Copyright Digital Equipment Corp. All rights reserved.

Examples

   1.$ STOP/CPU

     The STOP/CPU command in this example selects a processor and
     removes it from the multiprocessing system's active set.

   2.$ STOP/CPU 4,7

     The STOP/CPU command in this example selects the processors
     with CPU IDs 4 and 7 and removes them from the multiprocessing
     system's active set.

   3.$ STOP/CPU/OVERRIDE_CHECKS 8

     The STOP/CPU/OVERRIDE_CHECKS command in this example overrides
     some OpenVMS scheduling states that ordinarily prevent the
     operation and stops the processor with the CPU ID of 8. Then
     it is removed from active participation in the multiprocessing
     system.

   4.$ STOP/CPU/ALL

     The STOP/CPU/ALL command in this example stops all eligible
     secondary processors in the active set and removes them from
     the multiprocessing system.

   5.$ STOP/CPU/MIGRATE=WFGLXE 5

     The STOP/CPU/MIGRATE command in this example removes CPU 5 from
     the current instance's active set and transfers ownership to
     instance WFGLXE in the current hard partition.

   6.$ STOP/CPU/ASSIGN=$$HARD 6

     The STOP/CPU/MIGRATE command in this example removes CPU 6 from
     the current instance's active set and transfers ownership to
     the hard partition node in the configuration tree. The CPU is
     immediately available for assignment for any instance within
     the hard partition defined by that node.