Customization and Configuration Guide For the POWER7 750 Technical Support [email protected] November 16, 2009
10 Processors is designed to help you stay up and running. Which helps reduce system maintenance. Plus it can even identify a potential problem befo
100 Figure 61 - Trade application Portfolio The user then proceeds to his portfolio page clicking the portfolio link at the top of the web page.
101 Figure 62 - New order page From the portfolio page the user selects sell next to one of the stocks in his portfolio. The order to sell is exe
102 Figure 63 - Quotes/Trade Page Next the user selects the Quotes/Trade link at the top of the page to receive the Qoutes/Trade Page Figure 19.
103 Figure 64 - Buy Order Confirmation Page Selecting a Buy button next to one of the stocks executes an order to buy resulting in the Buy Order C
104 Figure 65 - Account Page Next we have the user select his account page. There is an update Profile option on this page. We select the button
105 Figure 66 - Account update successful page
106 Appendix E Installing Applications Under Linux RedHat Installing applications under Linux has been a major stumbling block for Linux newbies ,
107 rpm -qa | grep -i To search if a particular package with is installed on the system. Installing from source files: Most of the Open-Sourc
108 make make: - This command starts compiling the application after reading the Makefile on how to install the applications binaries. This process
109 Appendix F Installing and migrating x86 applications onto a PowerVM Lx86 system This section explains how to install x86 applications onto a
11 The following sections provide the details you will need to get logged into the systems and add applications or change the configuration. There
110 By default, home directories on the POWER system are escaped from x86World during the installation process. All user home directories are then v
111 you can copy them into x86World, or an accessible location, and run them within a VxE using the runx86 command. You can make application binari
112 Mounting from within an x86 shell: The following is an example of starting an x86 shell from a POWER shell, and then mounting a directory
113 1. Download the IBMJava2-142-ia32-JRE-1.4.2-8.0.i386.rpm file from http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/java/jdk/linux/download.html to X86WORLDROO
114 Example: Running applications from an x86 shell This example shows how to run an application named TradeOffice. It normally runs on a Linux on
115 Appendix G IBM Power System 750 Facts and Figures Power 750 Product Line IBM Power 750 Express Machine type 8233-E8B System packaging 19&
116 IBM i CPW (number cores) 3.0 GHz: 44600(8), 82600(16), 122500(24), 158300(32) 3.3 GHz: 37200(6), 69200(12), 94900(18), 135300(24) 3.3 GHz: 4
117 Reference material • Hardware Management Console Documentation http://publib.boulder.ibm.com/infocenter/systems/scope/hw/index.jsp?topic=/iphc
118 Support Support for Power on Wheels is handled via email. The email ID is staffed between the hours of 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM Eastern Time Monday
119 Notices This information was developed for products and services offered in the U.S.A. IBM may not offer the products, services, or features di
12 Provides an approach to the efficient use of computing resources in order to reduce the number of servers and provide better utilization computin
120 for the operating platform for which the sample programs are written. These examples have not been thoroughly tested under all conditions. IBM,
13 - Rebuild LPARs • JMeter: Runs stored scripts to drive the load through the system Logical Layout of IBM POWER on Wheels Figure 1 - Logical
14 Transaction Flow: Figure 2 - Transaction Flow The POWER on Wheels evaluation demo provides a means for you to run a transaction through the L
15 Note: Detailed documentation related to any of the operating systems and applications installed on the solution can be found on http://x24n01.pbm
16 Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server - Power on Wheels has 5.2 Beta version of Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server - LPARs: p22n03 and p22n08 have the R
17 - In contrast to regular emulators only the instructions are translated, not the entire system, thus making it fast and flexible. The Lx86 softw
18 - The Web GUI provides following features: o Power on of the Power 750 Hardware o Start LPARs o Stop LPARs o Run the Demo o Check Documenta
19 LDAP JMS Mail - POP3 o Complete portability and 100% Java purity . o Full Swing and lightweight component support (precompiled JAR
20 Verifying the environment The first thing to do is to prove that the environment is working as expected so that when you install your applicati
21 Click the Trading and Portfolios tab at the top of the navigation pane. See Figure 4 Figure 4 - Trade Application Menu bar Then select login at
22 Figure 6 - Trade Application User Home page If you see this page, you have verified that the application is working properly. From this poin
23 Figure 7 - Web GUI Main Control Panel 1. Click the Stop DB2 button to stop DB2. 2. Enter the address of the web server trade application to v
24 when the database that contains the data is not functional. Similarly you cannot provide a web page to the web server if the web app server does
25 Beyond the Demo If you have run through the demo you may be wondering what to do next. If you have an application of your own that you want to
26 then su to the db2 instance ID: su – db2inst1 To add a new database to the system. At the DB2 prompt type: db2 create db testdb To make
27 Additional Excercises How to Run WebSphere Application Server Version 5 Samples on DB2 : Introductory Tom Krieger ([email protected])
28 Figure 1. Plants by WebSphere splash page Environment To complete the instructions, you need the following environment: • Windows® 2000 + Ser
29 To create and populate the PLANTSBY database in DB2: 1. Locate the batch file, db2createplantsby_db.bat, in the install subdirectory created af
3 Introduction... 5 IBM
30 Uninstalling, rebuilding and reinstalling the Plants by WebSphere enterprise archive file The Plants by WebSphere sample contains Cloudscape depl
31 {-appname PlantsByWebSphere -usedefaultbindings -node [node] -deployejb -deployejb.dbtype DB2UDB_V72 -server [server]}" 6. where:
32 The next section illustrates how to configure the resources through the administrative console rather than through the automated JACL script Conf
33 Figure 3. JDBC provider properties 8. Click OK. Create a new DB2 data source 1. Click Resources > JDBC Providers. 2. Click the new DB2 pr
34 8. Verify that the data in your panel matches Figure 4. Figure 4. Data source properties 9. Click OK. Configure your new DB2 data source 1.
