6.2 HP IBRIX 9300/9320 Storage Administrator Guide (AW549-96049, December 2012)

Event:
=======
EVENT ID : 1980
TIMESTAMP : Feb 14 15:08:14
LEVEL : ALERT
TEXT : category:CHASSIS, name: 9730_ch1, overallStatus:DEGRADED,
component:OAmodule, uuid:09USE038187WOAModule2, status:MISSING, Message: The Onboard
Administrator module is missing or has failed., Diagnostic message: Reseat the Onboard
Administrator module. If reseating the module does not resolve the issue, replace the Onboard
Administrator module., eventId:000D0004, location:OAmodule in chassis S/N:USE123456W,
level:ALERT
FILESYSTEM :
HOST : ix2403.ad.hp.com
USER NAME :
OPERATION :
SEGMENT NUMBER :
PV NUMBER :
NIC :
HBA :
RELATED EVENT : 0
The ibrix_event -l and -i commands can include options that act as filters to return records
associated with a specific file system, server, alert level, and start or end time. See the HP IBRIX
9000 Network Storage System CLI Reference Guide for more information.
Removing events from the events database table
Use the ibrix_event -p command to removes event from the events table, starting with the
oldest events. The default is to remove the oldest seven days of events. To change the number of
days, include the -o DAYS_COUNT option.
ibrix_event -p [-o DAYS_COUNT]
Monitoring cluster health
To monitor the functional health of file serving nodes and 9000 clients, execute the ibrix_health
command. This command checks host performance in several functional areas and provides either
a summary or a detailed report of the results.
Health checks
The ibrix_health command runs these health checks on file serving nodes:
Pings remote file serving nodes that share a network with the test hosts. Remote servers that
are pingable might not be connected to a test host because of a Linux or IBRIX software issue.
Remote servers that are not pingable might be down or have a network problem.
If test hosts are assigned to be network interface monitors, pings their monitored interfaces to
assess the health of the connection. (For information on network interface monitoring, see
“Setting network interface options in the configuration database” (page 102)
Determines whether specified hosts can read their physical volumes.
The ibrix_health command runs this health check on both file serving nodes and 9000 clients:
Determines whether information maps on the tested hosts are consistent with the configuration
database.
If you include the -b option, the command also checks the health of standby servers (if configured).
Health check reports
The summary report provides an overall health check result for all tested file serving nodes and
9000 clients, followed by individual results. If you include the -b option, the standby servers for
Monitoring cluster health 77