Table of Contents
Introduction
This section describes how to migrate your HP Alpha system to CHARON-AXP. We will use a sample HP AlphaServer ES40 system running OpenVMS to demonstrate the migration procedure. The process is similar for all CHARON-AXP models.
Creating CHARON Virtual Machine
As a first step it is required to create a CHARON Virtual Machine (VM) using CHARON Virtual Machines Manager in the following way:
Press the "Create VM from Template" button:
Specify the HP Alpha model to be emulated and the name of the VM, press the "Create" button. The VM will be created:
Select the VM and switch to the "VM Configuration" tab.
Press the "Edit Configuration file" button:
Collecting information about the source HP Alpha system
The next step is to determine the exact configuration of your HP Alpha hardware in order to create the CHARON VM configuration file.
Turn on your source HP Alpha system. At the ">>>" prompt, issue "show device" command:
>>> |
To get more detailed information boot OpenVMS and issue "show dev /full" command:
Disk PFCAXP$DKA0:, device type RZ28, is online, mounted, file-oriented device, Disk PFCAXP$DKA100:, device type RZ22, is online, file-oriented device, Disk PFCAXP$DKA200:, device type RZ23, is online, file-oriented device, Disk PFCAXP$DQA0:, device type TSSTcorpCDDVDW SH-222BB, is online, file-oriented Disk $1$DGA0: (PFCAXP), device type RZ24, is online, file-oriented device, Magtape PFCAXP$MKA600:, device type Virtual SCSI Tape, is online, file-oriented Terminal OPA0:, device type VT102, is online, record-oriented device, carriage Device EWA0:, device type DE500, is online, network device, device is a template Device FGA0:, device type KGPSA Fibre Channel, is online, shareable, error Device PGA0:, device type SCSI FCP, is online, error logging is enabled. ... Device PKA0:, device type Qlogic ISP1020 SCSI port, is online, error logging is Device $1$GGA32767:, device type Generic SCSI device, is online, shareable. $ |
In case of Tru64 UNIX V5 running on the host system it is recommended to use the following commands to get information on the host configuration:
Command | Description |
---|---|
#/sbin/hwmgr view devices | Get detailed information about the host hardware configuration |
#/sbin/hwmgr show scsi | Get specific information about the host SCSI controllers and attached disks |
#/sbin/hwmgr view hierarchy | Get information about the host controllers |
Please reference to the Tru64 UNIX User's Guide for more details.
The source HP Alpha peripheral configuration in this example is:
Controller | Devices on controller | Description |
---|---|---|
KZPBA | -DKA0 (RZ28) | SCSI disk/tape controller |
KGPSA-CA | -DGA0 (RZ24) | FC disk controller |
OPA0 | System console | |
-DQA0 | IDE CD-ROM controller | |
EWA0 | Network interface, MAC address: "F8-D1-11-00-67-E6" |
Now collect some general information about the HP AlphaServer ES40 system:
>>> |
>>> |
So the collected information about the HP AlphaServer ES40 system is:
Component | Value |
---|---|
System Type | AlphaServer ES40 6/667 |
Serial Number | SN01234567 |
Number of CPUs | 4 |
System memory | 512 Mb |
In some particular situations it is also important to know the exact placement of all the peripheral devices on HP Alpha PCI bus. To get that information issue "show config" command at ">>>" prompt of HP Alpha console, for example:
>>> |
The "show config" command collects the following information of placement of peripheral devices on PCI bus:
- Bus number
- Slot number
- Function number
To find out the exact types of controllers and other useful information refer to the source HP Alpha system documentation.
Creation of CHARON-AXP configuration file
Using the above info, the following configuration can be created instead of the template configuration file:
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Making disk images
In our example, possible mappings of KZPBA SCSI controller include disk and tape images. Tape images have not to be manually created whereas you have to provision disk images, as described below.
Our example creates disk images of the original physical type. In reality, this step is the best opportunity in the migration to provision bigger disks to get extra storage space.
Create special directories for storing disk and tape images, as needed. Created directories are referenced in the sample configuration file above.
...> cd C :\
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This operation can also be done using Windows Explorer.
Alternatively it is possible to put the tape and disk images in CHARON VM Home Directory.
