User manual

SANtools® S.M.A.R.T. Disk Monitor (SMARTMon-UX)34
SANTOOLS® is registered in US Patent and Trademark Office No 3,107,854 All rights reserved.
Cooling/Fan #2: Not Installed (Reserved for future use)
Power Supply #0 : Operational (Turned on)
Power Supply #1 : Malfunctioning (Commanded on)
Power Supply #2 : Not Installed (Reserved slot)
Device in slot #0: Empty slot
Device in slot #1: Empty slot
Device in slot #2: Activated (SCSI ID is 02h)
Device in slot #3: Activated (SCSI ID is 03h)
Device in slot #4: Empty slot
Device in slot #5: Activated (SCSI ID is 05h)
Door Lock #0: Unlocked (or no controllable lock installed
Alarm Speaker #0: Off (or not installed)
Temperature Sensor #0: 34C / 94F
Terminating program.
The text in RED printed as a result of the -E+ option. The rest of the text printed because the -I+ option was also
selected.
· If you invoke the -E option, the program will run in the background and poll your SES compliant enclosure(s) at the
same time it polls disk drives. If a problem is found, it generates an alert as specified by the command-line options.
If you invoke the program with the -E+ option, all of the current enclosure information will display and the program
will terminate.
· There are additional informational fields that this program can report, providing your enclosure manufacturer reports
that information to the SAF-TE electronics in their engine.
· If your SAF-TE enclosure supports the optional SAF-TE power-on minutes or SAF-TE power-on cycles
data, we report that as well starting in revision 1.27.
· Version 1.28 added SAF-TE reporting capability for additional slot and array status reporting.
Below is the output that one might see in a log file or email alert before and after unplugging a power cable.
D:\msdevstd\projects>smartmon-ux -E -F 10 \\.\SCSI3:
SMARTMon-ux [Release 1.13, Build 4-SEP-2002] - Copyright 2002 SANtools, Inc. http://www.SANtools.com
*******************************************************************
* This is an evaluation license. The software will expire on *
* Sun Sep 15 23:11:53 2002 (11 days). *
*******************************************************************
Discovered CNSi JSS122 S/N " " on \\.\SCSI3: (processor) [Adapter/ID.LUN=0/0.0]
Discovered CNSi JSS122 S/N " " on \\.\SCSI3: (processor) [SAF-TE] [Adapter/ID.LUN=0/0.6]
Program will poll every 10 seconds.
\\.\SCSI3: polled at Wed Sep 04 23:11:53 2002 Status:OK
\\.\SCSI3: polled at Wed Sep 04 23:12:03 2002 Status:OK
\\.\SCSI3: polled at Wed Sep 04 23:12:13 2002 Status:Critical - Power Supply #1 Malfunctioning (Commanded
on) CNSi JSS122
\\.\SCSI3: polled at Wed Sep 04 23:12:23 2002 Status:Critical - Power Supply #1 Malfunctioning (Commanded
on) CNSi JSS122
\\.\SCSI3: polled at Wed Sep 04 23:12:33 2002 Status:OK
^C
D:\msdevstd\projects>
1.12 Enclosure Services Reprogramming (SES)
This feature allows you almost full control of your SES enclosure and devices within it. We will let you send low-level
commands to do anything you want to do such as decrease the fan speed or turn off the power supplies. Use this
feature wisely. If you want to do something stupid like program all of the fans to get turned off and disable the thermal
shutdown, SMARTMon-UX will let you submit those commands to your enclosure (which will probably be rejected as
most SES engines will not let you do these things for obvious reasons).
This function is really for storage engineers, hardware designers, and other advanced users who would typically be
very aware of how to directly program a SES enclosure, but require an application program that can facilitate this for
them. These users would typically be very familiar with the ANSI SES programming specification, as well as
programming vendor-unique fields that would not normally be available without a non-disclosure agreement between
the end-user and the enclosure manufacturer.
Usage: