HP Management Packs 1.
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Contents Overview..................................................................................................................................... 5 About this guide........................................................................................................................................ 5 Introduction .............................................................................................................................................. 5 Benefits ....................................
HP Management Processor task....................................................................................................... 63 Discovery tasks.............................................................................................................................. 66 Event rules for HP ProLiant servers................................................................................................. 69 ProLiant ProLiant ProLiant ProLiant ProLiant ProLiant base hardware events....................
Overview In this section About this guide....................................................................................................................................... 5 Introduction ............................................................................................................................................. 5 Benefits ................................................................................................................................................... 6 Features ........
build on the functionality of the HP Insight Management Agents to display Windows® Event Log entries for HP server hardware as alerts in the MOM 2005 Operator Console, including real-time and prefailure event definitions. For advanced hardware lifecycle management and remote administration of HP ProLiant and Integrity servers, the HP Management Packs 1.
• New event rules for HP Integrity Support Pack versions up to 4.05 • Streamlined Base Hardware event rules in the HP Integrity Management Pack 1.1 for MOM 2005 • Streamlined procedure for HP Management Packs 1.
MOM platform support The HP Management Packs 1.1 for MOM 2005 are fully qualified to install and operate with MOM 2005 and MOM 2005 SP1. CAUTION: HP strongly discourages the use of the HP IMP for MOM 2000 in a MOM 2005 environment. The new HP Management Packs for ProLiant and Integrity servers have been specifically developed to take advantage of the redesigned architecture and new features provided with MOM 2005.
• Windows® 2000 Advanced Server • Windows® 2000 Datacenter Server • Microsoft® Windows NT® 4.0 Server with Service Pack 6a Product architecture The HP Management Packs 1.
• Computer attributes • Providers • Rules • Scripts • Tasks • Views If an HP ProLiant or Integrity server is running HP Insight Management Agents, the discovery rules provided with the management pack assign the server to the appropriate HP group within MOM 2005. After the server is properly discovered, the relevant HP providers, event processing rules, state processing rules, and scripts are also copied to the server if the server is classified as "Managed" under MOM 2005.
See "Using the software (on page 30)" for information on the components provided with the HP Management Packs 1.1 for MOM 2005.
Installation In this section Installation overview ............................................................................................................................... 12 Preinstallation checklist............................................................................................................................ 12 Downloading and installing the HP ProLiant Management Pack 1.1 for MOM 2005 .....................................
• Installation of the HP Management Packs 1.1 for MOM 2005 uses the standard Import Management Pack option provided in the MOM 2005 Administrator Console. • If the HP MOM Management Pack for MOM 2005 1.0 was previously installed, decide whether you want to update or replace the previous version before proceeding with the HP Management Packs 1.1 for MOM 2005 installation.
NOTE: The installation program can be run with the MOM Administrator Console open or closed. 4. Select I Agree to accept the license agreement, and click Next.
5. Select the installation directory. To change the default location, enter a new file location or click Browse to select a new file location. Everyone is the default selection. 6. Click Next.
NOTE: Installation of the management pack requires no further user interaction and takes two to six minutes to complete, depending on the speed and complexity of your MOM environment. 7. Click Close when the installation is complete.
Proceed to "Importing the Management Pack (on page 20)" to continue configuring the HP Management Packs 1.1 for MOM 2005. T T Downloading and installing the HP Integrity Management Pack 1.1 for MOM 2005 Download the file hpIntegrityMP01_1.msi from the HP website (http://www.hp.com/servers/integration) on a system hosting the MOM Management Server. 1. T HU T UH Execute the file hpIntegrityMP01_1.msi to begin the installation process and extract the following individual files. 2.
4. Select I Agree to accept the license agreement, and click Next. 5. Select the installation directory. To change the default location, enter a new file location or click Browse to select a new file location. Everyone is the default selection. 6. Click Next.
NOTE: Installation of the management pack requires no further user interaction and takes two to six minutes to complete, depending on the speed and complexity of your MOM environment. 7. Click Close when the installation is complete. Proceed to "Importing the Management Pack (on page 20)" to continue configuring the HP Management Packs 1.1 for MOM 2005.
