To use the fmdump command to identify faults, To use the fmdump – Sun Microsystems Sun Fire T1000 User Manual

Page 49

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Chapter 2

Sun Fire T1000 Server Diagnostics

37

To Use the fmdump Command to Identify Faults

The fmdump command displays the list of faults detected by the Solaris PSH facility.
Use this command for the following reasons:

To see if any faults have been detected by the Solaris PSH facility.

If you need to obtain the fault message ID (SUNW-MSG-ID) for detected faults.

To verify that the replacement of a FRU has cleared the fault and not generated
any additional faults.

If you already have a fault message ID, go to

Step 2

to obtain more information

about the fault from Suns Predictive Self-Healing Knowledge Article web site.

1. Check the event log using the fmdump command with -v for verbose output:

In this example, a fault is displayed, indicating the following details:

Date and time of the fault (Oct 21 10:32 EDT 2004)

Universal Unique Identifier (UUID) that is unique for every fault (a26d5379-
24b8-4a46-bcbf-d9e1ff75a1bc)

Sun message identifier (SUNW4U-8000-2S) that can be used to obtain additional
fault information

Faulted FRU (FRU: mem:///component=MB/CMP0/CH0:R1/D0/J0701), that in
this example is identified as the DIMM at R1/D0(J0701).

2. Use the Sun message ID to obtain more information about this type of fault.

a. In a browser, go to the Predictive Self-Healing Knowledge Article web site:

http://www.sun.com/msg

b. Enter the message ID in the SUNW-MSG-ID field, and press Lookup.

In this example, the message ID SUN4U-8000-2S returns the following
information for corrective action:

# fmdump -v

TIME

UUID

SUNW-MSG-ID

Oct 21 10:32:47.2211 a26d5379-24b8-4a46-bcbf-d9e1ff75a1bc SUN4U-

8000-2S

95% fault.memory.dimm

FRU: mem:///component=MB/CMP0/CH0:R1/D0/J0701

rsrc: mem:///component=MB/CMP0/CH0:R1/D0/J0701

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