EEM and syslog ext

I'm trying to get EEM to send an email using syslog extensions. The script works when run manually, but it never triggers from syslog.
Here is my syslog extension-
::cisco::eem::event_register_syslog occurs 1 pattern .*%SYS-5-CONFIG.* maxrun 90 queue_priority low nice 1
I have configured following this video-
http://www.cisco.com/cdc_content_elements/flash/ios/ios_commercial/send_email/Send_Email.html
I am running IOS 12.4(15)T7, but have tried others with the same results.
Any ideas? Thanks

I've tried to implement this script on my router but came across the following error when the router tried sending the email:
021948: Dec 13 20:45:16.898: %HA_EM-6-LOG: sendmail.tcl: smtp_send_email: error connecting to mail server:
can't read "reply_code_str(220-gateway.firewall.cx)": no such element in array
Obviously  the code in the parenthesis (220-gateway.firewall.cx) is what my email  server is returning to the router when it tries to connect. 
Can  someone advise on how I can overcome this issue or declare the system  message the email server will send to the router when it tries to  connect.  Here is an example of what the router gets when trying to connect:
220-gateway.firewall.cx ESMTP Exim 4.69 #1 Tue, 13 Dec 2011 20:44:49 +0200
220-We do not authorize the use of this system to transport unsolicited,
220 and/or bulk e-mail.
Many thanks in advanced.
Chris.