Importing the management pack 1. Open the MOM Administrator Console. 2. Click Console Root>Microsoft Operations Manager>Management Packs. 3. Click Import/Export Management Packs.
4. Click Next.
5. Select Import Management Packs and/or reports, and click Next. 6. If the management pack was not downloaded to the default directory, click Browse to locate the directory.
7. Select Import Management Packs only and click Next. T T T T If you select Import Management Packs and reports, you are prompted to select reports to import. T 8. T Select the management packs to import, and select one of the following Import Options: • Update existing Management Pack—This selection is the default. Custom rules, enabled or disabled settings, and Company Knowledge is retained. Select to update information that has changed in the existing management pack.
• Backup existing Management Pack—This check box is selected by default. Existing management packs are backed up so they can be restored if necessary. HP recommends selecting this option. The default directory is \Program Files\Microsoft Operations Manager 2005\MPBackup\. To select a different backup directory, click Browse.
9. Review your selections, and click Finish to import the management packs. 10. Click Close.
NOTE: If you experience problems importing the HP Management Packs 1.1 for MOM 2005, select the Create Log File option to capture the output for further analysis.
1. In the MOM Administrator Console, click Administration>Computers, and configure the HP servers to be managed. This step might include the installation of MOM Agents by the Install/Uninstall Agent Wizard. 2. In the MOM Administrator Console, click Administration>Computers>Agent-managed Computers. 3. To run Attribute Discovery now, right-click on the HP server or servers to be managed and click Run Attribute Discovery Now.
Uninstalling the HP IMP for MOM 2000 If the HP IMP for MOM 2000 has been installed in a MOM 2005 environment, it must be removed before installing the HP Management Packs 1.1 for MOM 2005. Failure to do so can lead to duplicate event and group entries and inoperative functionality under MOM 2005. The current architecture for MOM management packs does not allow for the easy removal of an imported management pack.
8. If the following error message appears, proceed with step 9 to disable the remaining rule groups. If no error message displays, proceed to step 10. 9. Right-click the remaining HP IMP Rule Groups, select Properties, and deselect the Enabled checkbox to disable the rule groups. No further processing will occur under these rule groups. 10. Right-click each HP IMP item in the Scripts folder, and select Delete. 11. Right-click each HP IMP item under the Providers folder, and select Delete. 12.
Using the software In this section Using the HP Management Packs 1.1 for MOM 2005 ............................................................................... 30 Computer groups ................................................................................................................................... 30 Rule groups ........................................................................................................................................... 32 Public views ............................
• HP ProLiant Servers ML—Contains computers identified as HP ProLiant ML servers • HP Systems Insight Manager Hosts—Contains computers with HP Systems Insight Manager installed The following is a list of computer groups that are added to the MOM Administrator Console after the HP Integrity Management Pack 1.
30 minutes by default. Automatic discovery is supplemented by a separate task that can be used to perform manual system discovery between scheduled discovery times. For more information on the discovery mechanisms delivered with the HP Management Packs 1.1 for MOM 2005, see "State monitoring and Service Discovery rules (on page 33)" and "Discovery tasks (on page 66)." Rule groups The HP Management Packs 1.
See "Event rules for HP Integrity servers (on page 74)" for a complete list of events installed with the HP Integrity Management Pack 1.1 for MOM 2005. T T State monitoring and service discovery rules The HP Management Packs 1.1 for MOM 2005 contain additional event processing rules to monitor system state and perform server discovery. These rules are contained in the rule group State Monitoring and Service Discovery Rules (on page 33). T T The HP ProLiant Management Pack 1.
• • HP ProLiant Servers ML HP ProLiant Servers Service Discovery—This timed event executes every 15 minutes by default to discover and monitor the state of HP server hardware and management services. The resulting state information can be seen in the State view associated with the HP ProLiant Servers folder. This timed event rule also generates an alert based on the state data received. The HP Integrity Management Pack 1.
3. Edit the Company Knowledge Base field to include any environment- or customer-specific information. T T Customizing event rules HP event rules are predefined for immediate use but can be easily customized to meet specific requirements.
Public views The MOM 2005 Operator Console provides a collection of folders and windows for viewing information stored in the MOM database. The HP Management Packs 1.1 for MOM 2005 include predefined public views that present information about each HP server and associated alerts. The following public views are added on the MOM Operator Console after successful installation of the HP ProLiant Management Pack 1.
