Craig,

DSPLICKEY after such a full system restore will still show you any "old" keys that are still in the license repository, but that may have been on a different machine with a different CPU serial #.   So, you need to look closely at those entries, and compare that to the actual serial #, e.g. DSPSYSVAL QSRLNBR ...

Hope that helps,

Mark S. Waterbury

On Monday, August 12, 2019, 3:49:40 PM EDT, Craig Jacobsen <craigjacobsen@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

I printed the DSPLICKEY.
The usage limit is *NOMAX for all 3.
The expiration date is *NONE.

Craig


On 8/12/2019 3:45 PM, Rob Berendt wrote:
There's nothing in the recovery manual about keying in the license information.  It should have restored from the backup.  This is why I asked my earlier questions.  I know some people who like to IPL from optical to prepare the disks and restore the base OS.  But that's mainly for system migrations.  This helps reduce downtime (if you really know what you are doing).  However it shouldn't apply in your situation unless someone did the optical thing anyway.

When you do the DSPLICKEY what are the values for
Usage limit
Expiration date


Rob Berendt


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