HP OpenVMS Systems Documentation |
OpenVMS System Management Utilities Reference Manual
The default value of SMP_CPUS, --1, boots all available CPUs into the multiprocessing system. Note that although a bit in the mask corresponds to the primary processor's CPU ID, the primary processor is always booted. That is, if the mask is set to 0, the primary CPU still boots. Any available secondary processors are not booted into the multiprocessing system. This parameter is ignored if the MULTIPROCESSING parameter is set to 0. SMP_CPUSHSMP_CPUSH is a special parameter reserved for Compaq use only. Compaq recommends that you use the default value.SMP_LNGSPINWAITCertain shared resources in a multiprocessing system take longer to become available than allowed by the SMP_SPINWAIT parameter. SMP_LNGSPINWAIT establishes, in 10-microsecond intervals, the length of time a processor in a multiprocessing system waits for these resources. A timeout causes a CPUSPINWAIT bugcheck.The default value is 3000000 (3 million 10-microsecond intervals or 30 seconds). SMP_SANITY_CNTSMP_SANITY_CNT establishes, in 10-millisecond intervals, the timeout period for each CPU in a symmetric multiprocessing (SMP) system. Each CPU in an SMP system monitors the sanity timer of one other CPU in the configuration to detect hardware or software failures. If allowed to go undetected, these failures could cause the cluster to hang. A timeout causes a CPUSANITY bugcheck.The default value is 300 milliseconds (30 10-millisecond intervals). SMP_SPINWAITSMP_SPINWAIT establishes, in 10-microsecond intervals, the amount of time a CPU in an SMP system normally waits for access to a shared resource. This process is called spinwaiting.A timeout causes a CPUSPINWAIT bugcheck. The default value is 100000 (100,000 10-microsecond intervals or 1 second). SMP_TICK_CNTSMP_TICK_CNT sets the frequency of sanity timer checks by each CPU in a multiprocessing system.This special parameter is used by Compaq and is subject to change. Do not change this parameter unless Compaq recommends that you do so. SPTREQ (A)(VAX only) SPTREQ sets the number of system page table (SPT) entries required for mapping the following components:Executive image The number of system page table entries required for all other purposes is automatically computed and added to the value of SPTREQ to yield the actual size of the system page table. SSINHIBITSSINHIBIT controls whether system services are inhibited (1) (on a per-process basis). By default, system services are not inhibited (0).This special parameter is used by Compaq and is subject to change. Do not change this parameter unless Compaq recommends that you do so. STARTUP_P1--8STARTUP_P1 specifies the type of system boot the system-independent startup procedure is to perform. If STARTUP_P1 is " ", a full boot is performed; "MIN" indicates a minimum boot that starts only what is absolutely necessary for the operating system to run.STARTUP_P2 controls whether verification is set during the execution of the system-independent startup procedure. If STARTUP_P2 is " ", verification is not enabled; "TRUE" indicates that verification is enabled. Beginning in OpenVMS Version 7.2, if STARTUP_P3 is set to AGEN, the system executes AUTOGEN at the end of the startup sequence. STARTUP_P4 through STARTUP_P8 are reserved for future use. SWP_PRIOSWP_PRIO sets the priority of I/O transfers initiated by the swapper.This special parameter is used by Compaq and is subject to change. Do not change this parameter unless Compaq recommends that you do so. SWPALLOCINC(VAX only) SWPALLOCINC sets the size (in blocks) to use to back up swap file space allocation in the swap or page file. Space in the file is allocated in multiples of this unit (up to WSQUOTA) to guarantee swap space.This special parameter is used by Compaq and is subject to change. Do not change this parameter unless Compaq recommends that you do so. SWPFAILSWPFAIL sets the number of consecutive swap failures allowed before the swap schedule algorithm is changed to ignore the swap quantum protection.This special parameter is used by Compaq and is subject to change. Do not change this parameter unless Compaq recommends that you do so. SWPFILCNTOn VAX systems, SWPFILCNT defines the maximum number of swap files that can be installed. On Alpha systems, beginning in OpenVMS Version 7.3, this parameter is obsolete.SWPOUTPGCNT (A on VAX,D)This parameter allows the swapper an alternative mechanism before actually performing swaps.On VAX systems, SWPOUTPGCNT defines the minimum number of pages to which the swapper should attempt to reduce a process before swapping it out. The pages taken from the process are placed into the free-page list. On Alpha systems, SWPOUTPGCNT defines the minimum number of pagelets to which the swapper should attempt to reduce a process before swapping it out. The pagelets taken from the process are placed into the free-page list. SWPRATESWPRATE sets the swapping rate (in 10-millisecond units). This parameter limits the amount of disk bandwidth consumed by swapping.This special parameter is used by Compaq and is subject to change. Do not change this parameter unless Compaq recommends that you do so. SYSMWCNT (A,G,M)SYSMWCNT sets the quota for the size of the system working set, which contains the pageable portions of the system, the paged dynamic pool, RMS, and the resident portion of the system message file.While a high value takes space away from user working sets, a low value can seriously impair system performance. Appropriate values vary, depending on the level of system use. When the system is running at full load, check the rate of system