05-09-2019
No. You will need to create a pset with wanted cpu cores and alocate that to specific zone or zones to compliant as far as i recall.
Lets say for simplicity you have 10 zones, 1 global zone and 9 zones
9 zones have 1 vcpu share (including global), while 1 zone has 2 vcpu share.
This means that in only in the case of cpu pressure, say 100%, kernel will guarantee each zone 10% of resources (1 cpu share) and one zone (2 cpu shares) will get 20% of cpu resources.
Not cores per se, but compute power using FSS scheduler.
For instance, all zones are mostly idle using total of 10% cpu, any zone will able to use rest of cpu time, as long there is no competition for cpu time.
Only under cpu pressure the scheduler will kick in to alocate time per ratio (1:1:1:1:1:1:1:1:1:2 = 100) to ensure quality of service per shares configuration.
When using psets allocated to zones, a zone will have dedicated cores defined in pset and no other zone will able to use those cores.
And you will be compliant as oracle hard partition, if that didn't change in the meantime...
Hope that helps.
Regards
Peasant.
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LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
cpupower-frequency-info
CPUPOWER-FREQUENCY-INFO(1) cpupower Manual CPUPOWER-FREQUENCY-INFO(1)
NAME
cpupower frequency-info - Utility to retrieve cpufreq kernel information
SYNTAX
cpupower [ -c cpulist ] frequency-info [options]
DESCRIPTION
A small tool which prints out cpufreq information helpful to developers and interested users.
OPTIONS
-e --debug
Prints out debug information.
-f --freq
Get frequency the CPU currently runs at, according to the cpufreq core.
-w --hwfreq
Get frequency the CPU currently runs at, by reading it from hardware (only available to root).
-l --hwlimits
Determine the minimum and maximum CPU frequency allowed.
-d --driver
Determines the used cpufreq kernel driver.
-p --policy
Gets the currently used cpufreq policy.
-g --governors
Determines available cpufreq governors.
-a --related-cpus
Determines which CPUs run at the same hardware frequency.
-a --affected-cpus
Determines which CPUs need to have their frequency coordinated by software.
-s --stats
Shows cpufreq statistics if available.
-y --latency
Determines the maximum latency on CPU frequency changes.
-o --proc
Prints out information like provided by the /proc/cpufreq interface in 2.4. and early 2.6. kernels.
-m --human
human-readable output for the -f, -w, -s and -y parameters.
REMARKS
By default only values of core zero are displayed. How to display settings of other cores is described in the cpupower(1) manpage in the
--cpu option section.
You can't specify more than one of the output specific options -o -e -a -g -p -d -l -w -f -y.
You also can't specify the -o option combined with the -c option.
FILES
/sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu*/cpufreq/
/proc/cpufreq (deprecated)
/proc/sys/cpu/ (deprecated)
AUTHORS
Dominik Brodowski <linux@brodo.de> - author
Mattia Dongili<malattia@gmail.com> - first autolibtoolization
SEE ALSO
cpupower-frequency-set(1), cpupower(1)
0.1 CPUPOWER-FREQUENCY-INFO(1)