-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 4
iDRAC
This document discusses configuring a m620 iDRAC 7 controller. There may be differences with various versions of firmware. We are using version 2.15.10.10 m620 iDRAC Lifecycle Controller firmware and 5.11.200.201510140002 m1000e Chassis Management Controller (CMC).
For individual DRACs
https://localhost:2008/start.html
CMC:
https://localhost:2000/cgi-bin/webcgi/main
iDRAC communication goes through CMC ethernet.
If you need to reboot on a Mac during an install, you type: fn-ctrl-alt-del.
The goal of this document is to help us understand how we are configuring our m1000e and m620 boxes with an emphasis on the iDRAC. Hopefully, you'll find it useful, too. YMMV.
There are many issues with the Dell tools, which are documented here. It's not clear why there are so many problems. The Dell documentation is voluminous and unclear at the same time. Here's a typical post (of a Dell employee) who ran into lots of problems, too. Hopefully, the following will save you time.
Also, be prepared for "not founds" when you click on links on the Dell site. Download the PDF instead of trying to browse the docs. The manuals we use are located in the manuals folder of this wiki. There's no way to list them.
The m620 is a blade in a m1000e enclosure. The Chassis Management Controller (CMC) firmware (version 5.11) has a feature for setting up the network ports of inserted blades. See the discussion here.
For this document, we'll assume our iDRAC is at 192.168.1.233 on a secure network, which is tunneled to your desktop via port 2033.
Also, we'll assume the root password for the iDRAC is stored in
somefile
(see below).
The racadm program (below) would otherwise require you
supply the password on the command line, which means it will
show up in your shell history. Not a good thing.
racadm
is a program and a protocol and a command. This makes it a
bit confusing. You'll see references to the program a lot, but you
don't need the program to get started. You can just execute it via
ssh to the iDRAC. For example,
$ ssh [email protected]
[email protected]'s password:
/admin1-> racadm
racadm>>getsysinfo
racadm getsysinfo
RAC Information:
RAC Date/Time = Wed Dec 30 23:01:52 2015
Firmware Version = 2.15.10.10
Firmware Build = 08
Last Firmware Update = 12/08/2015 12:11:51
Hardware Version = 0.01
MAC Address = F8:DB:88:74:7C:8D
[...snip...]
The first thing you should change the default password from
calvin
to whater you like, e.g.
racadm>>config -g cfgUserAdmin -o cfgUserAdminPassword -i 2 SOMEPASS
We do this in an ssh session to avoid the new password showing up in the command (bash) history on your Linux system when you are using racadm from the command line.
To install racadm
on your Linux box, you can get it from
the (Dell System Update
repo)[http://linux.dell.com/repo/hardware/dsu], which has a nice
curl installer.
If you are running on CentOS 6.x, you'll need to first install a backwards compatible version of openssl:
# yum install -y openssl098e.x86_64
The curl installer puts all the files in /opt/dell
so it's safe
to do this:
# curl -L -s -S http://linux.dell.com/repo/hardware/latest/bootstrap.cgi | bash
The idrac7 commands are not installed with this command so you'll need to:
# yum install srvadmin-idrac7 srvadmin-idracadm7
You'll want the path set for your session:
$ export PATH="/opt/dell/srvadmin/bin:$PATH"
There are actually a number of racadm commands. You probably want
to use idracadm7
, since it is compatible with the m620 with the
2.15 firmware.
One handy feature of the ssh racadm is that you get autocomplete with
tab. It's also faster, because it doesn't have to handshake with each
call. idracadm7
is needed for scripting, of course, so you
can experiment with the interactive version until you get the
hang of what you want to do.
Here's how you use idracadm7:
$ idracadm7 -r 192.168.1.233 -u root -p "$(cat somefile)" set iDRAC.IPMILan.Enable 1
Password:
Security Alert: Certificate is invalid - self signed certificate
Continuing execution. Use -S option for racadm to stop execution on
certificate-related errors.
[Key=iDRAC.Embedded.1#IPMILan.1]
Object value modified successfully
You have to pass the password on the comnand line. Not so good so at
least we put it in a file so it doesn't show in
~/.bash_history
. However,
the whole command is rather awkward, especially switching between
different IPs to talk to different blades.
