Jump to content United States-English
HP.com Home Products and Services Support and Drivers Solutions How to Buy
» Contact HP
More options
HP.com home
HP Global Workload Manager Version 4.0 User's Guide > Chapter 1 Overview

Concepts and Terms for Using gWLM

» 

Technical documentation

Complete book in PDF
» Feedback
Content starts here

 » Table of Contents

 » Index

Here are some concepts and terms to know when using gWLM:

Workload

The collection of processes executing within a single compartment. The compartment can be an nPartition (npar), a virtual partition (vpar), a virtual machine provided by HP Integrity Virtual Machines (hpvm), a processor set (pset), or a Fair Share Scheduler (fss) group. gWLM manages a workload by adjusting the system resource allocations for its compartment. (For background information on npars, vpars, virtual machines, psets, and fss groups, refer to the section “The gWLM Management Model”.)

Compartment

An npar, a vpar, a virtual machine, a pset, or an fss group with its resource allocation being managed by gWLM.

Multiple compartments are grouped to form a shared resource domain, or SRD. The compartments all share the resources within the SRD. Each compartment holds a workload and can be in only one deployed SRD. gWLM manages each workload by adjusting the resource allocation for its compartment.

Shared Resource Domain (SRD)

A collection of compartments that can share system resources. The compartments can be npars, vpars, virtual machines, psets, or fss groups. For example, a server containing npars can be an SRD—as long as the requirements in“The gWLM Management Model” are met. Also, a server or an npar divided into vpars can be an SRD for its vpar compartments. Similarly, a server or an npar divided into virtual machines can be an SRD for its virtual machine compartments.

gWLM allows you to nest compartments. gWLM then manages resources for the various levels of compartments.

Policy

A collection of settings that instruct gWLM how to manage a workload’s resources. For example, a policy can indicate the amount of CPU resources a workload owns (and is allocated when needed), as well as how much of those resources the workload can lend to other workloads.

A single policy can be associated with, or applied to, multiple workloads.

For more information on policies, see “Policy Types”.

Mode

Two modes are available: advisory and managed. Advisory mode allows you to see what CPU resource requests gWLM would make for a workload—without actually affecting resource allocation.

Advisory mode is not available for SRDs containing virtual machines, psets, or fss groups due to the nature of these compartments.

Use this mode when creating and fine-tuning your policies. Once you are comfortable with your policies, use managed mode to have gWLM automatically adjust the resource allocations for your defined workloads.

You can only set the mode on the SRD level. All workloads within an SRD operate in the same mode, either advisory or managed.

Deploy

Enable gWLM control of an SRD.

Deploying an SRD in managed mode enables gWLM control of resource allocation within the SRD. For example, in an SRD based on a vpar that has psets for compartments, deploying an SRD in managed mode allows gWLM to actively migrate cores among psets. (A core is the actual data-processing engine within a processor. A single processor might have multiple cores.)

When deploying an SRD in advisory mode, gWLM simply reports what the allocation would be—without actually affecting resource allocations on a system.

Advisory mode is not available for SRDs containing virtual machines, psets, or fss groups due to the nature of these compartments.

Undeploy

Disable gWLM’s management of resources in a specified SRD.

If an SRD is in managed mode, undeploying stops the migration of system resources among workloads in the SRD. If the SRD is in advisory mode, gWLM no longer provides information on what requests would have been made.

Printable version
Privacy statement Using this site means you accept its terms Feedback to webmaster
© 2004-2008 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P.