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rihad wrote: > On 05/14/2010 04:13 AM, Doug Ambrisko wrote: >> rihad writes: >> | Hi, I'm thinking of enabling the watchdog on our Dell PowerEdge 2950 / >> | FreeBSD 8.0 amd64, so that it reboots the machine in case of lockups. >> | Right now it doesn't work: >> | >> | # watchdog >> | watchdog: patting the dog: Operation not supported >> | # >> | Looking through the kernel configuration I found two relevant settings: >> | In /sys/conf/NOTES: >> | # >> | # Add software watchdog routines. >> | # >> | options SW_WATCHDOG >> | >> | and in /sys/amd64/conf/NOTES: >> | # >> | # Watchdog routines. >> | # >> | options MP_WATCHDOG >> | >> | Which of them should I rebuild the kernel with? BTW, the existing >> kernel >> | is built with the default "options SCHED_ULE" to make good use of >> | multiple CPUs, does watchdog work with it? >> >> If no one has said yet, kldload ipmi then run watchdogd. ... or compile >> it into the kernel. This will enable the IPMI HW watchdog. If it >> triggers, >> it will appear in the IPMI SEL (ipmitool sel list). >> > Thanks. So did I understand it right that I should first install > sysutils/ipmitool, then start polling "ipmitool sel list" in a shell > script from a cron job run once a minute, and reboot in case IPMI > triggers? But if it's a kernel lockup, none of the user level code might > run at all. Any way to fall back to a hard and fast kernel level machine > reset? No, watchdogd and the IPMI driver will manage the watchdog. You can use 'sel elist' after a reboot to see if the reboot was triggered via the watchdog. -- John Baldwin _______________________________________________ freebsd-stable@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-stable To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-stable-unsubscribe@freebsd.org"