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Knowledge Support Support exacqVision Webservice Products

exacqVision Web Server HTTP Policy “Redirect to HTTP” Broken

Description 

HTTP to HTTPS redirect implementation is broken and always supplies and internal IP address for the redirect, leading to any and all redirect from outside of the local network to fail.  

Product 

  • exacqVision Web Server 22.03

Steps to Reproduce 

  • Configure HTTPS on the web service, either external or ACME
  • Enable “Redirect to HTTPS” in the configuration
  • Attempt to connect to the web service via HTTP, e.g., `curl -v /login.web”>http://<url>/login.web`

Expected Results 

HTTP requests are redirected to HTTPS  

Actual Results 

Fails to connect  

Solution

Update exacqVision Web Service to 22.06 or above.

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See AESW-620 for additional information. 

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Categories
Knowledge Support Support exacqVision Server Categories Uncategorized

Replacing the First Storage Drive using GParted on a Non-RAID exacqVision Ubuntu Linux Server having an 8 GB or smaller ROOT partition

Description

•This procedure applies to replacing the first non-RAID storage drive (mechanical SATA hard disk drive) on an Ubuntu Linux-based exacqVision server. If the operating system ROOT partition is 8GB or smaller, the replacement primary storage drive will need to have the “Linux swap”, “export”, and first “storage” partitions created on it.
•These instructions assume that the Linux operating system is installed to an on-board solid-state drive (SSD) and can be successfully logged into with an administrator account.
•This procedure is not intended for simply adding a new storage drive to a fully functional system.

Product

exacqVision Ubuntu Linux non-RAID Servers

Solution:

A. Verifying the size of the Root partition is 8 GB or smaller

The root partition size will need to be verified before completing the replacement task properly. Open Terminal and specify the command: df -h

Filesystem      Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
udev            1.7G     0  1.7G   0% /dev
tmpfs           339M  4.1M  335M   2% /run
/dev/sda3        55G  9.9G   43G  19% /
tmpfs           1.7G     0  1.7G   0% /dev/shm
tmpfs           5.0M  4.0K  5.0M   1% /run/lock
tmpfs           1.7G     0  1.7G   0% /sys/fs/cgroup
/dev/sda2        17G  1.6G   15G  10% /home
/dev/sda4        28G  421M   26G   2% /mnt/export
/dev/sda1        12G  3.1G  8.2G  27% /boot/efi
tmpfs           339M   20K  339M   1% /run/user/1000

In this example, the root directory “/” is located on the “/dev/sda3 partition which has a size of “55 GB.”
If the root partition is 8 GB or less, continue with this document.

If, however, the root partition is 20 GB or greater, please obtain Support Portal Knowledge Base Number 10048 – “Replacing the First Storage Drive using GParted on a Non-RAID exacqVision Ubuntu Linux Server having a 20 GB or larger ROOT partition.”

B. Temporarily Disabling the Original Drive Mount Point Listed in the fstab File

  1. Type the command sudo gedit /etc/fstab in Terminal and press the enter key to edit the file.

# /etc/fstab: static file system information.
#
# Use ‘blkid’ to print the universally unique identifier for a
# device; this may be used with UUID= as a more robust way to name devices
# that works even if disks are added and removed. See fstab(5).
#
# <file system> <mount point>   <type>  <options>       <dump>  <pass>
# / was on /dev/sda3 during installation
UUID=36a8d968-7e63-4859-a91b-0fdfcc319d3a /               ext4    errors=remount-ro 0       1
# /boot/efi was on /dev/sda1 during installation
UUID=DDF2-8CC6  /boot/efi       vfat    umask=0077      0       1
# /home was on /dev/sda2 during installation
UUID=bc7b3ed7-7dfd-4530-972a-9c3269ea624b /home           ext4    defaults        0       2
# /mnt/export was on /dev/sda4 during installation
UUID=e4638d65-fbe8-407c-a9e8-6c3da0bed19c /mnt/export     ext4    defaults        0       2
/swapfile                                 none            swap    sw              0       0
LABEL=/mnt/edvr/1   /mnt/edvr/1   ext4   relatime,errors=remount-ro,noauto,x-systemd.automount    0   0

2. Locate and add a “” remark character and a space to the beginning of the line for “/mnt/edvr/1”. Save the file.

# LABEL=/mnt/edvr/1   /mnt/edvr/1   ext4   relatime,errors=remount-ro,noauto,x-systemd.automount    0   0 

3. Type the command sudo reboot in Terminal to restart the exacqVision Server.

C. Partitioning the First Non-RAID Storage Drive using GParted

  1. Open a Terminal session.  Type the command sudo gparted and press the enter key. If prompted for a password, use the admin account password.
  2. Select the empty hard drive from the drop-down list in the top-right corner. Note that the drive is unallocated, which indicates that you have selected the correct hard drive. Select Create Partition Table from the Device menu.

