Thanks for the insight, Mark. Being new in the SPARC architecture, I was completely unaware of ldoms For that reason, I deleted them until I can understand them better. Now, of course I can see all my RAM and CPUs in dmesg.
Besides ldomctl(8) and ldom.conf (5), have you written any other resources so one can get his feet wet in this topic? Cheers and thanks again, RS.- * Mark Kettenis <mark.kette...@xs4all.nl>: > > Date: Mon, 14 Oct 2019 15:35:51 +0200 > > From: Raymundo Soto <abuhuss...@secure.mailbox.org> > > > > Hi everyone, > > > > Has anyone been through this before? > > > > I have checked the sanity of all the DIMMs via ILOM (fault_state > > shows OK for each and every one of them) and have of course verified > > that they are physically, correctly placed in their slots. This is > > also not a missmatch problem since they are simmetrically positioned > > (all 16 slots are used with 2GB modules). Both dmesg and sysctl hw.* > > show the same. > > > > Any advice greatly appreciated. > > If you have a logical domain configuration you might need to > regenerate the configuration to make it aware of the additional > memory. This might involve switching back to the factory-default > config. If you use OpenBSD's ldomctl(8) to generate the configuration > you'll need to use the dump command and use the result as the base of > your config. > > Cheers, > > Mark