SUPER MICRO Computer Webcam X7DCL 3 User Manual

®
SUPER  
X7DCL-3  
X7DCL-i  
USER’S MANUAL  
Revision 1.0c  
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Preface  
Preface  
About This Manual  
This manual is written for system integrators, PC technicians and  
knowledgeable PC users. It provides information for the installation and use of  
the  
X7DCL-3/X7DCL-i motherboard. The  
X7DCL-3/X7DCL-i  
supports dual Intel Xeon Quad Core/Dual Core 5400/5300/5200/5100 Series  
processors (w/771 LGA) with a front side bus speed of up to 1.333 GHz. With  
dual 64-bit Xeon Quad Core/Dual Core 5400/5300/5200/5100 Series processors  
built-in, the X7DCL-3/X7DCL-i offers substantial functionality enhancements to  
the motherboards based on the Intel Core microarchitecture while remaining  
compatible with the IA-32 software. The features supported by this motherboard  
include Intel Virtualization Technology, Enhanced Intel SpeedStep technology,  
Extended Memory 64 Technology (EM64T) and Native DDR 2 DIMM modules.  
These features allow the motherboard to operate at much higher speeds with  
lower power consumption in much safer thermal environments than the traditional  
motherboards. The X7DCL-3/X7DCL-i is ideal for complex business applications  
and servers. Please refer to the motherboard specifications pages on our web site  
intended to be installed and serviced by professional technicians.  
Manual Organization  
Chapter 1 describes the features, specifications and performance of the  
mainboard and provides detailed information about the chipset.  
Chapter 2 provides hardware installation instructions. Read this chapter when  
installing the processor, memory modules and other hardware components into the  
system. If you encounter any problems, see Chapter 3, which describes trouble-  
shooting procedures for video, memory and system setup stored in the CMOS.  
Chapter 4 includes an introduction to the BIOS, and provides detailed information  
on running the CMOS Setup utility.  
Appendix A lists BIOS POST Error Codes. Appendix B and Appendix C provide  
the Windows OS and other Software Installation Instructions.  
Conventions Used in the Manual:  
Special attention should be given to the following symbols for proper installation  
and to prevent damage done to the components or injury to yourself.  
Danger/Caution: Instructions to be strictly followed to prevent catastrophic  
system failure or to avoid bodily injury.  
Warning: Important information given to ensure proper system installation or  
to prevent damage to the components.  
Note: Additional Information given to ensure correct system setup.  
iii  
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X7DCL-3/X7DCL-i User's Manual  
Table of Contents  
Preface  
About This Manual ........................................................................................... iii  
Manual Organization ........................................................................................ iii  
Conventions Used in the Manual.......................................................................iii  
Chapter 1: Introduction  
1-1 Overview ......................................................................................................... 1-1  
Checklist ................................................................................................... 1-1  
Contacting Supermicro ............................................................................. 1-2  
X7DCL-3/i Image ....................................................................... 1-3  
X7DCL-3/i Layout ...................................................................... 1-4  
Quick Reference ...................................................................................... 1-5  
Motherboard Features................................................................................ 1-6  
Intel 5100 Chipset: System Block Diagram ............................................. 1-8  
1-2 Chipset Overview ........................................................................................... 1-9  
1-3 Special Features ........................................................................................... 1-10  
1-4 PC Health Monitoring .................................................................................... 1-10  
1-5 ACPI Features .............................................................................................. 1-11  
1-6 Power Supply ............................................................................................... 1-12  
1-7 Super I/O ........................................................................................................ 1-12  
Chapter 2: Installation  
2-1 Static-Sensitive Devices ................................................................................. 2-1  
Precautions................................................................................................ 2-1  
Unpacking ................................................................................................ 2-1  
2-2 Processor and Heatsink Installation ............................................................... 2-2  
2-3 Installing DIMMs ............................................................................................. 2-6  
2-4 Control Panel Connectors and IO Ports ......................................................... 2-8  
Back Panel Connectors/IO Ports................................................................... 2-8  
Front Control Panel ....................................................................................... 2-9  
Front Control Panel Pin Definitions............................................................. 2-10  
NMI Button ............................................................................................. 2-10  
Power LED ............................................................................................. 2-10  
HDD LED .............................................................................................. 2-11  
NIC1/NIC2 LED Indicators ..................................................................... 2-11  
Overheat/Fan Fail LED ......................................................................... 2-12  
Power Fail LED ........................................................................................ 2-12  
Reset Button ......................................................................................... 2-13  
iv  
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Table of Contents  
Power Button .......................................................................................... 2-13  
2-5 Connecting Cables ....................................................................................... 2-14  
ATX Power Connector .......................................................................... 2-14  
Processor Power Connector ................................................................. 2-14  
Universal Serial Bus (USB)..................................................................... 2-15  
Fan Headers .......................................................................................... 2-16  
Chassis Intrusion .................................................................................... 2-16  
ATX PS/2 Keyboard and Mouse Ports..................................................... 2-17  
Serial Ports.............................................................................................. 2-17  
Wake-On-Ring.......................................................................................... 2-18  
Wake-On-LAN .......................................................................................... 2-18  
