Dell External OEMR 2970 User Guide - Page 188

System Board Fan 1 RPM, Minimum Warning Threshold

Page 188 highlights

Save Command Results to a File That Can Be Overwritten Use the -outc option when you want to overwrite data that is stored in previously written files. For example, at 11:00 A.M. you capture fan probe RPM readings for fan probe 0 on your system and write the results to a file called fans.txt. You type: omreport chassis fans index=0 -outc fans.txt Partial results written to the file are: Index Status Probe Name Reading Minimum Warning Threshold Maximum Warning Threshold Minimum Failure Threshold Maximum Failure Threshold : 0 : OK : System Board Fan 1 RPM : 2380RPM : 600RPM : 5700RPM : 500RPM : 6000RPM Four hours later, you repeat the command. You have no interest in the 11:00 A.M. snapshot as written to fans.txt. You type the same command: omreport chassis fans index=0 -outc fans.txt The 3:00 P.M. data overwrites the 11:00 A.M. data in the fans.txt file. Fans.txt now reads as follows: Index Status Probe Name Reading Minimum Warning Threshold Maximum Warning Threshold Minimum Failure Threshold Maximum Failure Threshold : 0 : OK : System Board Fan 1 RPM : 3001RPM : 700RPM : 5500RPM : 500RPM : 6000RPM You cannot refer to the previous command results to compare the earlier fan probe 0 output with the present output because in using the -outc option, you overwrote the fans.txt file. 188 Working With CLI Command Results

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188
Working With CLI Command Results
Save Command Results to a File That Can Be Overwritten
Use the
-outc
option when you want to overwrite data that is stored in previously written files. For
example, at 11:00 A.M. you capture fan probe RPM readings for fan probe 0 on your system and write the
results to a file called
fans.txt
. You type:
omreport chassis fans index=0 -outc fans.txt
Partial results written to the file are:
Four hours later, you repeat the command. You have no interest in the 11:00 A.M. snapshot as written to
fans.txt
. You type the same command:
omreport chassis fans index=0 -outc fans.txt
The 3:00 P.M. data overwrites the 11:00 A.M. data in the
fans.txt
file.
Fans.txt
now reads as follows:
You cannot refer to the previous command results to compare the earlier fan probe 0 output with the
present output because in using the
-outc
option, you overwrote the
fans.txt
file.
Index
Status
Probe Name
Reading
Minimum Warning Threshold
Maximum Warning Threshold
Minimum Failure Threshold
Maximum Failure Threshold
: 0
: OK
: System Board Fan 1 RPM
: 2380RPM
: 600RPM
: 5700RPM
: 500RPM
: 6000RPM
Index
Status
Probe Name
Reading
Minimum Warning Threshold
Maximum Warning Threshold
Minimum Failure Threshold
Maximum Failure Threshold
: 0
: OK
: System Board Fan 1 RPM
: 3001RPM
: 700RPM
: 5500RPM
: 500RPM
: 6000RPM