E table 6-1 – HP StorageWorks Scalable File Share User Manual
Page 133

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
.