GLAN 1/2 (Ethernet) Ports....................................................................... 2-19  
Speaker/Power LED Header .................................................................. 2-19  
Alarm Reset.............................................................................................. 2-20  
Power Supply Failure/Power Fault........................................................... 2-20  
VGA Connector ........................................................................................ 2-21  
SGPIO Headers ....................................................................................... 2-21  
Power SMB (I2C)...................................................................................... 2-22  
BP Power SMB (I2C) ................................................................................ 2-22  
Keylock..................................................................................................... 2-23  
2-6  
J..u..m...p..e..r...S..e..t.t.i.n..g..s................................................................... 2-24  
Explanation of Jumpers ......................................................................... 2-24  
GLAN Enable/Disable ............................................................................ 2-24  
CMOS Clear ............................................................................................ 2-25  
Watch Dog................................................................................................ 2-25  
VGA Enable/Disable................................................................................. 2-26  
I2C Bus to PCI Slots................................................................................. 2-26  
SAS Enable.............................................................................................. 2-27  
Software RAID Enable ............................................................................. 2-27  
O...n..b..o..a..r.d...L..E...D...I.n..d..i.c..a..t.o..r.s.......................................... 2-28  
2-7  
2-8  
GLAN LEDs.............................................................................................. 2-28  
Onboard Power LED................................................................................ 2-28  
System Status LED.................................................................................. 2-29  
CPU_VRM Overheat LEDs...................................................................... 2-29  
System Status LED.................................................................................. 2-30  
F...lo..p..p..y..,..S...I.M...L..C...I.P...M..I2a-n3d1 Hard Disk  
Floppy Connector.................................................................................... 2-31  
IDE Connector.......................................................................................... 2-32  
SIMLC IPMI Slot...................................................................................... 2-32  
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X7DCL-3/X7DCL-i User's Manual  
Chapter 3: Troubleshooting  
3-1 Troubleshooting Procedures ........................................................................... 3-1  
Before Power On....................................................................................... 3-1  
No Power................................................................................................... 3-1  
No Video .................................................................................................. 3-1  
Losing the System’s Setup Configuration ................................................ 3-1  
Memory Errors........................................................................................... 3-2  
3-2 Technical Support Procedures ........................................................................ 3-2  
3-3 Frequently Asked Questions ........................................................................... 3-3  
3-4 Returning Merchandise for Service................................................................. 3-3  
Chapter 4: BIOS  
4-1 Introduction ....................................................................................................... 4-1  
4-2 Running Setup ................................................................................................. 4-2  
4-3 Main BIOS Setup ............................................................................................. 4-2  
4-4 Advanced Setup ............................................................................................... 4-7  
4-5 Security Setup ............................................................................................... 4-20  
4-6 Boot Setup...................................................................................................... 4-21  
4-7 Exit.................................................................................................................. 4-22  
Appendices:  
Appendix A: BIOS POST Error Beep Codes .............................................................A-1  
Appendix B: Installing the Windows OS ....................................................................B-1  
Appendix C: Installing Other Software Programs and Drivers...................................C-1  
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Chapter 1: Introduction  
Chapter 1  
Introduction  
1-1  
Overview  
Checklist  
Congratulations on purchasing your computer motherboard from an acknowledged  
leader in the industry. Supermicro boards are designed with the utmost attention to  
detail to provide you with the highest standards in quality and performance. Check  
that the following items have all been included with your motherboard. If anything  
listed here is damaged or missing, contact your retailer.  
All the following items are included in the Retail Box only.  
One (1) Super Micro Mainboard  
One (1) ribbon cable for IDE devices (CBL-0036L-2)  
One (1) floppy ribbon cable (CBL-0022L)  
Eight (8) SATA cables (CBL-0044L) (X7DCL-3)  
Six (6) SATA cables (CBL-0044L) (X7DCL-i)  
One (1) I/O backpanel shield (CSE-PT07L)  
One (1) CPU Retention Module (SKT-0159)  
One (1) Supermicro CD containing drivers, software and utilities (CDR-X7)  
One (1) User's/BIOS Manual (MNL-0957)  
Optional  
(For SAS HostRAID 5)  
One (1) I-Button (AOC-iBUTTON 68) (X7DCL-3)  
1-1  
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X7DCL-3/X7DCL-i User's Manual  
Contacting Supermicro  
Headquarters  
Address:  
Super Micro Computer, Inc.  
980 Rock Ave.  
San Jose, CA 95131 U.S.A.  
+1 (408) 503-8000  
Tel:  
Fax:  
Email:  
+1 (408) 503-8008  
[email protected] (General Information)  
[email protected] (Technical Support)  
Web Site:  
Europe  
Address:  
Super Micro Computer B.V.  
Het Sterrenbeeld 28, 5215 ML  
's-Hertogenbosch, The Netherlands  
+31 (0) 73-6400390  
Tel:  
Fax:  
Email:  
+31 (0) 73-6416525  
[email protected] (General Information)  
[email protected] (Technical Support)  
[email protected] (Customer Support)  
Asia-Pacific  
Address:  
Super Micro, Taiwan  
4F, No. 232-1, Liancheng Rd.  
Chung-Ho 235, Taipei County  
Taiwan, R.O.C.  
Tel:  
+886-(2) 8226-3990  
+886-(2) 8226-3991  
Fax:  
Web Site:  
Technical Support:  
Email:  
Tel:  
886-2-8228-1366, ext.132 or 139  
1-2  
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Chapter 1: Introduction  
X7DCL-3/X7DCL-i Image  
Note: The drawings and pictures shown in this manual were based on the  
latest PCB Revision available at the time of publishing of the manual. The  
motherboard you’ve received may or may not look exactly the same as the  
graphics shown in the manual.  