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    CMD: ' transport input all' 14:32:46 MSK Wed Mar 14 2012
    CMD: 'scheduler allocate 20000 1000' 14:32:46 MSK Wed Mar 14 2012
    CMD: 'ntp server x.x.x.x' 14:32:46 MSK Wed Mar 14 2012
    CMD: 'event manager environment _syslog_test Configured' 14:32:46 MSK Wed Mar 14 2012
    CMD: 'event manager directory user policy "flash0:/USER/"' 14:32:46 MSK Wed Mar 14 2012
    CMD: 'event manager directory user repository flash0:/USER/' 14:32:46 MSK Wed Mar 14 2012
    CMD: 'event manager policy Multiple-test.tcl' 14:32:46 MSK Wed Mar 14 2012
    Mar 14 14:32:46: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface NVI0, changed state to up
    CMD: 'end' 14:32:46 MSK Wed Mar 14 2012
    Mar 14 14:32:46: %SYS-5-CONFIG_I: Configured from memory by console
    SETUP: new interface NVI0 placed in "shutdown" state
    Mar 14 14:32:48: %LINK-5-CHANGED: Interface GigabitEthernet0/0, changed state to reset
    Mar 14 14:32:48: %LINK-5-CHANGED: Interface GigabitEthernet0/1, changed state to administratively down
    Mar 14 14:32:48: %LINK-5-CHANGED: Interface GigabitEthernet0/2, changed state to administratively down
    Mar 14 14:32:49: %LINK-5-CHANGED: Interface NVI0, changed state to administratively down
    Mar 14 14:32:49: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface GigabitEthernet0/0, changed state to down
    Mar 14 14:32:50: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface NVI0, changed state to down
    Mar 14 14:32:52: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface GigabitEthernet0/0, changed state to down
    Mar 14 14:32:55: %LINK-3-UPDOWN: Interface GigabitEthernet0/0, changed state to up
    Mar 14 14:32:56: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface GigabitEthernet0/0, changed state to up
    Mar 14 14:32:56: %SYS-5-RESTART: System restarted --
    Cisco IOS Software, C3900e Software (C3900e-UNIVERSALK9_NPE-M), Version 15.1(4)M3, RELEASE SOFTWARE (fc1)
    Technical Support: http://www.cisco.com/techsupport
    Copyright (c) 1986-2011 by Cisco Systems, Inc.
    Compiled Tue 06-Dec-11 20:22 by prod_rel_team
    Mar 14 14:32:56: %SNMP-5-COLDSTART: SNMP agent on host i3925E-0-(offline) is undergoing a cold start
    Mar 14 14:32:58: %SYS-6-BOOTTIME: Time taken to reboot after reload =  121 seconds
    Mar 14 14:32:59: %SYS-6-LOGGINGHOST_STARTSTOP: Logging to host xx.x..xx port 514 started - CLI initiated
    CMD: 'enable' 14:36:05 MSK Thu Mar 15 2012
    CMD: 'sho event manager policy registered ' 14:36:12 MSK Thu Mar 15 2012
    CMD: 'sho logg' 14:36:26 MSK Thu Mar 15 2012
    CMD: 'sho run | inc logg' 14:37:34 MSK Thu Mar 15 2012
    CMD: 'sho run | sec DROP' 14:38:35 MSK Thu Mar 15 2012
    CMD: 'sho run | sec CFGLOG' 14:39:09 MSK Thu Mar 15 2012
    CMD: 'conf t' 14:39:42 MSK Thu Mar 15 2012
    CMD: 'no logging discriminator DROP mnemonics drops CFGLOG ' 14:39:45 MSK Thu Mar 15 2012
    Mar 15 14:39:45: %PARSER-5-CFGLOG_LOGGEDCMD: User:vty0  logged command:no logging discriminator DROP
    CMD: 'conf t' 14:39:51 MSK Thu Mar 15 2012
    CMD: 'logging monitor ' 14:40:16 MSK Thu Mar 15 2012
    Mar 15 14:40:16: %PARSER-5-CFGLOG_LOGGEDCMD: User:vty0  logged command:logging monitor
    CMD: 'do sho logg' 14:40:24 MSK Thu Mar 15 2012
    CMD: 'sho logg' 14:40:24 MSK Thu Mar 15 2012
    CMD: 'logging buffered ' 14:40:41 MSK Thu Mar 15 2012
    Mar 15 14:40:41: %PARSER-5-CFGLOG_LOGGEDCMD: User:vty0  logged command:logging buffered
    CMD: 'logg x.x.x.x 14:41:04 MSK Thu Mar 15 2012
    Mar 15 14:41:04: %PARSER-5-CFGLOG_LOGGEDCMD: User:vty0  logged command:logging x.x.x.x
    CMD: 'do sho logg' 14:41:12 MSK Thu Mar 15 2012
    CMD: 'sho logg' 14:41:12 MSK Thu Mar 15 2012
    CMD: 'do sho logg | inc DROP' 14:41:44 MSK Thu Mar 15 2012
    CMD: 'sho logg | inc DROP' 14:41:44 MSK Thu Mar 15 2012
    CMD: 'do sho logg ' 14:41:55 MSK Thu Mar 15 2012
    CMD: 'sho logg' 14:41:55 MSK Thu Mar 15 2012
    CMD: 'do term mon' 14:42:13 MSK Thu Mar 15 2012
    CMD: 'term mon' 14:42:13 MSK Thu Mar 15 2012
    CMD: 'exi' 14:42:20 MSK Thu Mar 15 2012
    Mar 15 14:42:20: %SYS-5-CONFIG_I: Configured from console by vty0 (x.x.x.x)
    Mar 15 14:42:20: %HA_EM-6-LOG: Multiple-test.tcl: START polycy #1...
    Mar 15 14:42:20: %HA_EM-6-LOG: Multiple-test.tcl: ENTRY status not exist...
    CMD: 'conf t' 14:47:16 MSK Thu Mar 15 2012
    Mar 15 14:47:17: %SYS-5-CONFIG_I: Configured from console by vty0 ()
    Mar 15 14:47:17: %HA_EM-6-LOG: Multiple-test.tcl: START polycy #1...
    Mar 15 14:47:17: %HA_EM-6-LOG: Multiple-test.tcl: ENTRY status not exist...
    CMD: 'sho run | inc logg' 14:48:27 MSK Thu Mar 15 2012
    CMD: 'conf t' 14:48:40 MSK Thu Mar 15 2012
    CMD: 'logging discriminator DROP1 mnemonics drops HA_EM ' 14:48:59 MSK Thu Mar 15 2012
    Mar 15 14:48:59: %PARSER-5-CFGLOG_LOGGEDCMD: User:vty0  logged command:logging discriminator DROP1 mnemonics drops HA_EM
    CMD: 'logging discriminator DROP1 mnemonics drops LOG ' 14:49:17 MSK Thu Mar 15 2012
    Mar 15 14:49:17: %PARSER-5-CFGLOG_LOGGEDCMD: User:vty0  logged command:logging discriminator DROP1 mnemonics drops LOG
    Mar 15 14:49:19: %SYS-5-CONFIG_I: Configured from console by vty0 ()
    Mar 15 14:49:19: %HA_EM-6-LOG: Multiple-test.tcl: START polycy #1...
    Mar 15 14:49:19: %HA_EM-6-LOG: Multiple-test.tcl: ENTRY status not exist...
    CMD: 'conf t' 14:49:27 MSK Thu Mar 15 2012
    CMD: 'logging monitor discriminator DROP1' 14:50:19 MSK Thu Mar 15 2012
    Mar 15 14:50:19: %PARSER-5-CFGLOG_LOGGEDCMD: User:vty0  logged command:logging monitor discriminator DROP1
    Mar 15 14:50:19: %SYS-5-CONFIG_I: Configured from console by vty0 ()
    14:50:19 MSK Thu Mar 15 2012: Unexpected exception to CPU: vector D, PC = 0x14F40AF
    -Traceback= 14F40AF 85A 4FDC574 4FDC527 190D227 190CE69 190CC2A 190CBDB
    CPU Register Context:
    EAX = 0x1E9B71D4  ECX  = 0x014F408B  EDX = 0x1E9B71D0  EBX  = 0x000000D3
    ESP = 0x1E9B70C8  EBP  = 0x1E9B7170  ESI = 0x0000085A  EDI  = 0x00000001
    EIP = 0x014F40AF  PS   = 0x00010206  CS  = 0x00000008  SS   = 0x00000010
    DS  = 0x00000010  ES   = 0x00000010  FS  = 0x00000010  GS   = 0x00000010
    ========= Start of Crashinfo Collection (14:50:19 MSK Thu Mar 15 2012) =========
    For image:
    Cisco IOS Software, C3900e Software (C3900e-UNIVERSALK9_NPE-M), Version 15.1(4)M3, RELEASE SOFTWARE (fc1)
    Technical Support: http://www.cisco.com/techsupport
    Copyright (c) 1986-2011 by Cisco Systems, Inc.
    Compiled Tue 06-Dec-11 20:22 by prod_rel_team
    ========= Malloc and Free Traces ===============================================
    MallocFree Trace: ixmallocfree=0xD  ptr=0x9DD3C48
    9DD3BE0: 1F421B68  4E5DD21 1F4223A0 600003B2 1F6F1E40 4000061C 1F6F1E40  4E4B0D3
    9DD3C00: 1F6F1E40  4E4BC70 1F6F2AA8 60000398 1FB0DA8C  15677BC 1FB0E678 600003C6
    9DD3C20: 1F1DB08C 40000060 1F1DB08C  153FBB1 1D9E48E4 40000204 1D9E48E4  190D088
    9DD3C40: 1F40912C 40000546 1F40912C  190D133 1FB0E678 400002CA 1FB0E678  4E4B0D3
    9DD3C60: 1FB0E678  4E6187F 1FB0EC3C 600000E4 1F4223A0 400002CA 1F4223A0  4E4B0D3
    9DD3C80: 1F4223A0  4E6187F 1F422964 600000D0 1D9E48E4 400002CA 1D9E48E4  4E4B0D3
    9DD3CA0: 1D9E48E4  4E6187F 1D9E4EA8 60000096 1FB0E678 400002CA 1FB0E678  4E4B0D3
    9DD3CC0: 1FB0E678  4E6187F 1FB0EC3C 600000E4 1F4223A0 400002CA 1F4223A0  4E4B0D3
    9DD3CE0: 1F4223A0  4E6187F 1F422964 600000D0 1D9E48E4 400002CA 1D9E48E4  4E4B0D3
    9DD3D00: 1D9E48E4  4E6187F 1D9E4EA8 60000096 1FB0E678 400002CA 1FB0E678  4E4B0D3
    9DD3D20: 1FB0E678  4E6187F 1FB0EC3C 600000E4 1F4223A0 400002CA 1F4223A0  4E4B0D3
    9DD3D40: 1F4223A0  4E6187F 1F422964 600000D0 1D9E48E4 400002CA 1D9E48E4  4E4B0D3
    9DD3D60: 1D9E48E4  4E6187F 1D9E4EA8 60000096 1FB0E678 400002CA 1FB0E678  4E4B0D3
    9DD3D80: 1FB0E678  4E6187F 1FB0EC3C 600000E4 1F4223A0 400002CA 1F4223A0  4E4B0D3
    9DD3DA0: 1F4223A0  4E6187F 1F422964 600000D0 1D9E48E4 400002CA 1D9E48E4  4E4B0D3
    9DD3DC0: 1D9E48E4  4E6187F 1D9E4EA8 60000096 1F1DB834  4E62135 1F1DBE04 600000E2
    ChunkMallocFree Trace: ixchunkmallocfree=0x9 ptr=0x9DEF16C
    9DEF100:  285CF44  28617F9 1EB10BE4   318BF3   307732 1C18ED7C   318C3F   305775
    9DEF120: 1D4F63F0   318C3F   3057C6 1D4F63F0   318C3F   3057C6 1D4F63A0   318BF3
    9DEF140:   3058E1 1C18ED7C  285CF44  285B561 1EB10BE4  285CEA5  285B561 1F6982FC
    9DEF160:   318BA3   30E02B 1D4F5754  1B16955  1B161B1 1C5644BC  285CF44  28617F9
    9DEF180: 1EB10BE4   318BF3   307732 1C18ED7C   318C3F   305775 1D4F63F0   318B53
    9DEF1A0:   3118A0 1D4F4804   318B53   3118A0 1D4F4828   318B53   3118A0 1D4F484C
    9DEF1C0:   318C3F   3057C6 1D4F63F0   318BF3   3058E1 1C18ED7C  285CF44  285B561
    9DEF1E0: 1EB10BE4  285CEA5  285B561 1F6982FC  285CEA5  285B35F 1F6982FC  285CF44
    9DEF200:  28617F9 1EB10BE4   318BF3   307732 1C18ED7C   318C3F   305775 1D4F63F0
    9DEF220:   318C3F   3057C6 1D4F63F0   318BF3   3058E1 1C18ED7C  285CF44  285B561
    9DEF240: 1EB10BE4  285CEA5  285B561 1F6982FC  285CEA5  285B35F 1F6982FC  285CF44
    9DEF260:  28617F9 1EB10BE4   318BF3   307732 1C18ED7C   318C3F   305775 1D4F63F0
    9DEF280:   318C3F   3057C6 1D4F63F0   318BF3   3058E1 1C18ED7C  285CF44  285B561
    9DEF2A0: 1EB10BE4  285CEA5  285B561 1F6982FC  285CEA5  285B35F 1F6982FC  285CF44
    9DEF2C0:  28617F9 1EB10BE4   318BF3   307732 1C18ED7C   318C3F   305775 1D4F63F0
    9DEF2E0:   318B53   311807 1D4F4804   318B53   311807 1D4F4828   318B53   311807
    9DEF300: 1D4F484C   318C3F   3057C6 1D4F63F0   318BF3   3058E1 1C18ED7C  285CF44