​​​​​​​3. Select Advanced in the Create Partition Table dialog. Select gpt from the Select New Partition Table Type drop-down list. Click Apply.

​​​​​​​4. Right-click in the unallocated space and select New to open the Create New Partition window. Select 20000 in the New Size (MiB) box. Select linux-swap in the File System drop-down list. In the Label field, type swap. Click Add.

5. Right-click the unallocated space and select New to open the Create New Partition window. Select 10000 in the New Size (MiB) box. Select ext4 in the File System drop-down list. In the Label field, type /mnt/export. Click Add.

6. Right-click the unallocated space and select New to open the Create New Partition window. Select the highest available number in the Set New Size (MiB) box. Make sure Free Space Preceding and Free Space Following are both zero or 1. Select ext4 in the File System drop-down list. In the Label field, type /mnt/edvr/1. Click Add.

​​​​​​​7. Click the green checkmark at the top of the screen and then click Apply. Wait for the operations to complete. Click on the Close button.

8. Close GParted.
9. In the terminal window, enter the following commands.

sudo service edvrserver stop
sudo mount –a

10. To create your export directories and change ownership:

sudo mkdir /mnt/export/admin
sudo mkdir /mnt/export/user
sudo chown admin /mnt/export/admin
sudo chown user /mnt/export/user
sudo service edvrserver start

11. In a Terminal window, enter the following commands:

sudo rm -r /home/admin/exacqVision\ Files
sudo rm -r /home/user/exacqVision\ Files
sudo ln -s /mnt/export/admin /home/admin/exacqVision\ Files
sudo ln -s /mnt/export/user /home/user/exacqVision\ Files

12. Run exacqVision Client and check the Storage configuration. You should see the new drive in the list of attached storage devices.

13. Type the command sudo gedit /etc/fstab in Terminal and press the enter key to edit the file.

# LABEL=/mnt/edvr/1   /mnt/edvr/1   ext4   relatime,errors=remount-ro,noauto,x-systemd.automount    0   0

  1. Locate and remove the “#” and space at the beginning of the line for “/mnt/edvr/1”. Save the file and closed the text editor.

LABEL=/mnt/edvr/1   /mnt/edvr/1   ext4   relatime,errors=remount-ro,noauto,x-systemd.automount    0   0

  1. Type the command sudo reboot in Terminal to restart the exacqVision Server. If prompted for a password, use the admin account password (admin256 by default).

D. The replaced drive may display as “Offline” in the Storage Page

  1. (A) If the old drive DOES NOT display as “Offline” in the Storage Page then the procedure is considered complete.  (B) If the old drive DOES display as “Offline” then continue below.
  2. Run exacqVision Client and check the Storage configuration. You should see the new drive in the list of attached storage devices.  The replaced drive displays as “Offline” which requires editing the <sysmgmtpi.xml> file located in the path: /usr/local/exacq/server to remove the corresponding entries. Click on the “Offline” disk and note the model number and serial number for this purpose. Close the exacqVision Client.
  1. Open a Terminal session. Type the command sudo service edvrserver stop and press the enter key to stop the server service.
  2. Type the command cd /usr/local/exacq/server/ and press the enter key.
  3. Type the command sudo cp -via sysmgmtpi.xml sysmgmtpi.bak and press the enter key to back-up the original file.
  4. Type the command sudo gedit sysmgmtpi.xml and press the enter key. Scroll down and remove the lines (between and including the xml tags < Disk Name = > and < / Disk >) for the corresponding “Offline” hard disk drive model number and serial number noted previously with exacqVision Client.  It should lack any < Attribute > tags.