1-3  
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X7DCL-3/X7DCL-i User's Manual  
X7DCL-3/X7DCL-i Motherboard Layout  
(not drawn to scale)  
JPWF1  
CPU1 VRM OH LED  
LED5  
SMB_PS  
JAR  
JPW1  
8-Pin PWR  
JPW2  
24-Pin PWR  
JKM1  
JBS1  
DIMM2A  
CPU1  
DIMM1A  
DIMM2B  
DIMM1B  
JCOM1  
JVGA1  
DIMM2C  
DIMM1C  
X7DCL-3/i  
JLAN1  
JLAN2  
CPU2  
JPL2  
LAN  
CTRL  
Intel  
5100  
North Bridge  
I-Button  
Fan  
Fan  
2
3
LED6  
LAN  
CTRL  
CPU2 VRM OH LED  
JP2  
JP1  
SP1  
Buzzer  
Slot6 PCI-E x8  
Intel  
Slot5 PCI-E x8  
ICH9R  
PWR LED  
LED3  
South Bridge  
Slot4 PCI-E x4(in x8 slot)  
VGA  
JF1  
CTRL  
JBT1  
LED1  
BIOS  
JPG1  
Slot3 PCI 33MHz  
Battery  
LSI  
SAS  
CTRL  
ITE  
SAS-GPIO1  
SAS-GPIO0  
Slot2 PCI 33MHz  
J10  
J9  
S I/O  
CTRL  
JWD1  
JWOL1  
JFDD1  
JL1  
JPA2  
LED4  
Slot1 PCI 33MHz  
SIMLC  
USB4/5  
BPI  
System Status LED  
JIDE1  
COM2  
USB2/3  
JUSB2  
2
C
Fan 4  
Notes:  
1. Jumpers not indicated are for test purposes only.  
2. See Chapter 2 for detailed information on jumpers, I/O ports and JF1 front panel  
connections.  
3. " " indicates the location of Pin 1.  
4. When LED3 is on, make sure to unplug the power cable before removing or  
installing components.  
5. All features and components related to SAS are available on the X7DCL-3 only,  
including SAS Connectors, the LSI SAS HostRAID Controller, and the I-Button  
socket. I-Button is used to support RAID 5 (optional.)  
1-4  
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Chapter 1: Introduction  
Quick Reference (X7DCL-3/X7DCL-i)  
Jumper  
JBT1  
Description  
Default Setting  
CMOS Clear  
See Chapter 2  
JI2C1/JI2C2  
JPG1  
SMB to PCI/PCI-Exp Slots  
VGA Enable  
Open (Disabled)  
Pins 1-2 (Enabled)  
Pins 1-2 (Enabled)  
Closed (Software RAID)  
Pins 1-2 (Enabled)  
Pins 1-2 (Reset)  
JPA1 (Note)  
JPA2 (Note)  
JPL1/ JPL2  
JWD  
SAS Enable  
Software RAID/IT RAID Mode  
GLAN1/GLAN2 Enable  
Watch Dog  
Connector  
BPI2C  
Description  
Back Panel Power System Management (I2C) Header  
COM1/COM2 Serial Port and Header  
Fans 1-2: CPU Fans, Fans 3-6: System cooling fans  
Floppy Disk Drive Connector (JFDD1)  
Front Control Panel Connector (JF1)  
IDE Hard Drive  
COM1/COM2  
FAN 1-6  
Floppy  
FP Control  
IDE  
J7/J8/9/10  
Serial-Links General Purpose Input/Output Headers  
(J7/J8: SATA T-SGPIO 0/1, J9/J10: SAS T-SGPIO 0/1)  
Alarm Reset Header  
JAR1  
JD1  
Power LED(pins1-3)/SpeakerHeader (pins 4-7)  
I-Button Socket  
JIBTN1  
JL1  
Chassis Intrusion Header  
JPW1  
+12V 8-pin PWR  
JPW2  
Primary 24-Pin ATX PWR Connector  
Power Supply Failure (See Chapter 2)  
BP USB0/1 (JUSB1), FP USB2/3/4/5 (JUSB2/3)  
Wake-on-LAN Header  
JPWF1  
JUSB1/JUSB2/3  
JWOL  
JWOR  
Wake-on-Ring Header  
Keylock  
LAN1/2  
PWR I2C  
SAS0-SAS7 (Note)  
SATA0-SATA5  
SIMLC  
Keylock Header (JKEY1)  
G-bit Ethernet Ports 1/2  
Power System Management (I2C) Header (JPI2C1)  
Serial Attached SCSI Connectors (#0-#7) (X7DCL-3)  
SATA 0-5 Connectors  
IPMI SIMLC Slot (JIPMI)  
VGA  
VGA Port  
LED Indicator  
LED1  
Description  
SAS LED  
LED3/LED4  
LED5/LED6  
Power LED (LED3)/System Status LED (LED4)  
CPU1/CPU2 VRM Overheat (respectively)  
Note: SAS is available on the X7DCL-3 only.  
1-5  
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X7DCL-3/X7DCL-i User's Manual  
Motherboard Features  
CPU  
Dual Intel® 64-bit Xeon LGA 771 Quad Core/Dual Core 5400/5300/5200/5100  
Series processors at a front side bus speed of 1333 MHz/1066 MHz  
Memory  
Six 240-pin DIMM sockets with support up to 32 GB Single-Rank, Registered/  
ECC DDR2 667/533 Memory.  
Note: PCB revision 1.1a and later will now support up to 48 GBs of Single-  
Rank, Registered/ECC DDR2 667/533 Memory (See Section 2-3 in Chapter  
2 for DIMM Slot Population.)  