    9DEF320:  285B561 1EB10BE4  285CEA5  285B561 1F6982FC  285CEA5  285B35F 1F6982FC
    9DEF340:  285CF44  28617F9 1EB10BE4   318BF3   307732 1C18ED7C   318C3F   305775
    9DEF360: 1D4F63F0   318C3F   3057C6 1D4F63F0   318BF3   3058E1 1C18ED7C  285CF44
    9DEF380:  285B561 1EB10BE4  285CEA5  285B561 1F6982FC  285CEA5  285B35F 1F6982FC
    9DEF3A0:  285CF44  28617F9 1EB10BE4   318BF3   307732 1C18ED7C   318C3F   305775
    9DEF3C0: 1D4F63F0   318C3F   3057C6 1D4F63F0   318BF3   3058E1 1C18ED7C  285CF44
    9DEF3E0:  285B561 1EB10BE4  285CEA5  285B561 1F6982FC  285CEA5  285B35F 1F6982FC
    ========= Stack Trace ==========================================================
    -Traceback= 14F40AF 85A 4FDC574 4FDC527 190D227 190CE69 190CC2A 190CBDB
    ========= Context ==============================================================
    C3900e Software (C3900e-UNIVERSALK9_NPE-M), Version 15.1(4)M3, RELEASE SOFTWARE (fc1)
    Technical Support: http://www.cisco.com/techsupport
    Compiled Tue 06-Dec-11 20:22 by prod_rel_team
    CPU Register Context:
    EAX = 0x1E9B71D4  ECX  = 0x014F408B  EDX = 0x1E9B71D0  EBX  = 0x000000D3
    ESP = 0x1E9B70C8  EBP  = 0x1E9B7170  ESI = 0x0000085A  EDI  = 0x00000001
    EIP = 0x014F40AF  PS   = 0x00010206  CS  = 0x00000008  SS   = 0x00000010
    DS  = 0x00000010  ES   = 0x00000010  FS  = 0x00000010  GS   = 0x00000010
    Signal = 10 Vector = 0xD
    ========= Stack Dump ===========================================================
    Stack Frame Pointer in Context is 0x1E9B70C8, at process level
    1E9B6CC8: FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF
    1E9B6CE8: FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF
    1E9B6D08: FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF
    1E9B6D28: FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF
    1E9B6D48: FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF
    1E9B6D68: FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF
    1E9B6D88: FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF
    1E9B6DA8: FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF
    1E9B6DC8: FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF
    1E9B6DE8: FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF
    1E9B6E08: FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF
    1E9B6E28: FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF
    1E9B6E48: FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF
    1E9B6E68: FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF
    1E9B6E88: FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF
    1E9B6EA8: FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF
    1E9B6EC8: FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF
    1E9B6EE8: FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF
    1E9B6F08: FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF
    1E9B6F28: FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF
    1E9B6F48: FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF
    1E9B6F68: FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF
    1E9B6F88: FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF 1C1F0AC0
    1E9B6FA8:      4B0 60381F1C 1C1F0AC0      328 1E63B504      438 4C4BD51D 1E63B504
    1E9B6FC8:      ABC 4C4BD51D E46F9B1E 8D9DFC04 1DD54B4C 1E9B6FF8        0 84709B1E
    1E9B6FE8: C45A8802 1D88C6B8 1E9B6FF8  288CB4A        0 804E3F1F        0 6D6A2500
    1E9B7008: 8A1A0000        0  10000F1        0        0  10000F1  1000000  2000000
    1E9B7028:        0        0        0 F80C0000        0 58709B1E  9700520  404AD28
    1E9B7048:        0  9700520  404B7E4        0  9700520        3 B0709B1E 335D8402
    1E9B7068: 1C1ED564        0        0  9700520        3  404B7E4        1        0
    1E9B7088:  CD41E1C 1C1ED40C        0 36010000  6000000 30000000 1E9B716C 8A080000
    1E9B70A8: D3000000 1E9B7178 5A080000 70719B1E        0 AF404F01 470E1000  D000000
    1E9B70C8: E4709B1E FCF98202  9700520        0 7AF78202 31340000        0 33B5631E
    1E9B70E8: C0D15B1E        1 3490401F        0  6000000 73000000  3000000  1000000
    1E9B7108: 1E9B70DC  4000000  1000000        0        0 1E9B70F0        0 5A080000
    1E9B7128:      85A 1F409357        1 7C080000 1E9B7134 1E9B7180 87070000 5A080000
    1E9B7148: FFFFFFFF        0        0 D3000000        0 20000000        0 FFFFFFFF
    1E9B7168: FFFFFFFF 1E9B7178 9C719B1E 74C5FD04 1F40942A FFFFFFFF  54BED16 D4719B1E
    1E9B7188:        0      85A 986FF51E 7454F51E  9C62CC0 B8719B1E 27C5FD04 1F409357
    1E9B71A8:      85A  54BEC40 CC719B1E CC719B1E 10729B1E 27D29001 1F409357      85A
    1E9B71C8:  54BEC40        4        1 1D9E48E4 1F4091F1      9C0       29        1
    1E9B71E8:        0        3  9C64024  9C62CC0 7454F51E  9C62CFC 1D9E48E4 7454F51E
    1E9B7208: 78AEA71E 986FF51E 54729B1E 69CE9001  C737F1E 64E6EC1D        1   1572B8
    1E9B7228:        1        0  9C62CC0 78AEA71E 1EA7AE78  9C62CC0  A000000   150000
    1E9B7248: C02CC609        0 15000000 70729B1E 2ACC9001 D9BE8502 1DECE6C4 1E9B72B8
    1E9B7268:  9C62CC0  A000000 88729B1E DBCB9001 1E9B72B0 90729B1E 1E9B72B0  9C62CC0
    1E9B7288: BC729B1E 5AE09001  9C62CC0 1DECE664        0        1        0        0
    1E9B72A8:        0        0        2 1E865DD0        2        0 30ED8502        0
    1E9B72C8: FD0110DF AB1234CD FFFE0000        0  515505C  18DA0DD 1E9B732C 1E9B342C
    1E9B72E8: 80000018        1        0  1000001 1C1F0F70 1E7FD4FC 1E7FD460  6ADF740
    1E9B7308:        C  4000000        0     1D22 FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF        0
    1E9B7328: FD0110DF AB1234CD FFFE0000        0  515505C  18DA0DD 1E9B738C 1E9B72E0
    1E9B7348: 80000018        1        0  1000001 1C1F0F70 1E3CD1D8 1E7FD4B0  6AE25A0
    1E9B7368:        E  4000000        0     204F FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF        0
    1E9B7388: FD0110DF AB1234CD FFFE0000        0  515505C  18DA101 1E9B73D8 1E9B7340
    1E9B73A8: 8000000E        1        0  1000001 1C1F0F70 746D5F66 7379735F 75736167
    1E9B73C8: 652E7463 6C000000        0 FD0110DF AB1234CD FFFE0000        0  515505C
    1E9B73E8:  18DA0DD 1E9B7438 1E9B73A0 80000018        1        0  1000001 1C1F0F70
    1E9B7408: 1E7FD5A8 1E7FD55C        0       11  6000000        0        0 FFFFFFFF
    1E9B7428: FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF        0 FD0110DF AB1234CD FFFE0000        0  515505C
    1E9B7448:  18DA101 1E9B7484 1E9B73EC 8000000E        1        0  1000001 1C1F0F70
    1E9B7468: 65656D5F 706E745F 30000000        0        0        0 FD0110DF AB1234CD
    1E9B7488: FFFE0000        0  515505C  18DA0DD 1E9B74E4 1E9B744C 80000018        1
    1E9B74A8:        0  1000001 1C1F0F70 1E9B78BC 1E7FD608        0       14  6000000
    ========= Process Level Info ===================================================
    ---- Current Process Stack (0x324 bytes used, out of 0x3E80 available) ----
    Current SP = 0x1E9B70C8, saved SP = 0x1C1D2628
    1E9B6FA4: 1C1F0AC0      4B0 60381F1C 1C1F0AC0      328 1E63B504      438 4C4BD51D
    1E9B6FC4: 1E63B504      ABC 4C4BD51D E46F9B1E 8D9DFC04 1DD54B4C 1E9B6FF8        0
    1E9B6FE4: 84709B1E C45A8802 1D88C6B8 1E9B6FF8  288CB4A        0 804E3F1F        0
    1E9B7004: 6D6A2500 8A1A0000        0  10000F1        0        0  10000F1  1000000
    1E9B7024:  2000000        0        0        0 F80C0000        0 58709B1E  9700520
    1E9B7044:  404AD28        0  9700520  404B7E4        0  9700520        3 B0709B1E
    1E9B7064: 335D8402 1C1ED564        0        0  9700520        3  404B7E4        1
    1E9B7084:        0  CD41E1C 1C1ED40C        0 36010000  6000000 30000000 1E9B716C
    1E9B70A4: 8A080000 D3000000 1E9B7178 5A080000 70719B1E        0 AF404F01 470E1000
    1E9B70C4:  D000000 E4709B1E FCF98202  9700520        0 7AF78202 31340000        0
    1E9B70E4: 33B5631E C0D15B1E        1 3490401F        0  6000000 73000000  3000000
    1E9B7104:  1000000 1E9B70DC  4000000  1000000        0        0 1E9B70F0        0
    1E9B7124: 5A080000      85A 1F409357        1 7C080000 1E9B7134 1E9B7180 87070000
    1E9B7144: 5A080000 FFFFFFFF        0        0 D3000000        0 20000000        0
    1E9B7164: FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF 1E9B7178 9C719B1E 74C5FD04 1F40942A FFFFFFFF  54BED16
    1E9B7184: D4719B1E        0      85A 986FF51E 7454F51E  9C62CC0 B8719B1E 27C5FD04
    1E9B71A4: 1F409357      85A  54BEC40 CC719B1E CC719B1E 10729B1E 27D29001 1F409357
    1E9B71C4:      85A  54BEC40        4        1 1D9E48E4 1F4091F1      9C0       29
    1E9B71E4:        1        0        3  9C64024  9C62CC0 7454F51E  9C62CFC 1D9E48E4
    1E9B7204: 7454F51E 78AEA71E 986FF51E 54729B1E 69CE9001  C737F1E 64E6EC1D        1
    1E9B7224:   1572B8        1        0  9C62CC0 78AEA71E 1EA7AE78  9C62CC0  A000000
    1E9B7244:   150000 C02CC609        0 15000000 70729B1E 2ACC9001 D9BE8502 1DECE6C4
    1E9B7264: 1E9B72B8  9C62CC0  A000000 88729B1E DBCB9001 1E9B72B0 90729B1E 1E9B72B0
    1E9B7284:  9C62CC0 BC729B1E 5AE09001  9C62CC0 1DECE664        0        1        0
    1E9B72A4:        0        0        0        2 1E865DD0        2        0 30ED8502
    1E9B72C4:        0
    ========= Interrupt Level Stack Dump ===========================================
    ========= Interrupt Stack ======================================================
    ---- Level 1 Interrupt stack (0x618 bytes used, out of 0x4650 available) ----
    intstacks[1]: base 0x1D48ED84 stack 0x1D4933D0 routine 0x1F41F6