Note also that the certificate built into the iDRAC is invalid, because it is
self-signed. This output is annoying, and the -S
flag doesn't work
in the version we're using. It simply prints:
$ idracadm7 -S -r 192.168.1.233 -u root -p "$(cat somefile)" get iDRAC.IPMILan
Security Alert: Certificate is invalid - self signed certificate
Racadm not continuing execution of the command.
ERROR: Unable to connect to RAC at specified IP address.
The iDRAC uses a concept of "jobs" to "commit" changes. A job is
really a command to tell the Lifecycle Controller to do something
after the machine boots. As a part of the job, you'll ask the
box to reboot (pwrcycle
). You can do this as a seperate step
if you like. The name of the job is always fixed, in this case
this executes any BIOS.Setup
commands:
$ idrac 1 jobqueue create BIOS.Setup.1-1 -r pwrcycle -s TIME_NOW -e TIME_NA
RAC1024: Successfully scheduled a job.
Verify the job status using "racadm jobqueue view -i JID_xxxxx"
command.
Commit JID = JID_515145731719
Reboot JID = RID_515145732427
You can then check the jobqueue with:
$ idrac 1 jobqueue view
[Job ID=JID_515145731719]
Job Name=Configure: BIOS.Setup.1-1
Status=Running
Start Time=[Now]
Expiration Time=[Not Applicable]
Message=[PR20: Job in progress]
Percent Complete=[34]
----------------------------------------------------------
[Job ID=RID_515145732427]
Job Name=Reboot: Power cycle
Status=Reboot Completed
Start Time=[Now]
Expiration Time=[Not Applicable]
Message=[RED030: Reboot is complete.]
Percent Complete=[NA]
----------------------------------------------------------
If the RAID config is not cleared properly, the boot will stop at:
PowerEdge Expandable RAID Controller BIOS
Copyright(c) 2011 LSI Corporation
Press <Ctrl><R> to Run Configuration Utility
HA -0 (Bus 2 Dev 0) PERC H310 Mini
FW package: 20.11.0-0002
All of the disks from your previous configuration are gone. If this is
an unexpected message, then please power off your system and check your cables
to ensure all disks are present.
Press any key to continue, or 'C' to load the configuration utility.
There doesn't seem to be a way around clicking space, because the lifecycle controller job execution only happens after the RAID controller boots. This happens for refurbished computers, but not new ones.
You will have to reset the RAID controller before continuing.
Note that when the boot is stuck you won't see any errors
in the output of jobqueue view
. You'll just see that the
reboot is complete and the task is scheduled:
$ idrac 1 jobqueue view
-------------------------JOB\ QUEUE------------------------
[Job ID=JID_515145731719]
Job Name=Configure: BIOS.Setup.1-1
Status=Scheduled
Start Time=[Now]
Expiration Time=[Not Applicable]
Message=[JCP001: Task successfully scheduled.]
Percent Complete=[0]
----------------------------------------------------------
[Job ID=RID_515145732427]
Job Name=Reboot: Power cycle
Status=Reboot Completed
Start Time=[Now]
Expiration Time=[Not Applicable]
Message=[RED030: Reboot is complete.]
Percent Complete=[NA]
----------------------------------------------------------
$ idrac 1 racreset
If you get into this state, you will have to clear the jobqueue with:
$ idrac 1 jobqueue delete --all
$ sleep 120
$ idrac 1 racreset
We don't have a console to see this problem, because the serial console hasn't been setup. However, you can use the Java console which works pretty well.
ssh root@ racadm hwinventory
Windows will set this to:
racadm get System.ServerOS
[Key=System.Embedded.1#ServerOS.1]
HostName=DESKTOP-34PH90T
OSName=Windows 10
#OSVersion=10.0
#ServerPoweredOnTime=0
You can reset it this way:
set System.ServerOS.HostName ""
set System.ServerOS.OSName ""
http://www.gooksu.com/2015/04/27/racadm-quick-dirty-cheatsheet/