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AC Power Cord Traps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
Hardware Log Traps
Processor Device Status Traps
Pluggable Device Traps
Battery Traps
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Contents3
4Contents
Trap Correlation
Overview
This reference guide provides detailed information about the SNMP traps
generated by Dell OpenManage Server Administrator (OMSA) that are
displayed as messages on the HP Operations Manager (HPOM) console. It is
intended for system administrators who use HPOM to monitor Dell systems.
The SNMP Interceptor policy has predefined rules for processing all the
OMSA and OpenManage Storage Systems (OMSS) traps sent by the Dell
systems. For every OMSA or OMSS trap received there are one or more Clear Event traps that auto-acknowledge or clear the trap that is received.
This guide provides information about the OMSA Clear Event traps that
HPOM uses to auto-acknowledge the SNMP traps it receives from the Dell
systems.
For information on the OMSS Clear Event traps, see the "Storage
Management Message Reference" section in the Dell OpenManage Server Administrator Version 6.3 Messages Reference Guide available on the Dell
Support website at support.dell.com/manuals.
Instrumentation Traps
This section describes the traps that are generated by the Instrumentation
service of the Server Administrator. All the traps documented in this section
belong to the MIB enterprise identified by OID 1.3.6.1.4.1.674.10892.1
For information on the description of the traps, see the Instrumentation Traps
Section in the Dell OpenManage Server Administrator Version 6.3 SNMP Reference Guide.
Trap Correlation5
Miscellaneous Traps
Table 2-1 lists Miscellaneous traps that inform you that certain alert systems
are up and working.
Table 2-1. Miscellaneous Traps
Trap IDAlert NameRelated Alerts that are Cleared
1001 System UpNone
1004 Thermal ShutdownNone
1006 Automatic System
Recovery
1007 Host System ResetNone
1013 System Peak Power New
Peak
None
None
Temperature Probe Traps
Temperature probes help protect critical components by alerting the systems
management console when temperatures become too high inside a chassis.
The temperature probe traps use additional variables: sensor location, chassis
location, previous state, and temperature sensor value reported in degrees
Celsius.
Table 2-2. Temperature Probe Traps
Trap IDAlert Name Related Alerts that are Cleared
1052 Temperature Probe NormalTemperatureProbeWarning (1053),
Chassis intrusion traps are a security measure. Chassis intrusion indicates
that there is some disturbance to a system’s chassis. Alerts are sent to prevent
unauthorized removal of parts from a chassis.
Table 2-6. Chassis Intrusion Traps
Trap IDAlert NameRelated Alerts that are Cleared
1252Chassis Intrusion
Normal
1254Chassis Intrusion
Detected
ChassisIntrusionDetected (1254)
None
8Trap Correlation
Redundancy Unit Traps
Redundancy indicates that a system chassis has more than one of certain
critical components. Fans and power supplies, for example, are so important
for preventing damage or disruption of a computer system that a chassis may
have "extra" fans or power supplies installed. Redundancy allows a second or
nth fan to keep the chassis components at a safe temperature when the
primary fan has failed. Redundancy is normal when the intended number of
critical components are operating. Redundancy is degraded when a
component fails but others are still operating. Redundancy is lost when the
number of components functioning falls below the redundancy threshold.
The number of devices required for full redundancy is provided as part of the
trap message when applicable for the redundancy unit and the platform. For
more details on redundancy computation, please refer to the respective
platform documentation.
Power supply traps provide status and warning information for power supplies
present in a particular chassis.
Table 2-8. Power Supply Traps
Trap IDAlert NameRelated Alerts that are Cleared
1352 Power Supply NormalPowerSupplyWarning (1353), PowerSupplyFailure
(1354)
1353 Power Supply WarningPowerSupplyFailure (1354)
1354 Power Supply FailurePowerSupplyWarning (1353)
Trap Correlation9
Memory Device Traps
Memory device messages provide status and warning information for memory
modules present in a particular system. Memory devices determine health
status by counting the number of ECC memory corrections.
NOTE: A value of failure or non-recoverable does not indicate a system
failure or loss of data, but rather that the specified system exceeded the specified
ECC correction threshold.
Some systems are equipped with a protective enclosure for fans. Fan
enclosure traps monitor enclosures for whether foreign objects are present
and for how long a fan enclosure is absent from a chassis.
Table 2-10. Fan Enclosure Traps
Trap IDAlert NameRelated Alerts that are Cleared
1452 Fan Enclosure InsertionFanEnclosureRemoval (1453),
FanEnclosureExtendedRemoval (1454)
1453 Fan Enclosure RemovalFanEnclosureExtendedRemoval (1454)
1454 Fan Enclosure Extended Removal FanEnclosureRemoval (1453)
10Trap Correlation
AC Power Cord Traps
The AC power cord sensor monitors the presence of AC power for an
AC power cord. AC power cord traps provide status and warning information
for power cords that are part of an AC power switch, if your system supports
AC switching.
Table 2-11. AC Power Cord Traps
Trap IDAlert NameRelated Alerts that are Cleared
1501 AC Power Cord No Power
Nonredundant
1502 AC Power Cord NormalACPowerCordNoPowerNonRedundant (1501),
1504 AC Power Cord FailureACPowerCordNoPowerNonRedundant (1501),
ACPowerCordFailure (1504),
ACPowerCordFailure (1504)
ACPower Cord Normal (1502)
Hardware Log Traps
Hardware logs provide hardware status messages to systems management
software. On certain systems, the hardware log is implemented as a circular
queue. When the log becomes full, the oldest status messages are overwritten
when new status messages are logged. On some systems, the log is not
circular. On these systems, when the log becomes full, subsequent hardware
status messages are lost. Hardware log sensor messages provide status and
warning information about the noncircular logs that may fill up, resulting in
lost status messages.
Table 2-12. Hardware Log Traps
Trap IDAlert NameRelated Alerts that are Cleared
1552 Log NormalLogWarning (1553),
LogFull (1554)
1553 Log WarningLogFull (1554)
1554 Log FullLogWarning (1553)
Trap Correlation11
Processor Device Status Traps
The BMC on some systems reports the status of processor devices. Processor
device status traps provide status and warning information for processor devices
present in a system with a BMC that reports the status of processor devices.
Table 2-13. Processor Device Status Traps
Trap IDAlert NameRelated Alerts that are Cleared
1602 Processor Device Status NormalProcessorDeviceStatusWarning (1603),
ProcessorDeviceStatusFailure (1604)
1603 Processor Device Status Warning ProcessorDeviceStatusFailure (1604)
1604 Processor Device Status FailureProcessorDeviceStatusWarning (1603)
Pluggable Device Traps
Server Administrator monitors the addition and removal of pluggable devices
such as memory cards. Device traps provide information about the addition
and removal of such devices.
Table 2-14. Pluggable Device Traps
Trap ID Alert NameRelated Alerts that are Cleared
1651DeviceAddNone
1652DeviceRemoveNone
1653DeviceConfigErrorNone
12Trap Correlation
Battery Traps
The BMC on some systems reports the status of batteries. Battery traps
provide status and warning information for batteries present in a system with
a BMC that reports the status of batteries.