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Intel Server Board N440BX (BOXN440BX815881) Motherboard

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1. O O O as nio Ri E O O RI Ol J5B1 00 gt 1 3 O 5 o Bo e O 0 BE el E sB AIS i OM08097 Figure 18 Jumper Locations Table 32 Server Board Jumper Summary Jumper Block What it does at system reset A BMC Forced Update Mode B Chassis Intrusion Detection C FRB Timer Enable D Boot Block Write Protect E Recovery Boot Pins default in bold 9 10 Normal 10 11 Program 5 6 Enable 6 7 Disable 1 2 Enable 2 3 Disable 13 14 Protect 14 15 Erase Program 9 10 Normal 10 11 Recovery System boots normally System tries to update BMC firmware Switch installed on chassis indicates when cover has been removed Chassis intrusion switch is bypassed FRB operation is enabled system boots from processor 1 if processor 0 fails FRB is disabled BIOS boot block is write protected BIOS boot block is erasable and programmable System attempts to boot using the BIOS stored in flash memory BIOS attempts a recovery boot loading BIOS code from a fl
2. Dr Do o de ge i AE OM07056 Figure 3 Server Board Screw Hole Locations Installing the Server Board 1 2 3 Se Observe the safety and ESD precautions at the beginning of this chapter If available place the EMI gasket over the I O connectors on the system board Insert screws through the mounting holes and into the threaded standoffs Make sure the board is properly seated and then tighten all the screws firmly 6 0 inch pounds Connect all internal cables to the system board Reinstall add in boards Connect all internal cables to add in boards Make sure you connect the power cables to the correct power connectors Connect all peripheral device cables to the I O panel on the rear of the system Run the SSU to configure the system 23 Memory Installing DIMMs Jh CAUTIONS Use extreme care when installing a DIMM Applying too much pressure can damage the socket DIMMs are keyed and can be inserted in only one way Mixing dissimilar metals may cause later memory failures resulting in data corruption Install DIMMs with gold plated edge connectors
3. A B CDE FG H FF E O EE DD cc a BB e o Ax AR H C4 Z l Y xX a M Pri Sec N a HO P o gq w v U T S R OM06957 Figure 2 Server Board Connector and Component Locations Secondary processor connector Primary processor connector Processor Heatsink fan connectors Aux power connector ATX power connector Diskette drive connector Main power connector Hard drive LED connector Front panel connector 16 pin Speaker connector AT front panel connector Lithium backup battery System fan connector fan1 IDE connectors primary and secondary External IMB connector Configuration jumper blocks NXxK BS CHMDO 0 Dm D OD gt mm OO DS System fan connector fan2 Server monitor module SMM connector Narrow SCSI connector Wide SCSI connector Memory sockets for four DIMM components PCI slots for add in boards ISA slots for add in boards Chassis intrusion connector Wake on LANT enable jumper USB header RJ 45 network connector Serial port 2 header VGA monitor port Parallel port connector Serial port 1 connector Keyboard and Mouse PS 2 compatible connectors 11 Processor Each Pentium II processor is packaged in a Single Edge Contact S E C cartridge The cartridge includes the processor core with an integrated 16 K
4. 32K interlaced 32K 32K 32K 32K 32K 16 256K interlaced 256 256K interlaced 256 256K 256 256K 256 256K 32K 32K 32K 32K 16M 16M 16M 16M 16M Resolution 800 X 600 800 X 600 640 X 480 640 X 480 640 X 480 640 X 480 640 X 480 800 X 600 800 X 600 800 X 600 800 X 600 800 X 600 800 X 600 1024 X 768 1024 X 768 1024 X 768 1024 X 768 1024 X 768 1024 X 768 1280 X 1024 1280 X 1024 1280 X 1024 1280 X 1024 1280 X 1024 1152 X 864 1152 X 864 1152 X 864 1152 X 864 640 X 480 640 X 480 640 X 480 640 X 480 640 X 480 Pixel Freq MHz 56 25 68 2 25 31 5 31 5 36 43 2 36 40 50 49 5 56 25 68 2 44 9 65 75 78 7 94 5 113 3 75 75 108 135 157 5 94 5 108 121 5 143 5 25 31 5 31 5 36 43 2 Horiz Freq kHz 53 7 63 6 31 5 37 9 37 5 43 3 50 9 35 2 37 8 48 1 46 9 53 7 63 6 35 5 48 3 56 60 68 3 81 4 48 48 65 80 91 63 9 67 5 76 7 91 5 31 5 37 9 37 5 43 3 50 9 Vert Freq Hz 85 100 60 72 75 85 100 56 60 72 75 85 100 43 60 70 75 85 100 43 43 60 75 85 70 75 85 100 60 72 75 85 100 Min Memory 1MB 1MB 1MB 1MB 1MB 1MB 1MB 1MB 1MB 1MB 1MB 1MB 1MB 2MB 2MB 2MB 2MB 2MB 2MB 1MB 2MB 2MB 2MB 2MB 2MB 2MB 2MB 2MB 1MB 1MB 1MB 1MB 1MB continued Technical Reference Table 35 Mode s in Hex 74 74 74 74 74 74 78 78 78 78 78 78 7B 7B ZC ZC ZC
5. 7 RTS Return to send 8 CTS Clear to send 9 RIA Ring indication active Table 25 Serial Port B Internal Header Pinout Pin Signal Description 1 DCD Data carrier detected 2 DSR Data set ready 3 RXD Receive data 4 RTS Return to send 5 TXD Transmit data 6 CTS Clear to send 7 DTR Data terminal ready 8 RIA Ring indication active 9 GND Ground 10 NC No connect 101 RJ 45 Network Table 26 RJ 45 Network Connector Pinout Pin Signal Description 1 TX Transmit data plus the positive signal for the TD differential pair contains the serial output data stream transmitted onto the network 2 TX Transmit data minus the negative signal for the TD differential pair contains the same output as pin 1 3 RX Receive data plus the positive signal for the RD differential pair contains the serial input data stream received from the network NC NC 6 RX Receive data minus the negative signal for the RD differential pair contains the same input as pin 3 NC NC 102 Technical Reference Narrow SCSI Table 27 Narrow SCSI Connector Pinout H 5 DJ OA fw M Signal GND SCDO_L GND SCD1_L GND SCD2_L GND SCD3_L GND SCD4_L GND SCD5_L GND SCD6_L GND SCD7_L GND SCDP_L GND GND GND GND RESERVED RESERVED NC Pin 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 Signal TERMPWR RESERVED RESERVED GND GND GND SATN_L GND GND GND SBSY_L GND SACK_L GN
6. Default configuration used continued Solving Problems Table 10 POST Error Codes and Messages continued Code 0260 0270 0297 02B2 02B3 02D0 02F5 02F6 0401 None 0403 0404 0405 0406 0504 0505 0506 0601 0602 8100 8101 8104 8105 8106 8107 8108 810A 810B 810C 810D 810E 810F 8110 8120 8150 8151 8152 Error message System timer error Real time clock error ECC Memory error in base extended memory test in Bank xx Incorrect Drive A type run SETUP Incorrect Drive B type run SETUP System cache error Cache disabled DMA Test Failed Software NMI Failed Invalid System Configuration Data run configuration utility System Configuration Data Read Error Resource Conflict Resource Conflict Expansion ROM not initialized Warning IRQ not configured Resource Conflict Expansion ROM not initialized Warning IRQ not configured Device configuration changed Configuration error device disabled Processor 0 failed BIST Processor 1 failed BIST Processor 0 Internal Error IERR failure Processor 1 Internal Error IERR failure Processor 0 Thermal Trip failure Processor 1 Thermal Trip failure Watchdog Timer failed on last boot BSP switched Processor 1 failed initialization on last boot Processor 0 failed initialization on last boot Processor 0 disabled system in Uni processor mode Processor 1 disabled system in Uni processor mode Processor 0 failed FRB Level 3 timer Processor 1 failed FR
7. UUUUUUOU O a Are all cables correctly connected and secured Are the processors fully seated in their slots on the system board Are all add in ISA and PCI boards fully seated in their slots on the system board Are all switch and jumper settings on the system board correct Are all jumper and switch settings on add in boards and peripheral devices correct To check these settings refer to the manufacturer s documentation that comes with them If applicable ensure that there are no conflicts for example two add in boards sharing the same interrupt Are all SDRAM DIMMs installed correctly Are all peripheral devices installed correctly If the system has a hard disk drive is it properly formatted or configured Are all device drivers properly installed Are the configuration settings made with the SSU correct Is the operating system properly loaded Refer to the operating system documentation Did you press the system power on off switch on the front panel to turn the server on power on light should be lit Is the system power cord properly connected to the system and plugged into a NEMA 5 15R outlet for 100 120 V or a NEMA 6 15R outlet for 200 240 V Is AC power available at the wall outlet If these items are correct but the problem recurs see More Problem solving Procedures on page 81 Running New Application Software Problems that occur when you run new application software are usually related to
8. 20 utilities BIOS update 33 Emergency Management Port Console 56 Firmware update 33 78 FRUSDR load 33 FRUSDR load utility 69 SCSI 33 SCU 33 Setup 33 35 135 136 V VGA monitor connector 100 video blanking for security 20 controller 15 expansion 15 extended VGA modes 116 memory 9 resolutions supported 15 video controller 9 video memory 15 W Warning components may be hot 25 dispose of lithium battery safely 29 ESD can damage product 21 worksheet calculating DC power usage 128 write protect boot block jumper 111 write to diskette disabling 20 Information for Computer Integrators
9. Black Black Black Orange Orange Yellow Orange Yellow Yellow Technical Reference Auxiliary Power non ATX Connector Table 13 Auxiliary Power Connector Pinout Pin DJ OA fw M o 10 11 12 13 14 Signal 5V Remote sense return 5 V remote sense 3 3 V remote sense 3 3V remote sense return Not connected Not connected GND POWER_GOOD PS_ON COM 5 VSB Key Not connected COM Diskette Drive Table 14 Diskette Drive Connector Pinout ON oaoa oh y 5 a N OO P Go Mi O Signal GND FD_DENSEL GND N C Key FD_DRATEO GND FD_INDEX_L GND FD_MTRO_L GND FD_DR1_L GND FD_DRO_L GND FD_MTR1_L FD_MSEN1 Wire color Black Red Orange Black none none Black Gray Green Black Purple None None Black Pin Signal 18 FD_DIR_L 19 GND 20 FD_STEP_L 21 GND 22 FD_WDATA_L 23 GND 24 FD_WGATE_L 25 GND 26 FD_TRKO_L 27 FD_MSENO 28 FD_WPROT_L 29 GND 30 FD_RDATA_L 31 GND 32 FD_HDSEL_L 33 GND 34 FD_DSKCHG_L 97 Front Panel Connector Table 15 Front Panel Connector Pinout Pin Now 9 11 13 15 Signal GND Front panel reset switch 5V Front panel NMI switch Fan failure indicator LED Power fault LED DC Data line AT Style Front Panel Connector Table 16 AT Style Front Panel Connector Pinout Pin 0 0 d OO fF WD OH Signal Power button GND 5V Key HD LED 5V 5V NC GND GND Fan Interface Th
10. Delayed Transaction Passive Release Choices Enabled Disabled Enabled Disabled Enabled Disabled Description Enabled forwards ISA Master and DMA cycles to the PCI bus Disabled forwards these cycles to memory Enables the delayed transaction mechanism when the PIIX4 is the target of a PCI transaction Enables the passive release mechanism on the PHOLD signal when the PIIX4 is a PCI Master Configuration Software Utilities Security Menu You can make the following selections on the Security Menu itself Enabling the Supervisor Password field requires a password for entering Setup The passwords are not case sensitive Feature User Password is Administrator Password is Set User Password Set Administrator Password Password on Boot Diskette Access Fixed Disk Boot Sector Secure Mode Timer Secure Mode Hot Key Ctrl Alt Secure Mode Boot Video Blanking Floppy Write Protect Front Panel Lockout Choices Clear Set Clear Set Press Enter Press Enter Disabled Enabled Administrator User Normal Write Protect Disabled 1 min 2 min 5 min 10 min 20 min 1 hr 2 hr A B Z Disabled Enabled Disabled Enabled Disabled Enabled Disabled Enabled Description Status only user cannot modify Once set this can be disabled by setting it to a null string or by clearing password jumper on system board Status only user cannot modify W
11. PCI Configuration menu 41 PCI Device Embedded SCSI menu contents 41 42 PCI Device Slot 1 Slot 4 menu 41 primary IDE master and slave menu 39 recording settings 35 security menu contents 43 Server Management Information menu contents 45 server menu contents 44 summary main menus 36 soft boot 79 SSU See system setup utility switches alarm 18 DC power 79 locking reset and power on off Setup 20 reset 79 system board boot block protect jumper 111 chassis intrusion detection jumper 112 CMOS settings jumper 110 component locations figure 11 configuration jumpers 108 109 configurations 108 diskette drive connector 97 fan connectors 98 form factor 9 FRB timer enable jumper 112 front panel connector 98 installing 23 ISA connector 106 network RJ45 port 102 parallel port 101 password jumper 110 PCI connectors 107 recovery boot settings jumper 110 removing 22 serial ports 101 Server Management Module connector 99 video port connector 100 System Configuration Utility See SCU System setup utility CFG files 48 customizing 51 defining an ISA card 52 exiting 55 launching a task 51 location 48 removing an ISA card 53 running 50 locally 49 remotely 49 SCI files 48 when to run 48 T U termination board removing 27 timer keyboard or mouse inactive 17 lockout inactivity setting in SCU 17 upgrade Flash utility 75 user password 18 limit access to using system
12. or Class B for residential signifies compliance with electromagnetic interference requirements In Canada A nationally recognized certification mark such as CSA or cUL signifies compliance with safety requirements No regulatory assessment is necessary for low voltage DC wiring used internally or wiring used externally when provided with appropriate overcurrent protection Appropriate protection is provided by a maximum 8 A mp current limiting circuit or a maximum approved 5 Amp fuse or positive temperature coefficient PTC resistor This server board has PTCs on all external ports that provide DC power externally Prevent Power Supply Overload Do not overload the power supply output To avoid overloading the power supply make sure that the calculated total current load of all the modules within the computer is less than the maximum output current rating of the power supply If you do not do this the power supply may overheat catch fire or damage the insulation that separates hazardous AC line circuitry from low voltage user accessible circuitry and result in a shock hazard If the load drawn by a module cannot be determined by the markings and instructions supplied with the module contact the module supplier s technical support 122 Information for Computer Integrators Place Battery Marking on Computer There is insufficient space on this server board to provide instructions for replacing and disposing of the battery The following w
13. 1 to slot 4 lt gt NOTE Do not mix registered and unbuffered memory Non ECC memory maybe installed but is not recommended Mixing Non ECC memory and ECC memory causes all ECC features to be disabled Dual address strobe RAS signals are provided for each DIMM When single banked DIMMs are used one of the RAS lines is connected to both 36 bit halves of the DIMM When double banked DIMMs are used known as Dual RAS both RAS lines are connected to two 36 bit quarters of the DIMM 12 System Description System memory begins at address 0 and is continuous flat addressing up to the maximum amount of DRAM installed exception system memory is noncontiguous in the ranges defined as memory holes using configuration registers The system supports both base conventional and extended memory e Base memory is located at addresses 00000h to 9FFFFh the first 640 KB e Extended memory begins at address 0100000h 1 MB and extends to FFFFFFFFh 4 GB the limit of addressable memory The top of physical memory is a maximum of 1 GB to 3FFFFFFFh Some operating systems and application programs use base memory for example MS DOST OS 2t and UNIXT Other operating systems use both conventional and extended memory for example OS 2 and UNIX MS DOS does not use extended memory however some MS DOS utility programs such as RAM disks disk caches print spoolers and windowing environments use extended memory for better per
14. 17 Server Manage Md a 17 Server Board Management Controller BMC 0ooooccccccnnncccccccncccnnnnonancnnnnnnnnnarccnnnnnannnns 17 SEELEN e ee O din 18 Security with Mechanical Locks and Monitoring 18 SOMWANRC LOCKS ea 18 2 Upgrading Tools and Supplies Needed su anar 21 Warnings and Cautions 120 aes kere oes is an eh ate Deene 21 Server Board EE 22 Removing the Server te EE 22 Installing the Server BOO EE 23 MEO y onia an ath e dE Eege 24 Installing RUE 24 Removing DIMMS coa 25 POCOS Shoga a A 25 Removing a Processor EE 26 Installing a Mee 27 Replacing the Back up Bate Vitis baaa 29 3 Configuration Software and Utilities ele d AEAEE E E E EE N od 33 Power on Self Test POS Tira de In lee nl 34 WSING BOSS e o bd 35 Record Your Setup Settings iii tte duacalaadaieyleiaealeee a eeiectieees 35 It Yo Cannot ACCESS SetuP ar iire e 35 A EE ENEE 36 Setup Meng cuina di 36 Main ISU ee cease cee ccc ei ec 38 eet REENEN 40 Sec rity INS iaa A Aa 43 A O Pale erage aah 2s 44 Boot Melisa iaa ade 46 Exit BAC EE 47 Using the System Setup Utilities aici dead tea atrapada 48 When to Run the System Setup Utility wind cleveebvecehy d et 48 What You Need to RE 49 Running Ne SSU viciosa ae 49 C stomizing the SU nan acia 51 taunchingia Tas cial 51 Resource Configuration Add in RCA Wimdow 52 MUNDO Ee ee EL EE 54 Security Add in EE 54 SEL Viewer Add in cdas 55 Exiting the SSU EE 55 Emergency Management Port CGonsole uk 56 How the EMP
15. 768 640 X 400 640 X 480 640 X 480 640 X 480 640 X 480 640 X 480 1024 X 768 1024 X 768 1024 X 768 1024 X 768 1024 X 768 1024 X 768 640 X 480 640 X 480 640 X 480 640 X 480 640 X 480 800 X 600 800 X 600 800 X 600 800 X 600 Pixel Freq MHz 36 40 50 49 5 36 40 50 49 5 56 25 68 2 44 9 65 75 78 7 25 25 31 5 31 5 36 43 2 44 9 65 75 78 7 94 5 113 3 25 31 5 31 5 36 43 2 36 40 50 49 5 Horiz Freq kHz 35 2 37 8 48 1 46 9 35 2 37 9 48 1 46 9 53 7 63 6 35 5 48 3 56 60 31 5 31 5 37 9 37 5 43 3 50 9 35 5 48 3 56 60 68 3 81 4 31 5 37 9 37 5 43 3 50 9 35 2 37 8 48 1 46 9 Vert Freq Hz 56 60 72 75 56 60 72 75 85 100 43 60 70 75 70 60 72 75 85 100 43 60 70 75 85 100 60 72 75 85 100 56 60 72 75 Min Memory 1MB 1MB 1MB 1MB 1MB 1MB 1MB 1MB 1MB 1MB 1MB 1MB 1MB 1MB 1MB 1MB 1MB 1MB 1MB 1MB 1MB 1MB 1MB 1MB 1MB 1MB 1MB 1MB 1MB 1MB 1MB 1MB 1MB 1MB 1MB continued 115 116 Table 35 Mode s in Hex 65 65 66 66 66 66 66 67 67 67 67 67 67 68 68 68 68 68 68 66 6D 6D 6D 6D 6E 6E 6E 6E 71 71 71 71 71 Extended VGA Modes continued Bits per pixel 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 8 16 16 16 16 24 24 24 24 24 Colors 64K 64K 32K 32K 32K 32K 32K 32K 32K 32K 32K 32K 32K
16. 8 Bit No parity 1 stop bit Direct connect Serial Line Config Baud Rate Dial up Cancel Server _Cancel COM Port No fi gt El Help Figure 13 Connect Dialog Options available in the dialog are e Line Selection you can specify whether to use a direct connection or dial up modem connection to the server Dial up connects to a selected server with a modem Direct connect Serial Line connects to the selected server directly using a null modem serial cable e Server you can select or enter a server name from a dropdown edit list box of available servers A server must be selected when the line selection is Dial up e Serial Line must be filled out when the line selection is set to Direct connect Serial Line Baud Rate must be 19200 for EMP to connect properly COM Port No set the COM Port number to which the null modem serial cable is connected 62 Configuration Software Utilities Connect initiates connection to the connected server When this button is clicked you are prompted for the EMP password Config displays the Phonebook dialog Cancel exits the Connect dialog without any action taken Help displays dialog level help information Power On Off Selecting Power On Off from the Action menu allows you to power the server on or off with post power up options It generates the Power on off dialog Power on off El 3 Operation Option Post power up option C
17. Access Setup If the diskette drive is misconfigured so that you cannot access it to run a utility from a diskette you may need to clear CMOS memory You will need to open the system change a jumper setting use Setup to check and set diskette drive options and change the jumper back For a step by step procedure see Chapter 5 under the heading CMOS Jumper 35 Starting Setup You can enter and start Setup under several conditions When you turn on the system after POST completes the memory test When you reboot the system by pressing lt Ctrl Alt Del gt while at the DOS operating system prompt When you have moved the CMOS jumper on the system board to the Clear CMOS position enabled for the procedure see Chapter 5 under the heading CMOS Jumper In the three conditions listed above after rebooting you will see this prompt Press lt F2 gt to enter SETUP In a fourth condition when CMOS NVRAM has been corrupted you will see other prompts but not the lt F2 gt prompt Warning cmos checksum invalid Warning cmos time and date not set In this condition the BIOS will load default values for CMOS and attempt to boot Setup Menus Setup has six major menus and several submenus 1 36 Main Menu e Primary IDE Master and Slave e Secondary Master and Slave e Keyboard Features Advanced Menu e PCI Configuration PCI Device Embedded SCSI PCI Device Slot 1 Slot 4 e Integrated Periph
18. B1 B2 B3 B4 B5 B6 B7 B8 B9 B10 B11 B12 B13 B14 B15 B16 B17 B18 B19 B20 B21 B22 B23 B24 B25 B26 B27 B28 B29 B30 B31 PCI Connector Pinout Signal 12 V TCK GND TDO NC 5 V 5 V INTB_L INTD_L PRSNT1_L Reserved PRSNT2_L GND GND Reserved GND PCICLK GND REQ_L 5 V AD31 AD29 GND AD27 AD25 3 3 V CBE3_L AD23 GND AD21 AD19 3 3 V Pin A32 A33 A34 A35 A36 A37 A38 A39 A40 A41 A42 A43 A44 A45 A46 A47 A48 A49 A50 A51 A52 A53 A54 A55 A56 A57 A58 A59 A60 A61 A62 Signal AD16 3 3 V FRAME_L GND TRDY_L GND STOP_L 3 3 V SDONE SBO_L GND PAR AD15 3 3 V AD13 AD11 GND AD9 KEY KEY CBEO_L 3 3 V AD6 AD4 GND AD2 ADO 5 V REQ64_L 5 V 5 V and no power is available at the 3 3 V signal pins in expansion slots Pin B32 B33 B34 B35 B36 B37 B38 B39 B40 B41 B42 B43 B44 B45 B46 B47 B48 B49 B50 B51 B52 B53 B54 B55 B56 B57 B58 B59 B60 B61 B62 Signal AD17 CBE2_L GND IRDY_L 3 3 V DEVSEL_L GND LOCK_L PERR_L 3 3 V SERR_L 3 3 V CBE1_L AD14 GND AD12 AD10 GND KEY KEY AD8 AD7 3 3 V AD5 AD3 GND AD1 5 V ACK64_L 5 V 5 V The system board does not provide a PCI 3 3 V power connector Only the 5 V PCI signaling environment is supported 107 Server Board Jumpers
19. To display the FRU area type frusdr d fru and press lt Enter gt A message similar to the following appears Common Header Area Version 1 Length 8 Header Area Version 01h Internal Area Offset 01h Chassis Area Offset OAh Board Area Offset OEh Product Area Offset 16h PAD 00h PAD 00h CHECKSUM DOh Internal Information Area Version 0 Length 72 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 Chassis Information Area Version 1 Length 32 Chassis Type 11h Part Number ASCII Serial Number ASCII END OF FIELDS CODE 000000 000 9912345678 Board Information Area Version 1 Length 64 Unicode Country Base 00h Manufacturing Time mins 733803 Manufacturer Name ASCII Intel Product Name ASCII N440BX Serial Number ASCII 0123456789 Part Number ASCII 000000 000 END OF FIELDS CODE Product Information Area Version 1 Length 80 Unicode Country Base 00h Manufacturer Name ASCII Intel Product Name ASCII N440BX DP Part Number ASCII 000000000000 Version ASCII Serial Number ASCII 0123456789 Asset Tag ASCII END OF FIELDS CODE 72 Configuration Software Utilities Displaying SDR Area The SDR nonvolatile storage area is displayed in
20. Turn the system power off and Power off on then on This clears system memory restarts POST reloads the operating system and halts power to all peripherals Fault Resilient Booting Fault resilient booting insures the system will not stop from a boot problem Two sets of timers are implemented in the BMC that will automatically reset the system if the system should halt for some reason e FRB 2 5 sec timer If the primary processor does not come up in 5 seconds the system will automatically reset and switch to the secondary processor if installed It will try to boot off the primary if not e FRB 3 7 minute timer If the system does not make it up to the end of POST in 7 minutes the system will automatically reset and try again It is assumed that the processor failed regardless of what may have caused the system to hang The primary processor is taken off line and the system will boot off the secondary if installed otherwise it will try to boot again off of the primary Bad memory or a bad plug in card may cause an FRB 3 failure All failures are logged to the system event log The system will remember all FRB errors and display them at the end of POST until you select the Processor Retest option from the BIOS Setup utility Initial System Startup Problems that occur at initial system startup are usually caused by incorrect installation or configuration Hardware failure is a less frequent cause 79 Checklist UOUUUU
