temperature records


 
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Operating Systems HP-UX temperature records
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Old 06-06-2006
check logs for temp?

I'm fairly new to hpux, so this is what i've been trying to figure out. Is it possible to get any logs on hpux that would indicate if the system, cpu, or other hardware components reached above normal or critical temperatures?

Thanks,
-K

Last edited by uzerx; 06-06-2006 at 03:11 PM..
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envd(1M)																  envd(1M)

NAME
envd - system physical environment daemon SYNOPSIS
configfile] DESCRIPTION
The daemon provides a means for the system to respond to environmental conditions detected by hardware. Such responses are typically designed to maintain file system integrity and prevent data loss. The environmental conditions currently recognized by are over-tempera- ture and chassis fan failure. logs messages and then executes actions when a supported environmental event is detected. Whether to do message logging and what actions to perform for a given environmental event are determined by configfile (default is If no option was specified and the default configfile does not exist, fails. A recommended default configfile is available in The configfile (or is only examined when the daemon is started or when it receives a signal to restart and re-initialize the daemon itself. uses the message logging facility to log warning messages. If configfile specifies messages to be logged, the destination of the warning messages is determined by the configuration of the facility of the daemon (see syslogd(1M) and syslog(3C) for details) and various priori- ties defined below for the corresponding environmental events. Warning messages are written to the console if is unable to send to The configfile is composed of event lines, each of which followed by zero or more action lines. Comment lines can be interspersed at any point. No more than one event line can be specified for a given event. Event Event lines consist of an event keyword and a message indicator, separated by a colon Valid event keywords are and Valid message indicators are and An example is indicating that warning messages are to be sent for the event. Event keywords must start in the first column, and only one event and one message indicator are allowed on a given line. Action Action lines can consist of a sequence of any valid commands or pipelines. Lines from one event line to the next event line, or to the end of the file, are part of the action lines for the preceding event, and are passed intact to the shell to execute upon detecting the event. The action for an event can span across several lines, but the syntax of every line must be understood by There are no default actions for any events if no action lines are specified. No parsing or syntax checking is performed on the action lines; system administrators are responsible for verifying the correctness of the action syntax. Comments Lines beginning with the character in the first column are comment lines, and all characters up to the subsequent new-line character are ignored. Blank lines are ignored as comment lines. Here is an example file: Only users with appropriate privileges can invoke Over-temperature and Fan Failure Handling Over-temperature and fan failure handling is supported only on systems equipped with appropriate sensing hardware. Over-temperature and fan failure limits vary, depending on the hardware. Each system processor defines its own thresholds for supported equipment combinations. The table below shows temperature and fan failure states. For the temperature ranges and fan states specific to your system configuration, refer to any of the following documents for your system: or +-------------------+-------------------------------------------+ |State | State Description | +-------------------+-------------------------------------------+ |NORMAL | Within normal operating temperature range | |OVERTEMP_CRIT | Temperature has exceeded the normal oper- | | | ating range of the system, but is still | | | within the operating limit of the hard- | | | ware media. | |OVERTEMP_EMERG | Temperature has exceeded the maximum | | | specified operating limit of hardware | | | media; power loss is imminent. A minimum | | | of about 60 seconds is guaranteed between | | | the OVERTEMP_MID state and the | | | OVERTEMP_POWERLOSS (power loss) state. | |OVERTEMP_POWERLOSS | Hardware will disconnect all power from | | | all cards in the system chassis. | |FAN_NORMAL | All chassis fans are operating normally. | |FANFAIL_CRIT | One or more chassis fans have failed, but | | | the system has enough redundant fans to | | | allow continued operation while the | | | failed fans are replaced. | |FANFAIL_EMERG | Chassis fan failures prevent continued | | | operation of the system; power loss is | | | imminent. | |FANFAIL_POWERLOSS | Hardware will disconnect all power from | | | all cards in the system chassis. | +-------------------+-------------------------------------------+ The priorities mapped to the environmental events are: (for and and (for and Any non-shutdown activities (e.g. file transfer) should be performed at and It is important to configure only critical activities for because the over-temperature might rise dramatically fast to It is recommended to perform a quick shutdown using at and to preserve file system data integrity. If the hardware enters the or state and the system has not been shut down, the sudden loss of power could result in data loss. Note that power-fail recovery functionality is not available in this case. When the hardware powers down, no warning messages are produced, and no action is taken by the system. Whenever an environmental state changes from one level to another (such as from to or from to the warning message, if specified, is logged, and the corresponding action is executed once, and only once, per state change. AUTHOR
was developed by HP. FILES
executable file default configuration file default configuration file work files SEE ALSO
reboot(1M), shutdown(1M), syslogd(1M), syslog(3C), envd(1M)