1. Using
purehw list to get the health status of all the underlying infrastructure: Controller VMs,Virtual Drives, and Network interfaces.
purehw list
Output Example:
purecli@cbsavspv2> purehw list
Name Status Identify Slot Index Speed Temperature Voltage Details
CT0 ok - - 0 - - - -
CT0.ETH0 ok - 0 0 100.00 Gb/s - - -
CT0.ETH1 ok - 1 1 100.00 Gb/s - - -
CT0.ETH2 ok - 2 2 100.00 Gb/s - - -
CT0.ETH3 ok - 3 3 1.00 Gb/s - - -
CT1 ok - - 1 - - - -
CT1.ETH0 ok - 0 0 100.00 Gb/s - - -
CT1.ETH1 ok - 1 1 100.00 Gb/s - - -
CT1.ETH2 ok - 2 2 100.00 Gb/s - - -
CT1.ETH3 ok - 3 3 1.00 Gb/s - - -
SH0 ok - - 0 - - - -
SH0.BAY0 ok - - 0 - - - -
SH0.BAY1 ok - - 1 - - - -
SH0.BAY2 ok - - 2 - - - -
SH0.BAY3 ok - - 3 - - - -
SH0.BAY4 ok - - 4 - - - -
SH0.BAY5 ok - - 5 - - - -
SH0.BAY6 ok - - 6 - - - -
2. Using
puredrive list to get the health status of the virtual drives only.
puredrive list
Output Example:
pureuser@am-662-test-cbs> puredrive list
Name Type Status Capacity Details
SH0.BAY0 virtual healthy 3.38T -
SH0.BAY1 virtual healthy 3.38T -
SH0.BAY2 virtual healthy 3.38T -
SH0.BAY3 virtual healthy 3.38T -
SH0.BAY4 virtual healthy 3.38T -
SH0.BAY5 virtual healthy 3.38T -
SH0.BAY6 virtual healthy 3.38T -