Earlier this year I posted a script which sends email alerts from Dell servers using the alerting system built into Dell Openmanage. However, that script will only work on Windows systems.
A visitor to the blog called Steve has kindly posted some code on that post which enables the same functionality in Linux and I think it is worthy of its own post.
Before attempting to use the script you will need to download this perl script called sendEmail and that you have unix2dos installed.
The script accepts two arguments, which are setup or show.
“setup” will set the alerts action to the value of $alert_script which should be the full path to the script itself.
“show” will print the current alert settings for the system to the screen.
The code of the script is as follows, or you can download from here:
#!/usr/bin/perl
########
#
# Alter these setting to suit your system
$alert_script='/opt/asx_scripts/send_alert.pl';
$argument = 0;
$argument = $ARGV[0];
$omreport = '/opt/dell/srvadmin/bin/omreport';
$omconfig = '/opt/dell/srvadmin/bin/omconfig';
$sendemail = '/opt/asx_scripts/sendEmail';
$toname = 'name';
$fromname = 'name';
$domain = 'domain.com';
$tmp_path = '/tmp';
$mail_gateway = 'ip or name of mailgate';
$unix2dos = '/usr/bin/unix2dos';
#
#
if(“$argument” eq “setup”){set_available_alerts();
exit;
}
if(“$argument” eq “show”){
display_set_alerts();
exit;
}
if(“$argument” eq “help”){
print “If you need some help read the code\n”;
exit;
}
unless($argument){
$desc=`$omreport system alertlog 2>/dev/null | grep “Description” | head -1 | cut -f2-9 -d: | sed ‘s/ //’`;
chomp($desc);
$date=`$omreport system alertlog 2>/dev/null | grep “Date and Time” | head -1 | cut -f2-9 -d: | sed ‘s/ //g’ | sed ‘s/://g’`;
chomp($date);
$host=`$omreport system summary 2>/dev/null | grep “Host Name” | head -1 | cut -f2-9 -d: | sed ‘s/ //’`;
chomp($host);
$tag=`$omreport system summary 2>/dev/null | grep “Chassis Service Tag” | head -1 | cut -f2-9 -d: | sed ‘s/ //’`;
chomp($tag);
$attach=”$tmp_path/$date.log”;
`$omreport system alertlog > “$attach”`;
if( -f “$unix2dos”){
`$unix2dos “$attach” 2>/dev/null`;
}
$send=`$sendemail -f “$fromname\@$domain” -t “$toname\@$domain” -u “System Error: $host SvcTag: $tag Time: $date” -m “$host SvcTag: $tag Error: $desc Time: $date” -a “$attach” -s “$mail_gateway”`;
}else{
print “If you need some help read the code\n”;
exit;
}
sub set_available_alerts {
$alert_list = `$omconfig system alertaction 2>/dev/null | cut -f2 -d”<” | cut -f1 -d”>”`;
chomp($alert_list);
chomp($alert_list);
@split_alert_list = split(/\|/, $alert_list);
foreach my $alert (@split_alert_list){
$set_result = `$omconfig system alertaction event=$alert execappath=”$alert_script” 2>/dev/null | head -1`;
chomp($set_result);
if(“$set_result” eq “Alert action(s) configured successfully.”){
print “Set Action:\t$alert\n”;
}else{
print “ERROR Set didnt return expected value ($set_result)\n”;
}
}
}
sub display_set_alerts {
$currently_set = `$omreport system alertaction`;
print “$currently_set\n”;
}
exit;
A good way to test the script is to temporarily set the “Temperature Maximum” to something low like 12 to trigger an alert.
Unfortunately all of my Linux machines are virtual machines so I cannot test or modify this script, so if anyone wants to give me SSH access to a server running OMSA, be my guest. 🙂
Again, big thanks to Steve for posting this and I am sure it will be useful to lots of people. This has also inspired me to make some improvements to my original Windows version.