The section to be removed in our example:
< Disk Name = “WD-WCC4M4VYN3E5” Model=”WDC WD20PURZ-85GU6Y0″ SerialNumber=”WD-WCC4M4VYN3E5″ FirmwareVersion=”” DriverVersion=”” Capacity=”-1″ SmartAvailable=”-1″ SmartEnabled=”-1″ ControllerName=”” UnitName=”” OtherName=”” Speed=”-1″ LinkSpeed=”-1.000000″ Hotspare=”0″ CanConfigureHotSpare=”0″ Attached=”0″ NonRaidPort=”2″ SupportsPrep=”0″>
  < Thresholds >
    < Threshold Id = “194” Min=”5″ Max=”55″ />
  < /Thresholds >
< /Disk >

  1. Save” the changes and “Close” the gedit window.
  2. Type the command sudo service edvrserver start and press the enter key to start the server service.
  3. Close the Terminal window.
  4. Run exacqVision Client and check the Storage configuration is free of the “Offline” hard disk drive entry.
  1. Done.

<br>

Categories
Knowledge Support Support exacqVision Server Categories Products Uncategorized

Replacing the First Storage Drive using GParted on a Non-RAID exacqVision Ubuntu Linux Server having a 20 GB or larger ROOT partition

Description 

•This procedure applies to replacing the first non-RAID storage drive (mechanical SATA hard disk drive) on an Ubuntu Linux-based exacqVision server.  If the operating system ROOT partition is 20GB or larger, the replacement storage drive will only need to have the first “storage” partition created on it.
•These instructions assume that the Linux operating system is installed to an on-board solid-state drive (SSD) and can be successfully logged into with an administrator account.
•This procedure is not intended for simply adding a new storage drive to a fully functional system.

Product

exacqVision Ubuntu Linux non-RAID Servers

Solution:

A. Verifying the size of the Root partition is 20 GB or larger

The root partition size will need to be verified to complete the replacement task properly. Open Terminal and specify the command: df -h

Filesystem      Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
udev            1.7G     0  1.7G   0% /dev
tmpfs           339M  4.1M  335M   2% /run
/dev/sda3        55G  9.9G   43G  19% /
tmpfs           1.7G     0  1.7G   0% /dev/shm
tmpfs           5.0M  4.0K  5.0M   1% /run/lock
tmpfs           1.7G     0  1.7G   0% /sys/fs/cgroup
/dev/sda2        17G  1.6G   15G  10% /home
/dev/sda4        28G  421M   26G   2% /mnt/export
/dev/sda1        12G  3.1G  8.2G  27% /boot/efi
tmpfs           339M   20K  339M   1% /run/user/1000

In this example, the root directory “/” is located on the “/dev/sda3 partition which has a size of “55 GB.”
If the root partition is 20 GB or larger, continue with this document.
If, however, the root partition is 8 GB or smaller, please obtain Support Portal Knowledge Base Number 10050 – “Replacing the First Storage Drive using GParted on a Non-RAID exacqVision Ubuntu Linux Server having an 8 GB or smaller ROOT partition“.

B. Temporarily Disabling the Original Drive Mount Point Listed in the fstab File

  1. Type the command sudo gedit /etc/fstab in Terminal and press the enter key to edit the file.

# /etc/fstab: static file system information.
#
# Use ‘blkid’ to print the universally unique identifier for a
# device; this may be used with UUID= as a more robust way to name devices
# that works even if disks are added and removed. See fstab(5).
#
# <file system> <mount point>   <type>  <options>       <dump>  <pass>
# / was on /dev/sda3 during installation
UUID=36a8d968-7e63-4859-a91b-0fdfcc319d3a /               ext4    errors=remount-ro 0       1
# /boot/efi was on /dev/sda1 during installation
UUID=DDF2-8CC6  /boot/efi       vfat    umask=0077      0       1
# /home was on /dev/sda2 during installation
UUID=bc7b3ed7-7dfd-4530-972a-9c3269ea624b /home           ext4    defaults        0       2
# /mnt/export was on /dev/sda4 during installation
UUID=e4638d65-fbe8-407c-a9e8-6c3da0bed19c /mnt/export     ext4    defaults        0       2
/swapfile                                 none            swap    sw              0       0
LABEL=/mnt/edvr/1   /mnt/edvr/1   ext4   relatime,errors=remount-ro,noauto,x-systemd.automount    0   0

2. Locate and add a “” remark character and a space to the beginning of the line for “/mnt/edvr/1”. Save the file and closed the text editor.