• HP ProLiant Servers\ML Servers\State The following public views are added after successful installation of the HP Integrity Management Pack 1.
HP Integrity Servers\Task Status • NOTE: In the Public view, the State view under the Public Views folder might show a state for "HP Server" with no state details. For information on accessing server hardware details, see "HP Hardware state (on page 47)." T T T T Viewing HP alerts The Alerts view displays all open alerts associated with computers listed the Alerts pane. To display details for an individual alert, select the alert from the Alerts pane.
The predefined event processing rules included with the HP Management Packs 1.1 for MOM 2005 are designed to automatically identify and display HP server events received in the Windows® Event Log as MOM 2005 alerts. Analyzing HP alerts HP alerts contain server hardware and services information that enable you to identify the event root cause and implement a timely and effective response. For example, the previous figure shows a failed fan in an HP ProLiant server.
See "Tasks for HP servers (on page 58)" section for more information on launching the HP Systems Management Homepage or HP SIM from within MOM 2005 and for more information on the Tasks provided with the HP Management Packs 1.1 for MOM 2005. Computers view The Computers view displays summary information for all computers in a group. The summary information includes the overall system state and total number of open alerts. To display details for a server, select the appropriate server in the Computers pane.
Computer Attributes view To view computer attributes for an individual server, click the Attributes tab from the Computer Details pane. T T The HP ProLiant Management Pack 1.1 for MOM 2005 provides the following attribute information: • HP ProLiant Insight Management Agents Installed—The value "True" indicates that the ProLiant Insight Management Agents are installed on this computer.
To view rule groups, click the Rule Groups tab from the Computer Details pane. T T Computer Groups view The Computer Groups view displays summary information that includes the overall state and total number of open alerts for all computers in the specified group. To display details for a computer group, select the appropriate group in the Computer Groups pane. These details include attributes, rule groups, computer groups, and role information associated with the selected group.
• Manufacturer—The server manufacturer name • Model—The server family and model • Physical Memory (MB)—The total physical server memory in megabytes • Lights-Out Management Processor IP—The IP address of the Management Processor in an HP ProLiant server or a non-cellular HP Integrity server • Management Processor IP—The IP address of the Management Processor in a cellular HP Integrity server • Serial Number—The server serial number • System Firmware—The server firmware revision • System Type—
HP Systems Insight Manager hosts The HP Systems Insight Manager Hosts folder lists all computers that host the HP SIM application for crossplatform hardware resource lifecycle management. In addition to listing the available HP SIM hosts, the HP Management Packs 1.1 for MOM 2005 include a task that enables HP SIM to be launched from within MOM 2005 ("Tasks for HP servers" on page 58). Server Group Diagram view The Server Group Diagram view provides a graphical display of groups and associated computers.
Service Level Exceptions view The Service Level Exceptions view displays all service level exceptions associated with the selected computer group. State view The State view displays the overall status of HP server hardware, HP Insight Management Agents, and other HP management services associated with the listed computers. To view detailed information on the condition of HP Insight Management Agents and other management services for an individual computer, select the computer in the HP Agent column.
To view detailed state information for HP hardware subsystems for an individual computer, select the computer in the HP Hardware column. The associated data displays in the State Details pane. For more information on the state monitoring functionality provided with the HP Management Packs 1.1 for MOM 2005, see "State monitoring for HP servers (on page 47)." Task Status view The Task Status view lists all tasks that have been launched in association with the selected group.
For more information on the tasks provided with the HP Management Packs 1.1 for MOM 2005, see "Tasks for HP servers (on page 58)." T T State monitoring for HP servers The HP Management Packs 1.1 for MOM 2005 provide state monitoring for HP hardware, HP Insight Management Agents, and other HP management services. To view HP state monitoring data ("State view" on page 45), select State under the HP ProLiant Servers folder or the HP Integrity Servers folder in Public Views.
