HP Onboard Administrator User Manual

Page 103

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Configuring the HP BladeSystem c7000 enclosure and enclosure devices 103

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Blade fault

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Blade information change

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Tray status change

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Tray reset

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Switch connect

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Switch disconnect

All e-mails have the following header:

From: Enclosure ENCLOSURE-NAME <enclosure-name@serverdomain>

Date: Date in standard format

Subject: HP AlertMail-SEQ: <SEVERITY> SUBJECT

To: RECEIVER MAILBOX

Where SEVERITY is one of the following (from highest to lowest):

o

# FATAL

o

# CRITICAL

o

# WARNING MAJOR

o

# WARNING MINOR

o

# WARNING

o

# NORMAL

Each subject line contains a unique sequence number to easily identify the order of events in case the mail

server distributes them in the wrong order. Sequence numbers range from 0 to 999 and start again at 0.
The mail body is used to give more detailed information regarding the event issued. It also contains

information on what the user should do to correct any issue and what the current enclosure status is.

NOTE:

The enclosure status is displayed as the status at the time the event was processed which

can cause the status to show up as OK in an e-mail saying a Fan has Failed, if the user has already

replaced the fan at the time the event was sent out by AlertMail.

Sample e-mail

Subject: HP AlertMail-010: (CRITICAL) Power Supply #1: Failed

Date: Wed, 23 Apr 2006 15:02:22 +0200

From: Enclosure EM-00508BEBA571 <[email protected]>

To: user@domain

X-OS: HP BladeSystem Enclosure Manager

X-Priority: 1

Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii

EVENT (26 May 07:09): Power Supply #1 Status has changed to: Failed.

Enclosure, EM-00508BEBA571, has detected that a power supply in bay 1 has

changed from status OK to Failed.

The power supply should be replaced with the appropriate spare part. You can

ensure that the center wall assembly is operating correctly by swapping the

two power supplies. Make sure that there are no bent pins on the power supply

connectors before reinserting and that each power supply is fully seated.

An amber LED on the power supply indicates either an over-voltage,

over-temperature, or loss of AC power has occurred. A blinking LED on the

power supply indicates a current limit condition.

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