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console concentrator— 5000 in the example. Finally, we start the domain, which
has an effect similar to performing a “power on” operation for a real server: It
loads the OBP, which then displays its ok prompt.
# ldm set-variable autoboot\?=false ldom1
# ldm bind ldom1
# ldm list #(NOTE: this was done after bind, before start)
NAME STATE FLAGS CONS VCPU MEMORY UTIL UPTIME
primary active -n-cv- SP 4 3G 1.2% 38m
ldom1 bound ------ 5000 4 1G
# ldm start ldom1
It's helpful to bring up a second terminal window to watch this process. The
telnet command can be issued after the ldm bind command to do so. At first,
no output follows the output coming from the telnet command itself (the line
beginning with “ Press ~? ”). When ldm start ldom1 is issued, OpenBoot is
loaded and outputs {0} ok .
# telnet localhost 5000
Trying 127.0.0.1...
Connected to localhost....
Escape character is '^}'.
Connecting to console “ldom1” in group “ldom1” ....
Press ~? for control options ..
{0} ok
3.4.6 Viewing a Domain
From the ok prompt, we can issue OpenBoot commands and view the domain's
devices:
Sun Fire(TM) T1000, No Keyboard
Copyright 2009 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved.
OpenBoot 4.30.3, 1024 MB memory available, Serial #xxxxxxxx.
Ethernet address x:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx, Host ID: xxxxxxxx
{0} ok banner
Sun Fire(TM) T1000, No Keyboard
Copyright 2009 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved.
OpenBoot 4.30.3, 1024 MB memory available, Serial #xxxxxxxx.
Ethernet address x:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx, Host ID: xxxxxxxx.
{0} ok show-disks
 
 
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