• Lights-Out Management Processor—Lights-Out Management Processor in a ProLiant server • Server Storage—Aggregated server storage • Temperature—Aggregated server temperatures • UPS—Uninterruptible power supply • Other—All other components provided by HP management services, such as External Status and Performance state NOTE: At this time, only the HP ProLiant Management Pack 1.1 for MOM 2005 provides the state information for individual hardware components.
Adjusting the Service Discovery script interval By default, timed event processing of the HP ProLiant Servers Service Discovery and HP Integrity Servers Service Discovery events refresh the data in the public view folders every 15 minutes. To modify the time interval: 1. Open the MOM Administrator Console. 2.
5. Select one of the predefined intervals from the Provider name dropdown list, or select New to create a custom interval. The default interval is 15 minutes. 6. Click OK. 7. Right-click the folder Console Root>Microsoft Operations Manager>Management Packs, and select Commit Configuration Change.
Adjusting the alert resend period With the release of the HP Management Packs 1.1 for MOM 2005, you can specify how often alerts generated by the Servers Service Discovery events are resent. You can use this feature to reduce the number of alerts that are resent after the original alert is generated. 1. Open the MOM Administrator Console. 2.
5. Select HP ProLiant Servers Service Discovery or HP Integrity Servers Service Discovery, and click Edit.
6. Select StateAlertPeriodMinutes in the Script parameters field, and click Edit Parameter.
7. Enter the amount of time in minutes to wait before resending an alert in the Value field. The default entry is 240 (four hours). 8. Click OK. 9. Right-click the folder Console Root>Microsoft Operations Manager>Management Packs, and select Commit Configuration Change.
Ignoring hardware alerts With the release of the HP Management Packs 1.1 for MOM 2005, you can ignore specific HP hardware alerts generated by the Servers Service Discovery events. Alerts that you identify as non-critical can be ignored and will no longer be reported to MOM. Be careful in selecting to ignore HP hardware alerts. New warnings and critical errors occurring on HP ProLiant or Integrity servers in your MOM environment will not be reported to MOM. To ignore an alert: 1.
6. In the Script parameters field, select the HP hardware alert to ignore, and click Edit Parameter. 7. Enter one of the following entries in the Value field: • Normal—Default entry. • Ignore Warning—Ignore warning level (yellow) alerts. Critical-level (red) alerts will be generated.
• Ignore—Ignore warning and critical-level alerts. 8. Click close on each open window. 9. Right-click the folder Console Root>Microsoft Operations Manager>Management Packs, and select Commit Configuration Change.
Tasks for HP servers The HP Management Packs 1.1 for MOM 2005 include predefined tasks that can be used to access indepth server information, carry out advanced remote server administration, and perform lifecycle management on multiple servers, clients, printers, and other networked devices. HP tasks are installed in the MOM Administrator Console Tasks entry under the HP ProLiant Servers or HP Integrity Servers folders and are clearly displayed in the Tasks pane of the MOM Operator Console.
4. Click the Tasks button on the menu bar to display the Tasks pane. 5. Expand the HP ProLiant Servers folder or the HP Integrity Servers folder. 6. Select HP System Management Homepage. A new browser window opens. 7. Log in to the HP System Management Homepage. NOTE: The web browser might display "Unable to complete your request due to added security features." Wait a few moments for a Security Alert dialog box to appear, or select the equivalent secure link hyperlink.
7. Log in to HP SIM. HP Lights-Out Management Processor task HP ProLiant servers can include a Lights-Out Management Processor, which enables you to perform advanced, secure, and operating system-independent remote server management using a standard browser interface. The HP ProLiant Management Pack 1.1 for MOM 2005 includes a task that collects HP Lights-Out Management Processor data and creates an associated browser link to remotely access the selected HP ProLiant server.
7. Click Next. 8. Click Next when prompted to edit the command line task parameters. The default command line entry does not require editing.
9. Verify that the computer listed in the Targets pane is the correct server, and click Next. 10. Click Finish. 11. Select Task Status under the HP ProLiant Servers folder from Public Views. 12. Locate and select the task launched. 13. Click the Properties tab of the Event Details pane.
14. Select the hyperlink to open a browser interface to the HP Lights-Out Management Processor on the associated ProLiant server. HP Management Processor task HP Integrity servers might include a Management Processor, which enables you to perform advanced, secure, and operating system-independent remote server management using a standard browser interface, irrespective of system state. The HP Integrity Management Pack 1.
