Events and event messages
When an event occurs in a storage system, an event message is recorded in the system’s event log and, depending on the system’s event
notication settings, can also be sent to users (using email) and host-based applications (using SNMP or SMI-S).
TIP: A best practice is to enable notications to be sent for events having severity Warning and higher.
Each event has a numeric code that identies the type of event that occurred, and has one of the following severities:
• Critical: A failure occurred that might cause a controller to shut down. Correct the problem immediately.
• Error: A failure occurred that might aect data integrity or system stability. Correct the problem as soon as possible.
• Warning: A problem occurred that might aect system stability but not data integrity. Evaluate the problem and correct it if necessary.
• Informational: A conguration or state change occurred, or a problem occurred that the system corrected. No immediate action is
required. In this document, this severity is abbreviated as “Info.”
• Resolved: The condition that caused an event to be logged has been resolved.
An event message might specify an associated error code or reason code, which provides additional detail for technical support. Error
codes and reason codes are outside the scope of this guide.
Topics:
• Event descriptions
• Events
• Using the trust command
• Events sent as indications to SMI-S clients
Event descriptions
This section describes event messages that may be reported during system operation and species any actions recommended in response
to an event.
This section describes all event codes that exist as of this publication. Depending on your system model and rmware version, some events
described in this document may not apply to your system. The event descriptions should be considered as explanations of events that you
do see. They should not be considered as descriptions of events that you should have seen but did not. In such cases those events
probably do not apply to your system.
In this section:
• The term disk group refers to either a vdisk for linear storage or a virtual disk group for virtual storage.
• The term pool refers to either a single vdisk for linear storage or a virtual pool for virtual storage.
Resources for diagnosing and resolving problems
For further information about diagnosing and resolving problems, see the troubleshooting chapter and the LED descriptions appendix in
your product’s Hardware Installation and Maintenance Guide.
For a summary of storage events and corresponding SMI-S indications, see Events sent as indications to SMI-S clients.
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