21. Use the submenus for other selections Feature Choices Description System Time HH MM SS Sets the system time System Date MM DD YYYY Sets the system date Legacy Diskette A Disabled Selects the diskette type 360KB 1 2 MB 720KB 1 44 1 25 MB 2 88 MB Legacy Diskette B Disabled 360KB 1 2 MB 720KB 1 44 1 25 MB 2 88 MB Primary IDE Master Enters submenu Primary IDE Slave Enters submenu Secondary IDE Master Enters submenu Secondary IDE Slave Enters submenu Keyboard Features Enters submenu Memory Cache Enabled Enables processor cache Disabled CPU Speed Setting 200 MHz Sets the speed for the installed processor s for 100 MHz FSB 250 MHz A processors The BIOS 300 MHz CAUTION will detect the FSB 350 MHz Setting this higher than the proper speed for the speed and display the 400 MHz installed processor s may cause damage to the appropriate values 450 MHz processor s 500 MHz CPU Speed Setting 133 MHz Sets the speed for the installed processor s for 66 MHz FSB 166 MHz A processors The BIOS 200 MHz CAUTION will detect the FSB 233 MHz Setting this higher than the proper speed for the speed and display the 266 MHz installed processor s may cause damage to the appropriate values 300 MHz processor s 333 MHz 366 MHz 400 MHz 433 MHz 466 MHz 500 MHz 533 MHz Language English US Selects which language BIOS displays Frangais Espanol Deutsch Italiano 38 Configuration Software Utilities Primary Secondary IDE Master an
22. ZC 7D 7D 7D 7D Extended VGA Modes continued Bits per pixel 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 24 24 24 24 24 Colors 64K interlaced 64K 64K 64K 64K 64K 32K 16M 16M 16M 16M 16M 256 256K interlaced 256 256K 256 256K 256 256K 256 256K 256 256K 64K 64K 64K 64K Resolution 1024 X 768 1024 X 768 1024 X 768 1024 X 768 1024 X 768 1024 X 768 800 X 600 800 X 600 800 X 600 800 X 600 800 X 600 800 X 600 1600 X 1200 1600 X 1200 1152 X 864 1152 X 864 1152 X 864 1152 X 864 1152 X 864 1152 X 864 1152 X 864 1152 X 864 Pixel Freq MHz 44 9 65 75 78 7 94 5 113 3 36 40 50 49 5 56 25 68 2 135 162 94 5 108 1215 143 5 94 5 108 1215 143 5 Horiz Freq kHz 35 5 48 3 56 60 68 3 81 4 35 2 37 8 48 1 46 9 53 7 63 6 62 5 75 63 9 67 5 76 7 91 5 63 9 67 5 76 7 91 5 Vert Freq Min Memory Hz 43 60 70 75 85 100 56 60 72 75 85 100 48 60 70 75 85 100 70 75 85 100 2MB 2MB 2MB 2MB 2MB 2MB 1MB 2MB 2MB 2MB 2MB 2MB 2MB 2MB 1MB 1MB 1MB 1MB 2MB 2MB 2MB 2MB 117 118 Technical Reference 6 Information for Computer Integrators Regulatory Requirements This server board complies with the following safety and electromagnetic compatibility EMC regulations when correctly installed in a compatible host computer Safety Standards UL 1950 CSA 950 95 3 Edition July 28 1995 The Stan
23. a technically qualified person The procedure requires a special Boot Block Update Utility Contact your dealer or sales representative for more information Procedure to permit boot block erasing and programming 1 See General Procedure to Change Jumper Setting on page 109 2 Move the boot block jumper from pins 13 and 14 to pins 14 and 15 to erase and program the BIOS boot block Reinstall the side cover for your safety and connect the power cord to the system Run the Boot Block Update Utility Turn off the system and disconnect the power cord from the system Remove the side cover Move the jumper from pins 14 and 15 back to pins 13 and 14 to write protect the BIOS boot block 8 Reinstall the side cover and connect the power cord to the system AN UL AS 111 FRB Timer Enable Jumper The jumper at pins 5 6 and 7 controls the FRB timers See page 79 Procedure to disable FRB timer 1 See General Procedure to Change Jumper Setting on page 109 2 Move the recovery boot jumper from pins 5 and 6 to pins 6 and 7 3 Reinstall the side cover for your safety and connect the power cord to the system 4 Turn the system on and wait for POST to complete 5 Run the SSU to configure the system See Chapter 3 Chassis Intrusion Detection Jumper The chassis contains an alarm switch that sends a notification signal to the server management software if a cover is removed The jumper at pins 9 10 and 11
24. automatically resets to No in next boot Select Yes if you want to turn on the Advanced Configuration and Power Interface ACPI Enters submenu Enters submenu Enters submenu Selects the version of multiprocessor specification to use Some operating systems do not support version 1 4 Select DOS if your OS is DOS or Other for UNIX Novell NetWaret or other OS A large disk has more than 1024 cylinders more than 16 heads or more than 63 tracks per sector Forces a short delay at the end of each Option ROM scan Configuration Software Utilities PCI Configuration Submenu The PCI Configuration Menu only contains selections that access other submenus PCI Device Embedded SCSI Submenu Feature Option ROM Scan Enable Master Latency Timer PCI Device Slot 1 Slot 4 Submenus Feature Enable Master Latency Timer Choices Enabled Disabled Enabled Disabled Default 0020h 0040h 0060h 0080h 00A0h 00COh 00E0h Choices Enabled Disabled Default 020h 040h 060h 080h OAOh oCOh OEOh Description Enables option ROM scan of the onboard Symbios SCSI chip There are 2 SCSI channels that are controlled by the same option ROM Enabled selects the device as a PCI bus master Minimum guaranteed time in units of PCI bus clocks that a device may be master on a PCI bus A CAUTION Do not change this setting unless you fully understand the priority of this device on the PCI bus De
25. following 1 Touch the metal chassis before touching the processor or system board Keep part of your body in contact with the metal chassis to dissipate the static charge while handling the processor 2 Avoid moving around unnecessarily 25 Removing a Processor 1 26 Observe the safety and ESD precautions at the beginning of this chapter and the additional cautions given here If the processor has a fan heat sink disconnect the power wire B in the figure below from the connector on the system board C As you work place boards and processors on a grounded static free surface or conductive foam pad Press the processor latches toward the center of the S E C cartridge to free them from the retention module A Lift the S E C cartridge upward out of the retention module Put the processor in a piece of conductive foam and store in an antistatic package OM06345 Figure 5 Removing a Processor A Processor latches must be pushed inward until free from retention module B Fan heat sink power cable must plug into processor fan connector on system board C Processor fan connector Upgrading Installing a Processor OM06347 Figure 6 Installing a Second Processor A Processor latches B Processor in S E C cartridge C Retention module 1 Observe the safety and ESD precautions at the beginning of this chapter and the additional cautions given here 2 If your system has one processor and
26. for the specified period attempted keyboard and mouse input will not be accepted The monitor display will go blank and the diskette drive will be write protected if these security features are enabled through Setup or the SSU To resume activity Enter the correct password s To control access to setting or changing the system configuration set an administrative password and enable it through Setup or the SSU If both the administrative and user passwords are enabled either can be used to boot the system or enable the keyboard and or mouse but only the administrative password will allow Setup and the SSU to be changed To disable a password change it to a blank entry or press CTRL D in the Change Password menu of the Administrative Password Option menu found in the Security Subsystem Group To clear the password if you cannot access Setup or the SSU change the Clear Password jumper see Chapter 5 To control access to using the system set a user password and enable it through Setup or the SSU To disable a password change it to a blank entry or press CTRL D in the Change Password menu of the User Password Option menu found in the Security Subsystem Group To clear the password if you cannot access Setup or the SSU change the Clear Password jumper see Chapter 5 The system can boot with or without a keyboard During POST before the system boots the BIOS automatically detects and tests the keyboard if it is present
27. intermediate expert The expertise level determines which tasks are visible in the Available Tasks section and what actions each task performs For a new mode setting to take effect you must exit the SSU and restart it Language this button lets you change the strings in the SSU to strings of the appropriate language For a new language setting to take effect you must exit the SSU and restart it Other this button lets you change other miscellaneous options in the SSU The changes are instantaneous To change the interface default values Use the mouse to click on the proper button in the Preferences section of the SSU Main window or Use the tab and arrow keys to highlight the desired button and press the spacebar or lt Enter gt or Access the menu bar with the mouse or hot keys Alt underlined letter lt gt NOTE If you run the SSU from nonwritable media like a CD ROM these preferences will be lost when you exit the SSU Launching a Task It is possible to have many tasks open at the same time although some tasks may require complete control to avoid possible conflicts The tasks achieve complete control by keeping the task as the center of operation until you close the task window To launch a task 1 In the SSU Main window double click on the task name under Available Tasks to display the main window for the selected task or Highlight the task name and click on OK or Use the tab and arrow
28. microcode Autosize cache Enable processor cache Initialize the local bus IDE not used anymore but here for phx std Initialize Power Management APM not used in Nightshade Initialize keyboard controller 8237 DMA controller initialization Reset Programmable Interrupt Controller Test 8742 Keyboard Controller Read processor bus clock frequency and compute boot processor speed Initialize and register other CPU via SMM through APIC bus Initialize SMI handler for all processors Wait for secondary processor to execute INIT SMI handler Exit SMI handler secondary processor executed halt in sm Configure advanced PClset registers and reset coprocessor Load alternate registers with CMOS values Initialize interrupt vectors Check ROM copyright notice Initialize all pre PnP devices Initialize PCI bus and devices also read ESCD and allocate resources Check video configuration against CMOS VGA or MDA Initialize all video adapters in system Shadow video BIOS ROM Put CPU in big real mode flat mode memory addressing up to 4 GB Post display manager initialization video screen error codes now visible Reset and test keyboard first try only warm reset Reset and test keyboard controller both warm and cold reset Set key click if enabled Enable keyboard Test for unexpected interrupts Quietboot start not used in N440BX Display copyright notice Display CPU s type and speed continued 89 Table 9 Port 80 Codes conti
29. only in gold plated sockets See Chapter 1 for memory size and requirements 1 2 3 4 mn ON Observe the safety and ESD precautions at the beginning of this chapter Open your system Holding the DIMM only by its edges remove it from its antistatic package Orient the DIMM so that the two notches in the bottom edge of the DIMM align with the keyed socket Insert the bottom edge of the DIMM into the socket and press down firmly on the DIMM until it seats correctly Gently push the plastic ejector levers on the socket ends to the upright position Repeat the steps to install each DIMM Close the system Connect all external cables and the power cord to the system 10 Turn on the monitor and then the system 24 oO 8 gt E a a o P l Te EN KH q i erg gt E 4 EA 1g OM06417 Figure 4 Installing DIMMs Upgrading Removing DIMMs CAUTION Use extreme care when removing a DIMM Too much pressure can damage the socket slot Apply only enough pressure on the plastic ejector levers to release the DIMM 1 Observe the safety and ESD precautions at the beginning of this chapter 2 Open the system 3 Gently push the plastic ejector levers out and down to eject a DIMM from its socket 4 Hold the DIMM only by its ed
30. powered off During POST After OS boots Disabled Redirect window appears Redirect window Redirect window but is blank Pre boot EMP commands available Redirect window Redirect window Always Active EMP commands available Redirect window EMP commande available The operation mode can be modified by selections in the post reset and post power up dialogs These are server control dialogs available with the EMP Console 58 Configuration Software Utilities Table 8 EMP Console Access Modes Server not Configured for Console Redirect Mode Server is powered off During POST After OS boots Disabled Redirect window appears Redirect window appears Redirect window appears but is blank but is blank but is blank Pre boot EMP commands available EMP commands available Redirect window appears but is blank Always Active EMP commands available EMP commands available EMP commands available Requirements This section outlines the requirements and configurations necessary for using the EMP Console Operating Systems e Windows 95 16 MB of RAM 32 MB recommended 20 MB disk space e Windows NTt Windows NT 4 0 or later 24 MB of RAM 32 MB recommended 20 MB disk space Client Configuration The EMP Console will support all COM ports on the client system along with any Windows NT 95 compatible modem Server Configuration The EMP Console requires the server s COM 2 port to be connected to an external modem or directly con
31. system prompt does not appear see Initial System Startup on page 79 Specific Problems and Corrective Actions This section provides possible solutions for these specific problems Power light does not light No beep or incorrect beep pattern No characters appear on screen Characters on the screen appear distorted or incorrect System cooling fans do not rotate Diskette drive activity light does not light Hard disk drive activity light does not light CD ROM drive activity light does not light Problems with application software The bootable CD ROM is not detected Try the solutions in the order given If you cannot correct the problem contact your service representative or authorized dealer for assistance Power Light Does Not Light Check the following a a Is the system operating normally If so the power LED is probably defective or the cable from the front panel to the system board is loose Are there other problems with the system If so check the items listed under System Cooling Fans Do Not Rotate Properly If all items are correct and problems persist contact your service representative or authorized dealer for assistance No Characters Appear on Screen Check the following a a a a a Is the keyboard working Check to see that the Num Lock light is functioning Is the video monitor plugged in and turned on Are the brightness and contrast controls on the video mo
32. the SDR table must be reprogrammed Upon completing the programming of the FRU and SDR areas the server should be rebooted Note DOS users may alternatively use a instead of the 70 Configuration Software Utilities The following information is display 1f v option is included in the command line The D FRU command may be followed with up to 16 device addresses Thes device addresses are used to view up to 16 different FRU areas instead of the default of displaying the BMC FRU The arguments following the d FRU a D L re in the same order and value as the NVS_TYPE NVS_LUN DEV_BUS and EV_ADDRESS which are found in the FRU file header in each FRU file The UN address is optional If the LUN address is used it must start with an L Usage FRUSDR d fru device lun bus addr addr2 etc Example FRUSDR D FRU IMBDEVICE L00 00 CO C2 The configuration file may be used to load multiple FRU and SDR files In the configuration file you may define which FRU and SDR areas are to be programmed Additionally you may request information from the user or ask the user to choose which areas to program Displaying a Given Area When the utility is run with the d DMI d FRU or d SDR command line flag the indicated area is displayed Each area represents a sensor one sensor for each instrumented device in the server If the given display function fails because of an in
33. the SEL data from the BMC Exit Quits the SEL Viewer The View menu has the following options SEL Info Displays information about the SEL These fields are display only All Events Displays the current SEL data from the BMC By Sensor Brings up a pop up menu that allows you to view only the data from a certain sensor type By Event Brings up a pop up menu that allows you to view only the data from a certain event type Settings The Settings menu has the following options Help Display HEX Verbose toggles between the Hex interpreted mode of displaying the SEL records Output Text Binary determines whether SEL data will be saved to the file as under File Save in binary format or verbose format The Help menu has the following option About Displays the SEL Viewer version information Exiting the SSU Exiting the SSU causes all windows to close 1 2 Exit the SSU by opening the menu bar item File in the SSU Main window Click on Exit or Highlight Exit and press lt Enter gt 55 Emergency Management Port Console 56 The Emergency Management Port EMP Console provides an interface to the Emergency Management Port EMP called the Console Manager This interface allows remote server management via a modem or direct connection The following server control operations available with the Console Manager are e connecting to remote servers e powering the server on or off e resetting the server e s
34. the following hex format The data is separated by a Sensor Record Number X header where X is the number of that sensor record in the SDR area The next line after the header is the sensor record data in hex format delineated by spaces Each line holds up to 16 bytes The data on each line is followed by the same data in ASCII format nonprintable characters are substituted by a period Example To display the SDR area type frusdr d sdr and press lt Enter gt A message similar to the following appears Reading SDR Record 1 OF 00 10 01 37 20 00 0F 05 00 LO PL ERS 02 01 85 wae aa ia 02 00 00 00 04 00 00 C4 02 00 08 30 C2 07 91 95 o ooo E 8E FF 00 1B 1B 00 99 95 00 8A 8E 02 02 00 DIE 53 43 53 49 2D 42 2D 54 65 72 6D 33 SCSI B Term3 Reading SDR Record 2 OE 40 10 01 30 20 00 13 05 00 10 FL F8 04 01 05 0 o 00 00 00 20 29 00 00 1E 02 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ee eee 00 FF 00 03 03 00 00 00 00 42 49 02 02 00 01 C5 Dir 46 41 4E 2D 32 FAN 2 Using Specified CFG File The utility can be run with the command line parameter of cfg filename cfg The filename can be any DOS accepted eight character filename string The utility loads the specified CFG file uses the entries in the configuration file to probe the hardware and to select the proper SDRs to load into nonvolatile storage Displaying Utility Title and Version The utility displays its title FRU amp SDR Load Utility
35. the message upgrade is complete remove the floppy disk Press lt Enter gt As the computer boots check the BIOS identifier version number to make sure the upgrade was successful To enter the Setup program press lt r2 gt when you see the message Press lt F2 gt Key if you want to run SETUP 9 10 11 12 13 14 76 For proper operation load the Setup program defaults To load the defaults press lt F 9 gt To accept the defaults press lt Enter gt Set the options in the Setup program to the settings you wrote down before the BIOS upgrade To save the settings press lt F10 gt To accept the settings press lt Enter gt Turn off the computer and reboot Configuration Software Utilities Recovering the BIOS It is unlikely that anything will interrupt the BIOS upgrade however if an interruption occurs the BIOS could be damaged The following steps explain how to recover the BIOS if an upgrade fails The following procedure use recovery mode for the Setup program for more information about Setup modes lt gt NOTE A e 12 13 14 Because of the small amount of code available in the non erasable boot block area there is no video support You will not see anything on the screen during the procedure Monitor the procedure by listening to the speaker and looking at the floppy drive LED Turn off all peripheral devices connected to the computer Turn off the computer Remo
36. the software Faulty equipment is much less likely especially if other software runs correctly Checklist a U UU U a a a Does the system meet the minimum hardware requirements for the software See the software documentation Is the software an authorized copy If not get one unauthorized copies often do not work If you are running the software from a diskette is it a good copy If you are running the software from a CD ROM disk is the disk scratched or dirty If you are running the software from a hard disk drive is the software correctly installed Were all necessary procedures followed and files installed Are the correct device drivers installed Is the software correctly configured for the system Are you using the software correctly If the problems persist contact the software vendor s customer service representative 80 Solving Problems After the System Has Been Running Correctly Problems that occur after the system hardware and software have been running correctly often indicate equipment failure Many situations that are easy to correct however can also cause such problems Checklist a a If you are running the software from a diskette try a new copy of the software If you are running the software from a CD ROM disk try a different disk to see 1f the problem occurs on all discs If you are running the software from a hard disk drive try running it from a diskette If the s
37. through the password prompt In the EMP Password area of the System Management Submenu type in a password of up to 8 alphanumeric characters If a beep is heard the password was not accepted and a different password must be entered EMP Access Modes Choose either Disabled Pre boot or Always Active depending on the type of EMP access needed The tables above show what is available with a given setting EMP Restricted Mode Access Set Restricted Mode to either enabled or disabled as needed If in enabled mode this means that the EMP Console s server control options Power On Off and Reset are unavailable In disabled mode these same server control options are available EMP Direct Connect Modem Mode Select Direct Connect if a null modem serial cable directly connects the server s COM 2 port to the EMP Console client machine If they are connected via a modem select Modem Mode Console Redirection Submenu These settings in the Console Redirection Submenu of the Server menu must be set exactly as noted to be able to use the EMP COM Port Address Select 2F8 This is the COM 2 port that must be used by the EMP The IRQ setting automatically populates with the correct number based on the COM Port Address choice Baud Rate Select 19 2k Console Type Choose PC ANSI Flow Control Choose CTS RTS CD Main EMP Console Window The main EMP Console window provides a graphical user interface GUI to access server control operation
38. to which the data would be saved The default filename is SELLOG DAT If there is no data an error message will be displayed Exit exits the EMP Console e Connect e View SEL Information displays SEL summary information as returned by the server All Events displays all events in the SEL By Sensor Type shows all events in the SEL generated by a specific sensor type such as voltage temperature etc By Event displays all the events in the SEL of a particular type for example by memory or threshold A pop up menu lets you select the event type to display This pop up menu displays all the event types that may be generated by the particular hardware e Settings you can change several operating parameters for the SEL viewer This menu displays the following suboptions Display HEX Verbose toggles between HEX mode and interpreted mode of displaying SEL records Output Text Binary determines whether SEL data will be saved to the file in binary format or verbose format 66 Configuration Software Utilities Window gives options for displaying currently open windows Help provides version information for the SEL viewer and provides help topics on the EMP Console SDR Viewer The SDR viewer lets you view the Sensor Data Records retrieved from the SDR repository Options available through the SDR viewer are View all SDR records View SDR entries by SDR type View SDR summary info S
