You can define as many LPARs as your machine type allows. Each LPAR will
have (one or more) standard CPUs or (one or more) IFL CPUs assigned to
it but not both. A CPU can be assigned to more than one LPAR. If you
wish to use both standard and IFL CPUs you must have at least 2 LPARs
defined.
If you have one standard CPU and one IFL CPU then the simplest setup is
to define one LPAR with one standard CPU and one LPAR with one IFL CPU.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
After doing some further reading, it looks like I am confused with the
use of the word LPAR.
I am used to the old days meaning of LPAR being the equivalent of VM to
use machine resources to emulate multiple machines.
Now it looks like LPAR means one to one machine emulation, ie one LPAR
for CPU1and second LPAR for IFL1 etc. Or am I still off base????
--
Stephen Frazier
Information Technology Unit
Oklahoma Department of Corrections
3400 Martin Luther King
Oklahoma City, Ok, 73111-4298
Tel.: (405) 425-2549
Fax: (405) 425-2554
Pager: (405) 690-1828
email: stevef%doc.state.ok.us