After servicing a component, you might need to manually clear the fault using Oracle ILOM. Faults are captured by Oracle ILOM's fault manager and stored in the fault management database. If a component fault needs to be manually cleared, use the fmadm command from the Oracle ILOM Fault Management shell. The Fault Management shell is accessible by logging in to the Oracle ILOM CLI. For events logged in the Oracle ILOM event log, use the Oracle ILOM web interface.
For information about using fmadm, refer to the Oracle ILOM User Guide at http://www.oracle.com/goto/ILOM/docs
Before You Begin
This procedure requires the use of the Oracle ILOM CLI interface.
Log in as a user with root or administrator privileges. For example:
ssh root@ipadress
where ipadress is the IP address of the server SP.
For more information, see Accessing Oracle ILOM in Oracle X4 Series Servers Administration Guide .
The Oracle ILOM CLI prompt appears:
->
start /SP|CMM/faultmgmt/shell
The fmadm prompt appears:
faultmgmtsp>
help fmadm
The following output appears:
where <subcommand> is one of the following:
faulty [-asv] [-u <uuid>] : display list of faulty resources
faulty -f [-a] : display faulty FRUs
faulty -r [-a] : display faulty FRUs (summary)
acquit <FRU> : acquit faults on a FRU
acquit <UUID> : acquit faults associated with UUID
acquit <FRU> <UUID> : acquit faults specified by (FRU, UUID) combination
replaced <FRU> : replaced faults on a FRU
repaired <FRU> : repaired faults on a FRU
repair <FRU> : repair faults on a FRU
rotate errlog : rotate error log
rotate fltlog : rotate fault log
-a – Show active faulty components
-f – Show active faulty FRUs.
-r – Show active fault FRUs and their fault management states.
-s – Show a one-line fault summary for each fault event.
-u uuid – Show fault diagnosis events that match a specific universal unique identifier (uuid).
For command specifics, see the Oracle ILOM User Guide at: http://docs.oracle.com/cd/E37444_01/index.html
Clear the fault according to whether you want to use the acquit, repair, replaced, or repaired.