ipmiutil_wdt- display and set WatchDog Timer parameters
ipmiutil wdt [-acdelrtx -N node -P/-R pswd -U user
-EFJTVY]
ipmiutil wdt is a program that uses IPMI commands to
display and set WatchDog Timer parameters.
This utility can use either any available IPMI driver, or direct
user-space IOs, or the IPMI LAN interface if -N.
This utility is an example of how to access the IPMI watchdog
parameters directly, which allows changing the timer configuration.
There is an init script provided with ipmiutil to automate the
task of managing the watchdog timer in user-space.
# chkconfig --add ipmiutil_wdt (skip this if no chkconfig)
# /etc/init.d/ipmiutil_wdt start
This sets the watchdog timer to reset the system if the wdt is not restarted
within 90 seconds. It creates an /etc/cron.d/wdt file to restart wdt every
60 seconds. See also ipmiutil UserGuide section 4.4 for more
information.
Command line options are described below.
- -a N
- Set watchdog event Action to N. Values: 0 = No action, 1 = Hard
Reset(default), 2 = Power down, 3 = Power cycle.
- -c
- Show watchdog output in a canonical format, with a default delimiter of
'|'.
- -d
- Disables the watchdog timer.
- -e
- Enables the watchdog timer. The timer is not actually started, however,
until the timer is reset. The pre-timeout action is not enabled.
- -l
- Set the watchdog dontLog bit to not log watchdog events in the SEL.
- -p N
- Set watchdog Pretimeout event action to N. Values: 0 = No action(default),
1 = SMI, 2 = NMI, 3 = Messaging Interrupt. If this is set to an action
other than 0, the pretimeout will also be set to 90% of the timeout.
However, if the timeout is less than 20 seconds, the pretimeout will not
be enabled.
- -q S
- Set watchdog pretimeout value to S seconds, rather than 90% of the timeout
as in -p. The pretimeout value must be >= 5 and at least 5 seconds less
than the timeout value.
- -r
- Resets the watchdog timer. This should be done every N seconds if the
timer is running to prevent the watchdog action (usually a system reset)
from occurring.
- -tN
- Set the watchdog Timeout to N seconds. The default is 120 seconds (2
minutes).
- -x
- Causes extra debug messages to be displayed.
- -N nodename
- Nodename or IP address of the remote target system. If a nodename is
specified, IPMI LAN interface is used. Otherwise the local system
management interface is used.
- -P/-R rmt_pswd
- Remote password for the nodename given. The default is a null
password.
- -U rmt_user
- Remote username for the nodename given. The default is a null
username.
- -E
- Use the remote password from Environment variable IPMI_PASSWORD.
- -F drv_t
- Force the driver type to one of the followng: imb, va, open, gnu, landesk,
lan, lan2, lan2i, kcs, smb. Note that lan2i means lan2 with intelplus. The
default is to detect any available driver type and use it.
- -J
- Use the specified LanPlus cipher suite (0 thru 17): 0=none/none/none,
1=sha1/none/none, 2=sha1/sha1/none, 3=sha1/sha1/cbc128,
4=sha1/sha1/xrc4_128, 5=sha1/sha1/xrc4_40, 6=md5/none/none, ...
14=md5/md5/xrc4_40. Default is 3.
- -T
- Use a specified IPMI LAN Authentication Type: 0=None, 1=MD2, 2=MD5,
4=Straight Password, 5=OEM.
- -V
- Use a specified IPMI LAN privilege level. 1=Callback level, 2=User level,
3=Operator level, 4=Administrator level (default), 5=OEM level.
- -Y
- Yes, do prompt the user for the IPMI LAN remote password. Alternatives for
the password are -E or -P.
See http://ipmiutil.sourceforge.net/ for the latest version of
ipmiutil and any bug fix list.
Copyright (C) 2009 Kontron America, Inc.
See the file COPYING in the distribution for more details
regarding redistribution.
This utility is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY.
Andy Cress <arcress at users.sourceforge.net>