Chipset  
Intel 5100 chipset, including: the 5100 Memory Control Hub (MCH) and the  
ICH9R South Bridge  
Expansion Slots  
Two PCI-E x8 slot (Slot 5/Slot 6), and one in PCI-E x4 (in x8) slot (Slot 4)  
Three 32-bit PCI 33 MHz slot (Slot 1/Slot 2/Slot 3)  
One SIMLC IPMI Slot (Slot 0)  
BIOS  
8 Mb Phoenix® Flash ROM  
DMI 2.3, PCI 2.2, ACPI 1.0, Plug and Play (PnP), USB Keyboard support,  
Hardware BIOS Virus Protection and SMBIOS 2.3  
PC Health Monitoring  
Onboard voltage monitors for CPU core voltage, Memory voltage, +1.8V, +3.3V,  
+5V, +12V, -12V, +3.3V standby, +5V standby and VBAT)  
Fan status monitor with firmware control  
CPU/chassis temperature monitors  
Low noise fan speed control  
Platform Environment Control Interface (PECI) ready  
CPU fan auto-off in sleep mode  
Pulse Width Modulation (PWM) fan control  
I2C temperature sensing logic  
Thermal Monitor 2 (TM2) support  
CPU slow-down on temperature overheat  
CPU thermal trip support for processor protection  
Power-up mode control for recovery from AC power loss  
1-6  
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Chapter 1: Introduction  
Chassis intrusion detection  
System resource alert via Supero Doctor III  
ACPI Features  
Slow blinking LED for suspend state indicator  
Main switch override mechanism  
ACPI Power Management  
Power-on mode for power recovery  
Onboard I/O  
Six SATA ports support RAID 0, 1, 10 and 5 (in the Windows OS environ-  
ment)  
Eight SAS ports supports RAID 0, 1, 10 and 5. (For X7DCL-3 only)  
One SIMLC IPMI 2.0 socket  
Intel 82573V and 82573L LAN chips support two Giga-bit LAN ports  
One EIDE Ultra DMA/100 bus master interface  
One floppy port interface  
Two COM ports(1 header, 1 port)  
Up to six USB 2.0 (Universal Serial Bus) (2 ports, 4 Headers)  
XGI Volari Z9s 32 MB Graphic Controller  
Super I/O: Winbond W83627HG  
Other  
External modem ring-on  
Wake-on-LAN (WOL)  
Wake-on-Ring (WOR)  
Console redirection  
Onboard Fan Speed Control by Thermal Management via BIOS  
CD/Diskette Utilities  
Device drivers and Software  
Dimensions  
ATX 12.05" x 10" (306.1mm x 254 mm)  
1-7  
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X7DCL-3/X7DCL-i User's Manual  
PROCESSOR#1  
ISL6312A  
ISL6312A  
PROCESSOR#2  
1067/1333  
MT/S  
1067/1333  
MT/S  
#0-3  
#0-2  
#0-1  
PCI-EXP x8  
PORT  
#2,3  
#1-3  
#1-2  
#1-1  
MCH  
Intel 5100  
#7  
#6  
#5  
#4  
#3  
#2  
#1  
#0  
PCI-EXP x8  
PCI-EXP x8  
PORT  
#4,5  
PORT  
#6,7  
3.0 Gb/S  
PORT  
#0  
LSI 1068E  
#5  
#4  
#3  
#2  
#1  
#0  
PCI-EXP x1  
DMI  
RJ45  
RJ45  
82573V  
82573L  
LANE5  
3.0 Gb/S  
PCI-EXP x1  
LANE6  
ICH9R  
LANE1/2/3/4  
#5  
#4  
#3  
#2  
#1  
DDR2 SDRAM 32MB  
#0  
USB 2.0  
PCI 33MHz  
VGA  
CONN  
VGA  
Volari Z9S  
LPC  
IDE  
IT8213F  
PCI-33  
PCI-33  
PCI-33  
SIO  
W83627HG  
FWH  
MS  
KB  
COM2  
INTERNAL/SOL  
COM1  
External  
Block Diagram of the Intel 5100 Chipset  
Note: This is a general block diagram. Please see the previous Motherboard  
Features pages for details on the features of each motherboard.  
1-8  
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Chapter 1: Introduction  
1-2  
Chipset and Processor Features Overview  
Built upon the functionality and the capability of the Intel 5100 chipset, the X7DCL-  
3/X7DCL-i motherboard provides the performance and feature set required for  
dual processor-based high-end servers with configuration options optimized for  
intensive computing, high energy-efficiency and complex business applications.  
The 5100 chipset supports single or dual Intel Xeon 64-bit Quad Core/Dual Core  
5400/5300/5200/5100 Series processors with front side bus speeds of up to 1.333  
GHz. The chipset consists of the 5100 Memory Controller Hub (MCH), Intel I/O  
Controller Hub (ICH9R) and the I/O subsystem.  
The 5100 Memory Controller Hub (MCH)  
The Intel 5100 MCH chip is designed for symmetric multiprocessing across two  
independent front side bus interfaces. Each front side bus uses a 64-bit wide,  
1066/1333 MTS data bus capable of transferring data at 8.5/10.6 GB/s for a total  
bandwidth of 17/21.3 GB/s. The MCH supports a 36-bit wide address bus and up  
to six DDR2 667 MHz/533 MHz DIMM modules, providing a total memory capac-  
ity of up to 32 GB.  
The 5100 MCH also provides six x4 PCI-Express interfaces and one x4 DMI  
Interface to the ICH9R. Each PCI Express port on the MCH provides 4 GB/s bi-  
directional bandwidth if configured as a x8 port, or 2 GB/s bi-directional bandwidth  
if configured as a x4 port.  