                  size 0x4650     low   0x4650     desc    Network devices
    1D492DBC: E02D491D E02D491D E82D491D E82D491D B7222000  7000000  8000000 78000000
    1D492DDC: 1CA7DAA0 C0000000  1000000 302E491D 102E491D 102E491D B7222000  7000000
    1D492DFC: 28000000 28000000        0 C0000000  1000000 682E491D 521E2000 882E491D
    1D492E1C: 582F491D        0 582F491D 782E491D 938FDB01 802E491D 938FDB01 5C2E491D
    1D492E3C:        1        0        0 882E491D  42F491D 1D492E88  42F491D FC31491D
    1D492E5C:  A0103FB 1CA7DAA0 A0DAA71C        0        0        0  A0103FB 802F491D
    1D492E7C: 778BDD01 1CA7DAA0  A0103FB 1D492F58        0        0        0        1
    1D492E9C:        1        0        0        0        0 40010000 1D492F04        0
    1D492EBC:  42F491D E02E491D 15B2DD01 E030491D  9CD4EEC 282F491D 982F491D 7431491D
    1D492EDC: 1CA7DAA0 FC2E491D 1D44DD01 1D492F04 7431491D 982F491D 1CA7DAA0  B12D612
    1D492EFC: E831491D E5722E00 1CA7DAA0  B12D612  B12D626        0        0        0
    1D492F1C:  A0002FB FFFFFFFF        0        0        0       17    60000        0
    1D492F3C:        0        0        0        0 1C1F0E44 70461F1C 682F491D 8D9DFC04
    1D492F5C: 1C1F4670 1D492F7C E065351C  830491D C45A8802 1D88C598 1D492F7C  288CB4A
    1D492F7C: 8A7A2E00  6000000        0 1CA7DAA0        6 FFFFFFFE 1CA7DAA0 FFFFFFFE
    1D492F9C:        0  1000004 8D9DFC04 1C1F4670 1D492FC8 6014341C 5430491D 1CA7DAA0
    1D492FBC: 1D88C598 1CA7DAA0  288CB4A EC2F491D EC2F491D B7222000  7000000 1D5C9D44
    1D492FDC: 1430491D 37478502        6 1030491D AD324C00        0  6000000 F027981D
    1D492FFC: 1D982800 1D9827F0  2020000 C7188502      206 1D9826A0 1D98279C  97B785C
    1D49301C: 3830491D 446B9000  97B785C 1D98279C        2 A026981D        1 6030491D
    1D49303C: 57958502        1 46020000 88929000      206        0 5C30491D  8929000
    1D49305C: 8C30491D 2B938502        1 8430491D 8430491D 21EB8402  1000000 1C179EC8
    1D49307C: C89E171C 1C3565E0        6 A026981D A030491D D3C18502        0 1C3565E0
    1D49309C: 1C3565E0 BC30491D 4BFC4A00 1C179EC8 C430491D ED24BB01 1C179EC8 FB02000A
    1D4930BC: FB02000A        6 D030491D 8F52B701 5862340A 2031491D 9E49B701 1C3565E0
    1D4930DC: 57F85000 1CA7DAA0  B12D612 2418541C 1CA7DAA0 E065351C  9195000  1040000
    1D4930FC:  A0002FB  56142C4 767CCA09        6 1D60B6C0 3031491D E065351C        7
    1D49311C: 1C3565E0 3431491D CAB98602 1C3565E0  A34624A 1C3565E0 A831491D 12488B02
    1D49313C:        7 1C3565E0        0        0        0        1        0 1D4931B0
    1D49315C:        0        1        0 757CCA09        1 8061631E E065351C A0DAA71C
    1D49317C:        0 4A62340A    80000        4        1 E065351C E065351C 1D60B6C0
    1D49319C: E065351C  A34624A 1C541824 C831491D 62378B02 94E38402  6D31268        0
    1D4931BC: 1C3565E0       63 E065351C DC31491D CAB98602 1C3565E0       63 1C3565E0
    1D4931DC:  C32491D 91504900       63 A0DAA71C  9000000        9  C32491D 34A38202
    1D4931FC: 1E1000DC 1E107EAC  28AA52D  28AA52D 3432491D 2DA58A02 1E1000DC 1E107EAC
    1D49321C:        1        0 1E107EAC 1CA7DAA0  9000000 A0DAA71C 8832491D 25121F00
    1D49323C:        9 1CA7DAA0 12000000   D6120B A0DAA71C 1C3565E0 A0DAA71C E04E4900
    1D49325C: 1D630C4C 1D653C00   D6120B 1CA7DAA0 4662340A 1D60B6C0 A0DAA71C    10000
    1D49327C:   2834FA 1D60B6C0 18DBA71C A032491D 11251F00  6A86E44 A0DAA71C    10000
    1D49329C:  B12D60C  C33491D 627A2800 1D60B6C0 1CA7DAA0   2834FA  B12D60C 8C5A8802
    1D4932BC:  7000000        0 C0B6601D A0DAA71C 7EAF8802 38D4601D        0 F832491D
    1D4932DC:  B12D600   620000 1D60B6C0 1C541824 1C541824        0 1CA7DAA0 1D60C348
    1D4932FC: A0DAA71C 60CACB0A 1D60B6C0 F8A0D306 8833491D 519E2800 8833491D 5C33491D
    1D49331C: 5C33491D 5AD94700 1D60B6C0 38D4601D 60E90106  5D6FE9C      600 6033491D
    1D49333C: 57958502 18DBA71C 1CA7DAA0        0 1CA7DAA0 1D60D438 F8050000 F0CFCB0A
    1D49335C: 38D4601D 60CACB0A        0 C0B6601D C0B6601D 1D60B6C0 B4E8621D 1D662380
    1D49337C:        0       20 1CA7DAA0 AC33491D 1AA62800 1D60B6C0        0        0
    1D49339C:        1 1D60B6C0 1D60B6C0 80060000 C433491D 73A62800 C433491D 85A82500
    1D4933BC: 80060000 14983206 8C709B1E 1E212000 1D60B6C0 FFFFFFFF
    ---- Level 2 Interrupt stack (0x0 bytes used, out of 0x4650 available) ----
    intstacks[2]: base 0x1D48A734 stack 0x1D48ED80 routine 0x25650A
                  size 0x4650     low   0x4650     desc    One Shot Timer
    ---- Level 5 Interrupt stack (0x80 bytes used, out of 0x4650 available) ----
    intstacks[5]: base 0x1D4860E4 stack 0x1D48A730 routine 0x20C4F6
                  size 0x4650     low   0x4650     desc    Console Uart
    1D48A6B4: C4A6481D 17BF2000  3F90000  D000000 DCA6481D E1BA2000 FFFFFFFF E0A6481D
    1D48A6D4: 17BF2000 1C17676F  8A7481D 24C42000 1C174618 FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF
    1D48A6F4: 1C174618        0  8A7481D CCBE2000  2FA0000 28A7481D 6CC52000 FFFFFFFF
    1D48A714: FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF 30A7481D F6C42000  4983206 B0E3781D C6222000 FFFFFFFF
    ---- Level 7 Interrupt stack (0x54 bytes used, out of 0x4650 available) ----
    intstacks[7]: base 0x1D481A94 stack 0x1D4860E0 routine 0x91D8F0
                  size 0x4650     low   0x4650     desc    Clocktick Interrupt
    1D486090:        0  536CFF2        0  536CFF6 1D78E474 46020000 D22B8502      202
    1D4860B0: EDBF9000 FFFFFFFF C860481D 6B872200 D060481D 67938202 D060481D 25DA9100
    1D4860D0: D860481D BFD99100 20261D1C C6222000 FFFFFFFF
    ========= Register Memory Dump =================================================
    Reg00(EAX): 1E9B71D4
    Reg01(EBX):       D3
    Reg02(ECX):  14F408B
    Reg03(EDX): 1E9B71D0
    Reg04(ESP): 1E9B70C8
    Reg05(EBP): 1E9B7170
    Reg06(ESI):      85A
    Reg07(EDI):        1
    Reg08(EIP):  14F40AF
    Reg09(PS ):    10206
    Reg10(CS ):        8
    Reg11(SS ):       10
    Reg12(DS ):       10
    Reg13(ES ):       10
    Reg14(FS ):       10
    Reg15(GS ):       10
    buffer check=0 sched_hc=0x0
    ---- block0  ptr=1E9B7068  is_malloc=0  length=0x260 ----
    1E9B7028:        0        0        0 F80C0000        0 58709B1E  9700520  404AD28
    1E9B7048:        0  9700520  404B7E4        0  9700520        3 B0709B1E 335D8402
    1E9B7068: 1C1ED564        0        0  9700520        3  404B7E4        1        0
    1E9B7088:  CD41E1C 1C1ED40C        0 36010000  6000000 30000000 1E9B716C 8A080000
    1E9B70A8: D3000000 1E9B7178 5A080000 70719B1E        0 AF404F01 470E1000  D000000
    1E9B70C8: E4709B1E FCF98202  9700520        0 7AF78202 31340000        0 33B5631E
    1E9B70E8: C0D15B1E        1 3490401F        0  6000000 73000000  3000000  1000000
    1E9B7108: 1E9B70DC  4000000  1000000        0        0 1E9B70F0        0 5A080000
    1E9B7128:      85A 1F409357        1 7C080000 1E9B7134 1E9B7180 87070000 5A080000
    1E9B7148: FFFFFFFF        0        0 D3000000        0 20000000        0 FFFFFFFF
    1E9B7168: FFFFFFFF 1E9B7178 9C719B1E 74C5FD04 1F40942A FFFFFFFF  54BED16 D4719B1E
    1E9B7188:        0      85A 986FF51E 7454F51E  9C62CC0 B8719B1E 27C5FD04 1F409357
    1E9B71A8:      85A  54BEC40 CC719B1E CC719B1E 10729B1E 27D29001 1F409357      85A
    1E9B71C8:  54BEC40        4        1 1D9E48E4 1F4091F1      9C0       29        1
    1E9B71E8:        0        3  9C64024  9C62CC0 7454F51E  9C62CFC 1D9E48E4 7454F51E
    1E9B7208: 78AEA71E 986FF51E 54729B1E 69CE9001  C737F1E 64E6EC1D        1   1572B8
    1E9B7228:        1        0  9C62CC0 78AEA71E 1EA7AE78  9C62CC0  A000000   150000
    1E9B7248: C02CC609        0 15000000 70729B1E 2ACC9001 D9BE8502 1DECE6C4 1E9B72B8
    1E9B7268:  9C62CC0  A000000 88729B1E DBCB9001 1E9B72B0 90729B1E 1E9B72B0  9C62CC0
    1E9B7288: BC729B1E 5AE09001  9C62CC0 1DECE664        0        1        0        0
    1E9B72A8:        0        0        2 1E865DD0        2        0 30ED8502        0
    ---- block1  ptr=1C1ED488  is_malloc=1  length=0x1AC ----
    1C1ED448:        0        0 1C1ED4FC 1C1ED4C0 1C1ED448  6D31580       69    D0000
    1C1ED468:        0        0  5781DD4  2851E0A  2851E14  6D31568        0 FD0110DF
    1C1ED488: AB1234CD FFFE0000        0  515505C  2846FA7 1C1ED534 1C1ED3F0 8000003E
    1C1ED4A8:        1        0  1000001 1C1F0F70        0        0 1C1ED450 1C1ED414
    1C1ED4C8: 1C1ED4B8  6D31580       68    D0000        0        0  5781DE8  2851E0A
    1C1ED4E8:  2851E14  6D31568        0        0        0 1C1EC668 1C1ED450 1C1ED4F4
    1C1ED508:  6D31580       6A    D0000        0        0  5781DE8  2851E0A  2851E14
    1C1ED528:  6D31568        0 FD0110DF AB1234CD FFFE0000        0  515505C  2847042
    1C1ED548: 1C1ED610 1C1ED49C 80000056        1        0  1000001 1C1F0F70        0
    1C1ED568:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    1C1ED588:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    1C1ED5A8:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    1C1ED5C8:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    1C1ED5E8:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    1C1ED608:        0 FD0110DF AB1234CD FFFE0000        0  5781DC0  28470FE 1C1ED6B8
    1C1ED628: 1C1ED548 8000003C        1
    ---- block2  ptr=9700520  is_malloc=0  length=0x100 ----
    97004E0: FFA42200 46020000  8000000 10000000 10000000 10000000 10000000 10000000
    9700500:        0   22735A        0        1        0        0        0        0
    9700520:  5010EDC        1  6005190  6005190  97B9A6C  97014F8  9700528  6D31580
