cfgadm_sysctrl(1M) System Administration Commands cfgadm_sysctrl(1M)NAMEcfgadm_sysctrl - EXX00 system board administration
SYNOPSIS
/usr/sbin/cfgadm -c function [-f] [-o disable-at-boot | enable-at-boot]
[-n | -y] sysctrl0:slot# ...
/usr/sbin/cfgadm -x quiesce-test sysctrl0:slot#
/usr/sbin/cfgadm -x insert-test | remove-test sysctrl0:slot# ...
/usr/sbin/cfgadm -x set-condition-test=# sysctrl0:slot# ...
/usr/sbin/cfgadm [-l] -o disable-at-boot | enable-at-boot sysc‐
trl0:slot# ...
DESCRIPTION
The sysctrl hardware specific library /usr/plat‐
form/sun4u/lib/cfgadm/sysctrl.so.1 provides dynamic reconfiguration
functionality for configuring and disconnecting system boards on E6X00,
E5X00, E4X00, and E3X00 systems. You can insert both I/O and CPU boards
into a slot on a running system that is configured for Solaris without
rebooting. You can also disconnect and remove both types of boards from
a running system without rebooting.
System slots appear as attachment points in the device tree, one
attachment point for each actual slot in the system chassis. If a board
is not in a slot, the receptacle state is empty. If a board is powered-
off and ready to remove, the receptacle state is disconnected. If a
board is powered-on and is connected to the system bus, the receptacle
state is connected.
The occupant state is unconfigured when the receptacle state is empty
or disconnected. The occupant state is either unconfigured or config‐
ured when the receptacle state is connected.
In the configured state the devices on a board are available for use by
Solaris. In the unconfigured state, the devices on the board are not.
Inserting a board changes the receptacle state from empty to discon‐
nected. Removing a board changes the receptacle state from disconnected
to empty. Removing a board that is in the connected state crashes the
operating system and can result in permanent damage to the system.
OPTIONS
Refer to cfgadm(1M) for a more complete description options.
The following options are supported:
-c function
Perform the state change function. Specify function as connect,
disconnect, configure or unconfigure.
configure
Change the occupant state to configure.
If the receptacle state is disconnected, the configure function
first attempts to connect the receptacle. The configure func‐
tion walks the OBP device tree created as part of the connect
function and creates the Solaris device tree nodes, attaching
devices as required. For CPU/Memory boards, configure adds CPUs
to the CPU list in the powered-off state. These are visible to
the psrinfo(1M) and psradm(1M) commands. Two memory attachment
points are published for CPU/memory boards. Use mount(1M)andifconfig(1M) to use I/O devices on the new board. To use
CPUs, use psradm -n to on-line the new processors. Use
cfgadm_ac(1M) to test and configure the memory banks.
connect
Change the receptacle state to connected.
Changing the receptacle state requires that the system bus be
frozen while the bus signals are connected and the board
tested. The bus is frozen by running a quiesce operation which
stops all process activity and suspends all drivers. Because
the quiesce operation and the subsequent resume can be time
consuming, and are not supported by all drivers, the -x qui‐
esce-test is provided. While the system bus is frozen, the
board being connected is tested by firmware. This operation
takes a short time for I/O boards and a significant time for
CPU/Memory boards due to CPU external cache testing. This does
not provide memory testing. The user is prompted for confirma‐
tion before proceeding with the quiesce. Use the -y or -n
option to override the prompt. The connect operation is refused
if the board is marked as disabled-at-boot, unless either the
force flag, -f, or the enable at boot flag, -o enable-at-boot,
is given. See -l.
disconnect
Change the receptacle state to disconnected.
If the occupant state is configure, the disconnect function
first attempts to unconfigure the occupant. The disconnect
operation does not require a quiesce operation and operates
quickly. The board is powered-off ready for removal.
unconfigure
Change the occupant state to unconfigureed.
Devices on the board are made invisible to Solaris during this
process. The I/O devices on an I/O board are removed from the
Solaris device tree. Any device that is still in use stops the
unconfigure process and be reported as in use. The unconfigure
operation must be retried after the device is made non-busy.