The Ninth Generation I/O Controller Hub (ICH9)  
The I/O Controller ICH9R provides the data buffering and interface arbitration  
required for the system to operate efficiently. It also provides the bandwidth needed  
for the system to maintain its peak performance. The Direct Media Interface (DMI)  
provides the connection between the MCH and the ICH9R. The ICH9R supports  
up to six PCI-Express x1 slots, six Serial ATA ports and twelve USB 2.0 ports.  
In addition, the ICH9R offers the Intel Matrix Storage Technology which provides  
various RAID options for data protection and rapid data access. It also supports the  
next generation of client management through the use of PROActive technology in  
conjunction with Intel's next generation Gigabit Ethernet controllers.  
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X7DCL-3/X7DCL-i User's Manual  
1-3  
Special Features  
Recovery from AC Power Loss  
BIOS provides a setting for you to determine how the system will respond when  
AC power is lost and then restored to the system. You can choose for the system  
to remain powered off (in which case you must hit the power switch to turn it back  
on) or for it to automatically return to a power-on state. See the Power Lost Control  
setting in the Advanced BIOS Setup section to change this setting. The default  
setting is Last State.  
1-4  
PC Health Monitoring  
This section describes the PC health monitoring features of the X7DCL-3/X7DCL-  
i. All have an onboard System Hardware Monitor chip that supports PC health  
monitoring.  
Onboard Voltage Monitors  
An onboard voltage monitor will scan for the CPU Cores, Chipset Voltage, +1.8V,  
+3.3V, +5V, +12V, -12V, +3.3V Standby, +5V Standby and VBAT continuously.  
Once a voltage becomes unstable, a warning is given or an error message is sent  
to the screen. Users can adjust the voltage thresholds to define the sensitivity  
of the voltage monitor.  
Fan Status Monitor with Firmware Control  
The PC health monitor can check the RPM status of the cooling fans. The onboard  
CPU and chassis fans are controlled by Thermal Management via BIOS (under  
Hardware Monitoring in the Advanced Setting).  
Environmental Temperature Control  
The thermal control sensor monitors the CPU temperature in real time and will turn  
on the thermal control fan whenever the CPU temperature exceeds a user-defined  
threshold. The overheat circuitry runs independently from the CPU. Once it detects  
that the CPU temperature is too high, it will automatically turn on the thermal fan  
control to prevent any overheat damage to the CPU. The onboard chassis thermal  
circuitry can monitor the overall system temperature and alert users when the chas-  
sis temperature is too high.  
System Resource Alert  
This feature is available when used with Supero Doctor III in the Windows OS  
environment or used with Supero Doctor II in Linux. Supero Doctor is used to  
notify the user of certain system events. For example, if the system is running low  
on virtual memory and there is insufficient hard drive space for saving the data,  
1-10  
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Chapter 1: Introduction  
you can be alerted of the potential problem. You can also configure Supero Doctor  
to provide you with warnings when the system temperature goes beyond a pre-  
defined range.  
1-5  
ACPI Features  
ACPI stands for Advanced Configuration and Power Interface. The ACPI specifica-  
tion defines a flexible and abstract hardware interface that provides a standard  
way to integrate power management features throughout a PC system, including  
its hardware, operating system and application software. This enables the system  
to automatically turn on and off peripherals such as CD-ROMs, network cards, hard  
disk drives and printers. This also includes consumer devices connected to the PC  
such as VCRs, TVs, telephones and stereos.  
In addition to enabling operating system-directed power management, ACPI  
provides a generic system event mechanism for Plug and Play and an operating  
system-independent interface for configuration control. ACPI leverages the Plug  
and Play BIOS data structures while providing a processor architecture-independent  
implementation that is compatible with Windows 2000, Windows XP and Windows  
2003 Servers.  
Slow Blinking LED for Suspend-State Indicator  
When the CPU goes into a suspend state, the chassis power LED will start blinking  
to indicate that the CPU is in suspend mode. When the user presses any key, the  
CPU will wake-up and the LED will automatically stop blinking and remain on.  
Main Switch Override Mechanism  
When an ATX power supply is used, the power button can function as a system  
suspend button to make the system enter a SoftOff state. The monitor will be  
suspended and the hard drive will spin down. Pressing the power button again  
will cause the whole system to wake-up. During the SoftOff state, the ATX power  
supply provides power to keep the required circuitry in the system "alive". In case  
the system malfunctions and you want to turn off the power, just press and hold  
the power button for 4 seconds. This option can be set in the Power section of the  
BIOS Setup routine.  
External Modem Ring-On  
Wake-up events can be triggered by a device such as the external modem ringing  
when the system is in the Standby or Off state. Note that external modem ring-on  
can only be used with an ATX 2.01 (or above) compliant power supply.  
Wake-On-LAN is defined as the ability of a management application to remotely  
power up a computer that is powered off. Remote PC setup, up-dates and asset  
tracking can occur after hours and on weekends so that daily LAN traffic is kept  
1-11  
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X7DCL-3/X7DCL-i User's Manual  
to a minimum and users are not interrupted. The motherboard has a 3-pin header  
(WOL) to connect to the 3-pin header on a Network Interface Card (NIC) that has  
WOL capability. In addition, an onboard LAN controller can also support WOL  
without any connection to the WOL header. The 3-pin WOL header is to be used  
with a LAN add-on card only.  
Note: Wake-On-LAN requires an ATX 2.01 (or above) compliant power supply.  
1-6  
Power Supply  
As with all computer products, a stable power source is necessary for proper and  
reliable operation. It is even more important for processors that have high CPU  
clock rates.  