    9700540:        7    10000        1        0  5010EDC  2851E0A  2851E14  6D31568
    9700560:        0  DFDCB1E   570000  DF04B36 1FEB7948 20004E20        0       EF
    9700580:   5C6802        0        0 1BFFB1E0        0        0    18000     8000
    97005A0:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    97005C0:  9700950  9700C98       1E        E        0        E        0       27
    97005E0: 1E7C2A28        0        0        0        0        0 1F1DB18C        0
    9700600:        0        0       28        F       28       28       33  9700620
    ---- block3  ptr=CD41E1C  is_malloc=0  length=0x100 ----
    CD41DDC:      D9B        0      D9B        0      D9B        0      D9B        0
    CD41DFC:      D9B        0      E1C        0      E1C        0      E1C        0
    CD41E1C:      E1C        0      E1C        0      E1C        0      E1C        0
    CD41E3C:      E1C        0      E1C        0      E1C        0      E1C        0
    CD41E5C:      E1C        0      E1C        0      E1C        0      E1C        0
    CD41E7C:      E1C        0      E9D        0      E9D        0      E9D        0
    CD41E9C:      E9D        0      E9D        0      E9D        0      E9D        0
    CD41EBC:      E9D        0      E9D        0      E9D        0      E9D        0
    CD41EDC:      E9D        0      E9D        0      E9D        0      E9D        0
    CD41EFC:      E9D        0      F1E        0      F1E        0      F1E        0
    ---- block4  ptr=1C1ED38C  is_malloc=1  length=0x150 ----
    1C1ED34C:      100 1C1ECDAC        0 1C1ED8D8 1C1EC624      100 1C1ECDAC        0
    1C1ED36C: 1C1ED3C4 1C1EC754      100        0        0        0        0 FD0110DF
    1C1ED38C: AB1234CD FFFE0000        0  53D85F8  28866DC 1C1ED3DC 1C1ECD90 80000010
    1C1ED3AC:        1        0  1000001 1C1F0F70 6D656D6F 72790000        0 5BAF9596
    1C1ED3CC: 1C1ED368        0  6000008 FD0110DF AB1234CD FFFE0000        0  515505C
    1C1ED3EC:  2846F91 1C1ED488 1C1ED3A0 8000003E        1        0  1000001 1C1F0F70
    1C1ED40C:        0        0 1C1ED4C0 1C1EC81C 1C1ED40C  6D31580       67    D0000
    1C1ED42C:        0        0  5781DD4  2851E0A  2851E14  6D31568        0        0
    1C1ED44C:        0 1C1ED4FC 1C1ED4C0 1C1ED448  6D31580       69    D0000        0
    1C1ED46C:        0  5781DD4  2851E0A  2851E14  6D31568        0 FD0110DF AB1234CD
    1C1ED48C: FFFE0000        0  515505C  2846FA7 1C1ED534 1C1ED3F0 8000003E        1
    1C1ED4AC:        0  1000001 1C1F0F70        0        0 1C1ED450 1C1ED414 1C1ED4B8
    1C1ED4CC:  6D31580       68    D0000        0
    ---- block5  ptr=36010000  is_malloc=0  length=0x100 ----
    3600FFC0:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    3600FFE0:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    36010000:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    36010020:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    36010040:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    36010060:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    36010080:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    360100A0:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    360100C0:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    360100E0:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    ---- block6  ptr=6000000  is_malloc=0  length=0x100 ----
    5FFFFC0: 3CF63C89 E4AA954C E121426E 52D198F9 4106CC9E 889F1365 E75A7785 3FA3E8A8
    5FFFFE0: AFE382E1 35B3B2F7 86F711F7 723E31F2 62DAB426 9B1B499E 35932DAC 239EE27E
    6000000: B386527C E8CAC680 6AA06340 8E041CEC   E51836 FBA90814 5FFF6A22 2B469481
    6000020: 542CB93A 262EFF02 ED38D3D2 9933F6EB 8D9E84C6 C79AE572 700CCB69 2097F464
    6000040: 63C0AD83 503D7B00 70E1CF9B 62FA2E30 5E5E7771 E5D9EE14 B8C56714 2011CE7A
    6000060: 7E5DC339 5BB9732E 1223BFA3 5844B5CD 3AA38B2D 3117E51D 35D53CF2 26759487
    6000080: 18AABB89 9C800C78 4548DD96 E6A8833D 12C4CC64 E4567430 596306BD E3B3C21A
    60000A0: F94FD83B B4F04005 2550E677 31529D9C  5EE83FD A5DAFEB2 568B58CB 380F2902
    60000C0: 8468D893 CDBC40FE  EFD658A ED416E94 25041C27 A1FDEC4C A92E2AC9 4AA45A37
    60000E0: BBA463B1 64B8D1C2 B17727E1 54998746 9E2FD10F 4ACD721B C15B0F10 8F877B0A
    ---- block7  ptr=30000000  is_malloc=0  length=0x100 ----
    2FFFFFC0: 2AB01448  6E60026 40078400 938031C0 506000D0 1B7812E8  4B4049A  20D80DB
    2FFFFFE0: 250E540D 9C074E01 154029B0  BC0E720 EA10B42F E065A00F D01EE0BE 1E20E78D
    30000000: 8909C373 E4F136FE E08FDBFE FE228CC7 8070E025 A0C3459A 1EFFF8BA 3D5C84BA
    30000020: 78402EEC BFA59B88 7F2A9F7F AAEC5CFD 756E5D84 AEB72A42 C5C04AA0 3F70A465
    30000040: 119A0F84  2169306 46D00693 65A0458B 2FA65A9D 596BE88E A7C07627 EFF13CE9
    30000060: 1DF7338E 2C429381 11402FA0 15E033B2 48D03FCE 64F0859B 4930EA4C E40194CB
    30000080: CF44E62D BBF6CD4C 2CF476C2 7826F014 EC33B171 9010EFFD 293F4C6B 3085CD30
    300000A0: 19E2F023 82B03013 67C70B3A 18F24930  C01268C 1B218863 81AE5AEC 87B7C47E
    300000C0: 78F6A946 4B2DC0F1 FDA33509 D81C5CBC C6841F9A B9FC67E9 346EB2C4 CF64D224
    300000E0: F2D3151D 1F8CA869 349E5F9C 4937C3A2  917F891 2F379CC7 C89685BD 7AD0AFA6
    ---- block8  ptr=D000000  is_malloc=0  length=0x100 ----
    CFFFFC0:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    CFFFFE0:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    D000000:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    D000020:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    D000040:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    D000060:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    D000080:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    D0000A0:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    D0000C0:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    D0000E0:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    ---- block9  ptr=31340000  is_malloc=0  length=0x100 ----
    3133FFC0:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    3133FFE0:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    31340000:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    31340020:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    31340040:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    31340060:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    31340080:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    313400A0:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    313400C0:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    313400E0:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    ---- block10  ptr=33B5631C  is_malloc=0  length=0x100 ----
    33B562DC:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    33B562FC:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    33B5631C:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    33B5633C:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    33B5635C:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    33B5637C:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    33B5639C:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    33B563BC:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    33B563DC:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    33B563FC:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    ---- block11  ptr=3490401C  is_malloc=0  length=0x100 ----
    34903FDC:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    34903FFC:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    3490401C:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    3490403C:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    3490405C:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    3490407C:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    3490409C:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    349040BC:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    349040DC:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    349040FC:        0        0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    ---- block12  ptr=515505C  is_malloc=0  length=0x100 ----
    515501C: 6E202564 20737461 7475733D 4558545F 4E45575F 564C414E        0  A446561
    515503C: 6C6C6F63 61746520 65787420 766C616E 20256400 45787420 566C616E 20444220
    515505C: 496E6974        0 6578745F 766C616E 5F676574 5F766C61 6E5F696E 666F0000
    515507C: 564C414E 25303475        0        0        0        0        0        0
    515509C:        0  A767470 5F676574 5F747275 6E6B5F69 6E666F20 6174746D 65707465
    51550BC: 64206F6E 20747275 6E6B2030 7825782C 206E6F74 20666F75 6E642069 6E207472
    51550DC: 756E6B20 6C697374        0        0        0        0        0        0
    51550FC:        0  A767470 5F766C61 6E5F6368 616E6765 5F6E6F74 69666963 6174696F
    515511C: 6E3A204D 4F444946 49454420 564C414E 20282564 2920444F 45534E27 54204558
    515513C: 49535421 21210000        0        0        0        0        0        0
    ---- block13  ptr=1C1F0F70  is_malloc=0  length=0x100 ----
    1C1F0F30: 1C1F0F0C 1C1EE5E0        0        0        0        0        0        0
    1C1F0F50:        0        0        0        0 15A3C78B        1  288C988 1C1EE8B8
    1C1F0F70:        0  1000001 1C1F25ED      301  2861A94        0  1000000        0
    1C1F0F90: 1C1F0F28 1C1F0F70 1C1EE5E0        0        0        0        0        0
    1C1F0FB0:        0        0        0        0        0        0 FD0110DF AB1234CD
    1C1F0FD0: FFFE0000       