# LABEL=/mnt/edvr/1   /mnt/edvr/1   ext4   relatime,errors=remount-ro,noauto,x-systemd.automount    0   0 

3. Type the command sudo reboot in Terminal to restart the exacqVision Server. If prompted for a password, use the admin account password (admin256 by default). 

C. Partitioning the First Non-RAID Storage Drive using GParted

  1. Open a Terminal session.  Type the command sudo gparted and press the enter key. If prompted for a password, use the admin account password.
  2. Select the empty hard drive from the drop-down list in the top-right corner.  Note that the drive is unallocated, which indicates that you have selected the newly installed hard disk drive. Select Create Partition Table from the Device menu.
  3. In the Create Partition Table dialog, select gpt from the “Select New Partition Table Type” drop-down list. Click Apply
  1. Right-click the unallocated space and select New to open the Create New Partition window. Select the highest available number in the New Size (MiB) box. Make sure Free Space Preceding and Free Space Following are both at the minimum value allowed (zero or 1). Select “ext4” in the File System drop-down list. In the Label field, type “/mnt/edvr/1”. Click the “Add” button. Click the green checkmark icon near the top of the screen.
  1. Click on “Apply” and wait for the operations to complete. Click on the Close button. Close Gparted.
  2. Type the command sudo gedit /etc/fstab in Terminal and press the enter key to edit the file.

# LABEL=/mnt/edvr/1   /mnt/edvr/1   ext4   relatime,errors=remount-ro,noauto,x-systemd.automount    0   0

  1. Locate and remove the “#” and space at the beginning of the line for “/mnt/edvr/1”. Save the file and closed the text editor.

LABEL=/mnt/edvr/1   /mnt/edvr/1   ext4   relatime,errors=remount-ro,noauto,x-systemd.automount    0   0

  1. Type the command sudo reboot in Terminal to restart the exacqVision Server. If prompted for a password, use the admin account password (admin256 by default).

D. The replaced drive may display as “Offline” in the Storage Page

  1. (A) If the old drive DOES NOT display as “Offline” in the Storage Page then the procedure is considered complete.  (B) If the old drive DOES display as “Offline” then continue below.
  2. Run exacqVision Client and check the Storage configuration. You should see the new drive in the list of attached storage devices.  The replaced drive displays as “Offline” which requires editing the < sysmgmtpi.xml > file located in the path: /usr/local/exacq/server to remove the corresponding entries. Click on the “Offline” disk and note the model number and serial number for this purpose. Close the exacqVision Client.
  1. Open a Terminal session. Type the command sudo service edvrserver stop and press the enter key to stop the server service.
  2. Type the command cd /usr/local/exacq/server/ and press the enter key.
  3. Type the command sudo cp -via sysmgmtpi.xml sysmgmtpi.bak and press the enter key to back-up the original file.
  4. Type the command sudo gedit sysmgmtpi.xml and press the enter key. Scroll down and remove the lines (between and including the xml tags < Disk Name = > and < /Disk >) for the corresponding “Offline” hard disk drive model number and serial number noted previously with exacqVision Client.  It should lack any < Attribute > tags.

The section to be removed in our example:
< Disk Name = “WD-WCC4M4VYN3E5” Model=”WDC WD20PURZ-85GU6Y0″ SerialNumber=”WD-WCC4M4VYN3E5″ FirmwareVersion=”” DriverVersion=”” Capacity=”-1″ SmartAvailable=”-1″ SmartEnabled=”-1″ ControllerName=”” UnitName=”” OtherName=”” Speed=”-1″ LinkSpeed=”-1.000000″ Hotspare=”0″ CanConfigureHotSpare=”0″ Attached=”0″ NonRaidPort=”2″ SupportsPrep=”0″>
  < Thresholds >
    < Threshold Id = “194” Min=”5″ Max=”55″ />
  < /Thresholds >
< /Disk >

  1. Save” the changes and “Close” the gedit window.
  2. Type the command sudo service edvrserver start and press the enter key to start the server service.
  3. Close the Terminal window.
  4. Run exacqVision Client and check the Storage configuration is free of the “Offline” hard disk drive entry.
  1. Done.

