[solved] Plotting HP iLO Power Meter Readings
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[solved] Plotting HP iLO Power Meter Readings
Hi,
Recent HP ProLiant servers with iLO (integrated lights-out) devices show graphs of power consumption along with current and historic readings of power consumption. Has anyone figured out how to plot this data with Cacti? As far as I can tell it's not exposed via SNMP, and I'm stumped.
Cheers,
Ben.
Recent HP ProLiant servers with iLO (integrated lights-out) devices show graphs of power consumption along with current and historic readings of power consumption. Has anyone figured out how to plot this data with Cacti? As far as I can tell it's not exposed via SNMP, and I'm stumped.
Cheers,
Ben.
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- Screenshot of iLO Power Meter
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If you can write a script to pull the information, then cacti will be able to graph it.
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Yes, that much I know. Cacti scripting isn't my problem - I've written a few scripts for Cacti. What I'm looking for is some information from someone who might know how to access this data with a script or command line tool.BSOD2600 wrote:If you can write a script to pull the information, then cacti will be able to graph it.
Ben.
- Howie
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HP Systems Insight Manager collects all that data happily, and this page talks about sending SNMP traps... that suggests that you can probably access this info via SNMP with the latest HP SNMP agent installed in the host OS. I think it's the SIM CD that has all the MIBs on it for HP bits and pieces.
Weathermap 0.98a is out! & QuickTree 1.0. Superlinks is over there now (and built-in to Cacti 1.x).
Some Other Cacti tweaks, including strip-graphs, icons and snmp/netflow stuff.
(Let me know if you have UK DevOps or Network Ops opportunities, too!)
Some Other Cacti tweaks, including strip-graphs, icons and snmp/netflow stuff.
(Let me know if you have UK DevOps or Network Ops opportunities, too!)
Yes, I thought that too, but we're running the latest agents, and a complete walk of the HP SNMP tree does not expose this data, so my conclusion is that it is *not* in the latest HP SNMP agents.Howie wrote:HP Systems Insight Manager collects all that data happily, and this page talks about sending SNMP traps... that suggests that you can probably access this info via SNMP with the latest HP SNMP agent installed in the host OS. I think it's the SIM CD that has all the MIBs on it for HP bits and pieces.
Some devices don't implement all of the snmp commands. Try a snmpget. Does the HP MIB file(s) state this information is available?
| Scripts: Monitor processes | RFC1213 MIB | DOCSIS Stats | Dell PowerEdge | Speedfan | APC UPS | DOCSIS CMTS | 3ware | Motorola Canopy |
| Guides: Windows Install | [HOWTO] Debug Windows NTFS permission problems |
| Tools: Windows All-in-one Installer |
What about cpqHePowerMeter (1.3.6.1.4.1.232.6.2.15) or cpqPower (1.3.6.1.4.1.232.165) http://h10018.www1.hp.com/wwsolutions/m ... leMIBs.pdf
| Scripts: Monitor processes | RFC1213 MIB | DOCSIS Stats | Dell PowerEdge | Speedfan | APC UPS | DOCSIS CMTS | 3ware | Motorola Canopy |
| Guides: Windows Install | [HOWTO] Debug Windows NTFS permission problems |
| Tools: Windows All-in-one Installer |
cpqHePowerMeter is exactly what I was looking for. It turns out that the system I snmpwalked didn't have the right HP agents, but another couple of systems do. For cpqHePowerMeter to work you also need the latest iLO firmware (v1.79), and the latest Power Meter firmware (v3.4C), as well as the latest HP management agents.BSOD2600 wrote:What about cpqHePowerMeter (1.3.6.1.4.1.232.6.2.15) or cpqPower (1.3.6.1.4.1.232.165) http://h10018.www1.hp.com/wwsolutions/m ... leMIBs.pdf
As an aside, I found some example HP tools and scripts which can used to query the iLO via a command line, and can return this data without needing the SNMP agents. The downside is that it is much slower than SNMP (it takes about 10 seconds to return data).
Thanks,
Ben.
Personally, I'd go with the snmp solution since its much faster/reliable than launching another application/script which takes 10 seconds. While that works for a few servers, it won't scale well to 100+ servers.
| Scripts: Monitor processes | RFC1213 MIB | DOCSIS Stats | Dell PowerEdge | Speedfan | APC UPS | DOCSIS CMTS | 3ware | Motorola Canopy |
| Guides: Windows Install | [HOWTO] Debug Windows NTFS permission problems |
| Tools: Windows All-in-one Installer |
Yeah, I know. SNMP is my first choice, but at the moment it only seems to work for the Windows machines I need to monitor. For the servers running VMware and RHEL I have no choice but to use the script. Hopefully that will improve as HP release new versions of the management agents for VMware and Linux. Fortunately the number of non-Windows machines which I need to monitor is quite low.BSOD2600 wrote:Personally, I'd go with the snmp solution since its much faster/reliable than launching another application/script which takes 10 seconds. While that works for a few servers, it won't scale well to 100+ servers.
Ben.
I did a walk of this on a few new HP servers with Windows and latest HP Support Pack and compared cpqHePowerMeterCurrReading[1] with iLO Powermeter. Values didn't match on any of the systems. SNMP reported much higher values than via iLO.. Do you see the same?benzo wrote:cpqHePowerMeter is exactly what I was looking for.
[1]
cpqHePowerMeter 1.3.6.1.4.1.232.6.2.15
--cpqHePowerMeterSupport 1.3.6.1.4.1.232.6.2.15.1
--cpqHePowerMeterStatus 1.3.6.1.4.1.232.6.2.15.2
-- cpqHePowerMeterCurrReading 1.3.6.1.4.1.232.6.2.15.3
-- cpqHePowerMeterPrevReading 1.3.6.1.4.1.232.6.2.15.4
--
/Jesper
Do you mind posting these scipts or link to pages where they can be found?benzo wrote:As an aside, I found some example HP tools and scripts which can used to query the iLO via a command line, and can return this data without needing the SNMP agents. The downside is that it is much slower than SNMP (it takes about 10 seconds to return data).
Thanks,
ALeu
I see the same values via SNMP and iLO. I remember reading that the first versions of the power management controller firmware were a bit buggy and upgrading it can help. You can find v3.4c for the DL380 G5 here:Jesper wrote:I did a walk of this on a few new HP servers with Windows and latest HP Support Pack and compared cpqHePowerMeterCurrReading[1] with iLO Powermeter. Values didn't match on any of the systems. SNMP reported much higher values than via iLO.. Do you see the same?
http://h20000.www2.hp.com/bizsupport/Te ... Id=3896111
Not at all. This is what I did:aleu wrote:Do you mind posting these scipts or link to pages where they can be found?
Thanks,
ALeu
* Download the HP Lights-Out XML PERL Scripting Sample for Linux
* Copy locfg.pl and Get_Power_Readings.xml to the Cacti scripts directory
* Create a new user on the iLO board for querying (I used the username guest)
* Use this script to query the iLO board (it takes the name or IP of the iLO as a paramter):
get_ilo_power_readings.pl
Code: Select all
#! /usr/local/bin/perl
$command = "/usr/local/bin/perl /var/www/cacti/scripts/locfg.pl -s $ARGV[0] -f /var/www/cacti/scripts/Get_Power_Readings.xml -u guest -p [password]";
$output = `$command`;
@lines = split(/\n/,$output);
foreach $line(@lines) {
if (substr($line,0,22) eq "<PRESENT_POWER_READING") {
@vals = split('"', $line);
$presentreading = @vals[1]
}
}
print "presentreading:$presentreading";
Cheers,
Ben.
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