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05-13-2008 02:26 AM
05-13-2008 02:26 AM
Hi
I have question if is possible create intgrity virtual machine with 1,5vCPU?
for example:
hpvmcreate -c 1.5?
Thanks for info
Slawek
I have question if is possible create intgrity virtual machine with 1,5vCPU?
for example:
hpvmcreate -c 1.5?
Thanks for info
Slawek
Solved! Go to Solution.
3 REPLIES 3
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05-13-2008 02:51 AM
05-13-2008 02:51 AM
Solution
Not that I'm aware of. You can assign from 1 to 4 vCPUs to guest. However you can play with "-e" or "-E" flags to set % of cpu power assigned to the guest. For example,you can assign 2 vCPUs to your guest with -c 2 and reach 1.5 with -e 75 which means guest will use 75% of each vCPU making a total of 150 from 200% available.
Note,however,that all physical cpus and accordingly vCPUs are shared among all guests so what really provides cpu time is "-e"/"-E" since with -c only you'll get 10% of these cpus.
Zeev
Note,however,that all physical cpus and accordingly vCPUs are shared among all guests so what really provides cpu time is "-e"/"-E" since with -c only you'll get 10% of these cpus.
Zeev
So computers don't think yet. At least not chess computers. - Seymour Cray
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05-13-2008 08:06 AM
05-13-2008 08:06 AM
Re: hpvmcreate
No, you have to specify vCPU's in Integers, not fractions.
You can then play with the entitlement settings
You can then play with the entitlement settings
My house is the bank's, my money the wife's, But my opinions belong to me, not HP!
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05-21-2008 01:52 AM
05-21-2008 01:52 AM
Re: hpvmcreate
Bonjour,
As previously said, you must have an integer number of vCPU in a VM. You can play with entitlement, but you will never have a fixed amount of 1.5 CPU with native features of HPVM.
But you can have a fraction of CPU allocated to a VM, for example 1.5, with the product gWLM (Global WorkLoad Manager) trough "fixed allocation policy". With gWLM you have more ways to control how CPU is used by the VMs : fixed, utilization, own-borrow and custom policies.
The problem with "fixed policiy" is that you loose dynamic allocation provided by HPVM. In fact you give a constant share of CPU resource to a VM, even if it does not need it at a time. "fixed policy" may result in a lower system utilization because resources that are not in use are not allowed to be shared.
gWLM is a product you must purchase. For more informations, look at : http://docs.hp.com/en/vse.html#HP%20Global%20Workload%20Manager
Regards
Eric
As previously said, you must have an integer number of vCPU in a VM. You can play with entitlement, but you will never have a fixed amount of 1.5 CPU with native features of HPVM.
But you can have a fraction of CPU allocated to a VM, for example 1.5, with the product gWLM (Global WorkLoad Manager) trough "fixed allocation policy". With gWLM you have more ways to control how CPU is used by the VMs : fixed, utilization, own-borrow and custom policies.
The problem with "fixed policiy" is that you loose dynamic allocation provided by HPVM. In fact you give a constant share of CPU resource to a VM, even if it does not need it at a time. "fixed policy" may result in a lower system utilization because resources that are not in use are not allowed to be shared.
gWLM is a product you must purchase. For more informations, look at : http://docs.hp.com/en/vse.html#HP%20Global%20Workload%20Manager
Regards
Eric
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