39. 33 Interrupts Interrupt INTR NMI IRQO IRQ1 IRQ2 IRQ3 IRQ4 IRQ5 IRQ6 IRQ7 IRQ8_L IRQ9 IRQ10 IRQ11 IRQ12 IRQ14 IRQ15 PCLINTA_L PCLINTB_L PCLINTC_L PCILINTD_L 1 O APIC level INTO N A INT2 INT1 INT3 INT4 INTS INT6 INT7 INT8 INT9 INT10 INT11 INT12 INT13 INT14 INT15 INT16 INT17 INT18 INT19 Description Processor interrupt NMI from BUD to processor Timer interrupt from PIIX4 Keyboard interrupt Interrupt signal from second 8259 in PIIX4 Serial port A or B interrupt from 87309VLJ device user can configure Serial port A or B interrupt from 87309VLJ device user can configure Open for use Diskette Parallel port RTC interrupt Reserved for SCI ACPI Open for use Open for use Mouse interrupt Compatibility IDE interrupt from primary channel IDE devices 0 and 1 Secondary IDE interrupt PCI Interrupt signal A PCI Interrupt signal B PCI Interrupt signal C PCI Interrupt signal D 113 Video Modes The 5480 integrated video controller provides all standard IBM VGA modes With 1 MB of video memory the system goes beyond standard VGA support The tables below show all supported video modes using 1 MB of video memory The following tables show the standard modes that the chip supports including the number of colors and palette size resolution pixel frequency and scan frequencies 114 Table 34 Mode s in Hex O 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 D E F 10 11 12 12 13 Standard V
40. 4 Configuration Software Utilities Using BIOS Setup This section describes the BIOS Setup options Use Setup to change the system configuration defaults You can run Setup with or without an operating system being present Setup stores most of the configuration values in battery backed CMOS the rest of the values are stored in flash memory The values take effect when you boot the system POST uses these values to configure the hardware if the values and the actual hardware do not agree POST generates an error message You must then run Setup to specify the correct configuration Run Setup you may run Setup to modify any standard PC ATT system board feature such as e Select diskette drive e Select parallel port e Select serial port e Set time date to be stored in RTC e Configure IDE hard drive e Specify boot device sequence e Enable SCSI BIOS e Specify processor speed Run SSU not Setup you must run the SSU instead of Setup to do the following e Add or remove any ISA board that is not Plug and Play compatible e Enter or change information about a board e Alter system resources such as interrupts memory addresses I O assignments to user selected choices instead of choices selected by the BIOS resource manager Record Your Setup Settings If the default values ever need to be restored after a CMOS clear for example you must run Setup again Referring to the worksheets could make your task easier If You Cannot
41. A24 A25 Signal IOCHK_L SD7 SD6 SD5 SD4 SD3 SD2 SD1 SDO IOCHRDY AEN SA19 SA18 SA17 SA16 SA15 SA14 SA13 SA12 SA11 SA10 SA9 SA8 SA7 SA6 Pin B1 B2 B3 B4 B5 B6 B7 B8 B9 B10 B11 B12 B13 B14 B15 B16 B17 B18 B19 B20 B21 B22 B23 B24 B25 ISA Connector Pinout Signal GND RESET 5V IRQ9 5V DRQ2 12V SRDY_L 12V GND SMEMW_L SMEMR_L IOW_L IOR_L DACK3_L DRQ3 DACK1_L DRQ1 REFRESH_L BCLK IRQ7 IRQ6 IRQ5 IRQ4 IRQ3 Pin Signal A26 SA5 A27 SA4 A28 SA3 A29 SA2 A30 SA1 A31 SAO Connector key C1 SBHE_L C2 LA23 C3 LA22 C4 LA21 C5 LA20 C6 LA19 C7 LA18 C8 LA17 cg MEMR_L C10 MEMW_L C11 SD8 C12 SD9 C13 SD10 C14 SD11 C15 SD12 C16 SD13 C17 SD14 C18 SD15 Pin Signal B26 DACK2_L B27 TC B28 BALE B29 5V B30 OSC B31 GND Connector key D1 MEMCS16_L D2 10CS16_L D3 IRQ10 D4 IRQ11 D5 IRQ12 D6 IRQ15 D7 IRQ14 D8 DACKO_L D9 DRQO D10 DACK5_L D11 DRQ5 D12 DACK6_L D13 DRQ6 D14 DACK7_L D15 DRQ7 D16 5V D17 MASTER16_L D18 GND Technical Reference PCI Table 31 Pin Al A2 A3 A4 A5 A6 A7 A8 A9 A10 A11 A12 A13 A14 A15 A16 A17 A18 A19 A20 A21 A22 A23 A24 A25 A26 A27 A28 A29 A30 A31 Signal TRST_L 12 V TMS TDI 5 V INTA_L INTC_L 5 V Reserved 5 V Reserved GND GND Reserved RST_L 5 V GNT_L GND Reserved AD30 3 3 V AD28 AD26 GND AD24 IDSEL 3 3 V AD22 AD20 GND AD18 Pin
42. AC power available at the wall outlet Is the system power cord properly connected to the system and the wall outlet Did you press the power button Is the power on light lit Have any of the fan motors stopped use the server management subsystem to check the fan status Are the fan power connectors properly connected to the system board Is the cable from the front panel board connected to the system board Are the power supply cables properly connected to the system board Are there any shorted wires caused by pinched cables or power connector plugs forced into power connector sockets the wrong way If the switches and connections are correct and AC power is available at the wall outlet contact your service representative or authorized dealer for assistance 84 Solving Problems Diskette Drive Activity Light Does Not Light Check the following Q Are the diskette drive power and signal cables properly installed Are all relevant switches and jumpers on the diskette drive set correctly a QU Is the diskette drive properly configured a Is the diskette drive activity light always on If so the signal cable may be plugged in incorrectly If you are using the onboard diskette controller use the SSU to make sure that Onboard Floppy 1s set to Enabled If you are using an add in diskette controller make sure that Onboard Floppy is set to Disabled To run the SSU see Chapter 3 If the problem p
43. Address IRQ Baud Rate Console Type Flow Control Boot Menu Choices Disabled 3F8 2F8 3E8 3or4 None 9600 19 2k 38 4k 115 2k PC ANSI No Flow Control CTS RTS XON XOFF CTS RTS CD Description When enabled console redirection uses the l O port specified 3F8 typically is COM 1 2F8 typically is COM 2 All keyboard mouse and video will be directed to this port This is designed to be used only under DOS in text mode When console redirection is enabled this displays the IRQ assigned per the address chosen in the COM Port Address field COM port address is disabled None is automatically selected When console redirection is enabled use the baud rate specified Sets the terminal emulation protocol that the remote console will see Disables flow control CTS RTS is hardware flow control XON XOFF is software flow control CTS RTS CD is hardware plus carrier detect for modem use When carrier detect is lost modem will drop phone connection You can make the following selections on the Boot Menu itself Feature Floppy Check Choices Disabled Enabled Boot Device Priority Hard Drive Removable Devices Boot Device Priority Use the up or down arrow keys to select a device then press the lt gt or lt gt keys to move the device higher or lower in the boot priority list 46 Boot Priority 1 2 3 4 Device Removable Devices Hard Drive ATAPI CD RO
44. Area After the configuration is determined the utility updates the FRU nonvolatile storage area First it verifies the Common Header area and checksum from the specified FRU file The Internal Use Area is read out of the specified FRU file and is programmed into the nonvolatile storage The Chassis Area is read out of the specified FRU file Last it reads the Product Area out of the specified FRU file then the area is programmed into the FRU nonvolatile storage All the areas are also written to the FRU TMP file which happens before the areas get programmed Updating DMI FRU Nonvolatile Storage Area After programming the BMC FRU area the utility then programs the following Chassis Board and Product FRU information to the DMI fields Example Loading DMI System Area Manufacturer Name Intel Name NA440BX Server System Version Number SMADNOOOBNOO Serial Number 0123456789 Loading DMI Board Area Manufacturing Name Intel Name BMAD440LX Serial Number 0123456789 Version Number 681234 501 Loading DMI Chassis Area Chassis Part Number 000000 000 Chassis Serial Number Asset Tag If a failure occurs the utility displays an error message and exits Cleaning Up and Exiting 74 If an update was successfully performed the utility displays a single message and then exits If the utility fails it immediately exits with an error message and exit code Configuration Software Utilities Upgradin
45. B Level 3 timer Server Management Interface failed to function IOP sub system is not functional NVRAM Cleared by Jumper NVRAM Checksum Error NVRAM cleared NVRAM Data Invalid NVRAM cleared 93 94 Solving Problems 5 Technical Reference This chapter includes the following e Environmental specifications e System memory map addresses e Board interrupts e Standard video modes e Electromagnetic Compatibility EMC notices Connectors The figure shows connector locations on the system board This section provides pin information about the connectors ABC DE F x DO de i e la V IA li R U T eee ER E S Q E a To Pri Sec K er ii L o JM P O N Figure 17 Connector Locations Processor Heatsink fan connectors Aux power connector ATX power connector Diskette drive connector Main power connector Hard drive LED connector Front panel connector 16 pin
46. B primary L1 cache the secondary L2 cache a thermal plate and a back cover The processor implements the MMX technology and maintains full backward compatibility with the 8086 80286 Intel386 Intel486 Pentium Pentium Pro and Pentium II processors The processor s numeric coprocessor significantly increases the speed of floating point operations and complies with ANSI IEEE standard 754 1985 Each processor cartridge connects to the system board through a 242 pin edge connector The cartridge is secured by a retention module attached to the system board Depending on configuration your system may have one or two processors The processor external interface is MP ready and operates at 100 MHz The processor contains a local APIC section for interrupt handling in MP and UP environments The second level cache is located on the substrate of the S E C cartridge The cache includes burst pipelined synchronous static RAM BSRAM The L2 cache is offered in 512 KB configurations only with error correcting code ECC that operates at half the core clock rate Memory Only 100 MHz PC 100 ECC SDRAM is supported by the system board Memory is partitioned as four banks of SDRAM DIMMs each providing 72 bits of noninterleaved memory 64 bit main memory plus ECC e Install from 32 MB to 1 GB of memory using registered DIMMs e Install from 32 MB to 512 MB of memory using unbuffered DIMMs Memory should be added in order from slot
47. Console EE 57 A iia aa eiS 59 Setting Up the Server for the EMP 59 Main EMP Console Window dividida 60 Server Control Operations eiii distal tias 62 Phonebook EE 65 Management lt GL 66 ERUSDE e RA 69 When to Run the FRUSDR Load Utility tege tee iene te ede aioe 69 What You Need ODO toto can dle dd odds 69 How You Use the FRUSDR Load Ultility ooooooccconononoccconononanonancnononanananannno 69 Upgrading TING ENO Secta tobas 75 Preparing for the Upgrade dad 75 Upgrading the BIOS iseyen ra raea ENEE ee ee elen 76 Recovering the BIOS cadete io lio aca E 77 Changing the BIOS Language ENEE 77 Using the Firmware Update Utility sarral aaa 78 Running the Firmware Update Utility ke 78 Installing Video Drivers g re dee gedet lin 78 Using the Symbios SGSI occitano ate 78 Running the SCSI Utility isis a a 78 Solving Problems Resettingthe System tl RR 79 Fault Resilient e ln Le GE 79 Initial SyStem Start DEE 79 Ee el EE 80 Running New Application Software oooomooooccccnnncoconoccccncnnonanannncncnnnnnnn nn nncnnn nan nn non ccnnnnnnnnnnnnos 80 CheckliSti iran ica 80 After the System Has Been Running Correctly kk EEN 81 Checklist ans oda caia 81 5 More Problem Solving Procedures eege Cegedel ef 81 Preparing the System for Diagnostic Testing ceceeceeeeeeeeeeeneeeeeeeeeeeeseeeeeeeeeeeteaaees 81 Using PO Diagnostics irka riada 82 MONITORING POST asus bend 82 Verifying Proper Operation of Key System
48. D SRESET_L GND SMSG_L GND SSEL_L GND SCD L GND SREQ_L GND SIO_L 103 Wide SCSI 104 Table 28 Wide SCSI Connector Pinout Pin 1 16 17 18 19 20 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 Signal GND TERMPWR TERMPWR NC GND SCD12_L SCD13_L SCD14_L SCD15_L SCDPH_L SCDO_L SCD1_L SCD2_L SCD3_L SCD4_L SCD5_L SCD6_L SCD7_L SCDP_L Pin 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 Signal GND TERMPWR TERMPWR NC GND SATN_L GND SBSY_L SACK_L RESET_L SMSG_L SSEL_L SCD_L SREQ_L SV O_L SCD8_L SCD9_L SCD10_L SCD11_L Technical Reference IDE Table 29 oN o om AO n y 5 oO ON Oa FW Mi az O 20 IDE Connector Pinout Signal RESET_L GND DD7 DD8 DD6 DD9 DD5 DD10 DD4 DD11 DD3 DD12 DD2 DD13 DD1 DD14 DDO DD15 GND Keyed Pin 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 Signal IDEDRQ GND DIOW_L GND DIOR_L GND IORDY CSEL 1 KQ p d IDEDAK_L GND IDEIRQ Reserved N C IDESA1 PDIAG_L tied to GND IDESAO IDESA2 IDECS1_L IDECS3_L IDEHDACT_L GND If no IDE drives are present there should be no IDE cable connected If only one IDE drive is installed it must be connected at the end of the cable 105 ISA 106 Table 30 Pin A1 A2 A3 A4 A5 A6 A7 A8 A9 A10 A11 A12 A13 A14 A15 A16 A17 A18 A19 A20 A21 A22 A23
49. D protection ESD can damage disk drives boards and other parts We recommend that you perform all procedures in this chapter only at an ESD workstation If one is not available provide some ESD protection by wearing an antistatic wrist strap attached to chassis ground any unpainted metal surface on your system when handling parts ESD and handling boards always handle boards carefully They can be extremely sensitive to ESD Hold boards only by their edges After removing a board from its protective wrapper or from the system place it component side up on a grounded static free surface Use a conductive foam pad if available but not the board wrapper Do not slide board over any surface 21 Installing or removing jumpers a jumper is a small plastic encased conductor that slips over two jumper pins Some jumpers have a small tab on top that you can grip with your fingertips or with a pair of fine needle nosed pliers If your jumpers do not have such a tab take care when using needle nosed pliers to remove or install a jumper grip the narrow sides of the jumper with the pliers never the wide sides Gripping the wide sides can damage the contacts inside the jumper causing intermittent problems with the function controlled by that jumper Take care to grip with but not squeeze the pliers or other tool you use to remove a jumper or you may bend or break the stake pins on the board Server Board Removing the Server Board CAU
50. EMP active Powe O Power OEF Allow BGS Redirect Cancel Help Figure 14 Power On Off Dialog Options available in the dialog are Power ON powers on the server Power OFF powers off the server This option is not allowed if the server is configured in RESTRICTED mode for EMP operations Post power up option sets the mode selection of the server to EMP active or BIOS redirection The setting is available after the next power up The default selection is EMP active Cancel exits the dialog without any action taken Help displays dialog level help information 63 Reset Selecting Reset from the Action menu generates the Reset dialog so that you can remotely reset the server with post reset options Option Post reset option e EMP active Allow BIOS Re direct Cancel Help Figure 15 Reset Dialog Options available in the dialog are e System Reset resets the server with the selected post reset options This operation is not allowed if the server is configured in RESTRICTED mode for EMP operations e Option Group sets the post reset option that will be effective after reset The options are EMP active or BIOS redirection The default selection is EMP active e Cancel exits the dialog without any action taken e Help displays dialog level help information 64 Configuration Software Utilities Phonebook The EMP Console provides a support plug in know
51. GA Modes Bits per Colors pixel no per palette size o A A HR HR HR HR HHP SS SP 16 256K 16 256K 4 256K 2 256K Mono 16 256K 16 256K Mono 16 256K 2 256K 16 256K 16 256K 256 256K Resolution 360 X 400 720 X 400 320 X 200 640 X 200 720 X 400 320 X 200 640 X 200 640 X 350 640 X 350 640 X 480 640 X 480 640 X 480 320 X 200 Pixel Freq MHz 14 28 12 5 25 28 12 5 25 25 25 25 25 31 5 12 5 Horizontal Vertical Freq kHz Freq Hz 31 5 31 5 31 5 31 5 31 5 31 5 31 5 31 5 31 5 31 5 31 5 37 5 31 5 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 70 60 60 75 70 Technical Reference Table 35 Mode s in Hex 58 6A 58 6A 58 6A 58 6A 56 56 56 56 56 56 5D 5D 5D 5D 5E 5F 5F 5F 5F 5F 60 60 60 60 60 60 64 64 64 64 64 65 65 65 65 Extended VGA Modes Bits per pixel co o o o o oo o Oo 0 o o o o o Oo 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 16 Colors 16 256K 16 256K 16 256K 16 256K 256 256K 256 256K 256 256K 256 256K 256 256K 256 256K 16 256K interlaced 16 256K 16 256K 16 256K 256 256K 256 256K 256 256K 256 256K 256 256K 256 256K 256 256K interlaced 256 256K 256 256K 256 256K 256 256K 256 256K 64K 64K 64K 64K 64K 64K 64K 64K 64K Resolution 800 X 600 800 X 600 800 X 600 800 X 600 800 X 600 800 X 600 800 X 600 800 X 600 800 X 600 800 X 600 1024 X 768 1024 X 768 1024 X 768 1024 X
52. Lights ooooccoonncccccnnnccconncnccnnncccnanancccnnnnnns 82 Confirming Loading of the Operating System ooooocccccnnnicccoccccnononcnanancncnnnnnnanrn cnn nnnnnnnns 83 Specific Problems and Corrective Achons AAA 83 Power Light Does Not Light sccoooocicninda ba li 83 No Characters Appear on Screen ui ta 83 Characters Are Distorted or Incorrect Ak 84 System Cooling Fans Do Not Rotate Properly oooooocccccncccccoccccccnccconnnancnnnnncnnnnancccnancnns 84 Diskette Drive Activity Light Does Not Lob 85 Hard Disk Drive Activity Light Does Not obt 85 CD ROM Drive Activity Light Does Not Light ooooocccccn nnococcccconnanananaccncnnnnnanancncnnnnnnnos 85 Cannot Connect to EE 86 Problems with INGIWOIK EE 86 PGI Installation BS Desi ds 87 Problems with Application Software ANNE 87 Bootable CD ROM Is Not Detected AAA 88 Error and InformationaliMessages uu Ne awed ema 88 POST Codes and Countdown Codes AAA 88 POST Error Codes and Messag s ooiii ENEE EEN EEERSOEEEEe SEENEN Ee 92 Technical Reference COIN A aa esta ee cea a SE Ga og eee a a lahat ee cade aati Cel aa 95 ATX Power GONNA A di 96 Mal Power Connect 96 Auxiliary Power non ATX Connector cooooocccccccccconoccccnnncconnnnncnnnnnononnnnncnnnncnnannnnncnnnicnnns 97 Diskette DIV vta id e ee Ae 97 From Panel Connector saeta dia 98 AT Style Front Panel Connector EEN 98 A O E Matar desiu dec AE cect eluigeel a ear a 98 Server Management usarios tai 99 MB EEN 100 VGA Video POM unan AR
53. Log and Power Consumption Worksheets Equipment Log Use the blank equipment log provided here to record information about your system You will need some of this information when you run the SSU Manufacturer Name and Item Model Number Serial Number Date Installed System Server board Primary Processor speed and cache Secondary Processor speed and cache Video display Keyboard Mouse Diskette drive A Diskette drive B Tape drive CD ROM drive Hard disk drive 1 Hard disk drive 2 Hard disk drive 3 Hard disk drive 4 Hard disk drive 5 continued 125 Equipment Log continued Manufacturer Name and Item Model Number Serial Number Date Installed 126 Information for Computer Integrators Current Usage As an overall current usage limitation on the power supply do not exceed a combined power output of 167 watts for the 5 and 3 3 volt outputs The ISA slots on the server board are rated at a maximum of 4 5 amperes per slot The ISA specification recommends supporting an average of 2 0 amperes per slot The average current usage should not exceed 3 0 amperes per slot that is 15 watts The PCI slots on the server board are rated at a maximum of 3 amperes per slot The maximum power allowed for each slot is 20 watts at 5 volts The average current usage per slot should not exceed 3 0 amperes per slot that is 15 watts The cooling efficiency varies per slot therefore ensure that adequate cooling i
54. M Drive LANDesk Service Agent II Description If Enabled system verifies diskette type on boot Disabled results in a faster boot Enters submenu Enters submenu Enters submenu Description Attempts to boot from a removable media device Attempts to boot from a hard drive device Attempts to boot from an ATAPI CD ROM drive Loads LANDesk service Agent and attempts to boot off of a remote agent on the embedded network interface card Intel 82558 Configuration Software Utilities Hard Drive For options on this menu use the up or down arrow keys to select a device then press the lt gt or lt gt keys to move the device higher or lower in the boot priority list Option 1 Hard Drive 1 or actual drive string 2 Other Bootable Device Removable Devices Description IDE drives will have a suffix attached to the drive ID string PM hard drive on Primary Master Channel PS hard drive on Primary Slave Channel SM hard drive on Secondary Master Channel SS hard drive on Secondary Slave Channel SCSI CD ROMs will be displayed here because the onboard Symbios SCSI bios treats CD ROMs as hard drives SCSI zip or removable drives will also appear here Removable IDE zip drives will only show up if the removable media is formatted as a hard drive Covers all the boot devices that are not reported to the system BIOS through the BIOS boot specification mechanism This includes all PCI cards that are not b
55. N440BX Server Board Product Guide Order Number 695449 001 Disclaimer Intel Corporation Intel makes no warranty of any kind with regard to this material including but not limited to the implied warranties of merchantability and fitness for a particular purpose Intel assumes no responsibility for any errors that may appear in this document Intel makes no commitment to update nor to keep current the information contained in this document No part of this document may be copied or reproduced in any form or by any means without prior written consent of Intel An Intel product when used in accordance with its associated documentation is Year 2000 Capable when upon installation it accurately stores displays processes provides and or receives date data from into and between the twentieth and twenty first centuries including leap year calculations provided that all other technology used in combination with said product properly exchanges date data with it t Third party brands and trademarks are the property of their respective owners Copyright 1998 Intel Corporation Contents 1 Description Server Ee RW 9 Back Panel Gonnectors iii di 10 Server Board Connector and Component Locations 11 AALT EE EE 12 MEMO di 12 Pone Sud ds ist 14 A A ean exten n wee atin aula eatin ee OR n 14 Add in Board e 14 e E 15 SCS Controlan a a da RES 15 IDE Controler aia ud ines E A E EE N 16 Network Ee e TEE 16 Keyboard AM a
56. S 100 Keyboard and MOUS E 100 Parallel Por ia A das 101 Serial Ports A ad ara do 101 Ru NIDO eege E 102 Narrow SOS ui a id 103 Wide A a atalad a oe se Gealo E Gua EAEE 104 Se tee 105 PA eG Se RDN raed Sedat RAR a 106 POG At steet Eeer 107 Server Board JuMpers siii dee EEN 108 General Procedure to Change Jumper Setting kee 109 EMOS ls a 110 Password lol 110 Recovery Boot JUMPER 110 Boot Block Write Protect JUM Per x cin ie 111 FRB Timer Enable Jumper v oococicinacidaslcda ic 112 Chassis Intrusion Detection Jumper uk 112 ar 113 Video Oe 114 6 Information for Computer Integrators Regulatory Require ments uneseni n A A A 119 Safety Standard EE 119 ENC lt Regula lO Success id 119 Product Certification Markings nn nncnnn cnn nnnnrrnncnn 120 Installation INStrUCIONS eins si 121 Seeerei 121 Ensure Host Computer and Accessory Module Certifications ssseeeeeeeeeeee eenen 122 Prevent Power Supply Overload vicio ada 122 Place Battery Marking On Computer 123 Use Only for Intended Appltcatons ANEN 123 installation Preca tionS sice krein ada 123 7 Equipment Log and Power Consumption Worksheets ste W ahs nna e BE 125 Current Usage caviar a 127 Calculating Power Consumption step did 127 AO AA A O ae ven OEE eerste 131 vi Figures 60 00 Ll Back Pa el Kapgen asientan 10 Server Board Connector and Component Locations 11 Server Board Screw Hole Locations AE 23 ASA REI GE 24 REMOVING a PrOCESSOF sico toca
57. Server Management Module Connector Pinot ENNEN 99 IMB Connector A A O cs de ee 100 Video Port Connector Pin Outs sets chcvetectectes ill lt ee eg Cas 100 Keyboard and Mouse Connector Pinouts ENNEN 100 Parallel Port Connector PIQUE acia ii rs aii 101 Serial Port A External Connector Pinot 101 Serial Port B Internal Header Pinout Au 101 vii viii RJ 45 Network Connector Pinout 0 ccecceeeeceeeceeeceeeeceeeceeeceeeceeceeceeeeseeeceeeaeeeenees 102 Narrow SCSI Connector bmout anno nanancnnncnnnncnanananins 103 Wide SCSI Connector Pinout e a a O a A A eai 104 DE Gonnector nA i EA Lct dla 105 ISA Comnector bot 106 PCI Connector PINOUT ien a a e a ea OE a 107 Server Board Jumper SUMIMANY spratietarls italia 108 unge sti rl R ee 113 Standard VGA Mocdes nn cano a aaa 114 Extended VGA lee EE 115 Power Usage Worksheet 1 ncicioion ica id 128 Power Usage Words hostias sti aviedas deb ob ae alid due bah Re Suneaieccave eR MAetyennc Sees 129 1 Description Server Board Features Table 1 Server Board Features Feature Processor Memory dynamic random access DRAM Video memory PCI bus ISA bus Server Management Graphics SCSI Network System I O Form Factor Description Installed Up to two Pentium II processors packaged in single edge contact S E C cartridges and installed in 242 pin Slot 1 processor connectors operating at 1 8 V to 3 5 V The system board s voltage regulator is auto