  • EEM And Tcl scripts

    Hi
    Please teach me. How to implementation EEM.
    I want use EEM this situation.
    When gi1/1 detect down EEM scripts enable.
    In case gi1/1 is up  within 3 seconds then finish the EEM scripts.
    Another case gi1/1 down time is over 3 seconds, Then shutdown gi1/2 and gi1/3.
    IOS version 12.2(46)SG.

    You have a tight time margin here, but these EEM applet policies should work:
    event manager environment quote "event manager applet int-down event syslog pattern "LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN.*GigabitEthernet1/1.*changed state to down" action 1.0 cli command "enable" action 2.0 cli command "config t" action 3.0 cli command "event manager applet int-down-countdown" action 3.1 cli command "event timer countdown time 3" action 3.2 cli command "action 1.0 cli command enable" action 3.3 cli command "action 2.0 cli command $quote config t$quote" action 3.4 cli command "action 3.0 cli command $quote int gi1/2$quote" action 3.5 cli command "action 4.0 cli command $quote shutdown$quote" action 3.6 cli command "action 5.0 cli command $quote int gi1/3$quote" action 3.7 cli command "action 6.0 cli command $quote shutdown$quote" action 3.8 cli command "action 7.0 cli command $quote no event manager applet int-down-countdown$quote" action 3.9 cli command "action 8.0 cli command $quote end$quote" action 4.0 cli command "end"event manager applet int-up event syslog pattern "LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN.*GigabitEthernet1/1.*changed state to up" action 1.0 cli command "enable" action 2.0 cli command "config t" action 3.0 cli command "no event manager applet int-down-countdown" action 4.0 cli command "end"

  • EEM OSPF syslog

    hi all,
    I'm using EEM to be warn by mail when my OSPF adj changes ; I use OSPF in tunel int, so I can know when tunnel is down/up.
    My script works well but sometimes I do not receive any mail whereas adj changes, so I can receive mail with "up" whereas I did not receive "down".
    I ask me if there is no rate-limiter on syslog msg that could explain my issue. what else ? if you have an idea, I'm interested.
    Other problem in my case, when my Internet access falls down, I receive tons of mail (one by tunnel interface ; I have 50 int tunnel !)... so I would like to improve my script to detect internet issue and in that case send only a mail to tell me : no internet. Same when Internet is back.
    my script :
    event manager environment mail_smtp aaa.bbb.ccc.ddd.eee
    event manager environment mail_to [email protected]
    event manager applet OSPFtunnelDOWN
       event syslog pattern "OSPF-5-ADJCHG.*FULL to DOWN"
       action 100 info type routername
       action 110 regexp "on ([_0-9a-zA-Z]*) from" "$_syslog_msg" result nominterface
       action 120 cli command "show interface $nominterface"
       action 130 regexp "Description: ([a-zA-Z0-9\-]+)" "$_cli_result" result site
       action 200 mail server "$mail_smtp" to "$mail_to" from "$[email protected]" subject "down : $site" body "down $site"
    event manager applet OSPFtunnelUP
       event syslog pattern "OSPF-5-ADJCHG.*to FULL"
       action 100 info type routername
       action 110 regexp "on ([_0-9a-zA-Z]*) from" "$_syslog_msg" result nominterface
       action 120 cli command "show interface $nominterface"
       action 130 regexp "Description: ([a-zA-Z0-9\-]+)" "$_cli_result" result site
       action 200 mail server "$mail_smtp" to "$mail_to" from "$[email protected]" subject "up : $site" body "up $site"
    help is welcome
    thanks
    Niko

