Logical partition concept: Bus-level and IOP-level I/O partitions

 

Bus-level and IOP-level are two ways of I/O partition. Depending on your needs, there can be advantages to setting up one type of I/O partition instead of another.

With bus level I/O partitions, the system partitions I/O resources by bus. On a server that is completely partitioned at the bus level, every secondary partition has its own removable media and workstation.

Bus-level logical partitions allow for:

When you partition a server at the IOP level, one or more buses are shared and divided up between the I/O resources by the IOP. This type of logical partitions allows for:

You might also consider having a system configuration with both bus-level partitioning and IOP-level partitioning. For example, you may put all of the IOPs that you wish to switch in a shared bus and configure all other logical partitions to have bus-level partitioning. The shared bus can then belong to a test partition. This allows you the ability to switch IOPs such as tape drives or LAN adapters to partitions that need these resources.

 

Parent topic:

Hardware for logical partitions

Related concepts
Logical partition concept: Bus Logical partition concept: IOP Dynamically switching IOPs between partitions Logical partition concept: IOP and device switching