IBM DSA Log Doubt
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@scottalanmiller Yes Sir I have downloaded and got the DSA Log now.And there is a issue in this where CPU card is ON and CPU Card Fault is also ON in node 1 and node 2 does not have this ON state which was in OFF state.Can I know what is the reason.When I googled there is an issue in CPU Card.What is CPU card in IBM Server x3950
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@Lakshmana You'll probably need to contact Lenovo for that hardware issue.
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@thecreativeone91 said:
@Lakshmana You'll probably need to contact Lenovo for that hardware issue.
This sums it up. This requies Lenovo support. No one is going to be able to help you with this. You need new hardware from the vendor.
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Can anyone give me the image of the CPU card in IBM server x3950.
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I've never seen one, never known anyone to use this kind of gear. This might be it...
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Yes, that is the right picture. "CPU Card" is the wrong name. The proper name is a "Compute Book". Lenovo has a virtual tour of the Lenovo X3950 X6 to make this easy for you....
http://www.ibm.com/systems/data/flash/systemx/hardware/enterprise/x3950x6/3dtour/index.html
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@scottalanmiller Sir one doubt.Can I know why the DSA log shows that the CPU Card fault error.Whether the above mentioned device have any issue with the node 1 Sir
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Whether any devices such as CPU card is present in the IBM server x3950.If yes means please provide me the information about the CPU Card
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@Lakshmana said:
@scottalanmiller Sir one doubt.Can I know why the DSA log shows that the CPU Card fault error.Whether the above mentioned device have any issue with the node 1 Sir
As was mentioned before... you really need to get in touch with Lenovo x86 support. This is a hardware fault. You probably won't be able to fix it without replacement parts.
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@Lakshmana said:
@scottalanmiller Sir one doubt.Can I know why the DSA log shows that the CPU Card fault error.Whether the above mentioned device have any issue with the node 1 Sir
I don't know anyone who has ever worked with this equipment. Lenovo gear is very rare here in the US, and now that they've been caught as a malware distributor, I don't know anyone who would do business with them at all. I assume that if the log shows an error, the device is faulty. You must talk to your Lenovo dealer for this.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Lakshmana said:
@scottalanmiller Sir one doubt.Can I know why the DSA log shows that the CPU Card fault error.Whether the above mentioned device have any issue with the node 1 Sir
I don't know anyone who has ever worked with this equipment. Lenovo gear is very rare here in the US, and now that they've been caught as a malware distributor, I don't know anyone who would do business with them at all.
Yet, sadly the whole state government and state and local courts exclusively use Lenovo desktops and servers..
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@Lakshmana said:
Whether any devices such as CPU card is present in the IBM server x3950.If yes means please provide me the information about the CPU Card
From looking at the server it looks like a odd implementation of a blade server. It sounds like possibly a cpu in one of those nodes is bad but, I have no idea.
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@thecreativeone91 said:
Yet, sadly the whole state government and state and local courts exclusively use Lenovo desktops and servers..
Not groups concerned with being cost effective, supporting the US economy, being secure or with the good of their users in mind. Sounds like your local governments like sending private American data and American tax dollars to China. Wonderful.
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@thecreativeone91 said:
From looking at the server it looks like a odd implementation of a blade server. It sounds like possibly a cpu in one of those nodes is bad but, I have no idea.
Not a blade server. It's a modular design from the mainframe world where CPUs are kept on cards so that they can be easily replaced or upgraded. It's still a single server. Once you are getting into eight sockets and higher Intels or any enteprise servers over two sockets this becomes almost the de facto design choice. You'll find this in nearly all high end IBM (real IBM, not that cheap Lenovo crap), Oracle and Fujitsu systems. In this case, this is a lower end Lenovo that also works this way.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@thecreativeone91 said:
From looking at the server it looks like a odd implementation of a blade server. It sounds like possibly a cpu in one of those nodes is bad but, I have no idea.
Not a blade server. It's a modular design from the mainframe world where CPUs are kept on cards so that they can be easily replaced or upgraded. It's still a single server. Once you are getting into eight sockets and higher Intels or any enteprise servers over two sockets this becomes almost the de facto design choice. You'll find this in nearly all high end IBM (real IBM, not that cheap Lenovo crap), Oracle and Fujitsu systems. In this case, this is a lower end Lenovo that also works this way.
Ah, I haven't used anything from IBM expect the AS400 or i Series/System I whatever they call it now. A place a did contract work for at their data center had about 100 of them running their eCommerce/catalog website.
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@scottalanmiller Sir this is not a CPU Card for this server because it the card mentioned will be somewhat small in size.I say this after consulting with my senior engineers.The senior Engineers said that it was JVM,Scott.
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@Lakshmana said:
@scottalanmiller Sir this is not a CPU Card for this server because it the card mentioned will be somewhat small in size.I say this after consulting with my senior engineers.The senior Engineers said that it was JVM,Scott.
Well it IS a CPU card, CPUs are tiny AND a JVM is a piece of software, not hardware, so there can't be a picture of one. Not sure why your senior engineer is lying to you, but the things that he is saying aren't even remotely possible or logical.
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@scottalanmiller OK When I asked my friend in Dubai he said that CPU card was the place where the CPU is being fixed in the board.
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@Lakshmana said:
@scottalanmiller OK When I asked my friend in Dubai he said that CPU card was the place where the CPU is being fixed in the board.
Right, obviously. And that's why I provided you a picture of the board to which the CPU is attached.
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@scottalanmiller OK Thank you Scott