The X7DCL-3/X7DCL-i can only accommodate 24-pin ATX power supply. Although  
most power supplies generally meet the specifications required by the motherboard,  
some are inadequate. You should use one that will supply at least 400W of power.  
In addition, the 12V 8-pin is also required for adequate power supply to the CPU.  
Also your power supply must supply 1.5A for the Ethernet ports.  
It is strongly recommended that you use a high quality power supply that meets  
ATX power supply Specification 2.02 or above. It must also be SSI compliant (info  
present, you may choose to install a line filter to shield the computer from noise. It is  
recommended that you also install a power surge protector to help avoid problems  
caused by power surges.  
1-7  
Super I/O  
The disk drive adapter functions of the Super I/O chip include a floppy disk drive  
controller that is compatible with industry standard 82077/765, a data separator,  
write pre-compensation circuitry, decode logic, data rate selection, a clock generator,  
drive interface control logic and interrupt and DMA logic. The wide range of functions  
integrated onto the Super I/O greatly reduces the number of components required  
for interfacing with floppy disk drives. The Super I/O supports 360 K, 720 K, 1.2  
M, 1.44 M or 2.88 M disk drives and data transfer rates of 250 Kb/s, 500 Kb/s or  
1 Mb/s. It also provides two high-speed, 16550 compatible serial communication  
ports (UARTs). Both UARTs provide legacy speed with baud rate of up to 115.2  
Kbps as well as an advanced speed with baud rates of 250 K, 500 K, or 1 Mb/s,  
which support higher speed modems.  
The Super I/O supports one PC-compatible printer port (SPP), Bi-directional Printer  
Port (BPP), Enhanced Parallel Port (EPP) or Extended Capabilities Port (ECP).  
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Chapter 1: Introduction  
The Super I/O provides functions that comply with ACPI (Advanced Configuration  
and Power Interface), which includes support of legacy and ACPI power manage-  
ment through an SMI or SCI function pin. It also features auto power management  
to reduce power consumption.  
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Notes  
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Chapter 2: Installation  
Chapter 2  
Installation  
2-1  
Static-Sensitive Devices  
Electro-Static Discharge (ESD) can damage electronic components. To prevent  
damage to your system board, it is important to handle it very carefully. The fol-  
lowing measures are generally sufficient to protect your equipment from ESD.  
Precautions  
Use a grounded wrist strap designed to prevent static discharge.  
Touch a grounded metal object before removing the board from the antistatic  
bag.  
Handle the board by its edges only; do not touch its components, peripheral  
chips, memory modules or gold contacts.  
When handling chips or modules, avoid touching their pins.  
Put the motherboard and peripherals back into their antistatic bags when not  
in use.  
For grounding purposes, make sure your computer chassis provides excellent  
conductivity between the power supply, the case, the mounting fasteners and  
the motherboard.  
Use only the correct type of onboard CMOS battery as specified by the  
manufacturer. Do not install the onboard battery upside down to avoid possible  
explosion.  
Unpacking  
The motherboard is shipped in antistatic packaging to avoid static damage. When  
unpacking the board, make sure the person handling it is static protected.  
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2-2  
Processor and Heatsink Fan Installation  
When handling the processor package, avoid placing direct pressure  
on the label area of the fan.  
!
Notes:  
Always connect the power cord last and always remove it before adding, re-  
moving or changing any components. Make sure that you install the processor  
into the CPU socket before you install the CPU heatsink.  
Intel's boxed Xeon CPU package contains the CPU fan and heatsink assembly.  
If you buy a CPU separately, make sure that you use only Intel-certified multi-  
directional heatsink and fan.  
Make sure to install the motherboard into the chassis before you install the  
CPU heatsink and fan.  
When purchasing a motherboard with an LGA 771 CPU Socket, make sure  
that the CPU plastic cap is in place, and none of the CPU Socket pins are  
bent; otherwise, contact the retailer immediately.  
Refer to the Chipset/MB Features Section for more details on CPU support.  
Installing the LGA771 Processor  
Load Lever  
PnP Cap on  
top of the  
1. Press the load lever to release  
the load plate, which covers the  
CPU socket, from its locking  
position.  
Load Plate  
2. Gently lift the load lever to open  
the load plate.  
Load Plate  
(with PnP Cap  
attached)  
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Chapter 2: Installation  
North Center Edge  
Loading the Processor into the Socket  
1. Use your thumb and your index  
finger to hold the CPU at the North  
Center Edge and the South Center  
Edge of the CPU.  
2. Align CPU Pin1 (the CPU corner  
marked with a triangle) against the  
socket corner that is marked with a  
triangle cutout.  
South Center Edge  
gold dot  
Socket Key  
3. Align the CPU key that is the semi-  
circle cutout below a gold dot against  
the socket key, the notch on the  
same side of the triangle cutout on  
the socket.  
(Socket Notch)  
CPU Key (semi-  
circle cutout)  
below the circle.  
4. Once aligned, carefully lower the  
CPU straight down to the socket.  
(Do not drop the CPU on the socket.  
Do not move the CPU horizontally  
or vertically. Do not rub the CPU  
against the surface or against any  
pins of the socket to avoid damage  
to the CPU or the socket.)  
Corner with a  
triangle cutout  
CPU Pin1  
Load Lever  
5. With the CPU installed in the socket,  
inspect the four corners of the  
CPU to make sure that the CPU is  
properly installed. Then, close the  
load plate.  
CPU in the CPU socket  
6. Use your thumb to gently push the  
load lever down to lock it.  
7.  
If the CPU is properly installed into  
the socket, the plastic cap will be  
automatically released from the load  
plate when the clip is pushed in the  
clip lock. Remove the plastic cap  
from the motherboard.  
