| United States-English |
|
|
|
![]() |
HP-UX 11i Version 2 June 2007 Release Notes: HP 9000 and HP Integrity Servers > Chapter 2 Introduction to HP-UX
11i Version 2HP-UX 11i v2 Compatibility |
|
Hewlett-Packard (HP) understands your need for investment protection. By providing multiple levels of compatibility between operating system versions, between hardware platforms, on virtual machines, and even between chip architectures, we believe the HP-UX operating system provides the most comprehensive investment protection in the industry. (See “Definition of Terms and Levels of Compatibility ” for a definition of levels of compatibility.) For “Well-behaved” user space applications Hewlett-Packard (see “Definition of Terms and Levels of Compatibility ” for a definition of “Well-behaved” and other terms):
See the release notes for each version of HP-UX for information on new features that may require changes to applications. “Well-behaved” applications built on HP-UX 11i are binary compatible to run within HP-UX Virtual Partitions (vPars) on the same architecture family. No changes, recompilation or re-certification is necessary. “Well-behaved” applications built on HP-UX 11i Integrity are binary compatible to run within an HP Integrity Virtual Machine (VM). This binary compatibility applies to applications with no specific device dependencies and to applications that depend only on devices currently virtualized by Integrity VM. Most applications do not have specific device dependencies. However, if your application has specific device dependencies, please refer to the HP Integrity Virtual Machines QuickSpecs for details. You can view the document at http://h18000.www1.hp.com/products/quickspecs/12715_div/12715_div.PDF In addition to the compatibility provided within an architecture family, HP-UX 11i on HP 9000 servers is data, source, and build environment compatible with HP-UX 11i on Integrity servers. Build environments and source files can be moved from HP 9000 servers to Integrity servers and be rebuilt without modification. Application binaries that were built on HP-UX on HP 9000 servers are binary compatible, with some limitations, with HP-UX on HP Integrity servers when running through the Aries Dynamic Code Translator. The use of Aries can be completely transparent. For more information about Aries, see http://www.hp.com/go/aries. HP is committed to providing investment protection via compatibility as outlined above. Any owner of application code that meets the criteria for compatibility, who has encountered a compatibility failure as defined by this document, should contact HP through a special support line (for North America) at 1-800-249-3294 and use option 2. Help is also available alternatively by sending an e-mail to dspp.dev@hp.com. Please identify the problem as a “compatibility failure.” There are multiple types of compatibility that need to be defined:
Compatibility issues or exceptions have been noted for the following products or features that have been updated in June 2007. For details, see the indicated pages.[4] Chapter 4 “Hardware-Specific Information”. Chapter 5 “General System Administration”. Chapter 7 “Internet and Networking”. Chapter 9 “Commands and System Calls”. Chapter 10 “Libraries and Programming”.
For information about the support of products not listed elsewhere in this document, refer to the product’s individual documentation, which may be found at the following locations:
[4] For documentation of compatibility issues or exceptions in previous updates to HP-UX 11i v2, see the previous editions of the HP-UX 11i v2 Release Notes, available at http://docs.hp.com/en/oshpux11iv2.html. The HP-UX 11i v2 September 2004 Release Notes, in particular, lists compatibility exceptions from HP-UX 11i v1 to HP-UX 11i v2. |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||