Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Disk expansion on LDOM Guest
Operating Systems Solaris Disk expansion on LDOM Guest Post 302981789 by pressy on Monday 19th of September 2016 01:13:08 PM
Old 09-19-2016
That's not much information...

You will need to create a vdsdev in your vds service. this vdsdev can be used as a vdisk for your ldom. within the ldom you will need to add this disk to the volume(s) for your /u02... and that will depend on your volume manager... ZFS? VxVM?

gP
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Solaris

Help needed - trying to run commands in Guest LDoms from Control LDOM

Hi Folks, I am used to writing scripts to get info by running commands at local zones level from their respective global zone by using zlogin <localzone> "command>" while remaining at the global zone level. Can the same be done with Guest LDoms while remaining at the control LDOM level? ... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: momin
4 Replies

2. Solaris

Installing Solaris OS on LDOM SAN Disk

I have viewed a few previous posts regarding this, but none of them quite described or worked with my issue. I am out of local disk space on my LDOM Manager but still have plenty of SAN vCPU and Memory available so I am trying to install a new LDOM OS on SAN. I have exposed the SAN to the... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: MobileGSP
0 Replies

3. Solaris

Network Config on Zone in a Guest LDOM

Solaris for Sparc 11.1 with the latest patches. Created a Guest LDOM with two vnet's net0 and net1, installed a guest whole root, ip exclusive zone that I want to be able to utilize DHCP. I have been able to create the zone but unable to get it to boot because I am unable to assign an anet to it.... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: os2mac
4 Replies

4. Solaris

Increase disk size of guest domain

Host System: SPARC S7-2 Server; 2x8-core CPUs; 128Gb RAM; 2x600Gb HDD. running Solaris 11.3. Last login: Tue Sep 19 14:42:42 2017 from xxx.xxx.xxx Oracle Corporation SunOS 5.11 11.3 June 2017 $ uname -a SunOS sog01 5.11 11.3 sun4v sparc sun4v $ Original physical systems: Sun... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: apmcd47
0 Replies

5. Solaris

Exporting physical disk to ldom or ZFS volume

Generally, this is what we do:- On primary, export 2 LUNs (add-vdsdev). On primary, assign these disks to the ldom in question (add-vdisk). On ldom, created mirrored zpool from these two disks. On one server (which is older) we have:- On primary, create mirrored zpool from the two LUNs.... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: psychocandy
4 Replies

6. Solaris

Disk alignment inside of an LDOM

Hi! Quick background for the question... I have Solaris 11.4 control/primary zone with some LDOM's on top of it. I have some raw iSCSI LUN's presented to the control zone/primary zone from a NetApp, which I then pass up to the LDOM's via the VDS/vdisk. So basically the LDOM VM's see the disk as... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: rtmg
1 Replies

7. Solaris

Ldom guest volumen problem t8 Solaris 11

hello to everyone. im new member here. i have a problem with a guest ldom on solaris 11 sparc in a T8. I need to access to disk vds assigned to guest domain but from control domain. I want to modify a parameter in inittab of the guest domain because start guest domain give me problems... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Liam_
2 Replies

8. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

Solaris 11 LDOM guest network not working

I'm really stuck here. I've created an LDOM on a SPARC T4-1 with Solaris 11.4 to run a copy of Linux for SPARC. I got the Linux ISO installed and Linux itself installed and booted OK. The only thing is is that there's no networking available in the Linux guest. This question is basically the... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: Michele31416
7 Replies

9. Solaris

Sharing a physical disk with an LDOM

I have a guest LDOM running Solaris 10U11 on a Sun T4-1 host running Solaris 11.4. The host has a disk named bkpool that I'd like to share with the LDOM so both can read and write it. The host is hemlock, the guest is sol10. root@hemlock:~# zpool list NAME SIZE ALLOC FREE CAP DEDUP ... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Michele31416
3 Replies
numa_sched_launch(5)						File Formats Manual					      numa_sched_launch(5)

NAME
numa_sched_launch - change process default launch policy VALUES
Failsafe Default Allowed values Recommended values unless the application requires explicit different behavior. DESCRIPTION
The dynamic tunable controls the default launch policy for newly created processes. The process launch policy controls the initial place- ment of the child process at creation time. The scheduler can migrate threads from one locality domain (LDOM) to another to distribute workload for better throughput and responsiveness. The default launch policy is applicable only to processes that have no explicit launch policy, processor binding, or LDOM binding applied to them (see mpctl(2) for details). There are three possible values of this tunable: This value explicitly disables any change in the default launch policy for processes irrespective of the system configuration. A newly created process will be placed using the legacy default launch policy. This is the default and recommended value. HP-UX will autosense the right policy setting based on system configuration. This policy directs HP-UX to optimize the launch policy for multi-process applications that share data. Such applications can get better performance when the applications are packed together in the same LDOM. The policy will cause child processes created using to be placed in the same locality domain as the parent process. Note that a different default launch policy may be used in the future with new system configurations for improved application performance when this tunable is enabled. Processes created using will be treated as if they are a new application and will continue to be launched using the legacy default launch policy. This value explicitly enables the new default launch policy for processes. A process created using is placed in the same locality domain as its parent process irrespective of the system configuration. Who Is Expected to Change This Tunable? System administrators who prefer to explicitly control the default launch policy for applications even when LORA (Locality Optimized Resource Alignment) mode is enabled (see numa_policy(5) for details). Restrictions on Changing The tunable changes take effect immediately. However, changes to this tunable will not affect processes that are already created. Such processes will need to be stopped and restarted to be launched with a modified tunable setting. When Should the Value of This Tunable Be Changed to 0? The value of should be set to to preserve the legacy process default launch policy even when the system is configured in LORA mode. When Should the Value of This Tunable Be Changed to 1? The value of should be set to to improve the performance of multi-process applications. When Should the Value of This Tunable Be Changed to 2? The value of should be set to when a multi-process application is likely to see improved performance even if the system is not configured for LORA mode. What Are the Side Effects of Changing the Value? The distribution of CPU utilization across the system will change. This situation can result in a change in performance. The change in performance is highly dependent on the workload and the partition configuration. What Other Tunable Values Should Be Changed at the Same Time? None. WARNINGS
All HP-UX kernel tunable parameters are release specific. This parameter may be removed or have its meaning changed in future releases of HP-UX. Installation of optional kernel software, from HP or other vendors, may cause changes to tunable parameter values. After installation, some tunable parameters may no longer be at the default or recommended values. For information about the effects of installation on tun- able values, consult the documentation for the kernel software being installed. For information about optional kernel software that was factory installed on your system, see at AUTHOR
was developed by HP. SEE ALSO
fork(2), mpctl(2), vfork(2), numa_policy(5). Tunable Kernel Parameters numa_sched_launch(5)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 03:43 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy