On Mon, 2012-07-23 at 11:48 -0700, Brandon wrote: > Hello Al, > I want to thank you very much for your pointer to -x option to the > plugin. It works as billed! Now I just have to resolve why I can't > gain access while using the -f /path-to/ipmi.cfg and get an error: > /usr/local/sbin/ipmi-sensors: password verification timeout > > > But if I use the same info with -U, -P and -L options, it > authenticates properly. > I read about the CentOS 5 issues, but I am using CentOS 6 on one > machines, and Windows on another.Any thoughts there? Thanks again, > Brandon
I don't maintain the script, so I can't speak if there's a bug/issue in that script. Does your config file work w/ ipmi-sensors directly? i.e. ipmi-sensors -h myhost --config-file=/path/my-ipmi.cfg Outside of a typo or something, not sure what it could be. It's always possible there's a bug in FreeIPMI. Is your password along any interesting boundaries (i.e. 16 bytes long, 20 bytes long) or has a special character in it? Al > > On Fri, Jul 20, 2012 at 4:36 PM, Albert Chu <[email protected]> wrote: > Hi Brandon, > > I assume you're using this nagios plugin: > > http://www.thomas-krenn.com/en/oss/ipmi-plugin.html > > There is probably some confusion. The -f option (you list as > -F below, > I assume you mean -f) is the general FreeIPMI conf file > (usually /etc/freeipmi/freeipmi.conf). It's not the config > file from > ipmi-sensors-config. > > To deal with your problem, most users configure the script to > eliminate > sensors they don't want to monitor. It appears the > check_ipmi_sensor > script has a -x option to remove sensors they don't want to > monitor. > When calling ipmi-sensors directly, the option is the -R > option. > > Hope that helps, > Al > > On Fri, 2012-07-20 at 11:30 -0700, Brandon wrote: > > Hi All, > > I would like to know how I can tell check_ipmi_sensors > plugin perl script > > to update its knowledge of a remote server . It currently > sees that 8 fans > > are possible, and only reads 3 fans working. I have only 3 > fans installed. > > The output from the ipmi-sensors-config command shows the > proper number of > > fans ( as does the Supermicro IPMI View GUI utility.) Nagios > however throws > > critical errors showing that 5 fans are at speed 0. I was > hoping I could > > somehow use the output from ipmi-sensors-config --checkout > put into a file, > > and transfer it to the nagios server, and whenever I make a > call to the > > check_ipmi_sensors plugin, send that as a config file. > However, if I try > > and use that file directly as -F $ARG$ argument for the > config file, it > > goes into an UNKNOWN state and complain about line 1 unknown > configuration > > option "Section". Any pointers would be greatly appreciated. > Thanks. > > > _______________________________________________ > > Freeipmi-users mailing list > > [email protected] > > https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/freeipmi-users > -- > Albert Chu > [email protected] > Computer Scientist > High Performance Systems Division > Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory > > > > -- Albert Chu [email protected] Computer Scientist High Performance Systems Division Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory _______________________________________________ Freeipmi-users mailing list [email protected] https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/freeipmi-users
