> ,----[ "Jan Tiri" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> ] > | Another strange thing; my ipmi board now only reacts when the power is > | off. If my kernel crashes for whatever reason, I'm not able to reset the > | machine. I guess this isn't really normal behaviour ... > | > | response timed out: rq_seq=0 > | response received from 192.168.1.100: rq_seq=1, auth: none=clear > md2=clear > | md5=set passwd=clear oem=clear permsg=clear user=clear > | response received from 192.168.1.100: rq_seq=2, auth: none=clear > md2=clear > | md5=set passwd=clear oem=clear permsg=clear user=clear > `---- > This looks like network driver bug. Albert noticed a similar problem > with Intel's e1000 driver, when the kernel goes to halt. Patch is > simple. You have to comment the e1000_suspend call in notifier > routine. We should not suspend the e1000 controller, because it is > also used by the BMC. > > It is also possible to fix it without modifying the driver, by > fiddling with the EEPROM power-management setting using ethtool. Tell > me what network card you have, I will help you.
In my S2882 I have 3 NIC's; 2x Broadcom Tigeon (tg3) and 1x Intel (e100). I use the last one because I understood this is the only interface where the SMBC can 'listen' for this type of mobo. Strange thing is that the board even doesn't reply to IPMI requests when the machine is powered on and functioning properly. If I check all programs; - bmc-config: -i only sometimes update the configuration (only succeeded the first time) - sel: I see the timestamps there are outdated, can I change the clock somewhere ? - bmc-watchdog: starting bmc-watchdog based on the example parameters (-d -u 4 -p 0 -a 0 -i 3600) is killed immediatelly; [Mar 03 20:23:22]: starting bmc-watchdog daemon [Mar 03 20:23:22]: timer stopped by another process [Mar 03 20:23:22]: stopping bmc-watchdog daemon # /usr/local/sbin/bmc-watchdog -g Timer Use: SMS/OS Timer: Stopped Logging: Disabled Timeout Action: None Pre-Timeout Interrupt: None Pre-Timeout Interval: 1 seconds Timer Use BIOS FRB2 Flag: Clear Timer Use BIOS POST Flag: Clear Timer Use BIOS OS Load Flag: Clear Timer Use BIOS SMS/OS Flag: Clear Timer Use BIOS OEM Flag: Clear Initial Countdown: 3600 seconds Current Countdown: 3570 seconds So I assume there is something fishy with the hardware, I have to figure out. If I get the IPMI stuff to work, I'll try to write some kind of howto ;) Kind regards, Jan _______________________________________________ Freeipmi-users mailing list Freeipmi-users@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/freeipmi-users