Plastic cap  
is released  
from the  
load plate  
if the CPU  
properly in-  
stalled.  
!
Warning: Please save the plastic  
PnP cap. The motherboard must be  
shipped with the PnP cap properly in-  
stalled to protect socket pins. Shipment  
without the PnP cap properly installed will  
cause damage to the socket pins.  
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Installing the Heatsink  
CEK Passive Heatsink  
1. Do not apply any thermal grease to the  
heatsink or the CPU die; the required  
amount has already been applied.  
2. Place the heatsink on top of the CPU  
so that the four mounting holes are  
aligned with those on the retention  
mechanism.  
Screw#1  
Screw#2  
3. Screw in two diagonal screws (ie the  
#1 and the #2 screws) until just snug (-  
do not fully tighten the screws to avoid  
possible damage to the CPU.)  
Screw#1  
4. Finish the installation by fully tighten-  
ing all four screws.  
Screw#2  
To Remove the Heatsink  
Warning: We do not recommend that the CPU or the heatsink be removed.  
However, if you do need to uninstall the heatsink, please follow the instructions  
on the next page to uninstall the heatsink to prevent damage done to the CPU  
or the CPU socket.  
!
1. Unscrew and remove the heatsink screws  
from the motherboard in the sequence as  
shown in the picture on the right.  
2. Hold the heatsink as shown in the pic-  
ture on the right and gently wriggle the  
heatsink to loosen it from the CPU. (Do  
not use excessive force when wriggling  
the heatsink!!)  
3. Once the heatsink is loosened, remove  
the it from the CPU socket.  
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Chapter 2: Installation  
4. Clean the surface of the CPU  
and the heatsink to get rid of the  
old thermal grease. Reapply the  
proper amount of thermal grease  
on the surface before you re-install  
the CPU and the heatsink.  
Mounting the Motherboard in the Chassis  
All motherboards have standard mounting holes to fit different types of chassis.  
Make sure that the locations of all the mounting holes for both motherboard and  
chassis match. Make sure that the metal standoffs click in or are screwed in  
tightly. Then, use a screwdriver to secure the motherboard onto the motherboard  
tray. (Note: some components are very close to the mounting holes. Please take  
precautionary measures to prevent damage done to these components when you  
install the motherboard into the chassis.)  
Caution: To avoid damaging the motherboard and its components, please do  
not use a force greater than 8 lb/inch on each mounting screw during mother-  
board installation.  
2-3  
Installing DIMMs  
Note: Check the SuperMicro web site for recommended memory modules.  
CAUTION  
Exercise extreme care when installing or removing DIMM  
modules to prevent any possible damage. Also note that the  
memory is interleaved to improve performance.  
DIMM Installation  
1. Insert the desired number of DIMMs into the memory slots, starting with DIMM  
#1A. The memory scheme is interleaved, so you must install two modules  
at a time, beginning with DIMM 1A, DIMM 2A, then DIMM 1B, DIMM 2B, and  
DIMM 1C, DIMM 2C. (See the Memory Installation Table Below.)  
2. Insert each DIMM module vertically into its slot. Pay attention to the notch along  
the bottom of the module to prevent inserting the DIMM module incorrectly.  
3. Gently press down on the DIMM module until it snaps into place in the slot.  
Repeat for all modules (See step 1 above.)  
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Memory Support  
The X7DCL-3/X7DCL-i supports up to 48 GB Single-Rank/Dual Rank, Registered  
ECC DDR2 667/533 in 6 DIMMs (The amount and type of memory supported is  
dependent on the PCB revision. See Note 1 Below). Populating DIMM slots with  
pairs of memory modules of the same size and same type will result in Inter-  
leaved Memory which will improve memory performance.  
Note 1: For the PCB Rev. 1.1 motherboard, Slots 1A and 2A support Dual-Rank  
modules; however, Slots 1B, 2B, 1C and 2C support Single-Rank memory only  
(Maximum of 32 GB). The PCB Rev. 1.1a board supports 6 Dual-Rank or 6 Single-  
Rank modules (Maximum of 48 GB).  
Optimized DIMM Population Configurations  
Channel 0  
No. of  
DIMMs  
Channel 1  
2DIMMs  
4DIMMs  
6DIMMs  
DIMM 1A  
DIMM 1A  
DIMM 1A  
------  
DIMM 1B  
DIMM 1B  
------  
------  
DIMM 1C  
DIMM 2A  
DIMM 2A  
DIMM 2A  
------  
DIMM 2B  
DIMM 2B  
------  
------  
DIMM 2C  
(Notes: i. DIMM slot# specified: DIMM slot to be populated; “---“: DIMM slot not to be  
populated. ii. Both Registered ECC DDR2 667MHz and 533 MHz DIMMs are supported;  
however, you need to use the memory modules of the same speed and of the same type on  
a motherboard. iii. For memory to work properly, you need to follow the restrictions listed  
above. )  
