Handy shell and Perl scripts for use on FreeNAS servers
Most of the shell scripts here are my versions of the useful scripts available at the "Scripts to report SMART, ZPool and UPS status, HDD/CPU T°, HDD identification and backup the config" thread on the FreeNAS forum. The original author is FreeNAS forum member BiduleOhm, with others contributing suggestions and code changes. I have modified the syntax and made minor changes in formatting and spacing of the generated reports.
I used the excellent shell script static analysis tool at https://www.shellcheck.net to insure that all of the code is POSIX-compliant and free of issues. But this doesn't mean you won't find any errors.
All of the Perl code is my own contribution.
Generates and emails you a status report with detailed SMART information about your system's drives.
By default, my version of this script uses a function I wrote which uses smartctl's scan list to obtain the SMART-enabled drives on the system, but you have the option of using either a hard-coded list or a sysctl-based method instead, if you so choose. This version allows for serial numbers up to 18 characters in length, where the original only supported 15. It also selects the "Device Model" as the drive 'brand' if the "Model Family" SMART attribute is unavailable.
You will need to edit the script and enter your email address before using it.
Generates and emails you a status report about your system's pools.
You will need to edit the script and enter your email address before using it.
Generates and emails you a status report about your UPS.
You will need to edit the script and enter your email address before using it. You may also have the report include all of the available UPSC variables by setting the senddetail
variable to a value greater than zero.
Saves your FreeNAS system configuration file to a dataset you specify.
Supports both the now-defunct Corral and all SQLite-based versions of FreeNAS: 11.x, 9.x, etc.
The backup filenames are formed from the hostname, complete FreeNAS version, and date, in this format: hostname-freenas_version-date.db. Here is an example from a recent backup on my server named boomer:
boomer-FreeNAS-9.10.2-U2-e1497f2-20170315224905.db
Edit this script and specify the target dataset where you want the backup files copied.
Optional features:
-
Specify your email address to receive notification messages whenever the script executes.
-
Specify your ESXi short hostname to backup the ESXi server configuration file. These backup filenames are formed from the hostname and date in this format: hostname-configBundle-date.tgz. Here is an example from a recent backup on my server named felix, on which boomer is a guest:
felix-configBundle-20170315224905.tgz
Saves your FreeNAS system configuration file to a dataset you specify, optionally sending you an email message containing the configuration file in an encrypted tarball.
Supports the versions of FreeNAS which use an SQLite-based configuration file: these include FreeNAS 11.x, 9.x, and probably earlier versions as well... but not Corral.
The backup filenames are formed from the hostname, complete FreeNAS version, and date, in this format: hostname-freenas_version-date.db. Here is an example from a recent backup on my server named bandit:
bandit-FreeNAS-11.0-RELEASE-a2dc21583-20170710234500.db
Edit this script and specify the target dataset where you want the backup files copied.
Optional feature: you may configure the script to send an email message whenever it executes. The script will create an encrypted tarball containing the configuration file, which it will include with the email message as a MIME-encoded attachment. To enable this feature you must specify your email address and create a passphrase file.
The attachment filename is formed from the hostname, complete FreeNAS version, and date, in this format: hostname-freenas_version-date.tar.gz.enc. Here is an example from a recent backup on my server named bandit:
bandit-FreeNAS-11.0-RELEASE-a2dc21583-20170710234500.tar.gz.enc
To create the attachment, the script first validates the configuration file by testing it with the sqlite3
program's pragma integrity_check;
option. If successfull, it next uses tar
to store the configuration file in a gzipped tarball. Finally, it encrypts the tarball file with openssl
, using a default cipher type of -aes256
and a passphrase you specify in a passphrase file. You may use a different cipher by modifying the enc_cipher
variable. The passphrase file is simply a text file, with the passphrase stored in the first line of the file. Specify this file's location in the enc_passphrasefile
variable.
To decrypt the email attachment, first save it to your local system. Then use this command to decrypt it:
openssl enc -d -aes256 -pass file:[passphrase_file] -in [encrypted_file] -out [unencrypted_file]
Where:
passphrase_file
is a file containing the same passphrase you configured on your FreeNAS serverencrypted_file
is your locally-saved copy of the email attachmentunencrypted_file
is the unencrypted contents of the email attachment
Sets the Error Recovery Control (aka SCTERC or TLER) read and write values on your system's hard drives. What is this? There is a good discussion in the "Checking for TLER, ERC, etc. support on a drive" thread on the FreeNAS forum, and you can find more gory details in this FAQ at the smartmontools.org website. This key quote from the FAQ sums up why you want to set this up on your FreeNAS servers:
"It is best for ERC to be "enabled" when in a RAID array to prevent the recovery time from a disk read or write error from exceeding the RAID implementation's timeout threshold. If a drive times out, the hard disk will need to be manually re-added to the array, requiring a re-build and re-synchronization of the hard disk. Limiting the drives recovery timeout helps for improved error handling in the hardware or software RAID environments."
By default, the script sets both the read and write timeout value to 7 seconds. You can change either or both of these values to better suit your environment.
Some hard drives retain these values when powered down, but some do not - including the HGST 7K4000 drives I use in one of my systems. For this reason, I configure my FreeNAS servers to run set_hdd_src.sh
as a post-init startup script.
Displays the current temperature of your system's CPU and drives.
By default, the script uses sysctl
to determine the number of CPU cores and report their temperatures. This reports a temperature for each core on systems equipped with modern multi-core CPUs. The optional IPMI support, if enabled, reports a single temperature for each socketed CPU. The latter result is probably more useful for monitoring CPU status.
