Interface Card OL* Support Guide

#tail /var/opt/hpwebadmin/logs/error_log
To view the entire log file, you can use any of the following commands:
pg
more
cat
The NetTL Log File
The NetTL log file contains all errors generated by olrad except those that are generated when
using view options such as -q or -c. This is a log file, not a directory.
The NetTL log file is located in /var/adm/nettl.LOG00
To view the NetTL log file, use the netfmt command. For example, to format and view the last
50 lines of the log file enter the following command:
#netfmt -t 50 -f /var/adm/nettl.LOG000
For more information, see the nettl(1M), netfmt(1M), and olrad(1M) manpages.
Command Errors
The pdweb GUI calls underlying commands such as ioscan and olrad to facilitate most tasks.
When one of these commands fails, an error message appears describing the error and providing
the error information the command received. Following are errors that can occur with these
commands.
olrad Errors
The pdweb tool uses the olrad command to execute all OL* related operations. If the olrad
command returns a failure, the related error is displayed on the current page including all
available error information. For help in interpreting error messages returned by olrad , see the
olrad(1M) manpage.
In addition, all errors are logged in the NetTL log file. For more detail about why the command
failed, look in this log file. See “The NetTL Log File” (page 78).
If no obvious problems are recorded in the log file, you may need additional support resources.
See “Related Documents” (page 15).
Other Command Errors
The ioscan, insf, and diskinfo command errors are typically stored in the SAM log file, if
they were invoked by pdweb or from other sam areas. For more information, see “SAM Log File”
(page 77)
NOTE: Commands you run from the command line are not logged to the SAM log files.
Attention Button Actions
On certain PA platforms, if an online addition or online replacement of a PCI Card is attempted
using attention button and if the latch is open, the operation fails. This results in the Attention
LED showing a Steady ON state and indicating a Operational Hardware problem at the slot.
Closing the latch and attempting the operation again enables the online addition or replacement
operation to complete successfully, but the attention LED remains in the ON state. To turn off
the Attention LED, follow these steps:
1. Make the Attention LED BLINK by using the following olrad command:
#olrad -I ATTN slot_id
2. Turn the Attention LED steady OFF by using the following olrad command:
#olrad -I OFF slot_id
78 Troubleshooting