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Advanced POWER Virtualization on IBM System p5 - Previous ...

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View and change c<strong>on</strong>figurati<strong>on</strong><br />

Starting with Virtual I/O Server Versi<strong>on</strong> 1.3, dynamic LPAR is now supported with<br />

IVM.<br />

Processors<br />

An LPAR can be defined either with dedicated or with shared processors.<br />

When shared processors are selected for a partiti<strong>on</strong>, the wizard lets the<br />

administrator choose <strong>on</strong>ly the number of virtual processors to be activated. For<br />

each virtual processor, 0.1 processing units are implicitly assigned and the LPAR<br />

is created in uncapped mode, with a weight of 128.<br />

Processing unit value, uncapped mode, and the weight can be changed,<br />

modifying the LPAR c<strong>on</strong>figurati<strong>on</strong> after it has been created.<br />

Virtual Ethernet<br />

The IVM managed system is c<strong>on</strong>figured with four predefined virtual Ethernet<br />

networks, each having a virtual Ethernet ID ranging from 1 to 4. Every LPAR can<br />

have up to two virtual Ethernet adapters that can be c<strong>on</strong>nected to any of the four<br />

virtual networks in the system.<br />

Each virtual Ethernet network can be bridged by Virtual I/O Server to a physical<br />

network using <strong>on</strong>ly <strong>on</strong>e physical adapter. The same physical adapter cannot<br />

bridge more than <strong>on</strong>e virtual network.<br />

The virtual Ethernet network is a bootable device and can be used to install the<br />

LPAR’s operating system.<br />

Virtual storage<br />

Every LPAR is equipped with <strong>on</strong>e or more virtual SCSI disks using a single<br />

virtual SCSI adapter. The virtual disks are bootable devices and treated by the<br />

operating system as normal SCSI disks.<br />

Virtual optical device<br />

Any optical device equipped <strong>on</strong> the Virtual I/O Server partiti<strong>on</strong> (either CD-ROM,<br />

DVD-ROM, or DVD-RAM) can be virtualized and assigned at any logical<br />

partiti<strong>on</strong>, <strong>on</strong>e at a time, using the same virtual SCSI adapter provided to virtual<br />

disks. Virtual optical devices can be used to install the operating system and, if<br />

DVD-RAM, to make backups.<br />

Chapter 2. <str<strong>on</strong>g>Virtualizati<strong>on</strong></str<strong>on</strong>g> technologies <strong>on</strong> <strong>System</strong> p servers 107

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