This section describes how hard partitioned systems interact with other Oracle VM Server for SPARC features.
You can use CPU dynamic reconfiguration with domains that are configured with CPU whole cores. However, you can add or remove only entire CPU cores, not individual CPU threads. The hard partitioning state of the system is maintained by the CPU dynamic reconfiguration feature. In addition, if CPU cores are dynamically added to a domain, the maximum is enforced. Therefore, the CPU DR command would fail if it attempted to exceed the maximum number of CPUs.
Use the following commands to dynamically add to or remove CPU whole cores from a bound or active domain and to dynamically set the number of CPU whole cores for a bound or active domain:
ldm add-core number-of-CPU-cores domain ldm rm-core number-of-CPU-cores domain ldm set-core number-of-CPU-cores domain
This example shows how to dynamically add two CPU whole cores to the ldg1 domain. The ldg1 domain is an active domain that has been configured with CPU whole cores. The first command shows that the ldg1 domain is active. The second command shows that the ldg1 domain is configured with CPU whole cores and a maximum of four CPU cores. The third and fifth commands show the CPU cores that are assigned to the domain before and after the addition of two CPU whole cores. The fourth command dynamically adds two CPU whole cores to the ldg1 domain.
primary# ldm list ldg1 NAME STATE FLAGS CONS VCPU MEMORY UTIL UPTIME ldg1 active -n---- 5000 16 2G 0.4% 5d 17h 49m primary# ldm list -o resmgmt ldg1 NAME ldg1 CONSTRAINT whole-core max-cores=4 primary# ldm list -o core ldg1 NAME ldg1 CORE CID PCPUSET 1 (8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15) 2 (16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23) primary# ldm add-core 2 ldg1 primary# ldm list -o core ldg1 NAME ldg1 CORE CID PCPUSET 1 (8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15) 2 (16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23) 3 (24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31) 4 (32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39)
Dynamic resource management (DRM) can be used to automatically manage CPU resources on some domains.
You can set a separate power management (PM) policy for each hard-partitioned domain.
A domain that is configured with CPU whole cores remains configured with CPU whole cores when the domain is restarted, or if the entire system is restarted. A domain uses the same physical CPU cores for the entire time it remains bound. For example, if a domain is rebooted, it uses the same physical CPU cores both before and after the reboot. Or, if the entire system is powered off while a domain is bound, that domain will be configured with the same physical CPU cores when the system is powered on again. If you unbind a domain and then rebind it, or if the entire system is restarted with a new configuration, the domain might use different physical CPU cores.