7. Click Next. 8. Click Next when prompted to edit the command line task parameters. The default command line entry does not require editing.
9. Verify that the computer listed in the Targets pane is the correct server, and click Next. 10. Click Finish. 11. Select Task Status under the HP Integrity Servers folder from Public Views. 12. Locate and select the task launched. 13. Click the Properties tab of the Event Details pane.
14. Click the link to open a browser interface to the HP Management Processor on the associated Integrity server. Discovery tasks The HP ProLiant Management Pack 1.1 for MOM 2005 includes a task to manually discover and classify HP ProLiant servers. By default, computer discovery within MOM 2005 runs automatically on a predefined schedule.
7. Click Next. 8. Verify that the computer listed in the Targets pane is the correct server, and click Next.
9. Click Finish.
Event rules for HP ProLiant servers In this section ProLiant base hardware events................................................................................................................. 69 ProLiant environmental hardware events.................................................................................................... 70 ProLiant remote Management Processor events .......................................................................................... 70 ProLiant cluster hardware events .
Windows® event ID Base hardware event description 1165 Rack server power subsystem degraded 1166 Rack enclosure power subsystem degraded 1167 Rack enclosure power subsystem degraded 1169 Rack enclosure power subsystem degraded 1172 Rack enclosure power subsystem degraded 1173 Rack enclosure power subsystem degraded 1174 Rack enclosure power subsystem degraded 1175 Rack enclosure power subsystem degraded 1176 Rack power subsystem degraded 1177 Rack enclosure power subsystem degraded 117
ProLiant cluster hardware events Windows® event ID Cluster hardware event description 1167 Cluster resource degraded 1168 Cluster resource failed 1169 Cluster network degraded 1170 Cluster network failed 1171 Cluster service degraded 1172 Cluster service failed ProLiant network interface events Windows® event ID Network interface event description 1281 Network interface failed 1283 NIC teaming failed 1285 Network interface failed 1287 NIC teaming failed ProLiant server storage events
Windows® event ID Server storage event description 1148 External array accelerator failed 1149 External array accelerator data failed 1150 External array accelerator battery failed 1151 External array controller failed 1152 Storage system fan degraded 1153 Storage system power supply degraded 1154 Storage system power supply UPS degraded 1155 Storage system temperature degraded 1156 SCSI tape library failed 1158 SCSI tape library degraded 1159 SCSI tape library door degraded 1161 SC
Windows® event ID Server storage event description 1203 Drive array physical drive degraded 1204 Drive array accelerator degraded 1205 Drive array accelerator data degraded 1206 Drive array accelerator battery degraded 1207 Drive array tape library degraded 1208 Drive array tape library door degraded 1209 Drive array tape drive degraded 1210 Drive array tape drive degraded 1211 Drive array tape drive degraded 1212 Storage system fan degraded 1213 Storage system temperature degraded 1
Event rules for HP Integrity servers In this section Integrity base hardware events ................................................................................................................ 74 Integrity cluster hardware events .............................................................................................................. 93 Integrity network interface events..............................................................................................................
