How to check the LPAR in a AIX box ?


 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Operating Systems AIX How to check the LPAR in a AIX box ?
# 8  
Old 11-08-2011
hi,
Through VIO u cant say that whether an LPAR is running or not.
without IP u cant telnet any partition whether it is an VIO or an LPAR.
just login to the HMC and select the VIO partition,just click open terminal.you will have an
terminal...
Login or Register to Ask a Question

Previous Thread | Next Thread

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

AIX - SAN Mount and Unmount on LPAR

We have 2 LPAR. LPAR #1 have a Application, Database Server process (ctree Server) and SAN+Physical Table. LPAR#2 has only Application. Both Application process are connected to Database via C-tree Server Process (Running on LPAR #1.. We want to keep one Active C-tree Server and one Backup... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: gabhanes
1 Replies

2. AIX

AIX LPAR FC connection to SAN

Hi all, In my system, I have HMC 7 with Power Machine 6 & 7. On the managed system, we have many lpars. In some lpars, I can see they are using virtual fiber channel to connect to DS8K storage. In search with google, I understand that it is configured with VIOS server to share the physical FC... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: Phat
7 Replies

3. AIX

Will it affect my AIX LPAR security, when i set up email alerts on AIX server.

Hello, I've set up email alerts on AIX Servers. so that i can get email notifications (via mail relay server) when ever there is abnormal behavior. for example 1) my script monitors CPU/disk/memory etc... when it reaches high water ark, it will send an email alert. 2) disk usage alerts 3)... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: System Admin 77
5 Replies

4. AIX

Newbie - AIX LPAR performance problem

Running into performance issues with WAS application servers on two of LPAR's or like configuration under high load web pages crawl. Please forgive me I'm new to AIX and most my expertise is in the Linux space. Thanks for your help!! Here's the run down: The problem appears to be CPU... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: margeson
3 Replies

5. AIX

AIX 5.2.0 on own hardware -> i550 LPAR

We are running into a problem that we thought had solved but no go... We have multiple machine types but 1 AIX and 2 i550 (AS/400) with 4 lpar each. Existing AIX is an old (2004 vintage) machine with 5.2 on it for historical use only. Existing Power6 i550 running code that will used... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: jackb_guppy
6 Replies

6. AIX

AIX admin - lpar question

Hi Guru, my question is that can I create LPAR in AIX 5.3, 6.0, 6.1 by using smit lpar, rather than using HMC or AIX Commands? Thank you very much. Mir Alihttp://xwww.unix.com/images/icons/icon5.gif (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Tahniet
3 Replies

7. AIX

How to Find if AIX machine is LPar or not

Hi, I want to know if there is any command which will tell me if an AIX machine is a LPar or not. I am using "lparstat -i" but it does not work on all AIX machines. Is there any generic command by whose output I will come to know if it is an LPar or not? Please help. Thanks, Vineet (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: vineetd
3 Replies

8. AIX

p6 570 network for AIX LPAR

know how to do it. (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: rainbow_bean
3 Replies

9. AIX

Setting Dual Ip address on LPAR AIX 5.3

Hi Guys, Can somebody help me how to add and activate addtional ip address on AIX. My server is IBM p5-570 i already set ipadress on ent1 ent0 -- 192.168.206.105 ( default ) ent1 -- 192.168.0.89 (additional) i can ping from outside to 192.168.0.89 but i can not telnet or ftp. for... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: cahyo3074
6 Replies

10. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

difference between AIX box and Sun Solaris box

Hi, I need a clarification. Is there any difference between AIX box and Sun Solaris box? The bzip command with -c option works in AIX box and the same does not work in Sun Solaris box. Can anyone please explain if there is an implementation difference in both these boxes for the shell... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: nisha4680
1 Replies
Login or Register to Ask a Question
VIRT-WHAT(1)						      Virtualization Support						      VIRT-WHAT(1)