For CPU/Memory boards, the memory must have been changed to the
unconfigured state prior to issuing the board unconfigure oper‐
ation. The CPUs on the board are off-lined, powered off and
removed from the Solaris CPU list. CPUs that have processes
bound to them cannot be off-lined. See psradm(1M), psrinfo(1M),
pbind(1M), andp_online(2) for more information on off-lining
CPUs.
-f
Force a block on connecting a board marked as disabled-at-boot in
the non-volatile disabled-board-list variable. See Platform
Notes:Sun Enterprise 6x00/5x00/4x00/3x00 Systems
-l
List options. Supported as described in cfgadm(1M)cfgadm(1M).
The type field can be one of cpu/mem, mem, dual-sbus, sbus-upa,
dual-pci, soc+sbus, soc+upa, disk or unknown.
The hardware-specific info field is set as follows: [disabled at
boot] [non-detachable] [100 MHz capable]
For sbus-upa and soc+upa type boards, the following additional
information appears first: [single buffered ffb|double buffered
ffb|no ffb installed] For disk type boards, the following addi‐
tional information appears first: {target: # | no disk} {target: #
| no disk}
-o disable-at-boot | enable-at-boot
Modify the state of the non—volatile disabled-board-list variable.
Use this the -o option in conjunction with the -c function or -l
option.
Use -o enable-at-boot with the -c connect to override a block on
connecting a disabled-at-boot board.
-x insert-test | remove-test
Perform a test.
Specify remove-test to change the driver state for the specified
slot from disconnected to empty without the need for physically
removing the board during automated test sequences.
Specify insert-test to change the driver state of a slot made to
appear empty using the remove-test command to the disconnected
state as if it had been inserted.
-x quiesce-test sysctrl0:slot1
Perform a test.
Allows the quiesce operation required for board connect operations
to be exercised. The execution of this test confirms that, with the
current software and hardware configuration, it is possible to qui‐
esce the system. If a device or process cannot be quiesced, its
name is printed in an error message. Any valid board attachment
point can be used with this command, but since all systems have a
slot1 the given form is recommended.
-x set-condition-test=#
Perform a test.
Allows the condition of a system board attachment point to be set
for testing the policy logic for state change commands. The new
setting is given as a number indicating one of the following condi‐
tion values:
0 unknown
1 ok
2 failing
3 failed
4 unusable
OPERANDS
The following operand is supported:
sysctrl0:slot# The attachment points for boards on EXX00 sys‐
tems are published by instance 0 of the sysctrl
driver (sysctrl0). The names of the attachment
points are numbered from slot0 through slot15.
Specify # as a number between 0 and 15, indi‐
cating the slot number. This form conforms to
the logical ap_id specification given in
cfgadm(1M). The corresponding physical ap_ids
are listed in the FILES section.
FILES
/usr/platform/sun4u/lib/cfgadm/sysctrl.so.1
Hardware specific library
/devices/central@1f,0/fhc@0,f8800000/clock-board@0,900000:slot*
Attachment Points
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
┌─────────────────────────────┬─────────────────────────────┐
│ ATTRIBUTE TYPE │ ATTRIBUTE VALUE │
├─────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┤
│Availability │SUNWkvm.u │
└─────────────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────┘
SEE ALSOcfgadm(1M), cfgadm_ac(1M), ifconfig(1M), mount(1M), pbind(1M),
psradm(1M), , psrinfo(1M), config_admin(3CFGADM), attributes(5)
Sun Enterprise 6x00, 5x00, 4x00 and 3x00 Systems Dynamic Reconfigura‐
tion User's Guide
Platform Notes:Sun Enterprise 6x00/5x00/4x00/3x00 Systems
NOTES
Refer to the Sun Enterprise 6x00, 5x00, 4x00 and 3x00 Systems Dynamic
Reconfiguration User's Guide for additional details regarding dynamic
reconfiguration of EXX00 system CPU/Memory boards.
SunOS 5.10 10 Mar 1999 cfgadm_sysctrl(1M)