58. Speaker connector AT front panel connector System fan connector fan1 IDE connectors primary and secondary External IMB connector System fan connector fan2 Server monitor module SMM connector Narrow SCSI connector Wide SCSI connector Chassis intrusion connector USB header RJ 45 network connector Serial port 2 header VGA monitor port Parallel port connector Serial port 1 connector Keyboard and Mouse PS 2 compatible connectors TDASETIONmMOUOOU gt XEXSCAVODOVOZZ 95 ATX Power Connector Table 11 Pin 1 gt O ON DAF Go PD o ATX Power Connector Pinout Signal 3 3 VDC 3 3 VDC COM 5 VDC COM 5 VDC COM PWR OK 5 VSB 12 VDC Wire color Orange Orange Black Red Black Red Black Grey Purple Yellow Main Power Connector 96 Table 12 hPin 1 13 2 14 3 15 4 16 5 17 6 18 Main Power Connector Pinout Signal 5 VDC 5 VDC 5 VDC 5 VDC 5 VDC 5 VDC 12 VDC 5 VDC COM COM COM COM Wire Color Red Red Red Red White Red Blue Red Black Black Black Black Pin 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 Pin 19 20 21 10 22 11 23 12 24 Signal 3 3 VDC 3 3 V sense 12 VDC COM PS ON_L COM COM COM 5 VDC 5 VDC 5 VDC Signal COM COM COM COM COM COM 3 3 VDC 3 3 VDC 12V 3 3 VDC 12 VDC 12 VDC Wire color Orange Brown Blue Black Green Black Black Black White Red Red Wire Color Black Black Black
59. TIONS Jecke AD gg 22 The system board can be extremely sensitive to ESD and always requires careful handling After removing it from the system place it component side up on a nonconductive static free surface to prevent shorting out the battery leads If you place the board on a conductive surface the battery leads may short out This will result in a loss of CMOS data and will drain the battery Do not slide the system board over any surface If you place the system board on a conductive surface the battery leads may short out If they do this will result in a loss of CMOS data and will drain the battery Observe the safety and ESD precautions at the beginning of this chapter Open the system and remove peripherals and components blocking access to the system board See your chassis manual for more information Label and disconnect all internal cables connected to add in boards Remove all add in boards Label and disconnect all internal cables connected to the system board Remove the system board retaining screws and set them aside Remove the system board and place it component side up on a nonconductive static free surface or in an antistatic bag If present remove and save the EMI gasket that covers the I O connectors on the board Upgrading
60. Version 2 0 Revision X XX Where X XX is the revision number for the utility Configuration File The configuration file is in ASCII text The utility executes commands formed by the strings present in the configuration file These commands cause the utility to perform various tasks needed to ultimately load the proper SDRs into the nonvolatile storage of the BMC and possibly generic FRU devices Some of the commands may be interactive and require you to make a choice Prompting for Product Level FRU Information Through the use of a Configuration File the utility may prompt you for FRU information Filtering Sensor Data Record From the SDR File The MASTER SDR file has all the possible SDRs for the system These records may need to be filtered based on the current product configuration The configuration file directs the filtering of the SDRs 73 Updating the SDR Nonvolatile Storage Area After the utility validates the header area of the supplied SDR file it updates the SDR repository area Before programming the utility clears the SDR repository area If the SDR file is loaded via a cfg File the utility filters all tagged SDRs depending on the product configuration set in the Configuration File Nontagged SDRs are automatically programmed The utility also copies all written SDRs to the SDR TMP file It contains an image of what was loaded and the TMP file is also useful for debugging the server Updating FRU Nonvolatile Storage
61. a few seconds while the boot process continues and the system beeps once Then this message appears Insert bootable media in the appropriate drive If you do not press lt F2 gt and DO have an operating system loaded the boot process continues and this message appears Press lt Ctrl gt lt C gt to enter SCSI Utility 4 Press lt Ctrl C gt if there are SCSI devices installed When the utility opens follow the displayed instructions to configure the onboard SCSI host adapter settings and to run the SCSI utilities Also see Using the Symbios SCSI Utility on page 78 If you do not enter the SCSI utility the boot process continues 5 Press lt Esc gt during POST to pop up a boot menu when POST finishes From this menu you can choose the boot device or enter BIOS Setup After POST completes the system beeps once What appears on the screen after this depends on whether you have an operating system loaded and if so which one If the system halts before POST completes running it emits a beep code indicating a fatal system error that requires immediate attention If POST can display a message on the video display screen it causes the speaker to beep twice as the message appears Note the screen display and write down the beep code you hear this information is useful for your service representative For a listing of beep codes and error messages that POST can generate see the Solving Problems chapter in this manual 3
62. ability to parse the data present or a hardware failure the utility displays an error message and exits Displaying DMI Area The DMI area is displayed in ASCII format when the field is ASCII or as a number when the field is a number Each DMI area displayed is headed with the DMI area designated name Each field has a field name header followed by the field in ASCII or as a number Example To display the DMI area type frusdr d dmi and press lt Enter gt A message similar to the following appears Displaying DMI Area System Information Type 1 8 bytes Manufacturer Intel Product NA440BX BP Version 000000000000 Serial Number 0123456789 Board Information Type 2 8 bytes Manufacturer Intel Product N440BX Ultra SCSI Backplane Version 681234 501 Serial Number NO3121530 Chassis Information Type 3 9 bytes Manufacturer Intel Type Main Server Chassis Version 000000 000 Serial Number 9912345678 Asset Tagt 71 Displaying FRU Area The FRU area is displayed in ASCII format when the field is ASCII or as a number when the field is anumber Each FRU area displayed is headed with the FRU area designated name Each field has a field name header followed by the field in ASCH or as a number The Board Chassis and Product FRU areas end with an END OF FIELDS CODE that indicates there is no more data in this area The Internal Use area is displayed in hex format 16 bytes per line Example
63. ailure of an option ROM continued Solving Problems Table 9 Port 80 Codes continued Normal Port 80 Codes Beeps 93 9C 9D 9E AO A2 A4 C2 C3 A8 AA AC AE BO B2 B4 1 B5 BE B6 BG BA B7 BD BF 8F 91 9F 97 99 Error Scan for User flash ROMs MP table initialization wake up secondary processor and halt it Set up Power Management not used Enable security Enable hardware interrupts Set time of day Check key lock Initialize typematic rate Initialize DMI tables Log post errors with Post error manager and to SEL in BMC Also update VID bits and memory presence to BMC Display and FRB errors watchdog timeouts BIST or CPU failures Erase F2 prompt Scan for F2 key stroke Initialize EMP port if selected Remove com2 from BDA if EMP is enabled Enter SETUP Clear in POST flag Turn on secure boot if enabled secure front panel blank video floppy write protect Check for errors POST done prepare to boot Operating System One short beep before boot Display Quietboot not used Clear screen Check password optional Clear parity checkers Not used ACPI configuration table configuration in memory and BDA Display multiboot menu if esc is hit Display system config summary if enabled in CMOS Get total of hard drives and put in BDA Program IDE hard drives timing PIO modes etc Save Total of hard drives SCSI and ATA in BDA Fixup MP table checksum Check smart hard d
64. and displays a message There is no entry in the SSU to enable or disable a keyboard The sequence that you specify on the menu in the SSU Multi Boot Group will determine the boot order If secure mode is enabled a user password is set then you will be prompted for a password before the system fully boots If secure mode is enabled and the Secure Boot Mode option is also enabled the system will fully boot but will require a password before accepting any keyboard or mouse input System Description 2 Upgrading Tools and Supplies Needed e Phillips cross head screwdriver 1 bit and 2 bit e Jumper removal tool or needle nosed pliers e Pen or pencil e Antistatic wrist strap and conductive foam pad recommended Warnings and Cautions These warnings and cautions apply throughout this chapter Only a technically qualified person should configure the system board AA WARNINGS System power on off The power button DOES NOT turn off the system AC power To remove power from system you must unplug the AC power cord from the wall outlet Hazardous conditions devices amp cables Hazardous electrical conditions may be present on power telephone and communication cables Turn off the system and disconnect the power cord telecommunications systems networks and modems attached to the system before opening it Otherwise personal injury or equipment damage can result Jh CAUTIONS Electrostatic discharge ESD amp ES
65. annot be disabled The onboard device must always be at one end of the bus IDE Controller IDE is a 16 bit interface for intelligent disk drives with AT disk controller electronics onboard The PCIISA IDE Accelerator also known as PIIX4 is a multifunction device on the system board that acts as a PCI based Fast IDE controller The device controls e PIO and IDE DMA bus master operations e Mode 4 timings e Transfer rates up to 22 MB sec e Buffering for PCI IDE burst transfers e Master slave IDE mode e Up to two devices per channel two channels IDEO and IDE1 lt gt NOTE 18 inch maximum length of IDE cable on each channel you can connect an IDE signal cable up to a maximum of 18 inches each to each IDE connector on the system board Each cable can support two devices one at the end of the cable and one 6 inches from the end of the cable Network Controller The system board includes a 1OBASE T 100BASE TX network solution based on the Intel 82558 Fast Ethernet PCI Bus Controller As a PCI bus master the controller can burst data at up to 132 MB sec The controller contains two receive and transmit FIFO buffers that prevent data overruns or underruns while waiting for access to the PCI bus The controller has the following e 32 bit PCI bus master interface direct drive of bus compatible with PCI Bus Specification Revision 2 1 e Chained memory structure with improved dynamic transmit chaining for enhanced performance
66. are CD shipped with the server The SSU provides a graphical user interface GUI over an extensible framework for server configuration For the N440BX systems the SSU framework supports the following functions and capabilities e assigns resources to baseboard devices and add in cards prior to loading the operating system OS e allows you to specify boot device order and system security options e permits viewing and clearing of the system s critical event log e allows troubleshooting of the server when the OS is not operational e provides a system level view of the server s I O devices When to Run the System Setup Utility 48 The SSU is a DOS based utility that supports extended system configuration operations for onboard resources and add in boards You can also view the system event log and to set system boot and security options Use the SSU when you need to e add and remove boards affecting the assignment of resources ports memory IRQs DMA e modify the server s boot device order or security settings e change the server configuration settings e save the server configuration e view or clear the system event log If you install or remove an ISA add in board you must run the SSU to reconfigure the server Running the SSU is optional for PCI and Plug and Play ISA add in boards The SSU is PCl aware and it complies with the ISA Plug and Play specifications The SSU works with any compliant configuration CFG files supplied b
67. arning must be placed permanently and legibly on the host computer as near as possible to the battery A WARNING Danger of explosion if battery is incorrectly replaced Replace with only the same or equivalent type recommended by the manufacturer Dispose of used batteries according to the manufacturer s instructions Use Only for Intended Applications This product was evaluated for use in ITE computers that will be installed in offices schools computer rooms and similar locations The suitability of this product for other product categories other than ITE applications such as medical industrial alarm systems and test equipment may require further evaluation Installation Precautions When you install and test the server board observe all warnings and cautions in the installation instructions To avoid injury be careful of e Sharp pins on connectors e Sharp pins on printed circuit assemblies e Rough edges and sharp corners on the chassis e Hot components like processors voltage regulators and heat sinks e Damage to wires that could cause a short circuit Observe all warnings and cautions that instruct you to refer computer servicing to qualified technical personnel A WARNING Do not open the power supply Risk of electric shock and burns from high voltage and rapid overheating Refer servicing of the power supply to qualified technical personnel 123 124 Information for Computer Integrators 7 Equipment
68. ave all the changes made by clicking on the Save button Saving writes your current configuration to nonvolatile storage where it will be available to the system after every reboot 6 Closing the window by clicking on the system menu the dash in the upper left corner discards all changes Defining an ISA Card 52 An ISA card usually comes with a vendor created CFG file that specifies the resources the card requires to function properly If the CFG file is unavailable you must manually create it or define the card through the SSU Defining an ISA card consists of specifying the name of the card and the resources it consumes This allows the RCA to consider the ISA card resource requirements when the RCA tries to resolve conflicts The information is also used by the system BIOS to configure the hardware when the system is booted 1 To add or remove ISA card resources click on the appropriate resource buttons select the desired value and click on Add or Remove 2 After you complete the necessary information click on Save 3 To edit a card click on Load to retrieve the card information After making changes click on Save 4 To create a card click on New 5 To remove a current definition of a card click on Delete Configuration Software Utilities Adding and Removing ISA Cards Adding and removing cards through the RCA provides a way for the RCA to run its conflict detection algorithms on the resources requested by the
69. cards This alerts you to any possible problems with that particular card in the current configuration e To add an ISA card 1 Ze 3 Click on Add ISA Card in the RCA window Specify the directory for the CFG file Select the file and click on Ok e To remove an ISA card 1 2 Select a valid ISA card in the Devices section of the RCA window Click on Remove ISA Card Modifying Resources Modifying the resources of a device may be necessary to accommodate certain operating systems applications and drivers It may also be necessary to modify resources to resolve a conflict e To modify the resources associated with a device 1 2 Highlight the device in the Devices section of the RCA window Press the spacebar or lt Enter gt or double click on the entry This displays the functions of the selected device along with possible choices and the resources associated with those choices e To make a modification 1 2 6 Highlight the function in the Configuration window Press the spacebar or lt Enter gt or double click on the entry this updates the Choice and resource lists Press the tab key to get to the Choice list and press lt Enter gt Use the arrow keys to select a proper choice and press lt Enter gt again If the choice allows multiple possible values for a particular resource use the hot key to select a resource and press the spacebar or double click on the resource Select the
70. ces Turn off the system and all external peripheral devices Disconnect all of them from the system except the keyboard and video monitor Make sure the system power cord is plugged into a properly grounded AC outlet 81 3 Make sure your video display monitor and keyboard are correctly connected to the system Turn on the video monitor Set its brightness and contrast controls to at least two thirds of their maximum ranges see the documentation supplied with your video display monitor 4 If the operating system normally loads from the hard disk drive make sure there is no diskette in drive A Otherwise place a diskette containing the operating system files in drive A 5 Turn on the system If the power LED does not light see Power Light Does Not Light on page 83 Using PCDiagnostics A diagnostics package for the system is contained on the Configuration Software CD that comes with the system For documentation about the test modules see the Diagnostic help disks that end with the extension HLP They are ASCII files that you can print to form a manual of all tests in this product e The program called Testview uses a simple DOS based menu system e The program called T EXE is not for Windows or DOS you can access it at the command line prompt without having a hard drive installed The README TXT file for diagnostics tells how to install the program A CAUTION Read help information for a test before running it the diagn
71. controls whether this alarm feature is enabled or disabled Procedure to disable bypass the chassis intrusion switch 1 See General Procedure to Change Jumper Setting on page 109 2 Move the chassis intrusion detection jumper from pins 9 and 10 to pins 10 and 11 to disable the alarm switch 3 Reinstall the side cover for your safety and connect the power cord to the system 4 Turn the system on and wait for POST to complete 5 Run the SSU to configure the system See Chapter 3 To enable the intrusion switch do the above steps but move the jumper back to pins 9 and 10 112 Technical Reference Interrupts The table below recommends the logical interrupt mapping of interrupt sources it reflects a typical configuration Use the information to determine how to program each interrupt The actual interrupt map is defined using configuration registers in the PITX4 and the I O controller I O Redirection Registers in the I O APIC are provided for each interrupt signal the signals define hardware interrupt signal characteristics for APIC messages sent to local APIC s lt gt NOTE To disable either IDE controller and reuse the interrupt if you plan to disable either IDE controller to reuse the interrupt for that controller you must physically unplug the IDE cable from the board connector IDEO or IDE1 if a cable is present Simply disabling the drive by configuring the SSU option does not free up the interrupt Table
72. d Slave Submenu Feature Type Cylinders Heads Sectors Maximum Capacity Multi Sector Transfer LBA Mode Control 32 Bit I O Transfer Mode Ultra DMA Mode Choices Auto None CD ROM IDE Removable ATAPI Removable User 0 to 65535 1 to 16 0 to 63 N A Disabled 2 4 8 or 16 sectors Disabled Enabled Disabled Enabled Standard Fast PIO 1 Fast PIO 2 Fast PIO 3 Fast PIO 4 FPIO 3 DMA 1 FPIO 4 DMA 2 Disabled Mode 0 Mode 1 Mode 2 Description Auto forces the system to attempt auto detection of the drive type None informs the system to ignore this drive CD ROM allows the manual entry of some fields described below IDE Removable allows the manual entry of some fields described below ATAPI Removable allows the manual entry of some fields described below User allows the manual entry of all fields described below Number of Cylinders on Drive This field is changeable only for Type User Number of read write heads on drive This field is available only for Type User Number of sectors per track This field is available only for Type User Computed size of drive from cylinders heads and sectors entered This field is informational only for Type User Determines the number of sectors per block for multi sector transfers This field is informational only for Type Auto Enabling LBA causes logical block addressing to be used in place of cylinders heads and sect
73. d field To Change or Clear the Administrator Password 1 Click on the Administrator password button 2 Enter the old password in the first field 3 Enter the new password in the second field or leave blank to clear 4 Confirm the password by entering it again in the second field or leave blank to clear Security Options Under this window you can set the other security options e Hot Key set a key sequence that when pressed will drop the server into secure mode e Lock Out Timer set an interval that if no activity takes place during it will drop the server into secure mode e Secure Boot Mode force the server to boot directly into secure mode e Video Blanking turn off the video when the server is in secure mode e Floppy Write control access to the diskette drive while the server is in secure mode e Reset Power Switch Locking control the power and reset buttons while the server is in secure mode 54 Configuration Software Utilities SEL Viewer Add in Clicking on the SELU Add in task brings up the Server Event Log SEL viewer You can load and view the current SEL data stored in the BMC save the currently loaded SEL data to a file view previously saved SEL data or clear the SEL The SEL Viewer has the following menus File The File menu has the following options View Load SEL View data from a previously saved SEL file Save SEL Save the currently loaded SEL data to a file Clear SEL Clears
74. dard for Safety of Information Technology Equipment including Electrical Business Equipment USA and Canada CSA C22 2 No 950 95 3 Edition July 28 1995 The Standard for Safety of Information Technology Equipment including Electrical Business Equipment Canada EN 60 950 2 Edition 1992 with Amendments 1 2 and 3 The Standard for Safety of Information Technology Equipment including Electrical Business Equipment European Union IEC 950 2 edition 1991 with Amendments 1 2 3 and 4 The Standard for Safety of Information Technology Equipment including Electrical Business Equipment International EMKO TSE 74 SEC 207 94 Summary of Nordic deviations to EN 60 950 Norway Sweden Denmark and Finland EMC Regulations FCC Class B Title 47 of the Code of Federal Regulations Parts 2 and 15 Subpart B pertaining to unintentional radiators USA CISPR 22 2 Edition 1993 Amendment 1 1995 Limits and methods of measurement of Radio Interference Characteristics of Information Technology Equipment International 119 EN 55 022 1995 Limits and methods of measurement of Radio Interference Characteristics of Information Technology Equipment Europe EN 50 082 1 1992 Generic Immunity Standard Currently compliance is determined via testing to IEC 801 2 3 and 4 Europe VCCI Class B ITE Implementation Regulations for Voluntary Control of Radio Interference by Data Processing Equipment a
75. desired resource and click on Ok System Resource Usage Clicking on the Resource Use button in the Configuration window displays the System Resource Usage window This window shows what resources each device is consuming This information 1s useful for choosing resources if a conflict occurs Devices can be organized according to the resources you want to examine using the options in the Resource section of the screen The resource information can also be written to a plain text file through this window 53 Multiboot Options Add in Under this window you can change the boot priority of a device 1 Select a device 2 Press the button to move it up in the list Press the button to move it down Security Add in Under this window you can set the User and Administrator passwords and security options To Set the User Password 1 Click on the user password button 2 Enter the password in the first field 3 Confirm the password by entering it again in the second field To Change or Clear the User Password 1 Click on the User password button 2 Enter the old password in the first field 3 Enter the new password in the second field or leave blank to clear 4 Confirm the password by entering it again in the second field or leave blank to clear To Set the Administrator Password 1 Click on the Administrator password button 2 Enter the password in the first field 3 Confirm the password by entering it again in the secon
