Is the reason why I cannot get Hardware Watchdog setup properly related
to this bug?
openipmi (2.0.16-1.4)
ipmitool (1.8.14-4)
watchdog (5.14-3)
***
The server keeps rebooting after 5 minutes. What am I doing wrong, and
what do I need to do to get hardware watchdog working in Debian Jessie.
Please help.
Motherboard: Supermicro X9DRH-7TF
***
List of IPMI BMC Info:
# dmidecode --type 38
# dmidecode 2.12
# SMBIOS entry point at 0x000f04c0
SMBIOS 2.7 present.
Handle 0x003f, DMI type 38, 18 bytes
IPMI Device Information
Interface Type: KCS (Keyboard Control Style)
Specification Version: 2.0
I2C Slave Address: 0x00
NV Storage Device: Not Present
Base Address: 0x0000000000000CA2 (I/O)
Register Spacing: Successive Byte Boundaries
***
Install procedure:
# apt-get install openipmi
# apt-get install ipmitool
While installing ipmitools there was an error message "Job for
ipmievd.service failed...." because /dev/ipmi0 was not created yet. I
rebooted and reinstalled ipmitool.
# apt-get install --reinstall ipmitool
# lsmod | grep ipmi
ipmi_wathdog
ipmi_si
ipmi_poweroff
ipmi_devintf
ipmi_msghandler
# dmesg | grep ipmi
ipmi message handler version 39.2
ipmi device interface
ipmi_si: probing via ACPI
ipmi_si: 00:07: [io 0x0ca2] regsize 1 spacing 1 irq 0
ipmi_si: Adding ACPI-specified kcs state machine
ipmi_si: probing via SMBIOS
ipmi_si: SMBIOS: io 0xca2 regsize 1 spacing 1 irq 0
ipmi_si: Adding SMBIOS-specified kcs state machine duplicate interface
ipmi_si: probing via SPMI
ipmi_si: SPMI: io 0xca2 regsize 1 spacing 1 irq 0
ipmi_si: Adding SPMI-specified kcs state machine duplicate interface
ipmi_si: Trying ACPI-specified kcs state machine at i/o address 0xca2,
slave address 0x0, irq0 ipmi_si: 00:07: Found new BMC (man_id: 0x002a7c,
prod_id: 0x0664, dev_id: 0x20)
ipmi_si: 00:07: IPMI kcs interface initialized
Is there a conflict with there being duplicate interfaces, and should
one be used in place of the other and if so how?
***
The boot time startup screen listed
watchdog: iTCO_wdt: cannot register miscdev on minor=130 (err=-16).
watchdog: iTCO_wdt: a legacy watchdog module is probably present.
To solve this issue I blacklisted the following modules so they would
not load into the kernel.
iTCO-wdt
iTCO_vendor_support
Also setting the following option in '/etc/default/grub' before running
'update-grub'
GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet nmi_watchdog=0"
While I was trouble shooting, I also blacklisted
mei
mei_me
And I used 'lsmod' to verified that none of the blacklisted modules were
loaded into the kernel.
***
Then I install the watchdog service:
# apt-get install watchdog
I edited the watchdog daemon config file:
# nano /etc/watchdog.conf
watchdog-device=/dev/watchdog
watchdog-timeout=240
interval=20
logtick=30
realtime=yes
priority=1
admin=root
file=/var/log/messages
log-dir=/var/log/watchdog
# ipmitool mc watchdog get
Watchdog Time Use: SMS/OS (0x44)
Watchdog Time is: Started/Running
Watchdog Timer Action: Hard Reset (0x01)
Pre-timeout interval: 0 seconds
Timer Expiration Flags: 0x00
Initial Countdown: 240 sec
Present Countdown: 233 sec
# cat /var/log/syslog | grep watchdog
... watchdog[1087] : starting daemon (5.14):
... watchdog[1087] : int=20s realtime=yes sync=no soft=no mla=0 mem=0
... watchdog[1087] : ping: no machine to check
... watchdog[1087] : file: /var/log/messages:0
... watchdog[1087] : pidfile: no server process to check
... watchdog[1087] : interface: no interface to check
... watchdog[1087] : temperature: no sensors to check
... watchdog[1087] : test=none(0) repair=none(0) alive=/dev/watchdog
heartbeat=none to=root no_act=no force=no
... watchdog[1087] : watchdog now set to 240 seconds
... watchdog[1087] : hardware watchdog identity: IPMI
# nano /etc/default/watchdog
# Start watchdog at boot time? 0 or 1
run_watchdog=1
# Start wd_keepalive after stopping watchdog? 0 or 1
run_wd_keepalive=1
# Load module before starting watchdog
watchdog_module="none"
# nano /etc/default/ipmievd
# This is a shell script fraction
#
# To enable ipmievd set ENABLED="true" for sysvinit (ignored by systemd)
ENABLED="false"
#
#
# Options to the daemon ipmievd(8).
#
IPMIEVD_OPTIONS=open daemon"
ENABLE=true
In addition:
While I can manually start the 'watchdog.service' and 'ipmievd.service',
these serviced do not start automatically at boot time.
'systemctl enable <service name>' does not enable either service with
the following output listed:
Synchronizing state for watchdog.service with sysvinit using update-rc.d...
Executing /usr/sbin/update-rc.d watchdog defaults
Executing /usr/sbin/update-rc.d watchdog enable
The unit files have no [Install] section. they are not ment to be
enabled using systemctl.
...
How should I start the services automatically at boot time?
***
The motherboard has a jumper (JI2C1) for the 'I2C Bus to PCI-Exp.
Slots'. The jumper is currenly disabled. Does this jumper need to be
enabled as the output for 'dmidecode --type 38' lists an 'I2C Slave
Address: 0x00' ?
***
I read about setting the following parameters, but there was no
/etc/default/openipmi file.
IPMI_SI=yes
DEV_IPMI=yes
IPMI_WATCHDOG=yes
IPMI_WATCHDOG_OPTIONS="timeout=300"
IPMI_POWEROFF=no
IPMI_POWERCYCLE=no
IPMI_IMB=no
Am I supposed to set these parameters and if so where?
***
Is there supposed to be an ipmi.service? If so how does it get installed?
Thanks
Azeem
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