Windows® event ID Base hardware event description 733 Cooling unit has failed 734 Cooling unit has a critical failure 735 Manageability firmware has issued an error 736 Critical ASR state change has occurred 737 Critical ASR state change has occurred 738 Critical ASR state change has occurred 739 A critical device or entity is missing 740 A critical device or entity is missing 744 Log is full, or access to log has failed 745 Critical shutdown has occurred 746 Machine check or Init eve
Windows® event ID Base hardware event description 5076 PAL has a critical failure 5077 PAL has a critical failure 5078 PAL has a critical failure 5079 PAL has failed 5080 System firmware has issued a warning 5081 System firmware has issued a warning 5082 System firmware has issued a warning 5083 Processor has failed 5084 PAL has a critical failure 5085 System firmware has issued an error 5087 Log is full or access to log has failed 5091 System firmware has issued a warning 5092 Pr
Windows® event ID Base hardware event description 5145 I/O subsystem has failed 5146 I/O subsystem has failed 5147 I/O subsystem has failed 5148 I/O subsystem has failed 5149 I/O subsystem has failed 5150 I/O subsystem has failed 5152 Machine check or Init event has occurred 5159 Non-volatile storage access has failed 5161 Memory has failed 5171 Memory configuration has resulted in a warning 5172 Memory has failed 5173 Memory has failed 5174 Memory configuration has resulted in a
Windows® event ID Base hardware event description 5335 Processor has a critical failure 5354 System firmware has issued an error 5359 System configuration has resulted in an error 5360 System hardware has a critical failure 5361 System hardware has a critical failure 5365 Processor configuration has resulted in an error 5366 System hardware has a critical failure 5376 System hardware has a critical failure 5380 System hardware has a critical failure 5383 System hardware has a critical f
Windows® event ID Base hardware event description 5502 Nonvolatile storage has data error 5503 Non-volatile storage has data error 5505 System configuration has resulted in an error 5507 Cell board has a critical failure 5511 System firmware has issued an error 5514 System configuration has resulted in an error 5515 Fabric connection has an error 5518 I/O configuration has resulted in a warning 5525 System firmware has issued a warning 5527 Cell board has a critical failure 5528 Syste
Windows® event ID Base hardware event description 5638 System firmware has issued a warning 5646 System firmware has issued a warning 5655 PAL has failed 5658 PAL has failed 5679 System firmware has issued a warning 5682 System firmware has issued a warning 5683 System firmware has issued a warning 5684 PAL has failed 5685 PAL has failed 5686 PAL has failed 5698 EFI firmware has issued an error 5700 EFI firmware has issued an error 5701 EFI firmware has issued a warning 5704 EFI
Windows® event ID Base hardware event description 5753 Non-volatile storage access has failed 5755 PAL has a critical failure 5756 PAL has a critical failure 5757 PAL has a critical failure 5758 PAL has a critical failure 5762 Fabric connection has an error 5763 Fabric connection has an error 5764 Fabric connection has an error 5766 Fabric connection has an error 5767 Fabric connection has an error 5768 EFI firmware has issued a warning 5769 Manageability firmware has issued a warni
Windows® event ID Base hardware event description 7652 Firmware has issued a warning on the fabric link 7653 Firmware has issued an error on the fabric link 7655 Log is full or access to log has failed 7657 Firmware has issued an error on the fabric link 7658 Firmware has issued an error on the fabric link 7660 Firmware has issued a warning on the fabric link 7661 Firmware has issued a warning on the fabric link 7663 Fabric connection has an error 7664 Fabric connection has an error 7666
Windows® event ID Base hardware event description 7822 Power supply has a critical failure 7823 Power supply has a critical failure 7824 System configuration has resulted in a warning 7825 Power board has failed 7827 Temperature sensor has a critical failure 7828 Temperature sensor has failed 7829 Temperature sensor has failed 7836 Fan has failed 7842 Voltage sensor has failed 7845 Cooling unit has a critical failure 7846 Cooling unit has a critical failure 7849 Fan has failed 7855
Windows® event ID Base hardware event description 7963 Firmware has issued an error on the fabric link 7964 Firmware has issued an error on the fabric link 7965 Non-volatile storage access has failed 7966 System firmware has issued an error 7973 System firmware has issued an error 7974 System firmware has issued an error 8009 Processor configuration has resulted in an error 8010 System firmware has issued a warning 8128 Manageability firmware has issued an error 8130 Voltage sensor has
Windows® event ID Base hardware event description 8652 System firmware has issued an error 8690 I/O subsystem has failed 8691 I/O subsystem has a critical failure 8692 I/O subsystem has failed 8693 I/O subsystem has failed 8694 I/O subsystem has failed 8709 IO subsystem has a critical failure 8710 I/O subsystem has a critical failure 8711 I/O subsystem has a critical failure 8712 I/O subsystem has failed 8713 Fabric connection has a warning 8715 I/O subsystem has failed 8716 I/O s
