My LPAR always boots into SMS. Why?

If you turn on Multiboot from within the SMS menu (as shown below), your LPAR will always boot into SMS, regardless of your AIX boot list and/or LPAR profile settings.

  

PowerPC Firmware

Version EM310_048

SMS 1.6 (c) Copyright IBM Corp. 2000,2005 All rights reserved.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Multiboot

  1. Select Install/Boot Device
  2. Configure Boot Device Order
  3. Multiboot Startup <ON>

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Navigation keys:

M = return to Main Menu

ESC key = return to previous screen X = eXit System Management Services

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Type menu item number and press Enter or select Navigation key:

 

If your LPAR always boots to the SMS menu, check the Multiboot Startup setting. If its set to ON, change it to OFF (as shown below). To access this option you must enter “5. Select Boot Options” from the main SMS menu.

 

PowerPC Firmware

Version EM310_048

SMS 1.6 (c) Copyright IBM Corp. 2000,2005 All rights reserved.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Multiboot

  1. Select Install/Boot Device
  2. Configure Boot Device Order
  3. Multiboot Startup <OFF>

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Navigation keys:

M = return to Main Menu

ESC key = return to previous screen X = eXit System Management Services

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Type menu item number and press Enter or select Navigation key:

 

Enabling Multiboot is only useful if you’re planning on dual-booting AIX and Linux within an LPAR. With Multiboot turned on, each time you reboot the LPAR, you are taken to SMS so you can choose which disk to boot from i.e. the AIX boot disk or the Linux boot disk. I’ve never come across anyone actually doing this in the commercial world. Mathew Davis (from IBM) wrote an article about dual booting AIX and Linux on pSeries back in 2005:

http://www.ibmsystemsmag.com/aix/aprilmay05/tipstechniques/6640p1.aspx

 

There can be other reasons why an LPAR always boots into SMS. The following link has some information on this:

 

http://www.aixmind.com/?tag=keeps-booting-to-sms

 

This IBM document explains how to select a boot disk from within the SMS menu.

 

http://www-01.ibm.com/support/docview.wss?rs=1209&context=SWG10&dc=DB520&q1=multiboot+SMS&uid=isg3T1011805&loc=en_US&cs=UTF-8&lang=en

 

 

Remember, if the disk doesn’t have a valid boot image, it won’t appear in the SMS menu as a boot device!

 

One way to check you have a boot device on your system is to run the ipl_varyon command from the AIX command line (before restarting your LPAR!):

 

# ipl_varyon -i

PVNAME          BOOT DEVICE     PVID                    VOLUME GROUP ID

hdisk0          YES             00f6048868b4e0ef0000    00f6048800004c00

 

If you don’t see a boot device on your system, perhaps someone has accidentally removed the boot record? Or maybe it was never created?

 

For example, in the commands that follow, I have “accidentally” run the ‘chpv –c’ command against my boot disk. This clears the boot record from the disk! The ipl_varyon command no longer shows hdisk0 as a bootable device.

 

Leaving the system in this state would prevent the system from booting!

 

To recreate the boot image, I run the bosboot command against hdisk0. Now ipl_varyon recognises hdisk0 as a bootable device again. Phew!

 

# chpv -c hdisk0

# ipl_varyon -i

PVNAME          BOOT DEVICE     PVID                    VOLUME GROUP ID

hdisk0          NO              00f6048868b4e0ef0000    00f6048800004c00

 

# bosboot -a -d /dev/hdisk0

bosboot: Boot image is 42689 512 byte blocks.

 

# ipl_varyon -i

PVNAME          BOOT DEVICE     PVID                    VOLUME GROUP ID

hdisk0          YES             00f6048868b4e0ef0000    00f6048800004c00

Posted - Tue, Apr 16, 2019 5:27 PM. This article has been viewed 3216 times.
Online URL: http://kb.ictbanking.net/article.php?id=539

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