faults with the MONITOR PAGE command of the Monitor utility. An average system page fault rate of between 0 and 3 page faults per second is desirable. If the system page fault rate is high, and especially if the system seems to be slow, you should increase the value of SYSMWCNT. However, do not set this parameter so high that system page faulting never occurs. SYSPFCSYSPFC sets the number of pages to be read from disk on each system paging operation.This special parameter is used by Compaq and is subject to change. Do not change this parameter unless Compaq recommends that you do so. SYSTEM_CHECKSYSTEM_CHECK investigates intermittent system failures by enabling a number of run-time consistency checks on system operation and recording some trace information.Enabling SYSTEM_CHECK causes the system to behave as if the following system parameter values are set (although the values of the following parameters are not actually changed):
While SYSTEM_CHECK is enabled, the previous settings of the BUGCHECKFATAL and MULTIPROCESSING parameters are ignored. However, setting the parameter POOLCHECK to a nonzero value overrides the setting imposed by SYSTEM_CHECK. Setting SYSTEM_CHECK creates certain image files that are capable of the additional system monitoring. These image files are located in SYS$LOADABLE_IMAGES and can be identified by the suffix _MON. For information about the type of data checking performed by SYSTEM_CHECK, see the description of the ACP_DATACHECK parameter. For information about the performance implications of enabling SYSTEM_CHECK, see OpenVMS Performance Management. On VAX systems, SYSTEM_CHECK is a special parameter, which is subject to change at any time and should be modified only if recommended by Compaq. TAILOREDTAILORED specifies whether or not the system is tailored during installation. Compaq recommends that you use the default value.TAPE_ALLOCLASSTAPE_ALLOCLASS determines the tape allocation class for the system. The tape allocation class creates a unique clusterwide device name for multiple access paths to the same tape.The TAPE_ALLOCLASS parameter can also be used to generate a unique clusterwide name for tape devices with identical unit numbers. TAPE_MVTIMEOUT (D)TAPE_MVTIMEOUT is the time in seconds that a mount verification attempt continues on a given magnetic tape volume. If the mount verification does not recover the volume within that time, the I/O operations outstanding to the volume terminate abnormally.TBSKIPWSLTBSKIPWSL specifies the maximum number of working set list entries that may be skipped while scanning for a "good" entry to discard. Setting this parameter to 0 disables skipping.This special parameter is used by Compaq and is subject to change. Do not change this parameter unless Compaq recommends that you do so. TIME_CONTROL (D)This special parameter is used by Compaq and is subject to change. Do not change this parameter unless Compaq recommends that you do so.TIME_CONTROL is an SMP bit mask parameter that controls debugging functions. The following bits are defined:
TIMEPROMPTWAITTIMEPROMPTWAIT defines the number of seconds that you want a processor to wait for the time and date to be entered when a system boot occurs, if the processor's time-of-year clock does not contain a valid time. (The time unit of micro-fortnights is approximated as seconds in the implementation.) If the time specified by TIMEPROMPTWAIT elapses, the system continues the boot operation, and the date and time are set to the last recorded time that the system booted.
Depending on the value specified for the TIMEPROMPTWAIT parameter, the system acts in one of the following ways:
TIMVCFAIL (D)TIMVCFAIL specifies the time required for an adapter or virtual circuit failure to be detected. Compaq recommends that the default value be used. Compaq also recommends that this value be lowered only in OpenVMS Cluster of three CPUs or less, that the same value be used on each computer in the cluster, and that dedicated LAN segments be used for cluster I/O.TMSCP_LOAD (A)TMSCP_LOAD allows the loading of the tape mass storage control protocol server software. The TMSCP_LOAD parameter also sets locally connected tapes served. Refer to OpenVMS Cluster Systems for information about setting the TMSCP_LOAD parameter.Setting TMSCP_LOAD to 0 inhibits the loading of the tape server and the serving of local tapes. Setting TMSCP to 1 loads the tape server into memory at the time the system is booted and makes all directly connected tape drives available clusterwide. The following table describes the two states of the TMSCP_LOAD parameter:
TMSCP_SERVE_ALLTMSCP_SERVE_ALL is a bit mask that controls the serving of tapes. The settings take effect when the system boots. You cannot change the settings when the system is running.Starting with OpenVMS Version 7.2, the serving types are implemented as a bit mask. To specify the type of serving your system will perform, locate the type you want in the following table and specify its value. For some systems, you may want to specify two serving types, such as serving all tapes except those whose allocation class does not match. To specify such a combination, add the values of each type, and specify the sum. In a mixed-version cluster that includes any systems running OpenVMS Version 7.1-x or earlier, serving all available tapes is restricted to serving all tapes except those whose allocation class does not match the system's allocation class (pre-Version 7.2 meaning). To specify this type of serving, use the value 9, which sets bit 0 and bit 3. The following table describes the serving type controlled by each bit and its decimal value.