76. e Programmable transmit threshold for improved bus utilization e Early receive interrupt for concurrent processing of receive data e On chip counters for network management e Autodetect and autoswitching for 10 or 100 Mbps network speeds e Support for both 10 Mbps and 100 Mbps networks capable of full or half duplex with back to back transmit at 100 Mbps The network status LEDs on the system board indicate e Transmit receive activity on the LAN e Valid link to the LAN e 10 100 Mbps transfer mode 16 System Description Keyboard and Mouse The keyboard mouse controller is PS 2 compatible The system may be locked automatically if there is no keyboard or mouse activity for a predefined length of time if specified through the System Setup Utility SSU Once the inactivity lockout timer has expired the keyboard and mouse do not respond until the previously stored password is entered Server Management Server Management features are implemented using one microcontroller Server Board Management Controller BMC All server management functionality is concentrated in the BMC The BMC and associated circuitry are powered from 5V_Standby which remains active when system power is switched off and the system is still plugged into AC power One major function of the BMC is to autonomously monitor system management events and log their occurrence in the non volatile System Event Log SEL These include events such as over temperat
77. e adapter and the hub Some hubs require a crossover cable while others require a straight through cable for more information on crossover cabling see your hub documentation The Activity LED doesn t light a a 86 Make sure you ve loaded the correct network drivers Network may be idle Try accessing a server Solving Problems The controller stopped working when an add in adapter was installed a a a a a a a Make sure the cable is connected to the port from the onboard network controller Make sure your PCI BIOS is current Try the PCI Installation Tips below Make sure the other adapter supports shared interrupts Also make sure your operating system supports shared interrupts OS 2 does not Try reseating the add in adapter The add in adapter stopped working without apparent cause Try reseating the adapter first then try a different slot if necessary The network driver files may be corrupt or deleted Delete and then reinstall the drivers Run the diagnostics PCI Installation Tips Some common PCI tips are listed here a Reserve interrupts IRQs and or memory addresses specifically for ISA adapters This prevents PCI cards from trying to use the same settings ISA cards are using Use the SSU to keep track of ISA adapter resources Certain drivers may require interrupts that are not shared with other PCI drivers The SSU can be used to adjust the interrupt numbers for PCI devic
78. e drive is disabled or improperly configured you must use the flash resident Setup utility to enable it so that you can use the SSU If necessary you can disable the drive after you exit the SSU Information entered using the SSU overrides any entered using Setup Running the SSU Running the SSU Locally Running the ssu bat file provided on the SSU media starts the SSU If the server boots directly from the SSU media the seu bat file is automatically run If it boots from a different media the SSU can be started manually or by another application When the SSU starts in the local execution mode the default mode the SSU accepts input from the keyboard and or mouse The SSU presents a VGA based Graphical User Interface GUI on the primary monitor The SSU runs from writable nonwritable removable and nonremovable media If the SSU is run from nonwritable media user preference settings such as screen colors can not be saved The SSU supports the ROM DOS V6 22 operating system It may run on other ROM DOS compatible operating systems but they are not supported The SSU will not operate from a DOS box running under an operating system such as Windowst Running the SSU Remotely Running the SSU remotely requires a remote server with a Server Monitor Module 2 SMM2 card and a local system with Remote Control software available The SMM2 card provides video memory keyboard and mouse redirection support for the remote server The Rem
79. e or a diskette in drive A the system prompts for a password When the password is entered the system boots from CD or diskette and disables the secure mode If there is no CD in the CD ROM drive or diskette in drive A the system boots from a hard drive and automatically goes into secure mode All enabled secure mode features go into effect at boot time To leave secure mode Enter the correct password continued 19 Table 4 Feature Disable writing to diskette Disable the power and reset buttons Set a time out period so that keyboard and mouse input are not accepted Also screen can be blanked and writes to diskette can be inhibited Control access to using the SSU set administrative password Control access to the system other than SSU set user password Boot without keyboard Specify the boot sequence Software Security Features continued Description In secure mode the system will not boot from or write to a diskette unless a password is entered To set this feature use the SSU Security Subsystem Group To write protect access to diskette whether the system is in secure mode or not use the Setup main menu Floppy Options and specify Floppy Access as read only Enable the feature through the SSU Then the power and reset buttons are disabled when the system is in secure mode Specify and enable an inactivity time out period of from 1 to 120 minutes If no keyboard or mouse action occurs
80. e server board to the I O panel Parallel Port The 87309 provides one IEEE 1284 compatible 25 pin bidirectional EPP supporting levels 1 7 and 1 9 BIOS programming of the 87309 registers enable the parallel port and determine the port address and interrupt ECP mode is supported with 2 possible DMA channels When disabled the interrupt is available to add in boards Add in Board Slots The system board has two full length ISA bus connectors One of the connectors shares a chassis expansion slot with a PCI connector ISA features e Bus speed up to 8 33 MHz e 16 bit memory addressing e Type A transfers at 5 33 Mbps e Type B transfers at 8 Mbps e 8 or 16 bit data transfers e Plug and Play ready The system board has four full length PCI connectors One of the connectors shares a chassis expansion slot with an ISA connector PCI features e Bus speed up to 33 MHz e 32 bit memory addressing e 5 V signaling environment e Burst transfers of up to 133 Mbps e 8 16 or 32 bit data transfers e Plug and Play ready e Parity enabled 14 System Description Video The onboard integrated Cirrus Logic CL GD5480 64 bit VGA chip contains an SVGA controller that is fully compatible with these video standards CGAT EGAT Herculest Graphics MDAT and VGA The standard configuration comes with 2 MB of 10 ns onboard video memory The video controller supports pixel resolutions of up to 1600 x 1200 and up to 16 7 M colors The SVGA c
81. e system board has four 3 pin shrouded and keyed fan connectors Two are located next to the processor sockets one for each processor for a tachometer fan heat sink 98 Table 17 Pin 4 2 3 Signal GND 12V Fan Sensor Pin 10 12 14 16 Signal Hard disk activity LED Front panel power switch NC 5V Chassis intrusion switch 5v standby GND GND 12C Clock line Reset button Heatsink Fan Connector Pinout Technical Reference The remaining two fan connectors attach to a fans equipped with a sensor that indicates whether the fan is operating The sensor pins for these fans are routed to the BMC for failure monitoring Each connector has the following pinout Table 18 Chassis Fan Connector Pinout Pin 4 2 3 Signal GND Fan Sensor 12V Server Management Table 19 Server Management Module Connector Pinout Pin ON Oa fF WwW M Po M Pp NI Pp Pp N Co oak Go M zz 0 DAN DA A WO NM O Signal CPU_SMI_L LOCAL DC GCL GND Reserved PWR_CNTRL_SFC_L LOCAL_l2C_SDA 5VSTNDBY KEYLOCK_SFC_L CPU_NMI VCC3 RST_SFC_L GND GND Reserved SECURE_MODE_BMC GND SFC_CHASSIS_INSTRUSION_L Reserved Reserved GND Reserved Reserved Reserved Reserved Key pin N C Reserved Description System Management Interrupt GC clock line Ground N A Host power supply on off control 12C serial data line 5V standby indication power OK Keyboard lock
82. e that the host computer any added subassembly such as a board or drive assembly including internal or external wiring are certified for the region s where the end product will be used Marks on the product are proof of certification Certification marks are as follows In Europe The CE marking signifies compliance with all relevant European requirements If the host computer does not bear the CE marking obtain a supplier s Declaration of Conformity to the appropriate standards required by the European EMC Directive and Low Voltage Directive Other directives such as the Machinery and Telecommunications Directives may also apply depending on the type of product No regulatory assessment is necessary for low voltage DC wiring used internally or wiring used externally when provided with appropriate overcurrent protection Appropriate protection is provided by a maximum 8 Amp current limiting circuit or a maximum 5 Amp fuse or positive temperature coefficient PTC resistor This Intel server board has PTCs on all external ports that provide DC power externally In the United States A certification mark by a Nationally Recognized Testing Laboratory NRTL such as UL CSA or ETL signifies compliance with safety requirements External wiring must be UL Listed and suitable for the intended use Internal wiring must be UL Listed or Recognized and rated for applicable voltages and temperatures The FCC mark Class A for commercial or industrial only
83. ect to a Server a a Make sure you are using the drivers that are shipped on the system Configuration Software CD for the onboard network controller Make sure the driver is loaded and the protocols are bound Make sure the network cable is securely attached to the connector at the system back panel and that the network controller Link LED is on visible at back panel If the cable is attached but the problem persists try a different cable Make sure the hub port is configured for the same duplex mode as the network controller Check with your LAN administrator about the correct networking software that needs to be installed If you are directly connecting two servers no hub some hubs may also require a crossover cable see your hub documentation for more information on crossover cables Check the network controller LEDs that are visible through an opening at the system back panel Problems with Network The server hangs when the drivers are loaded a a a a LU UO Change the PCI BIOS interrupt settings Try the PCI Installation Tips below Diagnostics pass but the connection fails Make sure the network cable is securely attached Make sure you specify the correct frame type in your NET CFG file The Link LED doesn t light Make sure you have loaded the network drivers Check all cable connections Try another port on the hub Make sure you have the correct type of cable between th
84. ent initialization agent e Wake on LAN via Magic Packett support Security To help prevent unauthorized entry or use of the system the system includes server management software that monitors the system intrusion switch Security with Mechanical Locks and Monitoring Tf installed you can activate the chassis intrusion alarm switch When the side door is opened the switch transmits an alarm signal to the system board where server management software processes the signal The system can be programmed to respond to an intrusion by powering down or by locking the keyboard for example Software Locks The BIOS Setup and the System Setup Utility SSU provide a number of security features to prevent unauthorized or accidental access to the system Once the security measures are enabled you can access the system only after you enter the correct password s For example e Enable the keyboard lockout timer so that the server requires a password to reactivate the keyboard and mouse after a specified time out period 1 to 120 minutes e Set and enable an administrative password e Set and enable a user password e Set secure mode to prevent keyboard or mouse input and to prevent use of the front panel reset and power switches e Activate a hot key combination to enter secure mode quickly e Disable writing to the diskette drive when secure mode is set Using Passwords You can set either the user password the administrator password
85. equirements when installing this board assembly Read and adhere to all of these instructions and the instructions supplied with the host computer and associated modules If the instructions for the host computer are inconsistent with these instructions or the instructions for associated modules contact the supplier s technical support to find out how you can ensure that your computer meets safety and regulatory requirements If you do not follow these instructions and the instructions provided by host computer and module suppliers you increase safety risk and the possibility of non compliance with regional laws and regulations Ensure EMC Before computer integration make sure that the host chassis power supply and other modules have passed EMC certification testing In the installation instructions for the host chassis power supply and other modules pay close attention to the following e Certifications see Ensure Host Computer and Accessory Module Certifications on page 122 e External I O cable shielding and filtering e Mounting grounding and bonding requirements e Keying connectors when mismating of connectors could be hazardous If the host chassis power supply and other modules have not passed applicable EMC certification testing before integration EMC testing must be conducted on a representative sample of the newly completed computer 121 Ensure Host Computer and Accessory Module Certifications Make sur
86. eral Configuration e Advanced Chipset Control Security Menu Server Menu e System Management gt Server Management Information e Console Redirection Boot Menu e Boot Device Priority e Hard Drive e Removable Devices Exit Menu Configuration Software Utilities To Press Get general help lt F1 gt or lt Atl H gt Move between menus lt gt Go to the previous item t Go to the next Item y Change the value of an item OF Select an item or display a submenu lt Enter gt Leave a submenu or exit Setup lt Esc gt Reset to Setup defaults lt F9 gt Save and exit Setup lt F10 gt When you see this What it means On screen an option is shown but you You cannot change or configure the option in that menu cannot select it or move to that field screen Either the option is autoconfigured or autodetected or you must use a different Setup screen or you must use the SSU On screen the phrase Press Enter Press lt Enter gt to display a submenu that is either a separate appears next to the option full screen menu or a pop up menu with one or more choices The rest of this section lists the features that display onscreen after you press lt F2 gt to enter Setup Not all of the option choices are described because 1 a few are not user selectable but are displayed for your information and 2 many of the choices are relatively self explanatory 37 Main Menu You can make the following selections on the Main Menu itself
87. ersists there may be a problem with the diskette drive system board or drive signal cable Contact your service representative or authorized dealer for assistance Hard Disk Drive Activity Light Does Not Light If you have installed one or more hard disk drives in your system check the following Q Are the power and signal cables to the drive properly installed Q Are all relevant switches and jumpers on the hard drive and adapter board set correctly Q Is the onboard IDE controller enabled IDE hard drives only QU Is the hard disk drive properly configured gt NOTE Front panel hard disk LED indicates IDE and SCSI devices the hard disk drive activity light on the front panel lights when either an IDE hard disk drive or a SCSI device controlled by the onboard SCSI host controller is in use This LED does not display CD ROM activity CD ROM Drive Activity Light Does Not Light Check the following LI Are the power and signal cables to the CD ROM drive properly installed Q Are all relevant switches and jumpers on the drive set correctly QU Is the drive properly configured LI Is the onboard IDE controller enabled 85 gt NOTE Front panel hard disk LED indicates IDE and SCSI devices the hard disk drive activity light on the front panel lights when either an IDE hard disk drive or a SCSI device controlled by the onboard SCSI host controller 1s in use This LED does not display CD ROM activity Cannot Conn
88. erver connection Re Connect raises the connect dialog A list of the five most recent connections can click on one of the five servers most recently connected to A connection to the selected server is initiated Action Power On Off powers the server on or off with post power up options Reset resets the server with post reset options SEL Viewer opens the SEL viewer SDR Viewer opens the SDR viewer 61 FRU Viewer opens the FRU viewer Phonebook opens the phonebook dialog e Help provides version information and help topics for the EMP Console Server Control Operations Three server control operations are available from the menu or toolbar of the main EMP Console window remote server connection powering the server on and off and resetting the server The server console mode can also be switched between EMP active and BIOS redirect modes through post power up and reset options Connect When you select Re Connect from the Connect menu the Connect dialog in Figure 13 allows you to connect to a selected server If the client machine is already connected to a server initiating connection generates a warning message It lets you know that the existing connection will be terminated if you continue trying to initiate the new connection You are prompted to enter the EMP password whenever a connection is attempted Line selection Serial line Dial up
89. es For certain drivers 1t may be necessary to alter settings so that interrupts are not shared Problems with Application Software If you have problems with application software do the following a LU UL a Verify that the software is properly configured for the system See the software installation and operation documentation for instructions on setting up and using the software Try a different copy of the software to see if the problem is with the copy you are using Make sure all cables are installed correctly Verify that the system board jumpers are set correctly See Chapter 5 If other software runs correctly on the system contact your vendor about the failing software If the problem persists contact the software vendor s customer service representative for assistance 87 Bootable CD ROM Is Not Detected Check the following LJ Is the BIOS set to allow the CD ROM to be the first bootable device Error and Informational Messages When you turn on the system POST displays messages that provide information about the system If a failure occurs POST emits beep codes that indicate errors in hardware software or firmware If POST can display a message on the video display screen it causes the speaker to beep twice as the message appears POST Codes and Countdown Codes The BIOS indicates the current testing phase during POST after the video adapter has been successfully initialized by outputting a 2 digi
90. et SDR display mode to either Hex or verbose mode Close the SDR viewer Exit the EMP Console SDR Viewer Menu Options The following menu options are found on the SDR viewer menu bar File Close closes the SDR viewer Exit exits the EMP Console View Display all Records displays all records from the SDR repository SDR Type displays the records of a particular SDR type You select an SDR type from a pop up menu that displays all the SDR types available for the given hardware SDR Info displays the SDR summary information as returned by the server Settings lets you change operating parameters for the SDR viewer This menu displays the following suboption Display HEX Verbose toggles between HEX mode and interpreted mode of displaying SDR records Window gives options for displaying currently open windows Help provides version information for the SDR viewer and provides help topics on the EMP Console FRU Viewer The FRU viewer allows you to view the server s FRU Field Replaceable Units data from the server s baseboard FRU information area Options available with the SDR viewer are View all FRU records View FRU summary info Set FRU display mode to either Hex or verbose mode Close the FRU viewer Exit the EMP Console 67 FRU Viewer Menu Options 68 The following menu options are found on the FRU viewer menu bar File Close closes the FRU viewer Exit exit
91. formance The controller automatically detects sizes and initializes the memory array depending on the type size and speed of the installed DIMMs and reports memory size and allocation to the system via configuration registers NOTE DIMM sizes and compatibility use DIMMs that have been tested for compatibility with the system board Contact your sales representative or dealer for a current list of approved memory modules The table below lists some sample size combinations Table 3 Sample DIMM Component Combinations Bank 0 slot J1 Bank 1 slot J2 Bank 2 slot J3 Bank 3 slot J4 Total memory 32 32 MB 32 32 64 MB 32 32 128 192 MB 32 32 128 128 320 MB 32 128 128 128 416 MB 128 128 128 128 512 MB Peripherals Super UO Chip The National 87309 device supports two serial ports one parallel port diskette drive PS 2 compatible keyboard and mouse and integrated Real Time Clock RTC The server board provides a connector interface for each port Serial Ports Both serial ports are relocatable By default port A appears at the onboard DB9 connector and port B on the 10 pin header Each serial port can be set to one of four different COMx ports and can be enabled separately When enabled each port can be programmed to generate edge or level sensitive interrupts When disabled serial port interrupts are available to add in boards In order to use both ports you need to connect a ribbon cable from the 10 pin header on th
92. g the BIOS Preparing for the Upgrade Before you upgrade the BIOS prepare for the upgrade by recording the current BIOS settings obtaining the upgrade utility and making a copy of the current BIOS Recording the Current BIOS Settings 1 Boot the computer and press lt F2 gt when you see the message Press lt F2 gt Key if you want to run SETUP 2 Write down the current settings in the BIOS Setup program gt NOTE Do not skip step 2 You will need these settings to configure your computer at the end of the procedure Obtaining the Upgrade Utility You can upgrade to a new version of the BIOS using the new BIOS files and the BIOS upgrade utility IFLASH EXE You can obtain the BIOS upgrade file and the iFLASH EXE utility through your computer supplier or from the Intel World Wide Web site http www intel com gt NOTE Please review the instructions distributed with the upgrade utility before attempting a BIOS upgrade This upgrade utility allows you to e Upgrade the BIOS in flash memory e Update the language section of the BIOS The following steps explain how to upgrade the BIOS Creating a Bootable Floppy Diskette 1 Use a DOS or Windows 95 system to create the floppy disk 2 Insert a floppy disk in floppy drive A 3 At the CA prompt for an unformatted floppy disk type format a s or for a formatted floppy disk type sys a 4 Press lt Enter gt 75 Creating the BIOS Upgrade Flo
93. ges being careful not to touch its components or gold edge connectors Carefully lift it away from the socket and store it in an antistatic package 5 Repeat to remove other DIMMs as necessary 6 Close the system 7 Connect all external cables and the power cord to the system 8 Turn on the monitor and then the system Processors A WARNING If the system has been running any installed processor and heat sink on the processor board s will be hot To avoid the possibility of a burn be careful when removing or installing system board components that are located near processors CAUTIONS Processor must be appropriate You may damage the system if you install a processor that is inappropriate for your system Make sure your system can handle a newer faster processor thermal and power considerations For exact information about processor interchangeability contact your customer service representative Heat sink must be appropriate Depending on your configuration the existing processor may have a passive heat sink If you REPLACE the processor with a faster one it must have a fan heat sink powered fan instead of a passive heat sink If you ADD a second processor it must have a fan heat sink When adding a processor you must leave the existing one in Slot 1 primary connector closest to the center of the system board ESD and handling processors Reduce the risk of electrostatic discharge ESD damage to the processor by doing the