Start the "MkDisk" utility by pressing the "Disk Image generator" button in the "Host Information & Utilities" tab of the CHARON Virtual Machines Manager:
The main dialog of the utility will appear:
Select "Alpha AXP" in the "Select System" drop-down menu, "SCSI" in the "All Controllers" drop-down menu and "RZ24" (for example) in the "Select Disk Type" drop-down menu.
Press then the "Create Disk Image" button:
The utility will ask you to specify the output file name. Select the "C:\My disks" directory created just before (or create it directly in the dialog) and press "Save" button:
The "MkDisk" utility will create the requested disk image:
Repeat this sequence for the disks "RZ28.vdisk", "RZ22.vdisk" and "RZ23.vdisk". Place them in the same folder.
Installation of HP Alpha operating system
The next step is to transfer the data from the source HP Alpha system to CHARON-AXP. The easiest way to do this is via backup over the network. But for this operation we need a bootable, network-enabled operating system on a CHARON-AXP disk image or physical disk.
The example configures the CHARON-AXP AlphaServer ES40 system for installation of HP OpenVMS from a distribution CD-ROM (usually it is "\\.\CdRom0" if the host has only one CD-ROM drive):
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DKA300 will be the disk where all the source disks will be copied, so its size needs to be big enough to store all the disk backup images
Create an empty disk image for installation of HP OpenVMS and another one for storing backups from the source HP Alpha system as it is shown in the section above.
Run CHARON VM and boot from the CDROM named "dqa0" ("migration.cfg" is the configuration file we use in this example):
CHARON-AXP/ES40 for Windows x64 (AlphaServer ES40 6/667), Version 4.8.18100
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Install HP Alpha/VMS including DECnet on "dka400". DECnet address must belong to the same area as the source HP Alpha system.
Login to the newly installed OpenVMS system and initialize the disk intended for backups storage. Let's assume it's prompt is "newvms$
"
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Making remote backups
Now we are ready to create disk backups from the source HP Alpha system to CHARON VM.
Boot CHARON VM and make sure that the source HP Alpha system is available via DECnet.
Login to the source HP Alpha system. Stop all the batch queues, kick off the users, stop all applications and close databases if any. The commands listed in SYS$MANAGER:SYSHUTDWN.COM may be helpful. The goal is to close as many files as possible. The system disk will have several files opened (pagefile, swapfile, etc.), but this is normal.
The use of the "SHOW DEVICE /FILES" command would be of help to list opened files on a disk
Let's assume the CHARON VM system is node 1.400 in this example. Issue then the following commands from the source HP Alpha whose prompt is set to "source$
"
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Once the backup procedure completes, the disk "DKA300" of CHARON VM will contain 3 savesets: "DKA0.BCK", "DKA100.BCK" and "DKA200.BCK"
Restore backups to CHARON-AXP disks
Next, restore the new savesets to their corresponding virtual disks. Login to CHARON VM guest OS and issue this sequence of commands to restore all the savesets created on the previous step:
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If you are going to have CHARON VM and the original physical HP Alpha on the network at the same time, you must change the network identity of one (usually the CHARON VM).
The easiest way is to boot the CHARON VM virtualized system on the restored system disk with the network Disabled and configure new addresses, as needed.
The NIC can be disabled with a "connection:disabled" statement in the CHARON VM configuration file.
Then Enable the network and reboot.
Alternative ways of data transfer
Some alternative methods of data transfer are also possible. For example:
- Connect a SCSI tape drive to CHARON-AXP host via a PCI card
- Map the tape drive in the CHARON VM configuration file
a. Restore source HP Alpha system backups from tape to disk images via OpenVMS running on CHARON VM.
b. Boot from standalone backups and restore its content to CHARON VM virtual disks - Dump source HP Alpha system backups to tape images with "mtd" utility and:
a. Boot from freshly installed OpenVMS system and restore the tape images to CHARON VM virtual disks
b. Boot from standalone backups and restore its content to CHARON VM virtual disks
- Map the tape drive in the CHARON VM configuration file
Create a network cluster between the source HP Alpha system and CHARON VM (it is possible to use the source system as boot server); then simple backup from one disk to another:
$ BACKUP/IMAGE/IGNORE=INTERLOCK REAL$DKA0: DKA0: