HP OpenVMS Version 8.3 Upgrade and Installation Manual > Chapter 6 Upgrading the OpenVMS
Operating System
Booting the Operating System Media
The OpenVMS operating system includes procedures that allow
you to easily upgrade the operating system using the PCSI utility.
To upgrade your system, you must boot the OpenVMS Alpha CD or the
OpenVMS I64 OE DVD. To boot the OpenVMS Alpha system CD, see “Booting the OpenVMS
Alpha Operating System CD”. To boot the OpenVMS
I64 OE DVD, see “Booting the OpenVMS
I64 Operating System DVD”. Booting the OpenVMS
Alpha Operating System CD | |
To get started, boot the OpenVMS Alpha operating system CD
either from your local CD drive or from a CD drive served by the
InfoServer, as described in “Booting from the
Local Drive” and “Booting from the
InfoServer”. First, you need to identify the name
of the CD drive, as explained in “Determining the Boot Device”. For more information about booting operations,
see “Booting Operations”. Determining the Boot DeviceTo boot the operating system CD, you need to determine the
identity of the CD drive. Follow these steps: Insert the operating system CD into the local
CD drive. Enter the SHOW DEVICE command at the console prompt
(>>>) and look for the correct drive listed
in the output (for example, DKA400). If you are booting from the
InfoServer, look for a device listed with its hardware address,
as in the last line of the following example (EWA0): >>>SHOW DEVICE dva0.0.0.1000.0 DVA0 RX23 dka200.2.0.5.0 DKA200 RZ28M 1004 dka300.3.0.5.0 DKA300 RZ29B 0016 dka400.4.0.5.0 DKA400 RRD42 442E ewa0.0.0.3.0 EWA0 00-00-F8-1F-70-3D
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For additional information, see the HP OpenVMS
Version 8.3 for Alpha and Integrity Servers Software Product Description (SPD
82.35.xx) and the hardware manuals that you received with your
Alpha computer.
Booting from the
Local DriveTo boot the operating system CD from the local CD drive, enter
the boot command in the following format: BOOT -FLAGS 0,0 source-drive Substitute the device name of the CD drive for source-drive, such as DKA400, as listed in the SHOW DEVICE display
example in “Determining the Boot Device”.
In this case, you would enter the following command and press Enter: >>> BOOT -FLAGS 0,0 DKA400
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Booting from the
InfoServerTo boot the operating system CD using either the InfoServer
hardware or the InfoServer utility, follow these steps. To use
the InfoServer utility, certain configuration steps are required
initially (one time only), as described in Appendix C “Setting Up and Performing Network Booting”; note that the operating system CD must be mounted
systemwide. At the console prompt, enter the boot command
in the following format: >>> BOOT -FLAGS 0,0 -FILE APB_083 lan-device-name
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Substitute the name of the local area network device for lan-device-name, such as EWA0, as listed in the SHOW DEVICE display
example in “Determining the Boot Device”. The APB file name is the unique file name that was assigned
to the APB.EXE file when it was copied from the operating system
CD to the InfoServer. This file is the name of the APB program used
for the initial system load (ISL) boot program. | | | | | NOTE: If you are using a DEC 3000 or 4000 series system, note
the following: | | | | |
The InfoServer ISL program then displays the following
menu: Network Initial System Load Function Version 1.2 FUNCTION FUNCTION ID 1 - Display Menu 2 - Help 3 - Choose Service 4 - Select Options 5 - Stop Enter a function ID value:
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Respond to the prompts as follows, pressing Enter after each entry: Enter 3 for the function ID. Enter 2 for the option ID. Enter the service name (ALPHA083 is the default service
name for the InfoServer hardware; for the InfoServer utility, ask
your system or network manager for the service name).
A sample display follows: Enter a function ID value: 3 OPTION OPTION ID 1 - Find Services 2 - Enter known Service Name Enter an Option ID value: 2 Enter a Known Service Name: ALPHA083
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Booting the OpenVMS
I64 Operating System DVD | |
This section explains how to boot the OpenVMS I64 operating
environment DVD, either from your local DVD drive, as described
in “Booting
from the Local Drive”, or from
a virtual DVD drive served over the network by the InfoServer utility,
as described in “Booting
from the InfoServer Utility”.
For more information about booting operations, see “Booting Operations”. Booting
from the Local DriveTo boot a local OpenVMS I64 OE DVD, follow these steps. To
boot the DVD on a cell-based server, a DVD device must be accessible
by the nPartition that OpenVMS is being installed on. Make sure your Integrity
server is powered on. If your system has an attached external device, make
sure it is turned on and operational. Insert the DVD into the drive. Cycle power. From the main EFI boot menu (for cell-based servers,
this must be the EFI boot menu for the nPartition on which OpenVMS
is to be booted), select the appropriate item from the boot options list.
Note that the EFI boot menu is timed; press any key to stop the
countdown timer. For some systems, the boot
option to select is the Internal Bootable DVD option. If that option
is not listed in your EFI boot menu, move to the Boot From a File
menu and select the Removable Media Boot option, if present. Alternatively (and this method is recommended for cell-based
servers), boot the DVD drive from the EFI Shell prompt by entering
the command shown in the following example, where fsn: corresponds
to the Integrity server DVD drive (such as fs0:). Note that if you
have navigated to a particular file system, the EFI Shell prompt
would reflect that file system; for example, if the current file
system is fs0:, the EFI Shell prompt would be fs0:>. Shell>fsn:\efi\boot\bootia64.efi
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To determine which device is the bootable DVD drive, examine
the list of mapped devices and look for an fs device listing that
includes the letters “CDROM”, as in the following line,
where fsn is the file system associated with
the drive, which is usually fs0: (instead of "fsn",
you might see something similar to "V8.3"; instead of Ata,
you might see Scsi, depending on the server model): fsn : Acpi(HWP0002,400)/Pci(4|1)/Ata(Primary,Master)/CDROM(Entry0) You can use the following command to display the mapping of
various EFI device names to OpenVMS device names, where fsn is
the device you want to check (such as fs0:): Shell>fsn:\efi\vms\vms_show dev -fs
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On most Integrity servers, the DVD drive is DQA0:. On systems
that include a SCSI bus, such as the Superdome server, the DVD drive
is DKA0:. For more information about the vms_show command, see the HP OpenVMS System Management Utilities Reference Manual.
When the DVD boots properly, the OpenVMS operating system
banner appears, followed by the operating system menu. You can now
upgrade your OpenVMS I64 operating system on the target disk (see
“Performing the Upgrade”). If
the methods documented in this section do not succeed in booting
the DVD, see “Alternate
Method of Using EFI to Boot the DVD”.
| | | | | NOTE: When booting OpenVMS from the installation DVD for the
first time on any OpenVMS I64 system with a SAN storage device,
you might experience a delay in EFI initialization because the entire
SAN is scanned. Depending on the size of the SAN, this delay might
range from several seconds to several minutes. | | | | |
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