<br>

Categories
exacqVision Server Products

Hanwha cameras stop recording motion after a day or two

Issue

There is an issue reported for Hanwha cameras that it stops recording on motion after a day or two unless disabled the cameras and re-enabled again to make it works and start to record on motion

Fix

The issue was solved on ExacqVision Server version 22.03 or higher

Categories
Video Library Configuration exacqVision Webservice Categories Products

Exacq Cloud-Hosted Web Service Relay

Categories
Knowledge Support Support Categories exacqVision Hardware Uncategorized

Replacing MegaRAID Storage Manager (MSM) With LSI Storage Authority (LSA) – Linux

Title

Replacing MegaRAID Storage Manager (MSM) With LSI Storage Authority (LSA) – Linux

Description

MSM has been found to have some exposure to CVE-2021-44228, the Apache Log4j remote code execution vulnerability, see statement from Broadcom Log4j2 Exposure (CVE-2021-44228).   As a result you may be able to replace MSM with LSA on a Windows machine using the following instructions.

Product

  • MegaRAID 92xx Series RAID Controllers
  • MegaRAID 93xx Series RAID Controllers
  • Ubuntu 16.04 LTS and Earlier
  • Ubuntu 18.04 LTS
  • Ubunutu 20.04 LTS

Prerequisites 

First determine which version of Ubuntu the NVR is currently running using Knowledge Base Article #9996 “How to Identify the Current Linux OS Version”

Next identify the RAID controller model using Knowledge Base Article #7244 “How to Identify the MegaRAID Controller Model on an exacqVision Server”

Ubuntu 16.04 LTS or earlier Operating Systems

Broadcom has not provided an LSA version for 16.04 LTS or older versions of Ubuntu.

  • If possible, Re-image using Ubuntu 18.04 or 20.04 LTS
  • See exacqVision Field Recovery Instructions to see if your system meets the criteria for an update. 
  • If re-image is not possible then use the first option listed in the 92xx series RAID Controllers section below. 

92xx series RAID Controllers

Machines with 92xx series RAID controllers have the following options.

  • Uninstall MSM
    • Manage the array using the BIOS available on boot
    • Manage the array using storcli
  • Update MSM
    • Software, instructions, and support for your particular controller card are provided by the card Manufacturer, Broadcom
    • Information is available at https://www.broadcom.com/support/download-search (Legacy Products > Legacy RAID Controllers)

93xx series RAID Controllers

For Machines with 93xx series RAID controllers MSM can be  replaced with LSA using the following instructions.

Objectives

  • Uninstall MSM
  • Install LSA
  • Update Desktop Icon
  • Configure/ Restart LSA
  • Verify LSA can be accessed and login is working
  • Verify Storage information in exacqVision client is correct and video is being recorded

Uninstalling MSM

  • Double-click the Terminal icon on the desktop
  • Elevate to root using sudo -i 
  • Remove the MSM package using dpkg -r 
  • Ensure that the dpkg command completes with no errors.
  • Close the Terminal window
Example removing MSM


Install LSI Storage Authority (LSA)

  • Download and save LSA from https://docs.broadcom.com/docs/007.020.014.000_LSA_Linux-x64.zip
  • The LSI website will require reading a download agreement, (scrolling down to the bottom of the agreement), clicking an acknowledgement checkbox, then clicking the “I Agree” button
  • Once downloaded,  close Firefox
  • On the desktop double-click the Computer icon.
  • Select Downloads, locate and right-click on the LSA zip file and select extract here
  • Right-click the newly created x64 folder and select Open as Administrator
  • A caution window may appear, click OK to continue
  • Enter the Administrator Password and click Authenticate
  • Click File menu and Select Open in Terminal
  • In the terminal window type ./install_deb.sh and press Enter
  • The License agreement (EULA) will be displayed
  • Type Y to accept the License Agreement then press Enter
  • Type 1 to choose “Since last shutdown” and press Enter
  • Type to choose “Standalone” and press Enter
  • Type 2463 for Web Server port and press Enter
  • Type 9000 for LSA Port and press Enter
  • Type Y and press Enter to install openslp
  • When you see “LSA installation successful” the install is complete
  • Close the Terminal window

Edit the Desktop Icon 

  • Right-click on the MSM desktop icon and select properties 
  • Change these fields to the following:
    • Name: LSA
    • Command: /opt/lsi/LSIStorageAuthority/startupLSAUI.sh
    • Comment: LSI Storage Authority
  • Click Close

