Moving a system board from one domain to another – FUJITSU SPARC M4000 User Manual

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SPARC Enterprise Mx000 Servers XSCF User’s Guide • April 2008

Note –

When you delete the system board, please confirm the domain status, the

system board status, the device usage status on the system board, and also the
processes usage that are bound to the CPU or are accessing I/O devices. Then
confirm whether you should be able to delete the system board. Remember that
CMU resources also define the I/O resources, so deleting one resource will affect the
other. For details about operating the XSB while the OS is running, and for details
about DR messages, see the Dynamic Reconfiguration User’s Guide.

6. Use the showboards (8) command to confirm that the XSB has been deleted

from the domain.

XSCF> showboards –va

XSB R DID(LSB) Assignment Pwr Conn Conf Test Fault COD

---- - -------- ----------- ---- ---- ---- ------- -------- ----

00-0 02(00) Assigned n n n Passed Normal n

01-0 02(07) Assigned n n n Passed Normal n

01-1 SP Available n n n Passed Normal n

01-2 02(09) Assigned n n n Passed Normal n

01-3 02(10) Assigned n n n Passed Normal n

Moving a System Board From One Domain to Another

Command operation

1. Use the showdcl (8) command to display DCL information.

XSCF> showdcl –a

DID LSB XSB Status

02 Powered Off

00 00-0

07 01-0

08 01-1

09 01-2

10 01-3

2. Use the setdcl (8) command to define the LSB of a new domain.

<Example> In domain ID 1, specify XSB#01-0 for an LSB#00, XSB#01-

1 for an LSB#01, XSB#01-2 for an LSB#02, XSB#01-3 for an LSB#03.

XSCF> setdcl -d 1 -a 0=1-0 1=1-1 2=1-2 3=1-3

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