|
Diego is correct. The primary motivation for factory deconfigured cores
was to lower PowerVM costs. It's not much but it is a little.
When you get this machine IBM i sees only one core and needs one license.
If you wish to upgrade you can turn on more cores and add IBM i Licenses as
well.
In my customer base most don't go the deconfigured cores route as too much
is changing and it's very simple to add IBM i Licenses but not as simple to
reactivate cores and such especially if you do not have an HMC.
- Larry "DrFranken" Bolhuis
www.Frankeni.com
www.iDevCloud.com - Personal Development IBM i timeshare service.
www.iInTheCloud.com - Commercial IBM i Cloud Hosting.
On 9/27/2017 8:49 AM, Diego Kesselman wrote:
Kirk,This is the Midrange Systems Technical Discussion (MIDRANGE-L) mailing list
by deconfiguring cores you ask the factory to turn off some cores to
lower your PowerVM licensing and AIX or IBM i when you have single LPAR
configuration.
You can power off the system, get into the ASMI and activate those cores,
and then on again; but you'll need additional PowerVM licenses and, when
required, additional OS licenses.
When you have a single LPAR IBM i system I think (sorry, can't remember),
and as long as you have an "all resources" LPAR, you must see all cores
(prepare your OS keys). If this doesn't work out, just create a new LPAR
with all resources so you can reflect changes.
Regards
Diego Kesselman
El 27/09/17 a las 06:34, Kirk Goins escribió:
DrFranken and other hardware Guru's...
I saw a 4core Power7 the other day with IBMi only on it. When looking at
Failed and Non-Reporting Hardware screen it is reporting cores 2-4 as
failed. I know at one time in the AIX world you could by from IBM a
machine
with x number cores deconfigured. This was done to less than handle less
than whole machine licensing in the AIX world as their licensing is as
robust as IBMi. How does/would IBMi see these deconfigured cores?
Thanks in advance
--
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