To enable IPMI support, edit the script and:
- Set the
use_ipmi
variable to1
- Specify the IPMI host's IP address or DNS-resolvable hostname in the
ipmihost
variable. - Specify the IPMI username in the
ipmiuser
variable. - Specify the IPMI password file location in the
ipmipwfile
variable. This is a simple text file containing the IPMI user's password on a single line. You should protect this file by setting its permissions to 0600.
Drive output includes: the device ID, temperature (in Centigrade), capacity, serial number, and drive family/model. Here is sample output from one of my systems equipped with dual CPUs, using the IPMI feature and with serial numbers obfuscated:
=== CPU (2) ===
CPU 1: [35C]
CPU 2: [38C]
=== DRIVES ===
da1: 19C [8.58GB] SN9999999999999999 INTEL SSDSC2BA100G3L
da2: 39C [4.00TB] SN9999999999999999 HGST Deskstar NAS (HGST HDN724040ALE640)
da3: 36C [4.00TB] SN9999999999999999 HGST Deskstar NAS (HGST HDN724040ALE640)
da4: 27C [240GB] SN9999999999999999 Intel 730 and DC S35x0/3610/3700 (INTEL SSDSC2BB240G4)
da5: 27C [2.00TB] SN9999999999999999 Western Digital Green (WDC WD20EARX-00PASB0)
da6: 28C [2.00TB] SN9999999999999999 Western Digital Red (WDC WD20EFRX-68EUZN0)
da7: 19C [8.58GB] SN9999999999999999 INTEL SSDSC2BA100G3L
da8: 31C [6.00TB] SN9999999999999999 Western Digital Black (WDC WD6001FZWX-00A2VA0)
da9: 29C [2.00TB] SN9999999999999999 Western Digital Green (WDC WD20EARX-00PASB0)
da10: 29C [2.00TB] SN9999999999999999 Western Digital Red (WDC WD20EFRX-68EUZN0)
da11: 34C [4.00TB] SN9999999999999999 HGST HDN726040ALE614
da12: 37C [4.00TB] SN9999999999999999 HGST HDN726040ALE614
da13: 37C [4.00TB] SN9999999999999999 Western Digital Re (WDC WD4000FYYZ-01UL1B1)
da14: 38C [4.00TB] SN9999999999999999 Western Digital Re (WDC WD4000FYYZ-01UL1B1)
(Thanks to P. Robar for his helpful suggestions with respect to sysctl
usage and the get_smart_drives()
function.)
Displays the current temperature of your system's CPU and drives.
This is a Perl version of the get_cpu_temp.sh
script above.
By default, the script uses sysctl
to determine the number of CPU cores and report their temperatures. This reports a temperature for each core on systems equipped with modern multi-core CPUs. The optional IPMI support, if enabled, reports a single temperature for each socketed CPU. The latter result is probably more useful for monitoring CPU status.
To enable IPMI support, edit the script and:
- Set the
$useipmi
variable to1
- Specify the IPMI host's IP address or DNS-resolvable hostname in the
$ipmihost
variable. - Specify the IPMI username in the
$ipmiuser
variable. - Specify the IPMI password file location in the
$ipmipwfile
variable. This is a simple text file containing the IPMI user's password on a single line. You should protect this file by setting its permissions to 0600.
Drive output includes: the device ID, temperature (in Centigrade), capacity, drive type (HDD or SDD), serial number, drive model, and (when available) the model family. Here is sample output from one of my systems equipped with dual CPUs, using the IPMI feature and with serial numbers obfuscated:
==========
bandit.spearfoot.net (IPMI host: falcon.ipmi.spearfoot.net)
=== CPU (2) ===
CPU 1: 35C
CPU 2: 39C
=== Drives ===
da1: 20C [ 8.58 GB SSD] SN999999999999999999 INTEL SSDSC2BA100G3L
da2: 37C [ 4.00 TB HDD] SN999999999999999999 HGST HDN724040ALE640 (HGST Deskstar NAS)
da3: 35C [ 4.00 TB HDD] SN999999999999999999 HGST HDN724040ALE640 (HGST Deskstar NAS)
da4: 28C [ 240 GB SSD] SN999999999999999999 INTEL SSDSC2BB240G4 (Intel 730 and DC S35x0/3610/3700 Series SSDs)
da5: 26C [ 2.00 TB HDD] SN999999999999999999 WDC WD20EARX-00PASB0 (Western Digital Green)
da6: 28C [ 2.00 TB HDD] SN999999999999999999 WDC WD20EFRX-68EUZN0 (Western Digital Red)
da7: 19C [ 8.58 GB SSD] SN999999999999999999 INTEL SSDSC2BA100G3L
da8: 31C [ 6.00 TB HDD] SN999999999999999999 WDC WD6001FZWX-00A2VA0 (Western Digital Black)
da9: 29C [ 2.00 TB HDD] SN999999999999999999 WDC WD20EARX-00PASB0 (Western Digital Green)
da10: 28C [ 2.00 TB HDD] SN999999999999999999 WDC WD20EFRX-68EUZN0 (Western Digital Red)
da11: 32C [ 4.00 TB HDD] SN999999999999999999 HGST HDN726040ALE614
da12: 35C [ 4.00 TB HDD] SN999999999999999999 HGST HDN726040ALE614
da13: 36C [ 4.00 TB HDD] SN999999999999999999 WDC WD4000FYYZ-01UL1B1 (Western Digital Re)
da14: 37C [ 4.00 TB HDD] SN999999999999999999 WDC WD4000FYYZ-01UL1B1 (Western Digital Re)