1: | The default HP-UX kernel is: -
/stand/hpux -
/hpux/kernel -
/stand/vmunix -
/stand/hpux/kernel |
2: | The HP-UX kernel is: -
an executable file -
a text file -
a system image file that is loaded into memory at boot time -
a nonexecutable binary file |
3: | If you don't back up the old kernel: -
The new kernel never boots because it checks for the existence of the old kernel. -
You can't recover if the new kernel does not boot properly. -
The new kernel refuses to install if there is no backup copy, a safety feature enabled by Hewlett-Packard. -
None of the above. |
4: | A new kernel is rebuilt whenever you: -
install a new application -
change a kernel configurable parameter -
install a patch related to HP-UX commands -
don't shut down the system properly |
5: | For a proper memory dump, the size of the swap space must be larger than: -
the kernel size -
physical memory size -
any application size -
primary boot disk size |
6: | What does the sysdef command show? -
the system definition -
kernel tunable parameters -
kernel subsystems -
device drivers configured into the kernel |
7: | The maxswapchunks kernel parameter shows the value of maximum swap space: -
that can exist on the system -
used by each user -
per disk -
that can be used by a single application |