    hmm maybe I found the problem but don't know how to solve it to work with monitoring :
    sometimes there is no "full to down"
    I added a "debug ip ospf adj"
    1) when I shut tunnel int on other side :
    Apr  4 09:19:48.618: %LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN: Line protocol on Interface Tunnel16, changed state to down
    Apr  4 09:19:48.618: fh_fd_syslog_event_match: num_matches = 0
    Apr  4 09:19:48.618: fh_fd_data_syslog: num_matches = 0
    Apr  4 09:19:48.622: OSPF: Interface Tunnel16 going Down
    Apr  4 09:19:48.622: OSPF: 27.2.0.1 address 0.0.0.0 on Tunnel16 is dead, state DOWN
    Apr  4 09:19:48.622: OSPF: 23.2.0.1 address 192.168.23.68 on Tunnel16 is dead, state DOWN
    Apr  4 09:19:48.622: %OSPF-5-ADJCHG: Process 1, Nbr 23.2.0.1 on Tunnel16 from FULL to DOWN, Neighbor Down: Interface down or detached
    Apr  4 09:20:05.314: %OSPF-5-ADJCHG: Process 1, Nbr 23.2.0.1 on Tunnel16 from LOADING to FULL, Loading Done
    2) when I do "clear ip ospf proc" on other side :
    Apr  4 09:21:13.066: OSPF: Cannot see ourself in hello from 23.2.0.1 on Tunnel16, state INIT
    Apr  4 09:21:13.066: fh_fd_syslog_event_match: num_matches = 0
    Apr  4 09:21:13.066: fh_fd_data_syslog: num_matches = 0
    Apr  4 09:21:13.098: OSPF: 2 Way Communication to 23.2.0.1 on Tunnel16, state 2WAY
    Apr  4 09:21:13.098: OSPF: Tunnel16 Nbr 23.2.0.1: Prepare dbase exchange
    Apr  4 09:21:13.098: OSPF: Send DBD to 23.2.0.1 on Tunnel16 seq 0x1379 opt 0x52 flag 0x7 len 32
    Apr  4 09:21:13.098: OSPF: Rcv DBD from 23.2.0.1 on Tunnel16 seq 0x153E opt 0x52 flag 0x7 len 32  mtu 1427 state EXSTART
    Apr  4 09:21:13.359: %OSPF-5-ADJCHG: Process 1, Nbr 23.2.0.1 on Tunnel16 from LOADING to FULL, Loading Done
    so any idea how to improve my script to be ok with my mail ?
    Thanks
    Niko
    PS : I detected also several : "OSPF: Nbr 23.2.0.1 has larger interface MTU", can you tell me if it's important or not ? other than that all works well

  • How to move huge HD video files between external hard drives and defrag ext drive?

    I have huge high definition video files on a 2TB external hard drive (and its clone).  The external hard drive is maxed out.  I would like to move many of the video files to a new 3TB external hard drive (G-drive, and a clone) and leave a sub-group of video files (1+ TB) on the original external hard drive (and its clone).  
    I am copying files from original external drive ("ext drive A") to new external drive ("ext drive B") via Carbon Copy Cloner (selecting iMovie event by event that I want to transfer). Just a note: I do not know how to partition or make bootable drives, I see suggestions with these steps in them.
    My questions:
    1.)  I assume this transfer of files will create extreme fragmentation on drive A.  Should I reformat/re-initialize ext drive A after moving the files I want?  If so, how best to do this?  Do I use "Erase" within Disk Utilities?  Do I need to do anything else before transfering files back onto ext drive A from its clone?
    2.) Do I also need to defrag if I reformat ext drive A? Do I defrag instead of or in addition to reformating?  If so, how to do this? I've read on these forums so many warnings and heard too many stories of this going awry.  Which 3rd party software to use? 
    Thank you in advance for any suggestions, tips, advice.  This whole process makes me SO nervous.

    Here is a very good writeup on de-fragging in the OS environment that I borrowed
    From Klaus1:
    Defragmentation in OS X:
    http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1375  which states:
    You probably won't need to optimize at all if you use Mac OS X. Here's why:
    Hard disk capacity is generally much greater now than a few years ago. With more free space available, the file system doesn't need to fill up every "nook and cranny." Mac OS Extended formatting (HFS Plus) avoids reusing space from deleted files as much as possible, to avoid prematurely filling small areas of recently-freed space.
    Mac OS X 10.2 and later includes delayed allocation for Mac OS X Extended-formatted volumes. This allows a number of small allocations to be combined into a single large allocation in one area of the disk.
    Fragmentation was often caused by continually appending data to existing files, especially with resource forks. With faster hard drives and better caching, as well as the new application packaging format, many applications simply rewrite the entire file each time. Mac OS X 10.3 onwards can also automatically defragment such slow-growing files. This process is sometimes known as "Hot-File-Adaptive-Clustering."
    Aggressive read-ahead and write-behind caching means that minor fragmentation has less effect on perceived system performance.
    Whilst 'defragging' OS X is rarely necessary, Rod Hagen has produced this excellent analysis of the situation which is worth reading:
    Most users, as long as they leave plenty of free space available , and don't work regularly in situations where very large files are written and rewritten, are unlikely to notice the effects of fragmentation on either their files or on the drives free space much.
    As the drive fills the situations becomes progressively more significant, however.
    Some people will tell you that "OSX defrags your files anyway". This is only partly true. It defrags files that are less than 20 MB in size. It doesn't defrag larger files and it doesn't defrag the free space on the drive. In fact the method it uses to defrag the smaller files actually increases the extent of free space fragmentation. Eventually, in fact, once the largest free space fragments are down to less than 20 MB (not uncommon on a drive that has , say only 10% free space left) it begins to give up trying to defrag altogether. Despite this, the system copes very well without defragging as long as you have plenty of room.
    Again, this doesn't matter much when the drive is half empty or better, but it does when it gets fullish, and it does especially when it gets fullish if you are regularly dealing with large files , like video or serious audio stuff.
    If you look through this discussion board you will see quite a few complaints from people who find that their drive gets "slow". Often you will see that say that "still have 10 or 20 gigs free" or the like. On modern large drives by this stage they are usually in fact down to the point where the internal defragmentation routines can no longer operate , where their drives are working like navvies to keep up with finding space for any larger files, together with room for "scratch files", virtual memory, directories etc etc etc. Such users are operating in a zone where they put a lot more stress on their drives as a result, often start complaining of increased "heat", etc etc. Most obviously, though, the computer slows down to a speed not much better than that of molasses. Eventually the directories and other related files may collapse altogether and they find themselves with a next to unrecoverable disk problems.
    By this time, of course, defragging itself has already become just about impossible. The amount of work required to shift the data into contiguous blocks is immense, puts additional stress on the drive, takes forever, etc etc. The extent of fragmentation of free space at this stage can be simply staggering, and any large files you subsequently write are likely to be divided into many , many tens of thousands of fragments scattered across the drive. Not only this, but things like the "extents files", which record where all the bits are located, will begin to grow astronomically as a result, putting even more pressure on your already stressed drive, and increasing the risk of major failures.
    Ultimately this adds up to a situation where you can identify maybe three "phases" of mac life when it comes to the need for defragmentation.
    In the "first phase" (with your drive less than half full), it doesn't matter much at all - probably not enough to even make it worth doing.
    In the "second phase" (between , say 50% free space and 20% free space remaining) it becomes progressively more useful, but , depending on the use you put your computer to you won't see much difference at the higher levels of free space unless you are serious video buff who needs to keep their drives operating as efficiently and fast as possible - chances are they will be using fast external drives over FW800 or eSata to compliment their internal HD anyway.
    At the lower end though (when boot drives get down around the 20% mark on , say, a 250 or 500 Gig drive) I certainly begin to see an impact on performance and stability when working with large image files, mapping software, and the like, especially those which rely on the use of their own "scratch" files, and especially in situations where I am using multiple applications simultaneously, if I haven't defragmented the drive for a while. For me, defragmenting (I use iDefrag too - it is the only third party app I trust for this after seeing people with problems using TechToolPro and Drive Genius for such things) gives a substantial performance boost in this sort of situation and improves operational stability. I usually try to get in first these days and defrag more regularly (about once a month) when the drive is down to 30% free space or lower.
    Between 20% and 10% free space is a bit of a "doubtful region". Most people will still be able to defrag successfully in this sort of area, though the time taken and the risks associated increase as the free space declines. My own advice to people in this sort of area is that they start choosing their new , bigger HD, because they obviously are going to need one very soon, and try to "clear the decks" so that they maintain that 20% free buffer until they do. Defragging regularly (perhaps even once a fortnight) will actually benefit them substantially during this "phase", but maybe doing so will lull them into a false sense of security and keep them from seriously recognising that they need to be moving to a bigger HD!
    Once they are down to that last ten per cent of free space, though, they are treading on glass. Free space fragmentation at least will already be a serious issue on their computers but if they try to defrag with a utility without first making substantially more space available then they may find it runs into problems or is so slow that they give up half way through and do the damage themselves, especially if they are using one of the less "forgiving" utilities!
    In this case I think the best way to proceed is to clone the internal drive to a larger external with SuperDuper, replace the internal drive with a larger one and then clone back to it. No-one down to the last ten percent of their drive really has enough room to move. Defragging it will certainly speed it up, and may even save them from major problems briefly, but we all know that before too long they are going to be in the same situation again. Better to deal with the matter properly and replace the drive with something more akin to their real needs once this point is reached. Heck, big HDs are as cheap as chips these days! It is mad to struggle on with sluggish performance, instability, and the possible risk of losing the lot, in such a situation.

