1. Overview of the Oracle VM Server for SPARC Software
2. Installing and Enabling Software
4. Setting Up Services and the Control Domain
12. Performing Other Administration Tasks
File Names (file) and Variable Names (var-name)
Virtual Disk Server backend and Virtual Switch Device Names
Configuration Name (config-name)
Connecting to a Guest Console Over a Network
Combine Multiple Consoles Into One Group
Stopping a Heavily Loaded Domain Can Time Out
Operating the Oracle Solaris OS With Oracle VM Server for SPARC
OpenBoot Firmware Not Available After Oracle Solaris OS Has Started
Save Your Current Domain Configurations to the SP
Do Not Use the psradm(1M) Command on Active CPUs in a Power-Managed Domain
Result of Oracle Solaris OS Breaks
Results From Halting or Rebooting the Control Domain
Using Logical Domains With the Service Processor
Reset the Domain Configuration to the Default or Another Configuration
Configuring Domain Dependencies
Determining Where Errors Occur by Mapping CPU and Memory Addresses
Determine the Real Memory Address
Examples of CPU and Memory Mapping
Virtual Domain Information Command and API
A. Oracle VM Server for SPARC Physical-to-Virtual Conversion Tool
B. Oracle VM Server for SPARC Configuration Assistant
C. Logical Domains Manager Discovery
D. Using the XML Interface With the Logical Domains Manager
Starting with the Oracle VM Server for SPARC 2.0 release, each domain is assigned a universally unique identifier (UUID). The UUID is assigned when a domain is created. For legacy domains, the UUID is assigned when the ldmd daemon initializes.
Note - The UUID is lost if you use the ldm migrate-domain -f command to migrate a domain to a target machine that runs an older version of the Logical Domains Manager. When you migrate a domain from a source machine that runs an older version of the Logical Domains Manager, the domain is assigned a new UUID as part of the migration. Otherwise, the UUID is migrated.
You can obtain the UUID for a domain by running the ldm list -l, ldm list-bindings, or ldm list -o domain command. The following examples show the UUID for the ldg1 domain:
primary# ldm create ldg1 primary# ldm ls -l ldg1 NAME STATE FLAGS CONS VCPU MEMORY UTIL UPTIME ldg1 inactive ------ UUID 6c908858-12ef-e520-9eb3-f1cd3dbc3a59 primary# ldm ls -l -p ldg1 VERSION 1.4 DOMAIN|name=ldg1|state=inactive|flags=|cons=|ncpu=|mem=|util=|uptime= UUID|uuid=6c908858-12ef-e520-9eb3-f1cd3dbc3a59