Windows® event ID Base hardware event description 8860 System firmware has issued a warning 8861 System firmware has issued a warning 8864 System firmware has issued a warning 8865 System firmware has issued a warning 8872 Cell configuration has resulted in an error 8877 Processor has failed 8882 Processor configuration has resulted in a warning 8883 Non-volatile storage has data error 8906 Management controller has failed 8940 Cell board has a critical failure 8941 Cell board has a c
Windows® event ID Base hardware event description 9489 System firmware has issued an error 9490 System firmware has issued an error 9491 System firmware has issued an error 9492 System firmware has issued an error 9493 System firmware has issued an error 9494 System firmware has issued an error 9495 System firmware has issued an error 9496 System firmware has issued an error 9497 I/O subsystem has failed 9652 Memory has failed 9658 I/O subsystem has a critical failure 9678 System ha
Windows® event ID Base hardware event description 10357 Fabric connection has a warning 10358 Fabric connection has a warning 10361 System firmware has issued an error 10375 Firmware has issued a warning on the fabric link 10376 Fabric port access has failed 10377 Fabric port access has failed 10378 Firmware has issued a warning on the fabric link 10379 Firmware has issued a warning on the fabric link 10380 Firmware has issued a warning on the fabric link 10381 Firmware has issued a war
Windows® event ID Base hardware event description 10432 Firmware has issued a warning on the fabric link 10435 Fabric port access has failed 10436 Firmware has issued a warning on the fabric link 10439 Fabric port access has failed 10475 Fabric port access has failed 10489 Power supply has failed 10490 Power supply has failed 10492 Processor configuration has resulted in a warning 10495 Power supply has a critical failure 10520 Firmware has issued a warning on the fabric link 10521 Fi
Windows® event ID Base hardware event description 10626 Non-volatile storage has invalid data 10628 Non-volatile storage has invalid data 10629 I/O configuration has resulted in an error 10702 System firmware has issued an error 10703 Non-volatile storage has data error 10704 Non-volatile storage has data error 10705 Non-volatile storage has data error 10771 Non-volatile storage access has failed 10779 Processor configuration has resulted in an error 10780 Processor configuration has re
Windows® event ID Base hardware event description 11459 Voltage sensor has a critical failure 11461 Voltage sensor has a critical failure 11463 Voltage sensor has a critical failure 11465 Voltage sensor has a critical failure 11467 Voltage sensor has a critical failure 11468 System hardware has a critical failure 11471 System hardware has a critical failure 11478 System hardware has failed 11479 System hardware has a critical failure 11481 System hardware has failed 11482 System hardw
Windows® event ID Base hardware event description 11863 Fabric port access has failed 11870 Processor configuration has resulted in a warning 11885 Firmware has issued a warning on the fabric link 11904 Fabric port access has failed 11905 Fabric port access has failed 11932 System firmware has issued an error 11933 System firmware has issued an error 11960 PAL has failed 11961 PAL has failed 11962 PAL has failed 11970 Cell board has failed 11971 System firmware has issued a warning
Windows® event ID Base hardware event description 12155 A critical device or entity has been removed 12156 Fabric connection has a warning 12157 Firmware has issued a warning on the fabric link 12158 Firmware has issued a warning on the fabric link 12159 Firmware has issued a warning on the fabric link 12160 Fabric connection has a warning Integrity cluster hardware events Windows® event ID Cluster hardware event description 1167 Cluster resource degraded 1168 Cluster resource failed 116
Windows® event ID Server storage event description 1107 SCSI tape drive failed 1119 SCSI tape drive degraded 1120 SCSI tape drive degraded 1121 IDE drive degraded 1145 External array logical drive failed 1146 External array physical drive failed 1147 External array spare drive failed 1148 External array accelerator failed 1149 External array accelerator data failed 1150 External array accelerator battery failed 1151 External array controller failed 1152 Storage system fan degraded
Windows® event ID Server storage event description 1195 External tape drive degraded 1196 Storage system recovery server degraded 1197 External tape library degraded 1198 External tape library door degraded 1199 Drive array controller degraded 1201 Drive array spare drive degraded 1202 Drive array physical drive degraded 1203 Drive array physical drive degraded 1204 Drive array accelerator degraded 1205 Drive array accelerator data degraded 1206 Drive array accelerator battery degrade
HP IMP for MOM 2000 data tables In this section Removing the HP IMP for MOM 2000 components .................................................................................... 96 HP IMP for MOM 2000 computer groups ................................................................................................. 96 HP IMP for MOM 2000 computer attributes .............................................................................................. 97 HP IMP for MOM 2000 rule groups .........................
