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03-16-2004 08:04 AM
03-16-2004 08:04 AM
Greetings, all.
Is there a daemon I can run that keeps an eye on the health of my DL380's raid array? I'm used to mdstat on software raid, but am unsure what to use to monitor the hardware raid.
Is this something I can pull using an snmp query?
Thanks in advance,
-dd
Is there a daemon I can run that keeps an eye on the health of my DL380's raid array? I'm used to mdstat on software raid, but am unsure what to use to monitor the hardware raid.
Is this something I can pull using an snmp query?
Thanks in advance,
-dd
Hey, that's not a spoon.
Solved! Go to Solution.
3 REPLIES 3
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03-17-2004 12:23 AM
03-17-2004 12:23 AM
Re: monitor array status on DL380 running AS 2.1
I would use the Insight Manager agents.. You can monitor hardware status through the web interface..
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03-17-2004 01:30 AM
03-17-2004 01:30 AM
Re: monitor array status on DL380 running AS 2.1
A good answer, but it doesn't help me pipe stuff into my enterprise monitoring solution. I'd like to be able to query the server remotely (via perl script or snmp) to alert me when it drops a drive.
-dd
-dd
Hey, that's not a spoon.
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03-17-2004 02:05 AM
03-17-2004 02:05 AM
Solution
After you install the agents, you can use the MIBS on the Management CD and the man pages for the snmp utilities (snmpwalk and snmpget) to figure out how to get the info you need.
Below is an example of how to get the processor speed of a server running the standard equipment agent:
# snmpget localhost public enterprises.232.cpqStdEquipment.cpqSeComponent.cpqSeProcessor.cpqSeCpuTable.cpqSeCpuEntry.cpqSeCpuSpeed.0
/* the 0 is the processor number obtained by doing an snmpwalk on the index of the Cpu entries (example below) */
#snmpwalk localhost public enterprises.232.cpqStdEquipment.cpqSeComponent.cpqSeProcessor.cpqSeCpuTable.cpqSeCpuEntry.cpqSeCpuUnitIndex
This command will return a number of processors starting at 0.
In a two processor machine, the second processor would be 1, so ...
# snmpget localhost public enterprises.232.cpqStdEquipment.cpqSeComponent.cpqSeProcessor.cpqSeCpuTable.cpqSeCpuEntry.cpqSeCpuSpeed.1
would return the speed of processor number 2.
Below is an example of how to get the processor speed of a server running the standard equipment agent:
# snmpget localhost public enterprises.232.cpqStdEquipment.cpqSeComponent.cpqSeProcessor.cpqSeCpuTable.cpqSeCpuEntry.cpqSeCpuSpeed.0
/* the 0 is the processor number obtained by doing an snmpwalk on the index of the Cpu entries (example below) */
#snmpwalk localhost public enterprises.232.cpqStdEquipment.cpqSeComponent.cpqSeProcessor.cpqSeCpuTable.cpqSeCpuEntry.cpqSeCpuUnitIndex
This command will return a number of processors starting at 0.
In a two processor machine, the second processor would be 1, so ...
# snmpget localhost public enterprises.232.cpqStdEquipment.cpqSeComponent.cpqSeProcessor.cpqSeCpuTable.cpqSeCpuEntry.cpqSeCpuSpeed.1
would return the speed of processor number 2.
The opinions expressed above are the personal opinions of the authors, not of Hewlett Packard Enterprise. By using this site, you accept the Terms of Use and Rules of Participation.
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