Although the serving types are now implemented as a bit mask, the values of 0, 1, and 2, specified by bit 0 and bit 1, retain their original meanings:
If the TMSCP_LOAD system parameter is 0, TMSCP_SERVE_ALL is ignored. TTY_ALTALARMTTY_ALTALARM sets the size of the alternate type-ahead buffer alarm. This value indicates at what point an XOFF should be sent to terminals that use the alternate type-ahead buffers with the size specified by the TTY_ALTYPAHD parameter.TTY_ALTYPAHDTTY_ALTYPAHD sets the size of the alternate type-ahead buffer. Use this parameter to allow the block mode terminals and communications lines to operate more efficiently.The default value is usually adequate. Do not exceed the maximum value of 32767 when setting this parameter. TTY_AUTOCHAR (D)TTY_AUTOCHAR sets the character the terminal driver echoes when the job controller has been notified.TTY_BUFTTY_BUF sets the default line width for terminals.TTY_CLASSNAMETTY_CLASSNAME provides the 2-character prefix for the terminal class driver name that is required when booting. Changing the prefix can be useful when debugging a new terminal driver.TTY_DEFCHARTTY_DEFCHAR sets the default characteristics for terminals, using a code derived by summing the following hexadecimal values:
1Do not set this characteristic as the default in TTY_DEFCHAR. Where a condition is false, the value is 0. The upper byte is the page length. The default characteristics are 24 lines per page, terminal synchronization, wraparound, lowercase, scope, and full-duplex. TTY_DEFCHAR2TTY_DEFCHAR2 sets a second longword of default terminal characteristics. The default characteristics are represented as a code that is derived by summing the following hexadecimal values:
1This manual has been archived but is available on the OpenVMS Documentation CD-ROM. The defaults are AUTOBAUD and EDITING. TTY_DEFPORTTTY_DEFPORT provides flag bits for port drivers. Bit 0 set to 1 indicates that the terminal controller does not provide automatic XON/XOFF flow control. This bit should not be set for Compaq controllers, but it is needed for some foreign controllers. Currently only the YCDRIVER (DMF32, DMZ32) uses this bit. The remaining bits are reserved for future use. This special parameter should be modified only if recommended by Compaq.TTY_DIALTYPETTY_DIALTYPE provides flag bits for dialups. Bit 0 is 1 for United Kingdom dialups and 0 for all others. Bit 1 controls the modem protocol used. Bit 2 controls whether a modem line hangs up 30 seconds after seeing CARRIER if a channel is not assigned to the device. The remaining bits are reserved for future use. See the OpenVMS I/O User's Reference Manual for more information about flag bits.TTY_DMASIZE (D)TTY_DMASIZE specifies a number of characters in the output buffer. Below this number, character transfers are performed; above this number, DMA transfers occur if the controller is capable of DMA I/O.TTY_PARITYTTY_PARITY sets terminal default parity.TTY_RSPEEDTTY_RSPEED defines the receive speed for terminals. If TTY_RSPEED is 0, TTY_SPEED controls both the transmit and the receive speed. Maximum value is 17. This parameter is only applicable for controllers that support split-speed operations, such as the DZ32 and the DMF32.TTY_SCANDELTATTY_SCANDELTA sets the interval for polling terminals for dialup and hangup events. Shorter intervals use more processor time; longer intervals may result in missing a hangup event.TTY_SILOTIMETTY_SILOTIME defines the interval at which the DMF32 hardware polls the input silo for received characters. The DMF32 asynchronous terminal controller can delay the generation of a single input interrupt until multiple characters have accumulated in the input silo. TTY_SILOTIME specifies the number of milliseconds that the characters are allowed to accumulate prior to the generation of an input interrupt by the hardware.TTY_SPEEDTTY_SPEED sets the systemwide default speed for terminals. Low byte is transmit speed, and high byte is receive speed. If high byte is set to 0, receive speed is identical to transmit speed. Maximum value is 17. Baud rates are defined by the $TTDEF macro.TTY_TIMEOUT (D)TTY_TIMEOUT sets the number of seconds before a process associated with a disconnected terminal is deleted. The default value (900 seconds) is usually adequate. Note that using values for TTY_TIMEOUT greater than one year (value %X01E13380) can cause overflow errors and result in a disconnected device timing out immediately.TTY_TYPAHDSZTTY_TYPAHDSZ sets the size of the terminal type-ahead buffer. The default value is usually adequate. Do not exceed the maximum value of 32767 when setting this parameter.UAFALTERNATE (G,M)UAFALTERNATE enables or disables the assignment of SYSUAF as the logical name for SYSUAFALT, causing all references to the user authorization file (SYSUAF) to be translated to SYS$SYSTEM:SYSUAFALT. Use of the normal user authorization file (SYS$SYSTEM:SYSUAF) can be restored by deassigning the system logical name SYSUAF. This parameter should be set on (1) only when the system is being used by a restricted set of users. You must create a user authorization file named SYSUAFALT prior to setting UAFALTERNATE to 1.UDABURSTRATE (G)UDABURSTRATE is reserved for Compaq use only.USERD1 (D)USERD1 is reserved for definition at the user's site. The reserved longword is referenced by the symbol SGN$GL_USERD1.
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