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

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. From the Web-based <strong>System</strong> Manager main PLM window, as shown in<br />

Figure 6-16.<br />

This performs the same operati<strong>on</strong> as the command line: It creates a PLM<br />

server named RedbookServer in management mode, using the same<br />

policy and log files used in the command line. You can use the<br />

c<strong>on</strong>figurati<strong>on</strong> with your own designated name or use the default.<br />

Figure 6-16 Starting a PLM server<br />

The policy file stipulates that PLM will not start taking acti<strong>on</strong> before the CPU<br />

load reaches 0.8. Start a number of CPU intensive jobs in each partiti<strong>on</strong> and<br />

observe what acti<strong>on</strong> PLM takes.<br />

You can observe PLM’s acti<strong>on</strong>s by using the tail command to look at the log<br />

file:<br />

# tail /var/opt/plm/plm.log<br />

You can check the new partiti<strong>on</strong> c<strong>on</strong>figurati<strong>on</strong> with the mpstat command.<br />

12.From the PLM main Web-based <strong>System</strong> Manager window, you can show the<br />

PLM status and statistics and modify the PLM server. You can determine the<br />

names of the running instances using the following command:<br />

# xlplm -Q<br />

RedbookServer<br />

13.Stop PLM from the main PLM Web-based <strong>System</strong> Manager window or use<br />

the following command:<br />

# xlplm -K RedbookServer<br />

406 <str<strong>on</strong>g>Advanced</str<strong>on</strong>g> <str<strong>on</strong>g>POWER</str<strong>on</strong>g> <str<strong>on</strong>g>Virtualizati<strong>on</strong></str<strong>on</strong>g> <strong>on</strong> <strong>IBM</strong> <strong>System</strong> <strong>p5</strong>

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