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E table 6-1 – HP StorageWorks Scalable File Share User Manual

Page 133

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Verifying the system

6–3

Specify the severity levels to be included in the report.

There are four severity levels:

Critical conditions

Critical conditions are failures that will severely impact the operation of the system; for example,

an SFS20 array that is offline.

Warnings

Warnings identify failures that may not prevent the system from operating, but are nevertheless

serious; for example, a LUN that is visible to only one server.

Configuration issues

Configuration issues identify servers that are not fully configured.

Information

Information

output from the

syscheck

command reports the output of all the tests that

found no problems.

Specify an output file.

By default the output from the

syscheck

command is sent to

stdout

.

The syntax of the command is as follows:

syscheck [enable=components|all] [disable=components|none]
[servers=server_names|all]
[level=levels] [severity=severity_levels]
[report=stdout|file_name]

Table 6-1 describes the arguments for the command.

Table 6-1

Arguments for the

syscheck

command

Argument

Description

enable

Specifies (in a comma-separated list with no spaces) the components that are to be

included in the run. See Table 6-2 for a list of the components.
The default is

enable=all

.

disable

Specifies (in a comma-separated list with no spaces) the components that are to be

excluded from the run. See Table 6-2 for a list of the components.
The default is

disable=none

.

servers

Specifies the servers to be included in the tests.
Certain tests are server-focused; for example a test that

pings

the management

network on all servers. You can use this option to restrict the tests to a specified

subset of servers. You can specify one server, a comma-separated list of servers,

and/or a range of servers.
The default is

servers=all

.

level

Specifies the levels of tests that are to be performed. Valid values are

1

,

2

,

3

,

4

.

You can use this option to specify that only tests of a certain level are to be run.

The test level is an indication of the complexity of the test, and the amount of time

the test takes to complete; for example, level 2 tests are more complex and take

longer to run than level 1 tests. You can specify one test level, a comma-separated

list of levels, and/or a range of levels; for example,

level=1,3-4

.

Note that specifying

level=2

limits the testing to level 2 tests; it does not run level

1 tests. To run both level 1 and level 2 tests, specify

level=1-2

.

The default is

level=1-4

.