NAME
virt-what - detect if we are running in a virtual machine SUMMARY
virt-what [options] DESCRIPTION
"virt-what" is a shell script which can be used to detect if the program is running in a virtual machine. The program prints out a list of "facts" about the virtual machine, derived from heuristics. One fact is printed per line. If nothing is printed and the script exits with code 0 (no error), then it can mean either that the program is running on bare-metal or the program is running inside a type of virtual machine which we don't know about or cannot detect. FACTS
hyperv This is Microsoft Hyper-V hypervisor. Status: confirmed by RWMJ ibm_systemz This is an IBM SystemZ (or other S/390) hardware partitioning system. Additional facts listed below may also be printed. ibm_systemz-direct This is Linux running directly on a IBM SystemZ hardware partitioning system. This is expected to be a highly unusual configuration - if you see this result you should treat it with suspicion. Status: not confirmed ibm_systemz-lpar This is Linux running directly on an LPAR on an IBM SystemZ hardware partitioning system. Status: not confirmed ibm_systemz-zvm This is a z/VM guest running in an LPAR on an IBM SystemZ hardware partitioning system. Status: confirmed by RWMJ using a Fedora guest running in z/VM linux_vserver This is printed for backwards compatibility with older virt-what which could not distinguish between a Linux VServer container guest and host. linux_vserver-guest This process is running in a Linux VServer container. Status: contributed by BarXX Metin linux_vserver-host This process is running as the Linux VServer host (VxID 0). Status: contributed by BarXX Metin and Elan Ruusamaee lxc This process is running in a Linux LXC container. Status: contributed by Marc Fournier kvm This guest is running on the KVM hypervisor using hardware acceleration. Note that if the hypervisor is using software acceleration you should not see this, but should see the "qemu" fact instead. Status: confirmed by RWMJ. openvz The guest appears to be running inside an OpenVZ or Virtuozzo container. Status: contributed by Evgeniy Sokolov parallels The guest is running inside Parallels Virtual Platform (Parallels Desktop, Parallels Server). Status: contributed by Justin Clift powervm_lx86 The guest is running inside IBM PowerVM Lx86 Linux/x86 emulator. Status: data originally supplied by Jeffrey Scheel, confimed by Yufang Zhang and RWMJ qemu This is QEMU hypervisor using software emulation. Note that for KVM (hardware accelerated) guests you should not see this. Status: confirmed by RWMJ. uml This is a User-Mode Linux (UML) guest. Status: contributed by Laurent Leonard virt Some sort of virtualization appears to be present, but we are not sure what it is. In some very rare corner cases where we know that virtualization is hard to detect, we will try a timing attack to see if certain machine instructions are running much more slowly than they should be, which would indicate virtualization. In this case, the generic fact "virt" is printed. virtage This is Hitachi Virtualization Manager (HVM) Virtage hardware partitioning system. Status: data supplied by Bhavna Sarathy, not confirmed virtualbox This is a VirtualBox guest. Status: contributed by Laurent Leonard virtualpc The guest appears to be running on Microsoft VirtualPC. Status: not confirmed vmware The guest appears to be running on VMware hypervisor. Status: confirmed by RWMJ xen The guest appears to be running on Xen hypervisor. Status: confirmed by RWMJ xen-dom0 This is the Xen dom0 (privileged domain). Status: confirmed by RWMJ xen-domU This is a Xen domU (paravirtualized guest domain). Status: confirmed by RWMJ xen-hvm This is a Xen guest fully virtualized (HVM). Status: confirmed by RWMJ EXIT STATUS
Programs that use or wrap "virt-what" should check that the exit status is 0 before they attempt to parse the output of the command. A non-zero exit status indicates some error, for example, an unrecognized command line argument. If the exit status is non-zero then the output "facts" (if any were printed) cannot be guaranteed and should be ignored. The exit status does not have anything to do with whether the program is running on baremetal or under virtualization, nor with whether "virt-what" managed detection "correctly" (which is basically unknowable given the large variety of virtualization systems out there and that some systems deliberately emulate others). RUNNING VIRT-WHAT FROM OTHER PROGRAMS "virt-what" is designed so that you can easily run it from other programs or wrap it up in a library. Your program should check the exit status (see the section above). Some programming languages (notably Python: issue 1652) erroneously mask the "SIGPIPE" signal and do not restore it when executing subprocesses. "virt-what" is a shell script and some shell commands do not work correctly when you do this. You may see warnings from "virt-what" similar to this: echo: write error: Broken pipe The solution is to set the "SIGPIPE" signal handler back to "SIG_DFL" before running "virt-what". IMPORTANT NOTE
Most of the time, using this program is the wrong thing to do. Instead you should detect the specific features you actually want to use. (As an example, if you wanted to issue Xen hypervisor commands you would look for the "/proc/xen/privcmd" file). However people keep asking for this, so we provide it. There are a few legitimate uses: Bug reporting tool If you think that virtualization could affect how your program runs, then you might use "virt-what" to report this in a bug reporting tool. Status display and monitoring tools You might include this information in status and monitoring programs. System tuning (sometimes) You might use this program to tune an operating system so it runs better as a virtual machine of a particular hypervisor. However if installing paravirtualized drivers, it's better to check for the specific features your drivers need (eg. for the presence of PCI devices). SEE ALSO
<http://people.redhat.com/~rjones/virt-what/>, <http://www.vmware.com/>, <http://www.microsoft.com/windows/products/winfamily/virtualpc>, <http://xensource.com/>, <http://bellard.org/qemu/>, <http://kvm.qumranet.com/>, <http://openvz.org/> AUTHORS
Richard W.M. Jones <rjones @ redhat . com> COPYRIGHT
(C) Copyright 2008-2011 Red Hat Inc., <http://people.redhat.com/~rjones/virt-what/> This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. REPORTING BUGS
Bugs can be viewed on the Red Hat Bugzilla page: <https://bugzilla.redhat.com/>. If you find a bug in virt-what, please follow these steps to report it: 1. Check for existing bug reports Go to <https://bugzilla.redhat.com/> and search for similar bugs. Someone may already have reported the same bug, and they may even have fixed it. 2. Capture debug and error messages Run virt-what > virt-what.log 2>&1 and keep virt-what.log. It may contain error messages which you should submit with your bug report. 3. Get version of virt-what. Run virt-what --version 4. Submit a bug report. Go to <https://bugzilla.redhat.com/> and enter a new bug. Please describe the problem in as much detail as possible. Remember to include the version numbers (step 3) and the debug messages file (step 2) and as much other detail as possible. 5. Assign the bug to rjones @ redhat.com Assign or reassign the bug to rjones @ redhat.com (without the spaces). You can also send me an email with the bug number if you want a faster response. virt-what-1.13 2014-06-09 VIRT-WHAT(1)