35 3. In the databaseName field, type PLANTSBY for the value and click OK. See Figure 5. Figure 5. Database name 4. From the Resources > JDBC
36 4. Click Save near the top of your panel. 5. Click Save on the Save to Master Configuration panel. Whether you configured the Application Serve
37 Creating a new LPAR using the HMC interface To get some experience using the HMC interface, the following steps will guide you through the steps
38 At the Main HMC Screen Select the “ Log on and launch the Hardware Management Console Web application” link Figure 9 Figure 9 - HMC Main start s
39 Figure 10 - HMC Login Screen Login using the following: Userid: hscroot Password: abc123 Then select the login button. This will open the HM
4 How to record a script using Jmeter ... 62 How to use Rational Per
40 Figure 11 - HMC Welcome Screen From the Welcome screen navigation pane on the left, select the “+” next to Server Management. Select the “+” nex
41 Figure 12 - Server Partition Screen You can use the Create Logical Partition wizard on the Hardware Management Console (HMC) to create a new log
42 1. In the navigation pane, open Systems Management and click Servers. 2. In the contents pane, select the managed system, click the Tasks butto
43 Figure 13 - HMC Partition Listing screen Put a check mark in the box next to the web server which is the LPAR ending in 3 (i.e. p26n23) in thi
44 Figure 14 - Menu options The Tasks Pull down will appear. 1. At the Tasks Pull down menu, select Dynamic Logical Partitioning – Memory - Add
45 Figure 16 - DLPAR change window Change the assigned Memory from 4 to 2 , then select ok You should see the amount of memory assigned to the L
46 • Can have multiple connections per partition Figure 17 - Virtual Network Examples We could have used this method for the inter LPAR communicat
47 access the machines from. For this example we will change the “k” network to use the virtual adapter. It will look like the black Virtual Ether
48 Figure 19 - Configuration Manage Profiles pull down The Managed Profiles Window will open. Figure 20 - Managed Profiles screen
49 Select the check box next to the profile name Select the actions pull down. Select Edit See Figure 21 Figure 21 - Edit Profile Window dia
5 Introduction Server consolidation, green data center, Virtualization, are all the IT terminology in use today, but what are they and how does one
50 Figure 22 - Virtual Adapters You will see a listing of virtual adapters. Select the Actions pull down and select create Ethernet adapter
51 Figure 23 - Create Adapter
52 Figure 24 - Create Virtual Ethernet adapter Dialog Set the Adapter id to 6 and the VLAN ID to 1. Select OK to save your settings You should
53 Figure 25 - Adapter Listing Select ok to save this setting. Select close from the managed profile window. You will need to shutdown and rest
54 For this exercise we will remove the adapter that is currently being used for the performance network and reassign it to use the virtual adapters
55 assign the IP addresses called smitty. To access the smitty screen, type smitty at the command prompt. You will see the System Management main s
56 Figure 28 - Smitty Communications screen Pres Enter at the TCP/IP option
57 Figure 29 - Smitty TCP/IP screen Select the Further Configuration option
58 Figure 30 - Smitty Network Interface screen Select Network Interfaces
59 Figure 31 - Smitty Network interface screen Select Network Interface Selection
6 consolidation projects by simultaneously supporting any combination of IBM i, AIX, or x86 Linux applications. The Power 750 models boast an impres
60 Figure 32 - Smitty Network Interface selection screen Select the Change / Show Characteristics of a Network Interface option
61 Figure 33 - Smitty Network interfaces Cursor to the adapter en3 and press enter
62 Figure 34 - Smitty Network Configuration Add the information as shown in Figure 34 for this network Press enter to accept the changes. Then
63 We have installed Jmeter an open source load driver tool, on the x3550 and on the LPAR running Suse Sles 10 (p24n02) in to push load across the
64 4. select the thread group 5. right click “add -> config element -> Http Request Defaults” 6. Protocol – enter “HTTP” 7. Server name – ent
65 manually delete the servername, and port. In this sample, there aren't any default request parameters. If a particular request parameter is
66 An internet browser at this point (Internet Explorer) should pop-up and you need to enter the address of the daytrader application: http:
