An iCOD cell board is usually assigned to a nPartition; however,
it does not participate in the boot of the nPartition. Activating
an iCOD cell board that is licensed is a two step process:
Set the iCOD cell
board’s use-on-next-boot flag
to “y” (yes)
Perform a reboot of the nPartition
(using the shutdown command)
Example 6-3 Activating
an iCOD cell board in cabinet 0, slot 5, nPartition 3
For example, changing the use-on-next-boot flag
to “y” on the iCOD cell board in cabinet 0, slot 5,
in nPartition 3 can be accomplished via the following command:
/usr/sbin/parmodify -p 3 -m 0/5::y:
If there are available licensed processors in the complex,
the number of intended active processors is increased as high as
possible, limited by the number of processors in the newly activated
cell board. The available processor licenses are automatically used
in the cell activation.
After you have set the iCOD cell board’s use-on-next-boot flag
to “y”, and performed the reboot, you can use the icod_modify command to activate iCOD processors that are listed as inactive
processors that can be activated (as reported by the icod_stat command).
The number of active processors in the nPartition remains
the same after the iCOD cell board is made active — unless
prior to the iCOD cell board’s activation the number of intended
active processors is greater than the number of active
processors (as reported by the icod_stat command).
Activating an iCOD cell board causes at least one processor
to become active on that cell board.
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 | IMPORTANT: The above parmodify command fails if a licensed processor is not available
for activation on the newly activated cell board. |
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See the HP System Partitions Guide for
details about adding and configuring cells in nPartitions.