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Justin, Without dual independent FSP's have you really removed the requirement of the controlling partition? Granted it no longer runs OS/400 or eats up resources. However if you put on a new firmware level the partitions are still down during that time. Rob Berendt -- Group Dekko Services, LLC Dept 01.073 PO Box 2000 Dock 108 6928N 400E Kendallville, IN 46755 http://www.dekko.com "Haase, Justin C." <justin.haase@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent by: midrange-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx 02/03/2005 10:29 AM Please respond to Midrange Systems Technical Discussion <midrange-l@xxxxxxxxxxxx> To "Midrange Systems Technical Discussion" <midrange-l@xxxxxxxxxxxx> cc Subject RE: Service Processor Functions Responses inline... ----------------------- So, now you have to keep track of firmware code too. Look at FAQ 2. Do we have to backup this with the full system save too? -- The firmware for the FSP is included as a PTF (MHxxxxx) in the i5/OS LPP 5722999. It is automatically backed-up when you save the OS. If you have an LPARed system, you most likely are not using OS updating of the firmware level, and you update it via the HMC - that setting is in ASM to modify. Therefore, you will have media of some nature with the firmware level you loaded on-hand (either in the OS for a single-image, or on a CD or .zip file for a LPAR system updated by HMC). If not, you can always re-download it. Also, do we have now a recovery CD for the iseries (FAQ 5)? -- The recovery CDs are for the HMC software. If you're on a single-image system, no HMC is required. For the LPAR system, you can back up your LPAR config from the HMC to DVD. The Iseries is getting more and more like a PC server, are we going to lose any stability? -- IMHO, the iSeries/pSeries systems are better due to the simple fact that you've removed the requirement of the primary controlling partition. More flexible, more capable, and much much more fast. Once the HMC/FSP relationship is understood by the end-users, and once the environments are configured, the system is phenomenal. We do spend Big bucks ( us$ 4000 hard drives and so) on an iseries because it suppose to be the ISERIES we used to trust. Are we buying just an oversize, big muscle, pc server now? -- Not from what I can see - the POWER architecture is much better a big-muscle PC. Add the advanced virtualization and the multiple OS levels - I think our iSeries family is just getting better by the day. My .02 Justin C. Haase - iSeries System Administrator Kingland Systems Corporation iSeries Certified Systems Expert - V5R3 Tech Solutions email - justin.haase@xxxxxxxxxxxx -- This is the Midrange Systems Technical Discussion (MIDRANGE-L) mailing list To post a message email: MIDRANGE-L@xxxxxxxxxxxx To subscribe, unsubscribe, or change list options, visit: http://lists.midrange.com/mailman/listinfo/midrange-l or email: MIDRANGE-L-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx Before posting, please take a moment to review the archives at http://archive.midrange.com/midrange-l.
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