94. hen the lt Enter gt key is pressed you are prompted for a password press ESC key to abort Once set this can be cleared by setting it to a null string or by clearing password jumper on system board see Server Board Jumpers in Chapter 5 When the lt Enter gt key is pressed you are prompted for a password press ESC key to abort Once set this can be cleared by setting it to a null string or by clearing password jumper on system board see Server Board Jumpers in Chapter 5 Requires password entry before boot System will remain in secure mode until password is entered Password on Boot takes precedence over Secure Mode Boot Controls access to diskette drives Write protects boot sector on hard disk to protect against viruses Period of key PS 2 mouse inactivity specified for secure mode to activate A password is required for secure mode to function Cannot be enabled unless at least one password is enabled Key assigned to start the Quicklock feature Cannot be enabled unless at least one password is enabled System will boot in secure mode You must enter a password to unlock the system Cannot be enabled unless at least one password is enabled Blank video when secure mode is activated You must enter a password to unlock the system Cannot be enabled unless at least one password is enabled When secure mode is activated the diskette drive is write protected You must enter a password to disable Cannot be enab
95. idge then attach the large end B to the three pin connector on the system board C Upgrading OM06346 Figure 8 Locking in the Processor A Processor latches must be pushed outward until they click into retention module B Fan heat sink power cable must plug into processor fan connector on system board C Processor fan connector 9 After you have installed the processor you must configure its speed Replacing the Back up Battery The lithium battery on the system board powers the real time clock RTC for up to 10 years in the absence of power When the battery starts to weaken it loses voltage and the system settings stored in CMOS RAM in the RTC for example the date and time may be wrong Contact your customer service representative or dealer for a list of approved devices The following warning and translations are required by specific certifying agencies to be printed immediately adjacent to the procedure for removing the real time clock A WARNING Danger of explosion if battery is incorrectly replaced Replace only with the same or equivalent type recommended by the equipment manufacturer Discard used batteries according to manufacturer s instructions A ADVARSEL Lithiumbatteri Eksplosionsfare ved fejlagtig handtering Udskiftning ma kun ske med batteri af samme fabrikat og type Lev r det brugte batteri tilbage til leverand ren 29 A ADVARSEL Lithiumbatteri Eksplosjonsfare Ved utskifti
96. ility SDR and Desktop Management Interface DMI flash components BIOS Update Use to update the BIOS or recover from a corrupted BIOS update 75 Utility Firmware Update Use to update BMC flash ROM 78 Utility Using the Use to configure or view the settings of the SCSI host adapters and 78 Symbios SCSI onboard SCSI devices in the system Utility Hot Keys Use the keyboard s numeric pad to enter numbers and symbols Table 6 Hot Keys To do this Clear memory and reload the operating system this is a system reset Secure your system immediately Press these keys lt Ctrl Alt Del gt lt Ctrl Alt gt hotkey Set your hot key combination with the SSU or Setup 33 Power on Self Test POST Each time you turn on the system POST starts running POST checks the system board processor memory keyboard and most installed peripheral devices During the memory test POST displays the amount of memory that it is able to access and test The length of time needed to test memory depends on the amount of memory installed POST is stored in flash memory 1 Turn on your video monitor and system After a few seconds POST begins to run 2 After the memory test these screen prompts and messages appear Press lt F2 gt key if you want to run SETUP Keyboard Detected Mouse Detected 3 If you do not press lt F2 gt and do NOT have a device with an operating system loaded the above message remains for
97. ings See Chapter 3 GE EE Password Jumper The jumper at pins 5 6 and 7 controls whether the user and administrative passwords are retained or cleared during a system reset Procedure to clear the current password and then enter a new one See General Procedure to Change Jumper Setting on page 109 Move the Password jumper from pins 3 and 6 to pins 6 and 7 Reinstall the side cover for your safety and connect the power cord to the system Turn the system on and wait for POST to complete This automatically clears the password Turn off the system and disconnect the power cord Again remove the side cover Move the jumper from pins 6 and 7 back to pins 3 and 6 Reinstall the side cover and connect the power cord to the system Run the SSU to specify a new password See Chapter 3 NES ES Recovery Boot Jumper 110 The jumper at pins 9 10 and 11 controls whether the system attempts to boot using the BIOS programmed in the boot block area of the FLASH memory This should only be used if the operational area of the BIOS is corrupted or needs to be upgraded Contact your local service representative before doing this Procedure to disable recovery booting 1 See General Procedure to Change Jumper Setting on page 109 2 Move the recovery boot jumper from pins 9 and 10 to pins 10 and 11 Technical Reference 3 Reinstall the side cover for your safety connect the power cord to the system 4 Turn the sys
98. ios boot compliant legacy as well as ISA cards that are not PnP compliant ISA legacy cards will boot first before non bios boot compliant PCI cards in scan order from lowest slot to highest For options on this menu use the up or down arrow keys to select a device then press the lt gt or lt gt keys to move the device higher or lower in the boot priority list Option 1 Legacy Floppy Drive Exit Menu Description Refers to the onboard 3 5 floppy drive Removable IDE media may also show up here if the removable media was formatted in floppy emulation You can make the following selections on the Exit Menu Select an option using the up or down arrow keys then press lt Enter gt to execute the option Pressing lt Esc gt does not exit this menu You must select one of the items from the menu or menu bar to exit Choices Description Exit Saving Changes Exits after writing all modified Setup item values to NVRAM Exit Discarding Changes Exits leaving NVRAM unmodified Load Custom Defaults Loads default values for all Setup items Save Custom Defaults Saves present Setup values to custom defaults Load Default Values Loads values of all Setup items from previously saved custom defaults Discard Changes Reads previous values of all Setup items from NVRAM Save Changes Writes all Setup item values to NVRAM 47 Using the System Setup Utility The System Setup Utility SSU is on the Server System Configuration Softw
99. keys to highlight the desired button and press the spacebar or lt Enter gt 51 Resource Configuration Add in RCA Window The RCA provides three major functions e Creates representations of devices that cannot be discovered by the system ISA cards e Modifies the contents of the system by adding and removing devices e Modifies the resources used by devices You can use the RCA window to define an ISA card or add an ISA card by clicking on the appropriate button Removing an ISA card requires that the card be highlighted in the Devices section of the screen before clicking on the button You can only add as many ISA cards as you have ISA slots available 1 From the SSU main window launch the RCA by selecting the Resources task under the RCA heading in the task box 2 When the RCA window appears it displays messages similar to the following Baseboard System Board PCI Card Bus 00 dev 00 Host Processor Bridge PCI Card Bus 00 dev OD Multifunction Controller PCI Card Bus 00 dev OF Ethernet Controller PCI Card Bus 00 dev 12 Multifunction Controller PCI Card Bus 00 dev 14 VGA Controller 3 To configure a device select its name in the Devices section of the RCA window and press the spacebar or lt Enter gt or click on it 4 Itis possible to close the RCA window and return to the AF by clicking on the Close button Any changes made will be kept in memory for use by the RCA when it is rerun 5 S
100. l window With the EMP in this state you can remotely view boot messages access BIOS setup and run DOS text mode applications through the EMP Console s terminal window 28 EMP e E File Connect Action Help al ol zial e 2 SERVER NAME UNE MODE LINE STATUS 7 Figure 11 EMP Console in Command State 57 EMP Console Redirect Connect Action Window Help ai er mm el 2 i Redirect Copyright 1985 1998 Phoenix Technologies Ltd All Rights Resery NIGHTS 6 86B 6614 B 9862661855 446BX DP BIOS beta 2 FOR EVALUATION ONLY NOT FOR RESALE Build Time 02 06 98 18 39 51 0512K Cache SRAM Passed System BIOS shadowed Video BIOS shadowed UHB upper limit segment address F192 Keyboard Detected ATAPI CD ROM HITACHI CDR 83386 SERVER NAME UNE Direct MODE Redirect LINE STATUS Connected 7 Figure 12 EMP Console in Redirect State Figure 12 shows the EMP Console window in redirect state with the terminal window The text that appears on the server monitor displays in the redirect window Availability of the various EMP Console features is determined by two things the EMP access mode selected during configuration in the System Management Submenu of the BIOS Server Menu and if the server s COM 2 port is configured for console redirect in BIOS The three EMP access modes are disabled pre boot and always active Table 7 EMP Console Access Modes Server Configured for Console Redirect Mode Server is
101. language into memory select Continue with Programming Press lt Enter gt 6 When the utility displays the message upgrade is complete remove the floppy disk Press lt Enter gt 7 The computer will reboot and the changes will take effect 77 Using the Firmware Update Utility The Firmware Update Utility is a DOS based program used to update the Baseboard Management Controller s firmware code You only need to run the Firmware Update Utility if new firmware code becomes necessary Running the Firmware Update Utility 1 Create a DOS bootable diskette The version of DOS must be 6 0 or higher Place the firmware update utility FWUPDATE EXE and the hex file on the diskette Make a note of the hex file name you will need it later Insert the diskette into the drive and boot to it At the DOS prompt run the executable file FWUPDATE EXE The utility will display a menu screen Select Upload Flash The utility will ask for a file name Enter the name of the hex file The program will load the file and then ask if it should Upload Boot Block Press N to continue The program will next ask if it should Upload Operational Code Press Y to continue 9 Once the operational code has been updated and verified press any key to continue Then press the ESC key to exit the program 10 Shut the system down and remove any floppy disks that may be in the system 11 Disconnect the AC power c
102. leave boot block protect jumper at default 111 selecting correct heat sink 25 selecting correct processor 25 CFG files 48 chassis intrusion detection default jumper 112 CMOS clear to reconfigure diskette drive 35 retaining settings 110 configuration limiting access to system with administrative password 20 configuring system SCU 33 Setup 33 configuring system board jumpers boot block protect 111 chassis intrusion detection 112 FRB timer enabling or disabling 112 general procedure to change 109 location on system board 108 retaining CMOS settings 110 retaining stored password 110 summary description 108 109 131 connector auxiliary power signals non ATX 97 diskette drive 97 fan 98 front panel 98 IMB 100 ISA 106 locations on system board 95 narrow SCSI 103 parallel port 101 PCL 107 power 96 RJ45 network 102 SCSI wide input 104 serial ports 101 Server Management Module 99 VGA video port 100 Console Redirection menu configuring in Setup 46 controller diskette floppy 16 IDE 16 keyboard mouse 17 network 9 16 SCSI 15 system board management BMC 17 video 9 15 cooling heat sink for processor 25 current ratings for add in board slots 127 D diagnostics preparing system for testing 81 using PCDiagnostics 82 DIMM memory installing 24 removing 25 diskette drive connector on system board 97 drive controller 16 enabling disabling floppy writes 20 no booti
103. led unless at least one password is enabled When secure mode is activated the reset and power switches are locked You must enter a password to unlock the system Cannot be enabled unless at least one password is enabled 43 Server Menu You can make the following selections on the Server Menu itself Feature System Management Console Redirection PCI IRQs to lO APIC mappings Processor Retest Choices Disabled Enabled Yes No System Management Submenu Feature Server Management Mode System Event Logging Clear Event Log SMM Debug Mode Server Management Info EMP Password switch EMP Password EMP Escape sequence EMP Hangup Line String 44 Choices Disabled Enabled Disabled Enabled No Yes Disabled Enabled disabled enabled A Z 0 9 ATH Description Enters submenu Enters submenu Enabled BIOS can describe all 24 IO APIC pins in the MP table for PCI interrupts Not all MP operating systems and drivers can understand this description of the interrupts in the MP table Disabled BIOS will only use 16 IO APIC pins in the MP table for PCI interrupts All PCI interrupts are routed to a standard ISA IRQ pins on lO APIC All operating systems will work with standard ISA IRQ entries Yes tells BIOS to clear the historical processor status and retest all processors on the next boot BIOS automatically resets to No in next boot Description Enabled loads the embedded se
104. matically programmed by the processor s VID pins to provide the required voltage Four 72 bit sockets for 100 MHz PC 100 compliant ECC or non ECC registered or unbuffered SDRAM dual inline memory modules DIMM Installed 2 MB of video memory Four PCI expansion slots for add in boards one slot shared with an ISA slot 1x32 bit PCI bus Embedded devices video controller Network Interface Controller NIC and SCSI controller Two ISA expansion slots for add in boards one slot shared with a PCI slot Embedded PC compatible support serial parallel mouse keyboard diskette and Plug and Play features Thermal voltage monitoring and error handling Real time clock calendar RTC Front panel controls and indicators LEDs System Setup Utility SSU Basic Input Output System BIOS Power On Self Test POST and Setup stored in flash memory Integrated onboard Cirrus Logic CL GD5480 super video graphics array SVGA controller Symbiost SYM53C876 dual function controller providing ultra wide and legacy narrow SCSI interfaces Integrated onboard NIC an Intel 82558 PCI LAN controller for 10 or 100 Mbps TX Fast Ethernett networks RJ 45 Ethernet connector and indicator LEDs at I O back panel PS 2t compatible keyboard and mouse ports 6 pin DIN Advanced parallel port supporting Enhanced Parallel Port EPP level 1 7 and 1 9 ECP compatible 25 pin VGA video port 15 pin Two serial ports 9 pin serial port B is c
105. n as the Phonebook The Phonebook stores names and numbers of servers in a list that can be updated by adding modifying or deleting entries The Phonebook can be opened from the main menu and tool bars or launched from the Connect dialog by clicking the Config button Phonebook EN Server y i A Phone No Connect m Operation i Help New C Modify C Delete Figure 16 Phonebook Dialog Options available in the dialog are e Server a dropdown list of server names previously stored in the Phonebook If the New radio button is selected in the Operation area this area is cleared e Phone No the number of the selected server If the New radio button is selected in the Operation area this area is cleared e Operation New lets you make a new entry in the phonebook Selecting this option clears the Server and Phone No fields You must click Save for the entry to be added to the phonebook Modify lets you edit an existing entry You select an existing entry from the Server dropdown edit box and modifies the existing phone number before selecting this option Click Save in order to store this entry in the phonebook Delete lets you delete an entry from the phonebook You must first select an existing server from the Server dropdown edit box before selecting this option You must click Save for the entry to be deleted e Save saves a new or modified Phonebook entry or deletes an entry if the Delete radi
106. nd Electronic Office Machines Japan ICES 003 Issue 2 Interference Causing Equipment Standard Digital Apparatus Canada Spectrum Management Agency SMA Australian C Tick Compliance Limits and methods of measurement of Radio Interference Characteristics of Information Technology Equipment Australian Regulation based on International CISPR 22 Requirements New Zealand Ministry of Commerce Limits and methods of measurement of Radio Interference Characteristics of Information Technology Equipment New Zealand Regulation based on International CISPR 22 Requirements New Zealand Authorities accept SMA C Tick Compliance Mark Product Certification Markings This server board has the following product certification markings e European CE Mark Marking on the board assembly and or shipping container e UL Recognition Mark Marking is a stylized backward UR and UL File No E139761 on the component side of the board and the PB No on the solder side of the board Board material flammability is 94V 1 or 0 e Canadian Compliance Mark Marking is a small c followed by a stylized backward UR on the component side of the board e Australian SMA C Tick Compliance Mark Marking is a solid circle with a white tick like mark within the circle accompanied by the four digit supplier code 120 Information for Computer Integrators Installation Instructions A CAUTION Follow these guidelines to meet safety and regulatory r
107. nected to a serial cable Direct Connect Configuration A null modem serial cable is needed Connect one end of the cable into the COM 2 port of server and the other into a port on the client machine Modem Configuration On the client the EMP Console uses the Windows Application Program Interface API to determine if a modem is connected and available The EMP Console does not configure the modem it should be preconfigured through Windows For modem support the server must use a Hayes compatible 14400 bps modem The modem must be on the NT Hardware Compatibility List provided by Microsoft The server modem must be set in auto answer mode for the EMP Console to be able to connect to it Setting Up the Server for the EMP To use the EMP you must configure the server s BIOS with specific settings These settings take place in two submenus of the BIOS Server menu the System Management Submenu and the Console Redirect Submenu The earlier BIOS settings section shows all available options This section focuses on those settings that must be configured to use the EMP 59 System Management Submenu All EMP related settings occur from the System Management Submenu of the Server main menu Change Only the items below all other default settings should remain the same EMP Password Anytime you attempt to initiate a connection a prompt for the user password appears If you never set up the EMP password anyone can access the EMP by clicking OK
108. nfiguring in Setup 41 POST bootable media required 34 countdown codes 88 error codes and messages 92 error messages 34 memory amount tested 34 power on off locking on off switch Setup 20 133 134 power supply ATX connector pins 96 auxiliary connector signals non ATX 97 calculating power usage 127 current usage 127 main connector pins 96 monitoring power state 17 worksheet calculating DC power 128 problems after running new application software 80 after system has been running correctly 81 application software 87 bootable CD ROM not detected 88 cannot connect to network server 86 CD ROM drive activity light 85 confirm OS loading 83 diskette drive light 85 hard drive light 85 initial system startup 79 network 86 no characters on screen 83 PCI installation tips 87 power light 83 preparing system for diagnostic testing 81 random error in data files 81 screen characters incorrect 84 system cooling fans do not rotate 84 system lights 82 using PCDiagnostics 82 processor 25 installing 27 removing 26 selecting the correct processor 25 use grounded static free surface 26 processor description 12 R real time clock running SCU to configure settings 31 recovery boot jumper retaining settings 110 removing termination board 27 reset system 33 79 RJ45 port connector on system board 102 S SCI files 48 SCSI bus termination requirements 15 narrow connector pino
109. ng benyttes kun batteri som anbefalt av apparatfabrikanten Brukt batteri returneres apparatleverandgren A VARNING Explosionsfara vid felaktigt batteribyte Anv nd samma batterityp eller en ekvivalent typ som rekommenderas av apparattillverkaren Kassera anv nt batteri enligt fabrikantens instruktion A varoITUS Paristo voi r j ht jos se on virheellisesti asennettu Vaihda paristo ainoastaan laitevalmistajan suosittelemaan tyyppiin H vit k ytetty paristo valmistajan ohjeiden mukaisesti 30 Upgrading a ch Sr t 8 9 OMO07055 Figure 9 Replacing the Lithium Battery Observe the safety and ESD precautions at the beginning of this chapter Open the chassis Insert the tip of a small flat bladed screw driver or equivalent under the plastic tab on the San in plastic retainer A in figure Gently push down on the screwdriver to lift the battery B Remove the battery from its socket C Dispose of the battery according to local ordinance Remove the new lithium battery from its package and being careful t
110. ng in secure mode without password 19 reconfiguring if cannot enter Setup 35 running SCU from 33 34 E Emergency Management Port FRU viewer 67 main console window 60 phonebook 65 requirements 59 SDR viewer 67 SEL viewer 66 server control operations 62 Emergency Management Port Console 56 EMI gasket for I O connectors 22 23 EMP See Emergency Management Port Console equipment log 125 error codes and messages 92 messages 34 88 ESD add in boards 21 avoiding damage to product 21 do not touch processor pins 25 system board sensitive to 22 Exit menu configuring Setup 47 expanded video memory 15 extended memory 13 F fan connectors on system board 98 heat sink disconnecting 26 feature summary back panel connectors 10 board 9 Firmware update utility 33 78 FRB timer enable default jumper 112 front panel control board connector on system board 98 FRUSDR load utility 33 69 when to run 69 G H gasket EMI protection at I O connectors 22 23 Hard Drive menu configuring Setup 47 heat sink fan 25 26 hot key option quick reference 33 Information for Computer Integrators LO ISA expansion slots 9 PCI expansion slots 9 ports provided 9 12C bus for monitoring status 17 IDE bus length limit 16 controller 16 feature summary 14 primary master and slave configuring Setup 39 Integrated Peripheral Configuration menu configuring in Setup 42 Interrupt
111. nitor properly adjusted Are the video monitor switch settings correct Is the video monitor signal cable properly installed Is the onboard video controller enabled 83 If you are using an add in video controller board do the following 1 2 3 Verify that the video controller board is fully seated in the system board connector Reboot the system for changes to take effect If there are still no characters on the screen after you reboot the system and POST emits a beep code write down the beep code you hear This information is useful for your service representative See POST Codes and Countdown Codes on page 88 If you do not receive a beep code and characters do not appear the video display monitor or video controller may have failed Contact your service representative or authorized dealer for assistance Characters Are Distorted or Incorrect Check the following a a Are the brightness and contrast controls properly adjusted on the video monitor See the manufacturer s documentation Are the video monitor signal and power cables properly installed If the problem persists the video monitor may be faulty or it may be the incorrect type Contact your service representative or authorized dealer for assistance System Cooling Fans Do Not Rotate Properly If the system cooling fans are not operating properly system components could be damaged Check the following a U UU LU U UU U Is