Modify LSA.conf 

  • Double-click the Computer icon on the desktop to open a new file explorer.
  • Select File System
  • Navigate to /opt/lsi/LSIStorageAuthority/conf
  • Click the File menu and select Open as Administrator
  • Enter the Administrator Password and click Authenticate
  • In the explorer windows labeled conf (as superuser)  double-click on LSA.conf to open it for editing
  • Line 189 should read “full_access_groups = root”
  • Append “, adm” to this line so it now reads “full_access_groups = root, adm”
  • Click Save and close the file

Restart LSA Service

  • Double-click the Terminal icon on the desktop
  • Type sudo service LsiSASH restart
  • Wait for the command to complete, it will take 20-30 seconds
  • Close the Terminal Window 
Example restarting LSA Service

Verify desktop icon

  • Double-click the LSA desktop icon to launch LSA in the browser
  • Log in to LSA using Administrator credentials.

Verify Storage

  • Open the exacqVision Client 
  • Navigate to the Hardware tab on the Storage page (Configuration > YOURSERVER > Storage > Hardware tab)
  • Select Tree and verify the RAID Controller, the Unit (Virtual Drive) and the Ports (Physical Drives) are present. 
  • If possible verify video is being recorded and can be played back by searching to using exacqReplay
Categories
Knowledge Support Support exacqVision Server Categories exacqVision Hardware

How to Identify Currently Running Linux OS Version

Title

How to Identify Currently Running Linux OS Version

Description 

Here is how to determine which version of Ubuntu Linux operating system the server is running. 

Product 

  • exacqVision Server
  • Ubuntu Linux LTS

Solution

From the exacqVision Client 

  • In the System Information section of the Configure System page (Configuration > YOUR SERVER > Configure System > System Information)
Client Example

From Terminal 

  • From the desktop double click on Terminal Icon 
  • Run the lsb_release command 
Terminal Command Example
Categories
Knowledge Support Support exacqVision Server Categories exacqVision Integrations

Adding a Louroe Digifact IP Microphone to ExacqVision Server

Title

Adding a Louroe Digifact IP Microphone to ExacqVision Server

Description 

How to integrate with a Louroe Digifact IP audio device to your ExacqVision Server.

Product 

  • ExacqVision Server
  • Louroe Digifact IP Device

Solution

Refer to the following integration guide.

Louroe-Electronics-Digifact-IP-Audio.pdf
Categories
Knowledge Support Support exacqVision Hardware

Using gdisk to Fix Backup GPT Table Errors in Linux  

Description 

When experiencing Errors partitioning additional storage after a RAID array has been expanded or partition issues with either Archiving or Extended storage drives on an S-Series Server.  Check the partitions for errors using parted. 

Product 

  • exacqVision Server
  • Linux 

Steps to Reproduce 

  • Open Terminal from the machine hosting the storage drives. 
  • Run the parted command to list the partition layout on all block devices.
parted command example

Expected Results 

The results return the partition layout on all block devices with no Errors  

Actual Results 

  • The command returns an Error 
  • The language may vary but the GPT table is always indicated.
    •     Error: The backup GPT table is not at the end of the disk
    •     Error: The backup GPT table is corrupt, but the primary appears OK, so that will be used.
In this example the GPT Table error is referring to the partition listed immediately after you are required to type OK to continue, in this case /dev/sdb.

Solution

  • From Terminal run the gdisk command on the partition with the GPT Table Error
  • You will be prompted with the following, the responses are in bold
    • Command (? for help): x
    • Expert command (? for help):
    • Expert command (? for help): w   
    • Do you want to proceed? (Y/N): Y 
  • Once the command completes, reboot the system.
  • Run parted -l again (see above) to ensure there are no more GPT Table Errors. 
gdisk command example
Categories
Knowledge Support Support exacqVision Server exacqVision Hardware

exacqVision Unexpected Sense Message

Description 

Meaning of Unexpected Sense Message

Product 

  • exacqVision Server

Information

The message is caused by a RAID Controller firmware bug that can be disregarded.

Broadcom KB 1211161495572

If there are actual problems resulting in an error, there will be other indicators/messages pointing to the problem. 

Solution

Disregard, no action needed.

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