67 Figure 35 - Sample Script Although you may see the old address in other requests, on replay the new address will be used. Go ahead and expand
68 4. As you can see we have two test groups name “Buy and Sell” and “Day Trader Built-in Scenario”. These groups can be thought of as individual t
69 Figure 37 - Run Menu It will take up to a minute for the schedule to kick in, so be patient. Once the schedule is running, you should see
7 agement features, which can dramatically and dynamicallyconserve power and further improve energy efficiency. TheseIntelligent Energyfeatures enab
70 Figure 38 - Web landing page 2. click on the "IBM Director with Active Energy Manager" link to goto the IBM Director logon page. You
71 Figure 39 - Director Login Screen 3. Upon sucessful logon, you will then be presented with a screen similar to the one below with the "Tre
72 Figure 40 - Director Main 4. Select the "Time period:" from the pull down, and click the "Show Trend Data" button. You wil
73 Figure 41 - Director Trend Data Page How to add storage from external storage array There is an external storage drawer installed in the Powe
74 At the $prompt type lspv Storage that has not been assigned will show up as NONE in the VG column of the listing. lspv –avail Will show all
75 Next Select the menu drop down, or the Tasks drop down and click the Configuration – Manage Profiles option. See Figure Below Figure 43 - Conf
76 Figure 44 - Managed Profiles window Select the check box next to the p22n06 profile. Then select the Actions – Edit option from the actions
77 Select the Virtual adapters tab for to see the virtual adapters that are defined to the system. Note: Your menu will not show as many virtual
78 Figure 47 - Create Adapter Screen Give an adapter number that the sever will use to see the storage on. We have 34 in this example. Note: F
79 Next you will need to Halt the VIO Server so that he picks up all of the adapters you have just assigned. Note: I specifically use the word ha
8 generation architecture delivers industry-leading performance, real reliability, multidimensional scalability and unprecedented investment protect
80 Figure 48 - Change Configuration sub menu Again choosing Configuration – Manage Profiles to get to the Managed Profiles window. Figure 49 - E
81 Figure 50 - Virtual adapters Menu Select Actions - Create SCSI Adapter
82 Figure 51 - Add SCSI Adapter sub menu Figure 52 - Create Adapter Window
83 At the resulting Config Virtual Adapter window you can set the adapter you want to use to connect to the new storage device. Change the Virtual
84 Figure 54 - Create Adapter Parameters Select OK to save the adapter Select ok at the Manage Profiles window to save the Profile Select close t
85 Command earlier that there was an hdisk10 that was 307 Gb and I want to map that to my client. So on the VIO Server command line I would type th
86 Appendix A Disk mapping of VIO server for POWER7 750 Internal Storage LPAR Size Description hdisk0 p2xn06/7
87 hdisk11 p2xn04 300G dbdatavg for p24n04: db2 database hdisk12 p2xn05 300G nimvg for p24n05: NIM Server
88 Figure 55 - VIO server disk layout Figure 56 - DS5020 Arrays and Luns
89 Figure 57 - Arrays and Luns
9 be moved from one server to another without impacting the applications running on the partition. Reduce operating costs The IBM Power 750 system
90 Figure 58 - DS5020 Luns to Host Mapping View
91 Appendix C Network Layout for Power on Wheels Partition Mobility Towers The following table shows the relationship between physical adapter port
92 • For the extra and uplink ports, the port number depends on whether it is a 24 or 48 port switch. Sample host file # @(#)47 1.1 src/bos/usr/s
93 # Internet Address Hostname # Comments # 192.9.200.1 net0sample # ethernet name/address # 128.100.0.1 token0sample # token ring name/address # 1
94 Network Diagram
95
96 Power on Wheels Connecting to the customer network The Power on Wheels “tower” contains a network switch that all the nodes and servers connect
97 is possible to use a “jump box”, where a machine with two interfaces (one in customer network, one in tower admin network) is installed, and user
98 Appendix D Trade Scenario To drive some load through the system for the demo, we recorded a user session that logs into the trade web server, an
99 Figure 60 - Trade application Home Page After logging in the customer selects his Home page by clicking the Home link, the result is the home p
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