EasyManuals Logo

HP Integrity BL870c User Manual

HP Integrity BL870c
229 pages
To Next Page IconTo Next Page
To Next Page IconTo Next Page
To Previous Page IconTo Previous Page
To Previous Page IconTo Previous Page
Page #87 background imageLoading...
Page #87 background image
Table 8-4 iLO 2 Event Log Filter Options
Filter CriteriaFiltering Option
Filter by user Login IDN: User Login
Filter by port name (Serial, Telnet, SSH, WEB)P: Port Name
Filter by user IP Address (dotted decimal format)I: IP Address
Filter by date stamp of the records entries (MM/DD/YYYY)M: Date
If you select more than one filtering option, it acts as an additional filter. For example, if you
select the filtering option N followed by P, the logs displayed are the logs that satisfy the filtering
criteria for options N and P.
NOTE: The iLO2 Event Logs cannot be cleared.
A finite number of records are stored. The older records are replaced as the log fills up.
Table 8-5 lists alert (severity) levels.
Table 8-5 Alert Levels
DefinitionSeverity
Minor forward progress0
Major forward progress1
Informational2
Warning3
Critical5
Fatal7
See also: DC (default configuration) and VFP (virtual front panel).
SL Command for Integrity Cell-Based Servers
SL: Show Logs - View the events in the log history.
SL displays the contents of the events that have been stored in nonvolatile memory.
Events are data items that communicate system information from the source of the event to other
parts of the system, and ultimately to the system administrator. Events are produced by intelligent
hardware modules, the operating system, and system firmware. Events funnel into iLO 2 from
different sources throughout the server.
Events can be a result of a failure or an error (such as fan failure, machine-check, and so on).
They can indicate a major change in system state (firmware boot start, system power on/off) or
they might be forward progress markers, (such as CPU self test complete). Event data indicates
what the event was, where it happened, and the severity of the event. The most important events
are error logs (alert level 3 or higher), and major change of state logs, because they give information
that can provide clues about the cause of anomalous behavior. The log viewer contains an event
decoder to help you interpret events.
Table 8-6 lists events, actions, and functions of the logs.
Text User Interface 87

Table of Contents

Other manuals for HP Integrity BL870c

Questions and Answers:

Question and Answer IconNeed help?

Do you have a question about the HP Integrity BL870c and is the answer not in the manual?

HP Integrity BL870c Specifications

General IconGeneral
BrandHP
ModelIntegrity BL870c
CategoryServer
LanguageEnglish

Related product manuals