NAME
ldomctl
—
Logical Domain management
interface
SYNOPSIS
ldomctl |
command [argument ...] |
DESCRIPTION
The ldomctl
program is used to manage
logical domains on sun4v systems. It can be used to assign resources to the
primary and guest domains, start and stop guest domains from the primary
domain, and to display information about domains running on the system.
The following commands are available:
create-vdisk
-s
size file- Create a virtual disk image with the specified file path and size, in bytes. size can be specified with a human-readable scale, using the format described in scan_scaled(3), e.g. 512M.
console
domain- Using cu(1) connect to the console of the guest domain.
delete
configuration- Delete the specified configuration from non-volatile storage.
download
directory- Save a logical domain configuration to non-volatile storage on the service
processor. The name of the configuration is taken from the name of the
directory which must contain files created with the
init-system
command. The download is aborted if a configuration with the same name already exists. Depending on the firmware, the new configuration must be activated explicitly using theselect
command. dump
- Dump the current configuration from non-volatile storage into the current working directory.
init-system
[-n
] file- Generate files in the current working directory for a logical domain
configuration file as described in
ldom.conf(5).
-n
- Configtest mode. Only check the configuration file for validity.
list
- List configurations stored in non-volatile storage. Indicate the currently running configuration, and the configuration which will be used next (after resetting the machine) if it differs from the currently running one.
list-io
- List available PCIe devices for the configuration in the current directory.
panic
[-c
] domain- Panic a guest domain. The exact behaviour of this command depends on the
OS running in the domain. For OpenBSD the default
behaviour is to enter ddb(4).
-c
- Automatically connect to the guest console.
select
configuration- Select the next logical domain configuration to use (after resetting the machine).
start
[-c
] domain- Start a guest domain.
-c
- Automatically connect to the guest console.
status
[domain]- Display status information for domain, or for all domains running on the system.
stop
domain- Stop a guest domain.
EXAMPLES
A system using factory defaults has a single "factory-default" configuration:
# ldomctl list factory-default [current]
Create a new configuration based on the defaults:
# mkdir factory-default # cd factory-default # ldomctl dump # cd .. # cp -R factory-default openbsd # cd openbsd
A file describing the desired configuration must be created - see ldom.conf(5).
Generate a set of configuration files and download to non-volatile storage. If a configuration with the same name already exists, it must be removed first:
# ldomctl init-system ldom.conf # cd .. # ldomctl delete openbsd # ldomctl download openbsd # ldomctl list factory-default [current] openbsd [next]
Create a virtual disk image for each guest domain:
# ldomctl create-vdisk -s 8G /home/puffy/vdisk0 # ldomctl create-vdisk -s 8G /home/salmah/vdisk0
The minirootfs install media can be used to boot guest domains:
# cp miniroot67.img /home/puffy/vdisk1 # cp miniroot67.img /home/salmah/vdisk1
To have ldomctl
enabled at boot time, use
“rcctl enable ldomd”, which sets
ldomd_flags=""
in rc.conf.local(8).
Halt the primary domain and reset the hardware:
# halt sc> reset -c # ALOM -> reset /SYS # ILOM
The machine will now reset and boot into the new configuration. The primary domain should have less CPUs and memory, since they are now assigned to the guest domains:
# ldomctl status primary - running OpenBSD running 1% puffy ttyV0 running OpenBoot Primary Boot Loader 8% salmah ttyV1 running OpenBoot Primary Boot Loader 12%
Configure the vnet(4) interfaces for the guest domains. This example bridges guest domains into the physical network:
# ifconfig vnet0 up # ifconfig vnet1 up # ifconfig bridge0 create # ifconfig bridge0 add em0 add vnet0 add vnet1 up
Access the console of the first domain and boot it:
# ldomctl console puffy Connected to /dev/ttyV0 (speed 9600) {0} ok boot disk1
SEE ALSO
HISTORY
The ldomctl
program first appeared in
OpenBSD 5.3.
AUTHORS
The ldomctl
program was written by
Mark Kettenis
<kettenis@openbsd.org>.