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I found these 2 messages that show up in QSYSOPR message queue
after an ipl. Not sure which controller card - not authorized to hardware
resources.
The WRKDSKSTS screen, then F11 shows each drive in status "DEGRADED".
Help text on that column says "hardware failure" and decreasing performance.
jim
1.
* *Attention* Contact your hardware service provider now.
Additional Message Information
Message ID . . . . . . : CPPEA12 Severity . . . . . . . : 99
Message type . . . . . : Information
Date sent . . . . . . : 04/16/05 Time sent . . . . . . :
17:13:32
Message . . . . : *Attention* Contact your hardware service provider
now.
Cause . . . . . : Internal analysis of an exception indicates that an I/O
card is operating at a reduced performance level.
Recovery . . . : It is recommended that you contact your hardware
service
provider to have the I/O card serviced to return the I/O card to a normal
performance level.
Report the problem to your hardware service provider.
Technical description . . . . . . . . : LIC Exception Analysis
2.
A critical system hardware problem has occurred. Critical Message Handler
has been run.
Additional Message Information
Message ID . . . . . . : CPP8988 Severity . . . . . . . : 90
Message type . . . . . : Information
Date sent . . . . . . : 04/16/05 Time sent . . . . . . : 17:13:36
Message . . . . : A critical system hardware problem has occurred.
Critical
Message Handler has been run.
Cause . . . . . : See the Problem Log using WRKPRB command or the system
operator messages using DSPMSG QSYSOPR command for more information on the
problem.
Recovery . . . : A hardware replacement may be required. Contact your
system administrator or hardware service provider now. Failure to take
corrective action on this problem can result in unexpected system failure.
Technical description . . . . . . . . : A critical problem has occurred on
this system. This message is sent by Critical Message Handler code as a
record to indicate the problem was recognized and attempts were made to
post
notification of the problem.
Bottom
jim
----- Original Message -----
From: <JOberholtzer@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <midrange-l@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Sunday, April 17, 2005 1:11 PM
Subject: Re: lpar processor allocation - find disk cache failure
> <snip>
> we found our performance problem - cache batteries have failed.
> </snip>
>
> Was that a 2780 controller card? I am beginning to wonder if there is a
> real quality problem with the batteries on those cards. I had a couple of
> them fail on me during upgrades recently.
>
> As to the question about how to find the error, you need to look in
> SST/DST, Hardware service Manager , work with service action log. The
> failures and which cards should be indicated there. As previously
> mentioned, the easy way to see there is a problem, is if the disk
> utilization is very high, (approaching 100% for a restore). Those are the
> drives that have a cache failure.
>
> Jim Oberholtzer
> Senior Solutions Architect
> Computech Resources, Inc.
>
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