112. nued Normal Port 80 Codes 51 DA 5B 56 60 62 64 66 68 6A 6C 6E 70 72 74 ZC ZE EA 88 8A 81 87 85 82 84 86 83 89 8C 90 8B 95 92 C5 98 90 Beeps Error EISA INIT Not used in N440BX Display prompt Press F2 to enter SETUP Disable CPU L1 cache for memory test Test RAM between 512 and 640k Test extended memory 4Mb to top of memory Test extended memory address lines Jump to UserPatch1 Configure advanced cache registers Enable external and processor caches Display external cache size Display shadow message Display non disposable segments Display error messages to video Check for configuration errors Test real time clock Set up hardware interrupt vectors Test coprocessor if present Not used Initialize BIOS Data Area timeouts for detecting parallel serial and hdd controller Clear CMOS shutdown flag Initialize Extended BIOS Data Area Late post core initialization of devices Configure MCD devices Initialize and detect PC compatible PnP ISA devices serial parallel etc Not used Clear interrupts from com port detection Console redirection initialized Configure onboard hard disk controller Enable NMI Initialize floppy controller Initialize and detect hard disks Detect and test for Mouse or Auxiliary device on keyboard controller Install CD ROM for boot Jump to UserPatch2 Initialize GPNV areas of DMI Search for option ROMs One long two short beeps on checksum f
113. o button was selected e Connect raises the Connect dialog with the server from the Phonebook s Server dropdown edit box already populating the Connect dialog s Server dropdown edit box e Cancel exits the dialog without any action taken e Help displays dialog level help information 65 Management Plug ins SEL Viewer The SEL viewer provides access to the System Event Log on the server and can display records in either hexadecimal or text verbose form Options available through the SEL viewer are e View the SEL from a file e Save the SEL to a file e View SEL summary info e View all SEL entries e View SEL info by event type e View SEL info by sensor type e Set SEL display mode to either Hex or verbose mode e Set the SEL output file format to either text or binary format e Close the SEL viewer e Eet the EMP Console SEL Viewer Menu Options The following menu options are found on the SEL viewer menu bar e File Open you can view SEL data from a previously saved file if it was stored in binary format Selecting the Open menu item allows you to specify a filename under which the data is found The default filename is SELLOG DAT If the file cannot be opened the program displays an error message Close you can close the SEL viewer Save As dumps the SEL data to a file in either binary raw or verbose text format The binary file may be retrieved later Selecting this option lets you specify a filename
114. o observe the correct polarity insert it in the battery socket Reinstall the plastic retainer on the lithium battery socket Close the chassis 10 Run the SSU to restore the configuration settings to the RTC 31 32 Upgrading 3 Configuration Software and Utilities This chapter describes the Power on Self Test POST and system configuration utilities The table below briefly describes the utilities Table 5 Configuration Utilities Utility Description and brief procedure Page BIOS Setup If the system does not have a diskette drive or the drive is disabled or 35 misconfigured use Setup to enable it Or you can move the CMOS jumper on the system board from the default setting Protect CMOS memory to the Clear setting this will allow most system configurations to boot For the procedure to do this see the section CMOS Jumper in Chapter 5 in this manual Then run the SSU to configure the system System Setup Use for extended system configuration of onboard resources and add in 48 Utility SSU boards and for viewing the system event log setting boot device priority or setting system security options The SSU may be run from either the Server Configuration CD or from a DOS bootable diskette Information entered via the SSU overrides information entered via Setup EMP Console Use to access and monitor the server remotely 56 FRUSDR Load Use to update the Field Replacement Unit FRU Sensor Data Record 69 Ut
115. oftware runs correctly there may be a problem with the copy on the hard disk drive Reinstall the software on the hard disk and try running it again Make sure all necessary files are installed If the problems are intermittent there may be a loose cable dirt in the keyboard if keyboard input is incorrect a marginal power supply or other random component failures If you suspect that a transient voltage spike power outage or brownout might have occurred reload the software and try running it again Symptoms of voltage spikes include a flickering video display unexpected system reboots and the system not responding to user commands gt NOTE Random errors in data files if you are getting random errors in your data files they may be getting corrupted by voltage spikes on your power line If you are experiencing any of the above symptoms that might indicate voltage spikes on the power line you may want to install a surge suppressor between the power outlet and the system power cord More Problem solving Procedures This section provides a more detailed approach to identifying a problem and locating its source Preparing the System for Diagnostic Testing A CAUTION 1 2 Turn off devices before disconnecting cables before disconnecting any peripheral cables from the system turn off the system and any external peripheral devices Failure to do so can cause permanent damage to the system and or the peripheral devi
116. onnected from the 10 pin header on the server board to the back panel via a provided ribbon cable Network RJ 45 Ethernet port Server ATT form factor 12 x 13 inches ATX 2 01 compliant I O Back Panel Connectors Figure 1 Back Panel Connectors TOMNMOOW gt Mouse Connector Keyboard Connector Parallel Port Connector Serial Port Connector VGA Connector Network Connector Green NIC LED Orange NIC LED OM07054 Table 2 NIC LEDs NIC LED Color If it s on Orange 100 Mbps network connection Green Linked to network no network traffic If it s blinking NA Linked to network sending or If it s off 10 Mbps network connection Not linked to network receiving data System Description Server Board Connector and Component Locations DOZENAETIONMOON gt
117. ontroller supports analog VGA monitors single and multiple frequency interlaced and noninterlaced with a maximum vertical retrace noninterlaced frequency of 100 Hz You cannot add video memory to this system Depending on the environment the controller displays up to 16 7 M colors in some video resolutions It also provides hardware accelerated bit block transfers BITBLT of data SCSI Controller The system board includes a Symbios Logic SYM53C876 embedded dual function PCI SCSI host adapter The SYM53C876 contains two independent SCSI controllers that share a single PCI bus master interface as a multi function device Internally each controller is identical capable of operations using either 8 or 16 bit SCSI providing 10 MB s Fast 10 or 20 MB s Fast 20 throughput or 20 MB s Ultra or 40 MB s Ultra wide As implemented on the system board controller A attaches to a 68 pin 16 bit wide SCSI connector interface controller B attaches to a 50 pin 8 bit narrow SCSI connector interface Each controller has its own set of PCI configuration registers and SCSI I O registers As a PCI 2 1 bus master the SYM53C876 supports burst data transfers on PCI up to the maximum rate of 132 MB sec using on chip buffers No logic termination or resistor loads are required to connect devices to the SCSI controller other than termination in the device at the end of the cable The SCSI bus is terminated on the system board with active terminators that c
118. oppy diskette into the flash device This is typically used when the BIOS code has been corrupted continued Technical Reference Table 32 Server Board Jumper Summary continued Jumper Block F Password clear G CMOS clear H BMC boot block write protect WOL Enable Pins default in bold 5 6 Protect 6 7 Erase 1 2 Protect 2 3 Erase 1 2 Protect 2 3 Erase Program 1 2 Disabled 2 3 Enabled What it does at system reset Maintains the current system password Clears the password Preserves the contents of NVRAM Replaces the contents of NVRAM with the manufacturing default settings BMC boot block is wrote protected BMC boot block is erasable and programmable Disables Wake On LAN If your power supply does not provide 0 8 A of 5 V Standby current you must move the WOL Enable jumper to this position Enables Wake On LAN General Procedure to Change Jumper Setting The short general procedure for changing a configuration setting is the same for most of the jumper functions so we will describe it here 1 Ze 3 Observe the safety and ESD precautions at the beginning of this chapter Turn off all connected peripherals turn off system power and disconnect the AC power cord Remove the side cover You do not need to remove the system board from the chassis and you probably do not need to remove any add in boards system effect Locate the configuration jumpers at the edge of
119. or both passwords If only the user password is set you e Must enter the user password to enter BIOS Setup or the SSU e Must enter the user password to boot the server if Password on Boot is enabled in either the BIOS Setup or SSU e Must enter the user password to exit secure mode If only the administrator password is set you e Must enter the administrator password to enter BIOS Setup or the SSU e Must enter the administrator password to boot the server if Password on Boot is enabled in either the BIOS Setup or SSU e Must enter the administrator password to exit secure mode If both passwords are set you e May enter the user password to enter BIOS Setup or the SSU However you will not be able to change many of the options e Must enter the administrator password if you want to enter BIOS Setup or the SSU and have access to all of the options System Description e May enter either password to boot the server if Password on Boot is enabled in either the BIOS Setup or SSU e May enter either password to exit secure mode Secure Mode Configure and enable the secure boot mode by using the SSU When secure mode is in effect e You can boot the system and the operating system will run but you must enter the user password to use the keyboard or mouse e You cannot turn off system power or reset the system from the front panel switches Secure mode has no effect on functions enabled via the Server Manager Module or powe
120. ord from the system and wait 60 seconds 12 Connect the AC power cord and power up the system ON Oro Ge N 29 Installing Video Drivers After configuring the system you need to install video drivers to take full advantage of the features of the onboard Cirrus Logic CL GD3480 super VGA video controller e The Configuration Software CD includes video drivers for use with DOS and Windows NT Check the README TXT file on the CD for information on installing these drivers e For other operating systems see your OS instructions for installing device drivers Using the Symbios SCSI Utility The Symbios SCSI utility detects the SCSI host adapters on the system board Use the utility to e change default values e check and or change SCSI device settings that may conflict with those of other devices in the server Running the SCSI Utility 1 When this message appears on the video monitor Press Ctrl C to run SCSI Utility 2 Press lt Ctrl C gt to run this utility When it appears choose the host adapter that you want to configure 78 Configuration Software Utilities 4 Solving Problems This chapter helps you identify and solve problems that might occur while you are using the system Resetting the System To do this Press Soft boot reset which clears system memory lt Ctrl Alt Del gt and reloads the operating system Clear system memory restart POST and Reset button reload the operating system Cold boot reset
121. ors This field is informational only for Type Auto Enabling allows 32 bit IDE data transfers Selects the method for moving data to and from the drive This field is informational only for Type Auto Selects the Ultra DMA mode used for moving data to from the drive 39 Keyboard Submenu Feature Num Lock Key Click Keyboard auto repeat rate Keyboard auto repeat delay Advanced Menu Choices On Off Disabled Enabled 30 sec 26 7 sec 21 8 sec 18 5 sec 13 3 sec 10 sec 6 sec 2 sec 1 4 sec 1 2 sec 3 4 sec 1 sec Description Selects the power on state for Num Lock Enables or disables the audible key click Sets the numbers of time per second a key will repeat while it is held down Sets the delay before a key starts to repeat when it is held down You can make the following selections on the Advanced Menu itself Use the submenus for the three other selections that appear on the Advanced Menu Feature Plug and Play OS Reset Configuration Data Enable ACPI PCI Configuration Integrated Peripherals Configuration Advanced Chipset Control Use Multiprocessor Specification Large Disk Access Mode Delay on Option ROMs 40 Choices No Yes No Yes No Yes mb ha DOS Other Disabled Enabled Description Select Yes if you are booting a Plug and Play capable operating system Select Yes if you want to clear the system configuration data during next boot System
122. ostic package contains many optional tests that should only be used by a user with advanced technical knowledge Inadvertent actions could be damaging such as running a hard drive write test on a hard disk All tests that require external hardware user interaction or are destructive are disabled in the default configurations Before using such a test make sure you read and understand the help information for that test Monitoring POST See Chapter 3 Verifying Proper Operation of Key System Lights 82 As POST determines the system configuration it tests for the presence of each mass storage device installed in the system As each device is checked its activity light should turn on briefly Check for the following Q Does the diskette drive activity light turn on briefly Tf not see Diskette Drive Activity Light Does Not Light on page 85 Q Ifa second diskette drive is installed does its activity light turn on briefly If not see Diskette Drive Activity Light Does Not Light on page 85 LI If there is a hard disk drive or SCSI devices installed in the system does the hard disk drive activity light on the control panel turn on briefly If not see Hard Disk Drive Activity Light Does Not Light on page 85 Solving Problems Confirming Loading of the Operating System Once the system boots up the operating system prompt appears on the screen The prompt varies according to the operating system If the operating
123. ote Control console of the local system displays and sends video memory and user input to the remote server through either a modem or an Ethernet link Because the SSU runs exclusively on the remote server any files required for the SSU to run must be available on the remote server on removable or nonremovable media If you connect the local system to the remote server through a network or modem you can see the console control the mouse and control the keyboard of the remote server 49 Starting the SSU SSU consists of a collection of task oriented modules plugged into a common framework called the Application Framework AF The Application Framework provides a launching point for individual tasks and a location for setting customization information For full functionality the SSU requires the availability of the AF INI AF HLP plus any ADN files and their associated 50 HLP and INI files 1 Turn on your video monitor and your system 2 There are two ways to start the SSU a After creating set of SSU diskettes from the CD Insert the first SSU diskette in drive A and press the reset button or lt Ctrl Alt Del gt to reboot your server from the diskette b Directly from the Server Configuration Software CD Insert the Server Configuration CD into your CD ROM drive and press the reset button or lt Ctrl Alt Del gt to reboot When prompted to do so press lt F2 gt to enter BIOS Setup From the Boot Menu select the Boot Device P
124. ppy Diskette The BIOS upgrade file is a compressed self extracting archive that contains the files you need to upgrade the BIOS 1 Copy the BIOS upgrade file to a temporary directory on your hard disk 2 From the C prompt change to the temporary directory 3 To extract the file type the name of the BIOS upgrade file for example 10006BI1 EXE 4 Press lt Enter gt The extracted file contains the following files LICENSE TXT README TX BIOS EXE 5 Read the LICENSE TXT file which contains the software license agreement and the README TXT file which contains the instructions for the BIOS upgrade 6 Insert the bootable floppy disk into drive A 7 To extract the BIOS EXE file to the floppy disk change to the temporary directory that holds the BIos ExE file and type BIOS A 8 Press lt Enter gt 9 The floppy disk now holds the BIOS upgrade and recovery files Upgrading the BIOS 1 Ers ta 8 Boot the computer with the floppy disk in drive A The BIOS upgrade utility screen appears Select Update Flash Memory From a File Select Update System BIOS Press lt Enter gt Use the arrow keys to select the correct bio file Press lt Enter gt When the utility asks for confirmation that you want to flash the new BIOS into memory select Continue with Programming Press lt Enter gt When the utility displays
125. r cfg filename cfg p v Command Description frusdr Is the name of the utility or h Displays usage information d dmi fru sdr Only displays requested area cfg filename cfg Uses custom CFG file p Pause between blocks of data V Verbose display any additional details Parsing the Command Line The FRUSDR Load Utility allows only one command line function at a time A command line function may consist of two parameters for example cfg filename cfg Any invalid parameters result in displaying an error message and exiting the program You can use either a slash or a minus sign to specify command line options The p and v flags may be used in conjunction with any of the other options Displaying Usage Information When the utility is run with the or h command line flags the following message is displayed when the verbose flag v 1s added to the help command FRU SDR Load Utility Version 2 0 Revision R 2 1 Usage frusdr Is the name of the utility a2 Or Hh Displays usage information d dmi fru sdr Only displays requested area cfg filename cfg Uses custom CFG file p Pause between blocks of data bai Verbose display any additional details Copyright c 1998 Intel Corporation All Rights Reserved This utility must be run from a system executing DOS Running in a Window s DOS box is insufficient and will provide incorrect results Programming the BMC FRU area clears the SDR table therefore
126. r control via the real time clock Taking the system out of secure mode does not change the state of system power That is if you press and release the power switch while secure mode is in effect the system will not be powered off when secure mode is later removed However if the front panel power switch remains depressed when secure mode is removed the system will be powered off Summary of Software Security Features The table below lists the software security features and describes what protection each offers In general to enable or set the features listed here you must run the SSU and go to the Security Subsystem Group menu The table also refers to other SSU menus and to the Setup utility Table A Software Security Features Feature Description Secure mode How to enter secure mode In either the BIOS Setup or the SSU set either password and enable one or more of the secure mode features Secure Mode Timer if the system is inactive for longer than the set limit H enters secure mode Secure Mode Hot Key you can secure the system simply by pressing the key combination This means you do not have to wait for the inactivity time out period Secure Mode on Boot the system boots directly into secure mode When the system is in secure mode The system can boot and run the operating system but mouse and keyboard input is not accepted until the user password is entered At boot time if a CD is detected in the CD ROM driv
127. riority option and then select CD ROM as your primary boot device Save those settings and exit BIOS Setup The server will boot from the CD ROM and display a menu of options Follow the instructions in the menu to start the SSU 3 When the SSU title appears on the screen press lt Enter gt to continue 4 The mouse driver loads if it is available press lt Enter gt to continue 5 This message appears Please wait while the Application Framework loads 6 When the main window of the SSU appears you can customize the user interface before continuing System Setup Utility File Preferences Help Topics Tasks Available Tasks Resources MBA Boot Devices PHA Security SEL Task Description This item is a group There is no description available Preferences Color Mode Language E RS law ystem Setup Utility Figure 10 System Setup Utility Main Window Configuration Software Utilities Customizing the SSU The SSU lets you customize the user interface according to your preferences The AF sets these preferences and saves them in the AF INI file so that they take effect the next time you start the SSU There are four user customizable settings Color this button lets you change the default colors associated with different items on the screen with predefined color combinations The color changes are instantaneous Mode this button lets you set the desired expertise level novice
128. rive continued 91 Table 9 Port 80 Codes continued Normal Port 80 Codes C7 CO DO D2 D4 D6 D8 DA DC Beeps Error Prepare to boot to OS clean up graphics and PMM areas Try to boot with INT 19 return to video mode 3 disable PMM return to real mode disable gate A20 clears system memory reset stack Invokes INT 19 Error handling POST codes may occur at anytime during post Interrupt handler error Unknown interrupt error Pending interrupt error Initialize option ROM error Shutdown error Extended Block Move Shutdown 10 error POST Error Codes and Messages The following error codes and messages are representative of various conditions BIOS identifies The exact strings and error numbers may be different from those listed here Table 10 POST Error Codes and Messages Code 0162 0163 0164 0165 0200 0210 0211 0212 0213 0220 0230 0231 0232 0250 0251 92 Error message BIOS unable to apply BIOS update to processor 1 BIOS unable to apply BIOS update to processor 2 BIOS does not support current stepping for processor 1 BIOS does not support current stepping for processor 2 Failure Fixed Disk Stuck Key Keyboard error Keyboard Controller Failed Keyboard locked Unlock key switch Monitor type does not match CMOS Run SETUP System RAM Failed at offset Shadow RAM Failed at offset Extended RAM Failed at offset System battery is dead Replace and run SETUP System CMOS checksum bad
129. rs This is a continuation of the Modem Init string When 16 characters are typed into the Modem Init string are entered this field will pop up to allow another 4 characters to be typed in Pre boot Only EMP is only enabled during power down through end of POST Com 2 is returned to system use at the end of Post when operating system boots Always Active EMP is always enabled Com 2 cannot be used by operating system It is now dedicated for EMP use Disabled EMP is disabled Com 2 is always available for system use by console redirection or operating system If set to Enabled Power on off and Reset server controls via EMP are no longer available Sets how EMP connects to the server Direct Connect means a null modem serial cable directly connects COM 2 connector port to the EMP console machine Modem mode indicates that a modem is connected on COM 2 for EMP use Items on this menu can not be modified If items require changes consult your system administrator Feature Choices Board Part Number N A Board Serial Number N A System Part Number N A System Serial Number N A Chassis Part Number N A Chassis Serial Number N A BMC Revision N A Primary HSBP Revision N A Description Information field only Information field only Information field only Information field only Information field only Information field only Information field only Information field only 45 Console Redirection Submenu Feature COM Port
130. rver management firmware When enabled system events will be logged by BIOS and BMC in system event log Yes clears the system event log SEL in BMC If enabled the BIOS will output to video and Port 80 Enters submenu Sets the EMP password This field only shows up when the EMP password switch is enabled Entering a password and pressing return will send the password immediately to the BMC If a beep is heard the password was not accepted If no password is entered anyone has access to the server through the EMP Console Sets the escape sequence for the modem being used for EMP This will force the modem to command mode This is only used if the EMP direct connect mode is set to modem Sets the Hangup Line Sequence for the modem being used for EMP Only used in EMP modem mode continued Configuration Software Utilities System Management Submenu continued Feature Modem Init String High Modem Init String EMP Access Mode EMP Restricted Mode Access EMP Direct Connect Modem Mode Choices AT amp FOS0 1S14 0 amp D Pre boot Only Always Active Disabled Disabled Enabled Direct Connect Modem Mode Server Management Information Submenu Description Sets the initialization string for the modem being used for EMP Only used in EMP modem mode This field is only 16 characters long High modem Init string field is a continuation of the Modem Init string to be able to enter in another 4 characte
