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06-01-2007 05:08 AM
06-01-2007 05:08 AM
Can someone point me to the correct config file where the settings are maintained or let me know if these are hardcoded and we are not able to gain more info from the standard EMS processes.
We are looking for the actual cabinet temp at the time of the notification, what the shutdown temp is, etc.
Thanks in advance,
Doug
Event Time..........: Thu May 31 20:12:26 2007
Severity............: CRITICAL
Monitor.............: dm_core_hw
Event #.............: 33
System..............: IFASHP.spokaneschools.org
Summary:
Processor cabinet intake temperature is too hot
Solved! Go to Solution.
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06-01-2007 05:20 AM
06-01-2007 05:20 AM
Re: HW Event Notification
There is an instrument that is designed to do this task; I think it is called a "thermometer".
You can find digital thermometers that either have a serial interface and some are even web-enabled. Most will allow for multiple temperature probes. This is the approach I would take and then you can remotely measure temperature regardless of the equipment.
Of course, the real answer is to have adequate N + 1 cooling so that you can lose an entire HVAC unit and your equipment doesn't fail.
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06-01-2007 05:22 AM
06-01-2007 05:22 AM
Re: HW Event Notification
If you tell us the model this is, someone could maybe find a spec.
You can also see a bit more detail via the console interface to the firware/support processor (cntl-B) via the 'PS' (power status) command. It tells you which threshold you are at.
Event #33 is the first warning threshhold. If you get even hotter the machine should shut itself off.
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06-01-2007 05:25 AM
06-01-2007 05:25 AM
Re: HW Event Notification
We do have N+1 cooling and we have temp gauges on other hardware as well as HVAC notifications.
Thanks anyways.
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06-01-2007 06:31 AM
06-01-2007 06:31 AM
Re: HW Event Notification
man 1m dm_core_hw for more
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06-01-2007 07:06 AM
06-01-2007 07:06 AM
Re: HW Event Notification
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06-01-2007 08:39 AM
06-01-2007 08:39 AM
Re: HW Event Notification
rp7400 A3639C
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06-01-2007 08:57 AM
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06-01-2007 02:05 PM
06-01-2007 02:05 PM
Re: HW Event Notification
I have personally witnessed over $100,000 in damage when an air conditioner (just one) was turned off by a timer Sunday afternoon and the internal temperature went to an estimated 140 degrees. Four disk drives were destroyed, a tape drive, all the networking and several computers without overtemp shutdown were damaged beyond reliable repair. This company ignored requests for separate, dual air conditioners and instead spliced some ductwork off the building system into the computer room. The $100k was just hardware -- downtime was several weeks.
Bill Hassell, sysadmin
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07-11-2007 02:10 AM
07-11-2007 02:10 AM
Re: HW Event Notification
Would it be possible to find out the temp thresholds for an rp8420? We have a similar problem occuring at the moment and need to understand this a bit more.
Regards
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07-11-2007 04:02 AM
07-11-2007 04:02 AM
Re: HW Event Notification
Operating Temperature for rp8420 is 41° to 95° F (5° to 35° C)
You can check the inlet temperature from MP (DE command).
Hope this helps!
Regards
Torsten.
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07-11-2007 04:26 AM
07-11-2007 04:26 AM
Re: HW Event Notification
Would you also happen to know where the temperature margins lie, when it reaches Critical and then Emergency. I'm guessing the Critical warning comes in at the 35 degrees C but at what temperature would the Emergency kick in and for the machine to shutdown.
This is for an rp8420.
Regards
Matt / Paul
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07-11-2007 05:55 AM
07-11-2007 05:55 AM
Re: HW Event Notification
MP:CM> de
Display status of the selected MP entity (for use by trained personnel only)
B - BPS (Bulk Power Supplies)
U - CLU (Cabinet Utilities: Fans, Intrusion, Clock's etc.)
A - PACI (Partition Console Interface)
G - MP (Management Processor)
P - PM (Power Management)
H - Cell Board Controller (PDHC)
Select device: u
Cabinet 0 Utilities Status
FW Revision : 8.005 built Sep 26 2006 at 16:11:20
PWR SBY MP RUN REM ATT FLT
Front Panel LED State : * * * . . . .
Inlet Air Temperature : 20 deg C
You should consider everything above 30° C as critical, IMHO.
From the system point of view, an internal temp below 35° C is normal. Above this point it will create warnings and speed p the fans. This sounds like a starting plane.
The values are similar to the values mentioned above. Be aware of some tolerances while measuring (done inside the box!).
BTW, the system will perform a "reboot -h (-q?)".
Hope this helps!
Regards
Torsten.
__________________________________________________
There are only 10 types of people in the world -
those who understand binary, and those who don't.
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No support by private messages. Please ask the forum!
If you feel this was helpful please click the KUDOS! thumb below!

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07-11-2007 11:48 AM
07-11-2007 11:48 AM
Re: HW Event Notification
Unless the computer is generating a bogus alert, *ANY* warning is too much, requiring immediate action (within minutes). There is nothing to understand except that the computer is way too hot. The next action steps are easy. Start an immediate shutdown of non-essential systems and peripherals, then an emergency redesign of the cooling systems with redundancy and electronic monitoring of water, temperature and power. With rp8420's running $200k to over $1 million (each), it doesn't take too much to understand that the equipment is at serious risk. It's sort of like wanting to understand whether a fire in the computer room has reached 1000 degrees or 1500 degrees.
Bill Hassell, sysadmin
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04-30-2009 01:48 PM
04-30-2009 01:48 PM