HP (Hewlett-Packard) HP-UX 11i Computer Hardware User Manual


 
About this Document
This document contains information that will help system administrators learn how the
functionalities in System Administration Management (SAM) map with the functionalities in
HP System Management Homepage (HP SMH). System Administrators who are currently using
SAM for system management tasks can use this document to learn how to perform the same
tasks using HP SMH.
The document publishing date and part number on the cover indicate the document’s current
edition. The publishing date and the part number changes when a new edition is published.
Minor changes can be made at republish without changing the publishing date. The document
part number changes when extensive changes are made.
The latest version of this document can be found at the HP Technical Documentation website
http://www.docs.hp.com.
Scope of this Document
This cross reference guide addresses only functionalities that have been moved from SAM to
HP SMH up to HP-UX March 2008 release. This guide does not cover the functional areas that
are not part of SAM.
The functionalities in SAM and HP SMH are not mapped one-to-one. Hence, a functionality that
is supported in the graphical user interface (GUI) of HP SMH might not be supported in the text
user interface (TUI) of HP SMH.
Intended Audience
This document is intended for system administrators who want to use the HP-UX System
Management Homepage (SMH) instead of the System Administration Management (SAM),
which is deprecated HP-UX 11i v3 release onwards. Readers of this document must be familiar
with HP-UX system administration.
Typographic Conventions
Table 1 Conventions
A percent sign represents the C shell system prompt. A dollar sign represents
the system prompt for the Bourne, Korn, and POSIX shells. A number sign
represents the superuser prompt.
%, $, or #
Title of a book or other document.Book Title
Command name or qualified command phrase.
command
Text displayed by the computer.
computer output
The name of an environment, for example, PATH.ENVIRONMENT VARIABLE
Manual page (manpage). In this example, “find” is the manpage name and “1”
is the manpage section.
find(1)
The name of a keyboard key. Return and Enter both refer to the same key.Key
Commands and other text that you type.
User input
This alert provides essential information to explain a concept or to complete a
task
IMPORTANT
A note contains additional information to emphasize or supplement important
points of the main text.
NOTE
Scope of this Document 7