Starting and Stopping the System

Reloading Processors

8.Click Load.

9.Check for messages in the System Load dialog box. After the “System Startup Complete” message, close the dialog box.

10.In the Processor Status dialog box, check the status of all processors. At least one processor must be running. Determine whether you need to reload any remaining processors.

11.Dump processor memory, if needed. For more information about dumping processor memory, refer to Section 9, Processors and Components: Monitoring and Recovery.

12.If needed, reload any remaining processors.

Reloading Processors

After the system load, use one of these procedures to reload the remaining processors in the system:

Reloading Processors Using the RELOAD Command on page 15-12

Reloading Processors Using OSM on page 15-12

To reload a halted processor and perform memory dumps, use the reload procedures in Section 9, Processors and Components: Monitoring and Recovery.

Reloading Processors Using the RELOAD Command

1.From a TACL prompt, log on to the system as a super user ID (255,255).

2.Reload the remaining processors. For example:

> RELOAD (01 - 15), PRIME

3.Check that the reload initiated successfully. This message appears in the TACL window:

PROCESSOR RELOAD: nn

For more information about using the RELOAD command, refer to the TACL Reference Manual.

Reloading Processors Using OSM

The OSM Service Connection provides a Reload action on the Logical Processor object. You can perform the action on a single or multiple processors. The OSM action lets you reload an entire processor or omit a Blade Element from the reload action so you can dump the PE for that Blade Element before reintegrating it into the running processor. To reload a single processor, see Section 9, Processors and Components: Monitoring and Recovery.

HP Integrity NonStop NS-Series Operations Guide529869-005

15-12

Page 188
Image 188
HP NonStop NS manual Reloading Processors Using the Reload Command, Reloading Processors Using OSM, Reload 01 15, Prime