xref: /titanic_41/usr/src/man/man1m/poolcfg.1m (revision a970c705050f9e90c4b6d7982a9b3211719353fb)
te
Copyright (c) 2007, Sun Microsystems, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
The contents of this file are subject to the terms of the Common Development and Distribution License (the "License"). You may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You can obtain a copy of the license at usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE or http://www.opensolaris.org/os/licensing. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.
When distributing Covered Code, include this CDDL HEADER in each file and include the License file at usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE. If applicable, add the following below this CDDL HEADER, with the fields enclosed by brackets "[]" replaced with your own identifying information: Portions Copyright [yyyy] [name of copyright owner]
POOLCFG 1M "Nov 29, 2007"
NAME
poolcfg - create and modify resource pool configuration files
SYNOPSIS

/usr/sbin/poolcfg -c command [-d | [filename]]

/usr/sbin/poolcfg -f command_file [-d | [filename]]

/usr/sbin/poolcfg -h
DESCRIPTION

The poolcfg utility provides configuration operations on pools and sets. These operations are performed upon an existing configuration and take the form of modifications to the specified configuration file. If you use the -d option, the modifications occur to the kernel state. Actual activation of the resulting configuration is achieved by way of the pooladm(1M) utility.

Pools configuration files are structured files that must have been constructed using poolcfg itself or libpool(3LIB) directly.

An invocation of poolcfg with the pool dynamic location and write permission will hang if the dynamic location has already been opened for writing.

The configurations which are created by this utility can be used by pooladm to instantiate the configuration upon a target host.

OPTIONS

The following options are supported: -c command

Specify command as an editing command. See USAGE.

-d

Operate directly on the kernel state. No filename is allowed.

-f command_file

Take the commands from command_file. command_file consists of editing commands, one per line.

-h

Display extended information about the syntax of editing commands.

USAGE
"Scripts"

A script consists of editing commands, one per line, of the following: info [entity-name]

Display configuration (or specified portion) in human readable form to standard output. If no entity is specified, system information is displayed. Therefore, poolcfg -c 'info' afile is an equivalent invocation to poolcfg -c 'info system name' afile.

create entity-name [property-list]

Make an entity of the specified type and name.

destroy entity-name

Remove the specified entity.

modify entity-name [property-list]

Change the listed properties on the named entity.

associate pool-name [resource-list]

Connect one or more resources to a pool, or replace one or more existing connections.

transfer to [resourcetype] name[component-list]

Transfer one or more discrete components to a resource .

transfer [quantity] from [resourcetype] [src] to [tgt]

Transfer a resource quantity from src to tgt.

transfer [quantity] to [resourcetype] [tgt] from [src]

Transfer a resource quantity to tgt from src.

discover

Create a system entity, with one pool entity and resources to match current system configuration. All discovered resources of each resource type are recorded in the file, with the single pool referring to the default resource for each resource type. This command is a NO-OP when poolcfg operates directly on the kernel. See the -d option. You should avoid use of this command. The preferred method for creating a configuration is to export the dynamic configuration using pooladm(1M) with the -s option.

rename entity-name to new-name

Change the name of an entity on the system to its new name.

"Property Lists"

The property list is specified by:

( proptype name = value [ ; proptype name = value ]* )

where the last definition in the sequence for a given proptype, name pair is the one that holds. For property deletion, use ~ proptype name.

"Resource Lists"

A resource list is specified by:

( resourcetype name [ ; resourcetype name ]* )

where the last specification in the sequence for a resource is the one that holds. There is no deletion syntax for resource lists.

"Component Lists"

A component list is specified by:

( componenttype name [ ; componenttype name ]* )

where the last specification in the sequence for a component is the one that holds. There is no deletion syntax for component lists.

"Recognized Entities"
system

Machine level entity

pool

Named collection of resource associations

"Resource Types"
pset

Processor set resource

"Property Types"
boolean

Takes one of two values true or false.

int

A 64-bit signed integer value.

uint

A 64-bit unsigned integer value.

string

Strings are delimited by quotes ("), and support the character escape sequences defined in formats(5).

float

Scientific notation is not supported.

EXAMPLES

Example 1 Writing a poolcfg Script

The following poolcfg script creates a pool named Accounting, and a processor set, small-1. The processor set is created first, then the pool is created and associated with the set.

create pset small-1 ( uint pset.min = 1 ; uint pset.max = 4)
create pool Accounting
associate pool Accounting ( pset small-1 )

Example 2 Reporting on pool_0

The following command reports on pool_0 to standard output in human readable form:

 # poolcfg -c 'info pool pool_0' /etc/pooladm.conf

Example 3 Destroying pool_0 and Its Associations

The following command destroys pool_0 and associations, but not the formerly associated resources:

# poolcfg -c 'destroy pool pool_0' /etc/pooladm.conf

Example 4 Displaying the Current Configuration

The following command displays the current configuration:

$ poolcfg -c 'info' /etc/pooladm.conf
system example_system
 int system.version 1
 boolean system.bind-default true
 string system.comment Discovered by libpool

 pool pool_default
 boolean pool.default true
 boolean pool.active true
 int pool.importance 5
 string pool.comment
 string.pool.scheduler FSS
 pset pset_default

 pset pset_default
 int pset.sys_id -1
 string pset.units population
 boolean pset.default true
 uint pset.max 4294967295
 uint pset.min 1
 string pset.comment
 boolean pset.escapable false
 uint pset.load 0
 uint pset.size 2

 cpu
 int cpu.sys_id 0
 string cpu.comment

 cpu
 int cpu.sys_id 2
 string cpu.comment

Example 5 Moving cpu with ID 2 to Processor Set pset1 in the Kernel

The following command moves cpu with ID 2 to processor set pset1 in the kernel:

# poolcfg -dc 'transfer to pset pset1 ( cpu 2 )'

Example 6 Moving 2 cpus from Processor Set pset1 to Processor Set pset2 in the Kernel

The following command moves 2 cpus from processor set pset1 to processor set pset2 in the kernel:

# poolcfg -dc 'transfer 2 from pset pset1 to pset2'
ATTRIBUTES

See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:

ATTRIBUTE TYPE ATTRIBUTE VALUE
Interface Stability See below.

The invocation is Committed. The output is Uncommitted.

SEE ALSO

pooladm(1M), poolbind(1M), libpool(3LIB), attributes(5), formats(5)