• Computer Groups\HP Insight Manager 7 Server • Computer Groups\HP Remote Insight Host System • Computer Groups\HP Systems Insight Manager System HP IMP for MOM 2000 computer attributes Remove the following computer attributes installed by the HP IMP for MOM 2000: • Computer Attributes\HP Insight Management Agent Installed • Computer Attributes\HP Insight Management Agent Version Number • Computer Attributes\HP Insight Manager 7 • Computer Attributes\HP Remote Insight • Computer Attributes\HP
HP IMP for MOM 2000 scripts Remove the following scripts installed by the HP IMP for MOM 2000: • Scripts\Compaq::CompaqURLScript • Scripts\HP::HPIM7URLScript HP IMP for MOM 2000 providers Remove the following providers installed by the HP IMP for MOM 2000: • Providers\Compaq::Process-Handle Count-cpqnimgt-15-minutes • Providers\Compaq::Process-Handle Count-cpmgstor-15-minutes • Providers\Compaq::Process-Private Bytes-cpqnimgt-15-minutes • Providers\Compaq::Process-Private Bytes-cpmgstor-15-minute
Technical support In this section Additional references .............................................................................................................................. 99 Before contacting HP support ................................................................................................................... 99 Technical support contact information for the HP Management Packs 1.1 for MOM 2005 ............................ 100 HP contact information .......................................
NOTE: Running the Microsoft® Information Utility, msinfo32.exe, on your MOM server or capturing server configuration details using HP Survey or Insight Diagnostic might also be useful in providing additional system details for more advanced analysis. Technical support contact information for the HP Management Packs 1.1 for MOM 2005 For technical support for MOM 2005, contact Microsoft® support. For technical support for the HP Management Packs 1.1 for MOM 2005, e-mail HP support (mailto:MOMIntegrationPack.
Acronyms and abbreviations ATA Advanced Technology Attachment BIOS Basic Input/Output System CPU central processing unit DLL dynamic link library FAQ frequently asked questions HTTP hypertext transfer protocol I/O input/output IDE integrated device electronics IMP Insight Management Pack IP Internet Protocol IRQ interrupt request MIB management information base Acronyms and abbreviations 101
MOM Microsoft® Operations Manager MP Management Pack NIC network interface controller PCI peripheral component interface RAID redundant array of inexpensive (or independent) disks SAS serial attached SCSI SATA serial ATA SCSI small computer system interface SIM Systems Insight Manager SNMP Simple Network Management Protocol SP1 Service Pack 1 SQL structured query language UPS uninterruptible power system WMI Windows Management Instrumentation Acronyms and abbreviations 102
Index A E Administrator Console 12, 13, 17, 20, 30 alert resend period, adjusting 47, 51 alerts 5, 6, 38, 39, 55 Alerts view 38 alerts, HP 38 alerts, ignoring 55 alerts, viewing 38 architecture 9, 10 audience assumptions 5 authorized reseller 99, 100 event log 39 Events view 43 B backing up existing management packs 20 base hardware events, Integrity 74 base hardware events, ProLiant 69 benefits 6 C cluster hardware events, Integrity 93 cluster hardware events, ProLiant 71 Compaq management pack, unins
HP Management Packs 1.1 for MOM 2005, postinstallation procedures 26 HP Management Packs 1.1 for MOM 2005, preinstallation checklist 12 HP Management Packs 1.1 for MOM 2005, using 30 HP Management Processor task 63 HP ProLiant event rules 32 HP ProLiant Management Pack 1.
S server discovery 26, 31, 49 Server Group Diagram view 6, 41, 44 server storage events, Integrity 93 server storage events, ProLiant 71 server tasks 30, 47, 58, 59, 60, 63, 66 servers, discovering 26, 31, 33, 49 servers, monitoring 26, 30, 32, 33, 47 servers, supported 8 Service Discovery script interval, adjusting 49 Service Level Exceptions view 44 SNMP requirements 7, 12 SNMP, restarting 26 software procedures 30 state monitoring 30, 31, 32, 33, 49, 51, 55 State view 45, 47 support 99 supported hardware