Users Guide

The following details are displayed:
No. — The serial number of the event.
Category — The category to which the events belong. The available categories are:
All — Events related to all categories are listed.
System Health — Events related to the installed hardware such as fan, PSUs, NIC/LOM/CNA link, BIOS errors, and so on.
Storage — Events related to the external or internal storage components such as storage controller, enclosure, HDDs, and
software RAID.
Configuration — Events related to the hardware and software changes such as addition or removal of hardware in the
system, configuration changes made using Lifecycle Controller or system management tools.
Audit — Events related to a user login, intrusion, licenses, and so on.
Updates — Events related to updates or rollback of firmware and drivers.
Work Notes — Events logged by you.
NOTE: These options are available in the Filter by Category drop-down menu. Select the category to filter the
data depending on the category option selected.
Severity
Critical — Indicates the events that are business-critical.
Informational — Indicates the events that are generated only for information purpose.
Message ID — Each event is represented with a unique Message ID. For example, SWC0001.
Description — A brief description about the event. For example, Dell OS Drivers Pack, v.6.4.0.14, X14 was
detected.
NOTE: If you initiate configuration jobs using RACADM CLI or iDRAC web interface, the Lifecycle log description
displays the information about the user, interface used, and the IP address of the system from which you initiate
the job.
Date and Time — Indicates the date and time when an event occurred.
Exporting Lifecycle Log
Use the Export Lifecycle Log feature to export the Lifecycle Log information to a compressed file (.gz format) that has log files in
an .xml file. You can save the XML file in a USB drive or on a network share. For more information about the schema, see
en.community.dell.com/techcenter/extras/m/white_papers/20270305 . Before exporting the Lifecycle Log, make sure that the following
prerequisites are met:
To export the file to a USB drive, make sure that a USB drive is connected to the managed server.
To export the file to a network share (shared folder), set the correct network settings. For more information, see Configuring Network
Settings for a NIC.
NOTE:
As the system events are generated by various systems management tools, you may not view the events in
log immediately after they were logged.
NOTE: The log data is exported to a compressed file (.gz format) only if iDRAC version 1.50.50 or later is installed.
Else, the data is exported as an .xml file.
To export the Lifecycle Log:
1. Start Lifecycle Controller. For more information, see Starting Lifecycle Controller
2. In the left pane, click Lifecycle Log.
3. In the right pane, click Export Lifecycle Log.
4. Select either USB Drive or Network Share.
For more information, see Exporting hardware inventory to a USB drive or Exporting hardware inventory to network share
When you select Network Share, to verify connection, click Test Network Connection. Lifecycle Controller pings the Gateway IP,
DNS server IP, and host IP.
NOTE:
Lifecycle Controller cannot ping the domain name and cannot display the IP address if the DNS is not able to
resolve the domain name. Make sure that the issue with DNS is resolved and retry.
5. Click Finish.
The Lifecycle Log is exported to the specified location.
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Monitor