BREAKOUT SESSION : Manageability: Boosting performance with Integrity systems and HP-UX
Santosh Abraham and Ravindra Kini, Hewlett Packard Enterprise

BREAKOUT SESSION : Disaster-proofing your mission critical workloads (e.g. Oracle, SAP) with HPE Serviceguard
G M Bhaskar, Hewlett Packard Enterprise
 
pdc(1M) 																   pdc(1M)

NAME
pdc - processor-dependent code (firmware) DESCRIPTION
is the firmware that implements all processor-dependent functionality, including initialization and self-test of the processor. Upon com- pletion, it loads and transfers control to the initial system loader (isl(1M)). Firmware behavior varies somewhat, depending on the hard- ware as described below. To load from an external medium, must know the particular device on which resides. Typically the device is identified by the Primary Boot Path that is maintained by in Stable Storage. A path specification is an I/O subsystem mnemonic that varies according to hardware model. When the processor is reset after initialization and self-test complete, reads the Console Path from Stable Storage, and attempts to ini- tialize the console device. If the initialization fails, attempts to find and initialize a console device. Algorithms used to find a con- sole device are model-dependent. then announces the Primary Boot, Alternate Boot, and Console Paths. If (see isl(1M)) is enabled, provides a 10-second delay, during which time the operator can override the sequence by typing any character on the console. If the operator does not interrupt this process, initializes and reads from the Primary Boot Path. On models that support autosearch, if this path is not valid and (see isl(1M)) is enabled, then searches to find a bootable medium. If allowed to complete, a list of potentially bootable devices is displayed, labeled with abbreviated path identifiers (P0, P1, etc). A simple menu is then displayed where the user can: o Boot a specific device, using the abbreviated path identifier, or the full mnemonic. o Start a device search where the contents are searched for IPL images (note the first search only identified devices and did not check the contents). o Enter the boot administration level. o Exit the menu and return to autobooting o Get help on choices If the sequence is unsuccessful, overridden by the operator, or not enabled in the first place, interactively prompts the operator for the Boot Path to use. Any required path components that are not supplied default to zero. The Primary Boot, Alternate Boot, and Console Paths as well as and enable can be modified via SEE ALSO
boot(1M), isl(1M). PA-RISC Systems Only pdc(1M)
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