Solaris 10 Process SSH Monitor
The SSH daemon is not running. Check the Diagnostic and Recovery results to see if further action is required.
The daemon for SSH is named sshd. It provides secure encrypted communication between two untrusted hosts over an insecure network. There should be at least one process running at all times.
An unhealthy state indicates that the SSH daemon is not running.
Check the service by running ps -ef | grep sshd or by viewing the diagnostic in the Operations Manager Console. If it is down, try to login via telnet or rlogin. If these are disabled, you can login to the console. You can start the service by running the command "/etc/init.d/sshd start" or by clicking the recovery link in the Operations Manager Console.
For root cause analysis, first check the system log file (/var/adm/messages), and view any related entries at the time of failure. You may also check the system for any process core files. Use '/usr/bin/pstack [corefile]' to print a stack trace which will assist in troubleshooting the cause of failure.
Target | Microsoft.Solaris.10.OperatingSystem | ||
Parent Monitor | System.Health.AvailabilityState | ||
Category | AvailabilityHealth | ||
Enabled | True | ||
Alert Generate | True | ||
Alert Severity | Error | ||
Alert Priority | Normal | ||
Alert Auto Resolve | True | ||
Monitor Type | Microsoft.Unix.WSMan.Process.Status.MonitorType | ||
Remotable | True | ||
Accessibility | Public | ||
Alert Message |
| ||
RunAs | Default |
<UnitMonitor ID="Microsoft.Solaris.10.Process.Ssh.Monitor" Accessibility="Public" Target="Microsoft.Solaris.10.OperatingSystem" TypeID="Unix!Microsoft.Unix.WSMan.Process.Status.MonitorType" Enabled="true" ParentMonitorID="SystemHealth!System.Health.AvailabilityState">
<Category>AvailabilityHealth</Category>
<AlertSettings AlertMessage="Microsoft.Solaris.10.Process.Ssh.AlertMessage">
<AlertOnState>Error</AlertOnState>
<AutoResolve>true</AutoResolve>
<AlertPriority>Normal</AlertPriority>
<AlertSeverity>Error</AlertSeverity>
<AlertParameters>
<AlertParameter1>$Target/Host/Property[Type="Unix!Microsoft.Unix.Computer"]/PrincipalName$</AlertParameter1>
</AlertParameters>
</AlertSettings>
<OperationalStates>
<OperationalState HealthState="Success" MonitorTypeStateID="Running" ID="Running"/>
<OperationalState HealthState="Error" MonitorTypeStateID="NotRunning" ID="NotRunning"/>
</OperationalStates>
<Configuration>
<TargetSystem>$Target/Host/Property[Type="Unix!Microsoft.Unix.Computer"]/NetworkName$</TargetSystem>
<ProcessName>sshd</ProcessName>
<Interval>300</Interval>
</Configuration>
</UnitMonitor>