Adam Caines <acai...@lab.icc.edu> writes: > Looks like it's reporting "path health". The 6e has both sas ports > connected to redundant controllers in the MD1120. It's strange on > another server, I also have a PERC H700 connect to a MD1220 with > redundant links and it does not output the "path health" section.
[snip] > ID : 0 > Status : Ok > Name : Logical Connector > State : Ready > Connector Type : SAS Port RAID Mode > Termination : Not Applicable > SCSI Rate : Not Applicable > > Path Health > Status : Ok > Name : Connector 0 > State : Available > > Status : Ok > Name : Connector 1 > State : Available Yes, so this is the culprit... check_openmanage did not expect this output. It looks like the controller is connected to the enclosure in redundant path mode, according to the OMSA documentation[1]. I really need to see how this looks with SSV format, can you provide the output from this command: omreport storage connector controller=1 -fmt ssv In case of redundant path mode, the plugin should check the path health and report on it, in addition to the connector health. This functionality must be added to the plugin. Is it possible for you to check how check_openmanage handles this when checking via SNMP as well? [1] http://support.euro.dell.com/support/edocs/software/svradmin/6.4/en/CLI/HTML/reportst.htm#wp1077100 Cheers, -- Trond H. Amundsen <t.h.amund...@usit.uio.no> Center for Information Technology Services, University of Oslo ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Colocation vs. Managed Hosting A question and answer guide to determining the best fit for your organization - today and in the future. http://p.sf.net/sfu/internap-sfd2d _______________________________________________ Nagios-users mailing list Nagios-users@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/nagios-users ::: Please include Nagios version, plugin version (-v) and OS when reporting any issue. ::: Messages without supporting info will risk being sent to /dev/null