  • Ipfw, iTunes and syslog

    Hi,
    I've added my own ipfw rules, but now I can't get Apple Remote (from iPhone) to work. It reports that it cannot connect because there are some firewall rules (sic!).
    I've enabled iTunes'es listening port (3869), allowed anything to 244.0.0.0/4 to go in, and allowed traffic going to 255.255.255.255:9. Unfortunately, still nothing...
    Also, I can't get ipfw to log into /var/log/ipfw.log. I've tried:
    ipfw.* /var/log/ipfw.log
    in /etc/syslog.conf, but it doesn't work.
    Any hints?

    Tim Haigh wrote:
    Did remote login work prior to setting up IPFW rules?
    It is not Apple Remote Login, I'm talking about Apple Remote (you know, that useful app for iPhone/iPod, which lets you control iTunes on your laptop).
    ipfw.* /var/log/ipfw.log
    It does not follow the correct synstax "ipfw.*" is not a command.
    It does. As I stated in my email, it is a line from /etc/syslog.conf, not a command line for the Terminal.
    If you want to look at your IPFW logs use the command
    tail -f /var/log/ipfw.log
    It always shows an empty file.
    It would be a good idea you use an application such as water roof to configure the IPFW firewall.
    Tried, there is no button/option which says - enable iTunes Remote :/
    Cheers,
    Nikola

  • EEM and TcL Script to Disable Inactive Ports

    I've browsed around to the other  support strings to make sure I didn't miss anything, but I can't seem to  get this to work.  I have the latest sl_suspend_ports.tcl and  tm_suspend_ports.tcl created by Joseph Clarke from strings that verified they worked as planned.   Here are the commands I issued to register the scripts -
    Directory of flash:/policies/
        9  -rwx        3101   May 3 2013 07:58:03 +00:00  sl_suspend_ports.tcl
       10  -rwx        4669   May 3 2013 07:58:44 +00:00  tm_suspend_ports.tcl
    conf t
    event manager directory user policy flash:/policies
    event manager policy sl_suspend_ports.tcl
    event manager environment suspend_ports_days 1
    event manager environment suspend_ports_config flash:/susp_ports.dat
    event manager policy tm_suspend_ports.tcl
    #show run | inc event manager environment
    event manager environment suspend_ports_days 1
    event manager environment suspend_ports_config flash:/susp_ports.dat
    It doesn't appear to work though.  Essentially, we have a  need to make sure all computers are always on and all ports not active  for >24 hours to be shutdown and moved to a designated vlan (I added  the 'lappend' statement to the script to specify the additional command of assigning the vlan)
    I'm running 12.2(55)SE7 on Catalyst 3560s and 3750s
    Is there a way to manually run the script?  Did I miss anything in the configuration?
    Thanks for your help!
    Chris

    SUCCESS!  AWESOME!
    I added one more line to the lappend statements to add a description with the time stamp, here's what happened -
    Port      Name               Status       Vlan       Duplex  Speed Type
    Fa0/2     Disable by Inactiv disabled     666          auto   auto 10/100BaseTX
    Fa0/3     Disable by Inactiv disabled     666          auto   auto 10/100BaseTX
    Fa0/4     Disable by Inactiv disabled     666          auto   auto 10/100BaseTX
    Fa0/5     Disable by Inactiv disabled     666          auto   auto 10/100BaseTX
    Fa0/6     Disable by Inactiv disabled     666          auto   auto 10/100BaseTX
    Fa0/7     Disable by Inactiv disabled     666          auto   auto 10/100BaseTX
    Fa0/8     Disable by Inactiv disabled     666          auto   auto 10/100BaseTX
    Fa0/9     Disable by Inactiv disabled     666          auto   auto 10/100BaseTX
    Fa0/10    Disable by Inactiv disabled     666          auto   auto 10/100BaseTX
    #sh run int fa0/2
    Building configuration...
    Current configuration : 408 bytes
    interface FastEthernet0/2
    description Disable by Inactivity Script last used on Tue May 14 04:32:10 ZULU 2013
    switchport access vlan 666
    shutdown
    end
    So to recap for any future folks that stumble upon this thread and want to use this method. 
    1. Create a TACACS service account or use a TACACS/RADIUS account that has a high enough privilege to edit the config.
    2. Create a "policies" directory on flash and copy the attached scripts to it.
    3. Register the scripts using the following commands -
    #conf t
    (config)#event manager directory user policy flash:/policies
    (config)#event manager policy sl_suspend_ports.tcl
    (config)#event manager environment suspend_ports_days 1    "<--Or the number of days inactive you choose"
    (config)#event manager environment suspend_ports_config flash:/susp_ports.dat
    (config)#event manager policy tm_suspend_ports.tcl
    (config)#event manager session cli username "svc.eemscript"  "<---The account you created to run in step 1"
    The output of "show event manager policy registered" should then show the following -
    #show event manager policy registered
    No.  Class     Type    Event Type          Trap  Time Registered           Secu  Name
    1    script    user    syslog              Off   Fri May 3 10:20:26 2013   2048  sl_suspend_ports.tcl
    pattern {LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN}
    nice 0 queue-priority normal maxrun 600.000 scheduler rp_primary
    2    script    user    timer cron          Off   Tue May 14 05:25:42 2013  2048  tm_suspend_ports.tcl
    cron entry {0 0 * * *}
    nice 0 queue-priority normal maxrun 600.000 scheduler rp_primary
    NOTE: On lines 140-145 of the tm_suspend_ports.tcl file, you can edit the commands you want the script to execute to your liking.  I have it adding a description as seen in the above output and moving to an isolated non-routable VLAN of my network.
    Thanks Joe Clarke for the awesome script and assistance in getting it running!

  • WLC and syslog broadcast from AP

    Hello,
    my wlc analyzer keep on informing me about syslog messages sent in broadcast from my APs.
    how can I solve this problem?
    thanks
    Johnny

    by default, the LAPs send log infos to the broadcast address, 255.255.255.255. you should set this to your syslog-server, so that can be unicasted.
    config ap syslog host global 1.2.3.4
    otherwise your LAP-network will be flooded with broadcasts if something odd happens.
    see also "Wireless LAN Controller (WLC) Configuration Best Practices" for details on this hint and other things that you possibly "should set".

  • EEM and TCL Interface

    Hi.
    I need help. How to implementation EEM.
    I want use EEM this situation.
    If the syslogmessage "Interface.., changed state to down" comes than the Router should Reload.
    IOS 12.4(15)T8/T12
    Sry for my bad english

    This policy should work for you.
    event manager applet syslog-reload event syslog pattern "LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN.*changed state to down" action 1.0 reload
    You may want to get a bit more specific as to which interface triggers this, though.  For example:
    event manager applet syslog-reload event syslog pattern "LINEPROTO-5-UPDOWN.*Interface GigabitEthernet0/1, changed state to down" action 1.0 reload

  • EEM / Tcl Syslog Generator

    Hello Community,
    Can someone please show me how compile either an EEM or Tcl Script that when run will generate a syslog event of my choosing. For example, I might want to generate the following syslog %bgp-5-adjacency. I know I can easily generate by shutting down the an interface on a router with BGP configured but I would like generate any syslog event.
    Cheers
    Carlton

    Hi Joseph,
    These are files in flash. I've called the one you provide syslogbgp.tcl
    Directory of flash:/
        1  -rw-         151                      sysloggenIntDownv2.tcl
        2  -rw-          81                      bgplogbgp.tcl
        3  -rw-          81                      syslogbgp.tcl
    When I run the following nothing happens:
    tclsh flash:syslogbgp.tcl
    Is there something simple that I'm missing?
    Cheers

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