131. s mapping 113 intrusion detection 17 18 ISA connectors on system board 106 embedded device support 9 expansion slots 9 feature summary 14 slot current ratings 127 J K jumpers do not damage when changing 22 keyboard compatibility 17 features configuring Setup 40 lockout timer seting in SCU 17 L M language changing in BIOS 77 lithium backup battery disposing of safely 29 installing 31 removing 29 Main power supply connector 96 memory addresses 13 amount tested POST 34 as used by different operating systems 13 base amount 13 capacity 9 DIMM requirements 13 DIMM size 12 expansion 12 extended region 13 installing DIMM 24 removing DIMM 25 video amount 9 video size 15 what type to install 9 messages error and informational 88 monitoring system status 17 mouse compatibility 17 inactivity timer 17 N P network connector on system board 102 controller 9 16 parallel port location on system board 101 password 18 administrative 18 administrator 18 entering to unblank screen 20 retaining at system reset 110 user 18 using to reactivate keyboard mouse 20 using to reactivate keyboard mouse 17 PCI connectors on system board 107 embedded devices 9 expansion slots 9 interrupt mapping 113 slot current ratings 127 PCI Configuration Menu configuring in Setup 41 PCI Device Embedded SCSI menu configuring in Setup 41 42 PCI Device Slot 1 Slot 4 menu co
132. s and to launch the management plug ins from At the top of the GUI is the menu and tool bar These provide the options to initiate plug ins and other support features A status bar at the bottom displays connection information like server name line status and mode 60 Configuration Software Utilities Toolbar The tool bar buttons of the EMP Console main window combine server control and management plug in options available from the Connect and Action menus as follows IS lO la a amp i Generates the Connect dialog to allow connection to a selected server Disconnects from the server currently connected to Generates the Power On Off dialog Generates the Reset dialog SEL Launches the SEL viewer SOR Launches the SDR viewer Sa FRU Launches the FRU viewer a Opens the phonebook Opens the online help Status Bar The status bar displays at the bottom of the current window If contains the following status information SERVER NAME the name of the server connected to LINE the type of line connection This would be either direct or modem MODE either Redirect of EMP depending on whether the EMP has control of the COM 2 port LINE STATUS gives status information on the server connection For example if a server is connected the status bar says Connected Otherwise the line is blank EMP Console Main Menu File Exit Exits the EMP Console Connect Disconnect disconnects the s
133. s available in the target slot especially in an expansion slot drawing more than 2 0 amperes Calculating Power Consumption The total combined wattage for the system configuration must be less than the output of your power supply Use the two worksheets in this section to calculate the power used by your system boards For current and voltage requirements of add in boards and peripherals see your vendor documents 127 Worksheet Calculating DC Power Usage 128 1 List the current for each board and device in the appropriate voltage level column 2 Add the currents in each column Then go to the next worksheet Table 36 Power Usage Worksheet 1 Device Server board Primary Processor Secondary Processor if present Terminator card if no second processor Memory four 128 MB DIMMs PCI slot 1 PCI slot 2 PCI slot 3 ISA slot 1 ISA slot 2 1 3 5 inch hard disk drive 2 3 5 inch hard disk drive 3 3 5 inch hard disk drive 4 3 5 inch hard disk drive 5 3 5 inch hard disk drive 6 3 5 inch hard disk drive 3 5 inch diskette drive CD ROM drive Cooling fan 1 Total Current Current maximum at voltage level 3 3 V 5 V 5 V 12 V 12 V 1 0 A 8 0 A 0 1A 11A 0 4A 16A 18A 0 3A Information for Computer Integrators Worksheet Total Combined Power Used by the System 1 From the previous worksheet enter the total current for each column 2 Multiply the voltage by the total current to get the total wa
134. s pc ae ara eli 26 Installing a Second ProcES Oleiros 27 Removing a Termination EI teorias 28 LOCKING mthe dE 29 Replacing the Lithium Battery ecosport 31 System Setup Utility Main Window oonooocccccnnnnnncconccccccnonncnnaacccnnnnnnanrrn cnc ccnnnnnnnnnncnnos 50 EMP Console in Command State seess eege deene oct 57 EMP Console in Redirect lala andate 58 Connect Dial e e E a ia 62 Power Oly Oli Dial g ds aa 63 REIA RIE Iae E 64 Phonebook Dialog szara erea a a di ba 65 Connector Locations s eiere dir ata 95 Jumper Locations ea at ica a Sali cross 108 Server Board Features Sagesse EES EE en anwecaas 9 NIG LEDS us a 10 Sample DIMM Component Combinations ooocccccnnicanoccccnonancnannncnononnnann no ccncnnnnnn nn nncnnns 13 Software Security Features AEN 19 Configuration UMSS pesto ea 33 HO EE 33 EMP Console Access Modes Server Configured for Console Redirect 58 EMP Console Access Modes Server not Configured for Console Redirect 59 A A A A A A AOS 88 POST Error Codes and Messages seveugEEek SNE loa iden 92 ATX Power Connector PIO Uli e 96 Main Power Connector EIERE eersten dt ta ar 96 Auxiliary Power Connector Pinout iii aa 97 Diskette Drive Connector Pimout ue 97 Front Panel Connector PinOuts a 98 AT Style Front Panel Connector Pinout Sci dd 98 Heatsink Fan Connector PINGUt eet ects ee eer persia de beads eree ein ad teenie cetees 98 Chassis Fan Connector Pinout tii esdaedetacanvie ENN 99
135. s the EMP Console View Display all Records displays all FRU data which consists of chassis board and product information FRU Info displays the FRU summary information as returned by the server Settings lets you change operating parameters for the FRU viewer This menu displays the following suboption Display HEX Verbose toggles between HEX mode and interpreted mode of displaying FRU records Window gives options for displaying currently open windows Help provides version information for the FRU viewer and provides help topics on the EMP Console Configuration Software Utilities FRUSDR Load Utility The Field Replacement Unit FRU and Sensor Data Record SDR Load Utility is a DOS based program used to update the server management subsystem s product level FRU SDR and the Desktop Management Interface DMI nonvolatile storage components EEPROMs The load utility e discovers the product configuration based on instructions in a master configuration file e displays the FRU information e updates the nonvolatile storage device EEPROM associated with the Baseboard Management Controller BMC that holds the SDR and FRU area e updates the DMI FRU area located in the BIOS nonvolatile storage device e generically handles FRU devices that may not be associated with the BMC When to Run the FRUSDR Load Utility You should run the FRUSDR Load Utility each time you upgrade or replace the hardware in
136. scription Enables selected device as a PCI bus master Minimum guaranteed time in units of PCI bus clocks that a device may be master on a PCI bus A CAUTION Do not change this setting unless you fully understand the priority of this device on the PCI bus 41 Integrated Peripheral Configuration Submenu Feature COM 1 Base l O Address Interrupt COM 2 Base l O Address Interrupt Parallel Port Mode Base l O Address Interrupt DMA channel Floppy disk controller Choices Disabled Enabled Auto OS Controlled 3F8 2F8 3E8 2E8 IRQ3 IRQ 4 Disabled Enabled Auto PnP OS 3F8 2F8 3E8 2E8 IRQ3 IRQ 4 Disabled Enabled Auto PnP OS Output only Bi directional EPP ECP 378 278 IRQ5 IRQ7 DMA 1 DMA 3 Disabled Enabled Description Auto forces BIOS to configure the port Forces the OS to configure the port Selects the base I O address for COM 1 Selects the IRQ for COM 1 Auto forces BIOS to configure the port PnP OS forces OS configures the port Selects the base I O address for COM 2 Selects the IRQ for COM 2 Auto forces BIOS to configure the port PnP OS forces OS configures the port Selects parallel port mode Selects the base I O address for LPT port Selects the IRQ for LPT port Selects the DMA for LPT port only used for ECP mode Enables onboard diskette controller Advanced Chipset Control 42 Feature 640 768K Memory Region
137. signal Non maskable interrupt indication 3 3V power supply status input System board reset signal from Server Monitor Module Ground Ground N A Secure mode indication Ground Chassis intrusion indication N A N A Ground N A N A Not used N A Connector key N A 99 IMB Table 20 IMB Connector Pinout Pin Signal 1 LOCAL_l2C_SCL 2 GND 3 LOCAL DC GDA VGA Video Port Table 21 Video Port Connector Pinout H 5 Signal Red Green Blue NC GND GND GND GND DJ OA fw M Keyboard and Mouse The are functionally equivalent Table 22 Keyboard and Mouse Connector Pinouts Pin Pin Keyboard signal KEYDAT NC GND FUSED_VCC 5 V KEYCLK NC oar WwW N 100 Pin 10 11 12 13 14 15 1 2 3 4 5 6 Signal NC GND NC DDCDAT HSYNC VSYNC DDCCLK Mouse signal MSEDAT NC GND FUSED_VCC 5 V MSECLK NC Technical Reference Parallel Port Table 23 Parallel Port Connector Pinout Signal STROBE_L Data bit 0 Data bit 1 Data bit 2 Data bit 3 Data bit 4 Data bit 5 Data bit 6 Data bit 7 H 5 OO DAN DO Af ON Serial Ports A and B Pin Signal 10 ACK_L 11 Busy 12 PE 13 SLCT 14 AUFDXT_L 15 ERROR_L 16 INIT_L 17 SLCTIN_L 18 25 GND Table 24 Serial Port A External Connector Pinout Pin Signal Description 1 DCD Data carrier detected 2 RXD Receive data 3 TXD Transmit data 4 DTR Data terminal ready 5 GND Ground 6 DSR Data set ready
138. t hex code to I O location 80h If a port 80h ISA POST card is installed it displays the 2 digit code on a pair of hex display LEDs 88 Table 9 Port 80 Codes Normal Port 80 Codes 02 12 24 04 06 18 08 C4 11 0E oC 16 17 28 2A 26 2E 2F 38 20 Beeps 1 2 2 3 1 3 4 1 1 3 4 3 1 3 1 1 Error Verify Real Mode Restore processor control word during warm boot only occurs on warm reboot Set ES segment register to 4GB Get processor type Initialize system hardware 8254 timer initialization Initialize PClset registers with initial POST values Initialize system flags in CMOS Load alternate registers with initial POST values Initialize 1 O Initialize caches to initial POST values BIOS ROM checksum Turn cache off Autosize DRAM Clear 512K base RAM RAM failure on address line xxxx RAM failure on data bits xxxx of low byte of memory bus 1st 4 meg Initialize L2 cache if enabled in CMOS Shadow system BIOS ROM Test DRAM refresh continued Solving Problems Table 9 Port 80 Codes continued Normal Port 80 Codes 29 33 34 C1 09 0A 3A 0B OF 10 14 1A 1C 22 32 67 69 00 F4 3C 3D 42 46 45 49 48 4A 4C 24 59 22 52 54 76 58 4B 4E 50 Beeps 1 3 1 3 2 1 2 3 2 2 3 1 Error Post Memory Manager Initialization PMM Post Dispatch manager Initialization Test CMOS Post error manager Initialization Set in POST flag Initialize processor registers and CPU
139. tem on and insert the Flash Memory Update Utility diskette in drive A After the system boots the speaker emits a single beep and the recovery process starts This takes about three minutes When the recovery process completes the speaker emits two beeps While in the recovery mode there is no screen display on the monitor The keyboard is disabled as the system automatically recovers the BIOS The following beep codes describe the recovery status Beep Code Message 2 Successful completion no errors 4 The system could not boot from the diskette The diskette may not be bootable Continuous series of low beeps The wrong BIOS recovery files are being used and or the flash memory jumper is in the wrong position 5 Turn the system off disconnect the power cord s from the system and remove the left side cover 6 Move the jumper from pins 9 and 10 to pins 10 and 11 to enable the normal boot mode 7 Replace the left side cover remove the diskette from drive A and connect the power cord s to the system 8 After running the special recovery mode run the SSU to specify a new password See Chapter 3 Boot Block Write Protect Jumper A The jumper at pins 13 14 and 15 controls whether the BIOS boot block is protected from being erased and reprogrammed CAUTION Leave boot block jumper at factory default setting Programming the boot block incorrectly will prevent the system from booting Programming should only be done by
140. the system board toward the front of the Move jumper to pins specified for the desired setting Reinstall the side cover connect the power cord and turn on the system for the change to take You may need to repeat these steps to move the jumper back to its original setting depending on the jumper function 109 CMOS Jumper The jumper at pins 1 2 and 3 controls whether settings stored in CMOS nonvolatile memory NVRAM are retained during a system reset Procedure to restore the system s CMOS and RTC to default values 1 See General Procedure to Change Jumper Setting on page 109 2 Move the CMOS jumper from pins 1 and 2 to pins 2 and 3 the Clear CMOS memory position 3 Reinstall the side cover for your safety and connect the power cord to the system 4 Turn the system on Wait for POST to complete and for the messages NVRAM cleared by jumper and Press F2 to enter Setup to appear This automatically reprograms CMOS and RTC to their default settings 5 Enter Setup and make any changes necessary for example changing the boot device Press F10 to save the new Setup configuration and exit Setup Turn off the system and disconnect the power cord from the system Again remove the side cover Move the jumper from pins 2 and 3 back to pins 1 and 2 the Protect CMOS memory position Reinstall the side cover and connect the power cord to the system 10 Run BIOS Setup or the SSU to verify the correct sett
141. ttage for each voltage level 3 Add the total wattage for each voltage level to arrive at a total combined power usage on the power supply Table 37 Power Usage Worksheet 2 Voltage level and total current Total Watts VXA W for each voltage level 3 3WX _____A W 5 V X ____A W 5 V X ____A W 412V X ___A WwW 12WX __A W Total Combined Wattage W 129 130 Information for Computer Integrators Index A add in board IDE bus slots 14 ISA slots 14 Add in boards ISA 48 PCL 48 address base memory 13 extended memory 13 administrative password 18 limiting access to SCU 20 Advanced Menu configuring in Setup 40 ATX power supply connector 96 audible beep error codes 34 B Back Panel Connectors 10 base memory 13 battery disposing of safely 29 installing 31 removing 29 beep codes 34 BIOS changing the language 77 recovering 77 upgrading 75 BIOS update utility 33 BMC 17 boot block write protect default jumper 111 Boot Device Priority menu configuring Setup 46 Boot menu configuring Setup 46 boot sequence booting without keyboard 20 setting in Setup 20 bootable media required by POST 34 booting cold 79 bus termination requirements SCSI devices 15 C cables IDE bus length limit 16 Caution avoid damaging jumpers when changing 22 avoid touching processor pins 25 DIMM types matching 24 DIMMs use extreme care when installing 24 ESD protection 22
142. ure and over voltage conditions fan failure or chassis intrusion To enable accurate monitoring the BMC maintains the non volatile Sensor Data Record SDR from which sensor information can be retrieved The BMC provides an ISA host interface to SDR sensor information so software running on the server can poll and retrieve the server s current status SEL contents can be retrieved after system failure for analysis by field service personnel using system management tools such as Intel LANDesk Server Manager Since the BMC is powered by 5V_Standby SEL and SDRR information is also available via the IMB An Emergency Management Card such as the Intel LANDesk SMM card can obtain the SEL and make it remotely accessible using a LAN or telephone line connection While it receives the proper current the BMC performs the following functions e Baseboard temperature and voltage monitoring e VID Bit reading e Processor presence monitoring and FRB control e Baseboard fan failure detection and indicator control e SEL interface management e SDR Repository interface management e SDR SEL timestamp clock e Baseboard Field Replaceable Unit FRU information interface e System management watchdog timer e Periodic SMI timer e Front panel NMI handling e Event receiver e ISA host and IMB interface management e Secure mode control video blank and floppy write protect monitoring and control front panel lock unlock initiation e Sensor ev
143. ut 103 wide connector 104 SCSI controller 15 SCU administrative password limits access to 20 changing configuration 33 diskette drive required to run SCU 33 inactivity lockout timer 17 software locking feature 18 secure mode 19 affects boot sequence 20 enter by setting passwords 19 locking reset and power on off switches 20 no booting from diskette without password 19 using hot keys to enter 33 security 18 19 alarm switches 18 boot sequence 20 enabling disabling floppy writes 20 locking mouse keyboard with timer 17 20 locking reset and power on off switches Setup 20 password 20 secure mode 19 secure mode setting in SCU 19 software lock SCU 18 unattended start 20 using hot key combination 33 video blanking 20 Security menu configuring Setup 43 serial port connectors on system board 101 Server Management 9 BMC 17 features 17 intrusion detection 18 Server Management Information menu configuring in Setup 45 Server Management Module SMM connector 99 Information for Computer Integrators Server menu configuring in Setup 44 Setup Advanced menu 40 Boot Device Priority menu 46 Boot menu 46 cannot enter need to reconfigure diskette 35 changing configuration 33 Console Redirection menu 46 description 36 Exit menu 47 Hard Drive menu 47 Integrated Peripheral Configuration menu 42 keyboard features menu 40 locking reset and power on off switches 20 Main menu 38
144. ve the computer cover Locate jumper block J3J2 Move the Recovery Boot jumper from pins 9 10 to pins 10 11 see Figure 18 on page 108 Insert the bootable BIOS upgrade floppy disk into floppy drive A Replace the cover turn on the computer and allow it to boot The recovery process will take a few minutes Listen to the speaker Two beeps and the end of activity in drive A indicate successful BIOS recovery A series of continuous beeps indicates failed BIOS recovery If recovery fails return to step 1 and repeat the recovery process If recovery is successful turn off the computer Remove the computer cover and continue with the following steps Move the Recovery Boot jumper back to pins 9 10 Replace the computer cover Leave the upgrade disk in drive A and turn on the computer Continue with the BIOS upgrade see page 76 Changing the BIOS Language You can use the BIOS upgrade utility to change the language the BIOS uses for messages and the Setup program Use a bootable floppy disk containing the Intel flash utility and language files see page 76 1 Boot the computer with the bootable floppy disk in drive A The BIOS upgrade utility screen appears 2 Select Update Flash Memory From a File 3 Select Update Language Set Press lt Enter gt 4 Select drive A and use the arrow keys to select the correct 1ng file Press lt Enter gt 5 When the utility asks for confirmation that you want to flash the new
145. witching the server console between EMP active and BIOS re direct modes The Console Manager uses three management plug ins to monitor the server e SEL viewer e SDR viewer e FRU viewer The Console Manager also has a support plug in Phonebook which you can use to create and maintain a list of servers and their phone numbers You can launch the Connect dialog directly from the Phonebook dialog to connect to a selected server Configuration Software Utilities How the EMP Console Works The EMP shares use of the COM 2 port with the system When the EMP has control of the port the port operates in command state When the system has control of it the port operates in redirect state When connecting to a server the EMP Console checks to determine the current COM 2 port state The following discussion covers how the EMP Console functions in each state e Command state is the default COM 2 state In this state the EMP Console communicates with the server s firmware allowing the client to remotely reset or power the server up or down The client can also view the server s System Event Log SEL Field Replaceable Unit FRU information or Sensor Data Record SDR table e In redirect state the EMP Console serves as a PC ANSI terminal window for BIOS console redirection Commands typed in this terminal window are transmitted through BIOS to the server s console and text displayed on the server console are displayed on the EMP Console s termina
146. y the peripheral device manufacturer The I O baseboard comes with a CFG file The CFG file describes the characteristics of the board and the system resources that it requires The configuration registers on PCI and ISA Plug and Play add in boards contain the same type of information that is in a CFG file Some ISA boards also come with a CFG file The SSU uses the information provided by CFG files configuration registers FLASH and the information that you enter to specify a system configuration The SSU writes the configuration information to flash memory The SSU stores configuration values in FLASH memory These values take effect when you boot the server POST checks the values against the actual hardware configuration if they do not agree POST generates an error message You must then run the SSU to specify the correct configuration before the server boots The SSU always includes a checksum with the configuration data so the BIOS can detect any potential data corruption before the actual hardware configuration takes place Configuration Software Utilities What You Need to Do The SSU may be run directly from the Server Configuration Software CD or from a set of DOS diskettes If you choose to run the SSU from a set of DOS diskettes you must copy the SSU from the Server Configuration Software CD to a set of DOS diskettes and follow the instructions in the included README TXT file to prepare the diskettes If your diskett
147. you are ADDING a second then you must remove the termination board from the secondary processor connector Press the tabs on the top of the termination board A in figure toward each other to release them from the retention module Lift the board up and out of the retention module B and store it appropriately 27 28 OM06348 Figure 7 Removing a Termination Board If your system has one processor and you are REPLACING it leave the termination board intact in the empty Slot 1 secondary connector Remove the processor you want to replace See Removing a Processor on page 26 If your system has two processors and you are REPLACING one or both remove the appropriate one s See Removing a Processor on page 26 Remove the new processor from its antistatic package and place it on a grounded static free surface or conductive foam pad Orient the processor so that the heat sink faces the center of the system board Slide the processor into the retention module Ensure that the alignment notch in the S E C cartridge fits over the plug in Slot 1 Push down firmly with even pressure on both sides of the top until the S E C cartridge is seated To lock in the processor push the latches outward until they click into place in the retention module A in figure below The latches must be secured for proper electrical connection of the processor Attach the small end of the power cable to the fan connector on the S E C cartr
148. your server excluding add in boards hard drives and RAM For example if you replace an array of fans you need to run the utility It programs the sensors that need to be monitored for server management Because the utility must be reloaded to properly initialize the sensors after programming turn the server off and remove the AC power cords from the server Wait approximately 30 seconds and reconnect the power cords What You Need to Do The FRUSDR Load Utility may be run directly from the Configuration Software CD or from diskettes you create from the CD Before you can run the FRUSDR Load Utility from a diskette you must copy the utility from the Server Configuration Software CD to a DOS bootable diskette If your diskette drive is disabled or improperly configured you must use BIOS Setup to enable it If necessary you can disable the drive after you are done with the FRUSDR utility How You Use the FRUSDR Load Utility This utility is compatible with ROM DOS Ver 6 22 MS DOS Ver 6 22 and later versions The utility accepts CFG SDR and FRU load files The executable file for the utility is frusdr exe The utility requires the following supporting files e one or more fru files describing the system s field replaceable units e a cfg file describing the system configuration e a sdr file describing the sensors in the system 69 Command Line Format The basic command line format is frusdr h d dmi fru sd

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