Note 2: Due to OS limitations, some operating systems may not show more than  
4 GB of memory.  
Note 3: Due to memory allocation to system devices, memory remaining available  
for operational use will be reduced when 4 GB of RAM is used. The reduction in  
memory availability is disproportional. (Refer to the following Memory Availability  
Table for details. For Microsoft Windows users: Microsoft implemented a design  
change in Windows XP with Service Pack 2 (SP2) and Windows Vista. This change  
is specific to the Physical Address Extension (PAE) mode behavior which improves  
driver compatibility. For more information, please read the following article at Micro-  
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Chapter 2: Installation  
Possible System Memory Allocation & Availability  
System Device  
Size  
Physical Memory  
Remaining (-Available)  
(4 GB Total System Memory)  
Firmware Hub flash memory (System BIOS)  
Local APIC  
1 MB  
3.99  
3.99  
3.99  
3.99  
3.76  
3.51  
3.01  
4 KB  
Area Reserved for the chipset  
I/O APIC (4 Kbytes)  
2 MB  
4 KB  
PCI Enumeration Area 1  
PCI Express (256 MB)  
256 MB  
256 MB  
PCI Enumeration Area 2 (if needed) -Aligned on 256- 512 MB  
MB boundary-  
VGA Memory  
16 MB  
1 MB  
2.85  
2.84  
2.84  
TSEG  
Memory available to OS and other applications  
Installing and Removing DIMMs  
DDR2 DIMM  
X7DCL-3/i  
To Install: Insert module vertically and press  
down until it snaps into place. Pay attention to the  
alignment notch at the bottom.  
To Remove:  
Top View of DDR2 Slot  
Use your thumbs to  
gently push the re-  
lease tabs near both  
ends of the module  
to release it from the  
slot.  
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2-4  
Control Panel Connectors/IO Ports  
The I/O ports are color coded in conformance with the PC 99 specification. See  
the figure below for the colors and locations of the various I/O ports.  
Back Panel Connectors/IO Ports  
X7DCL-3/i  
2
4
5
6
7
8
1
3
Back Panel I/O Port Locations and Definitions  
Back Panel Connectors  
1. Keyboard (Purple)  
2. PS/2 Mouse (Green)  
3. Back Panel USB Port 0  
4. Back Panel USB Port 1  
5. COM Port 1 (Turquoise)  
6. VGA Port (Blue)  
7. Gigabit LAN 1  
8. Gigabit LAN 2  
(See Section 2-5 for details.)  
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Chapter 2: Installation  
Front Control Panel  
JF1 contains header pins for various buttons and indicators that are normally lo-  
cated on a control panel at the front of the chassis. These connectors are designed  
specifically for use with Super Micro server chassis. See the figure below for the  
descriptions of the various control panel buttons and LED indicators. Refer to the  
following section for descriptions and pin definitions.  
JF1 Header Pins  
20 19  
Ground  
NMI  
X
X
X7DCL-3/i  
Vcc  
Power LED  
Vcc  
Vcc  
HDD LED  
NIC1 LED  
NIC2 LED  
Vcc  
Vcc  
OH/Fan Fail LED  
PWR Fail LED  
Vcc  
Reset  
Reset Button  
Power Button  
Ground  
Ground  
PWR  
2
1
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Front Control Panel Pin Definitions  
NMI Button  
NMI Button  
Pin Definitions (JF1)  
The non-maskable interrupt button  
header is located on pins 19 and 20  
of JF1. Refer to the table on the right  
for pin definitions.  
Pin# Definition  
19  
20  
Control  
Ground  
Power LED  
Pin Definitions (JF1)  
Power LED  
The Power LED connection is located  
on pins 15 and 16 of JF1. Refer to the  
table on the right for pin definitions.  
Pin# Definition  
15  
16  
+5V  
Ground  
A. NMI  
B. PWR LED  
20 19  
Ground  
X
NMI  
X
A
BPower LED  
Vcc  
X7DCL-3/i  
Vcc  
Vcc  
Vcc  
Vcc  
Vcc  
HDD LED  
NIC1 LED  
NIC2 LED  
OH/Fan Fail LED  
PWR Fail LED  
Reset  
Reset Button  
Power Button  
Ground  
Ground  
PWR  
2
1
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Chapter 2: Installation  
HDD LED  
The HDD LED connection is located  
on pins 13 and 14 of JF1. Attach a  
hard drive LED cable here to display  
disk activity (for any hard drives on  
the system, including SAS, Serial  
ATA and IDE). See the table on the  
right for pin definitions.  
HDD LED  
Pin Definitions (JF1)  
Pin# Definition  
13  
14  
+5V  
HD Active  
NIC1/NIC2 LED Indicators  
The NIC (Network Interface Control-  
ler) LED connection for GLAN port1  
is located on pins 11 and 12 of JF1  
and the LED connection for GLAN  
Port2 is on Pins 9 and 10. Attach the  
NIC LED cables to display network  
activity. Refer to the table on the right  
for pin definitions.  
GLAN1/2 LED  
Pin Definitions (JF1)  
Pin# Definition  
9/11  
Vcc  
10/12 Ground  
A. HDD LED  
B. NIC1 LED  
C. NIC2 LED  
20 19  
Ground  
X
NMI  
X
X7DCL-3/i  
Vcc  
Power LED  
Vcc  
Vcc  
Vcc  
Vcc  
Vcc  
HDD LED  
A
B NIC1 LED  
NIC2 LED  
C
OH/Fan Fail LED  
PWR Fail LED  
Reset  
Reset Button  
Power Button  
Ground  
Ground  
PWR  
2
1
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Overheat/Fan Fail LED (OH)  
OH/Fan Fail LED  
Pin Definitions (JF1)  
Connect an LED to the OH/Fan Fail  
connection on pins 7 and 8 of JF1  
to provide advanced warnings of  
chassis overheating or fan failure.  
Refer to the table on the right for pin  
definitions.  
Pin# Definition  
7
8
Vcc  
Ground  
OH/Fan Fail Indicator  
Status  
State Definition  
Off  
On  
Normal  
Overheat  
Fan Fail  
Flash-  
ing  
Power Fail LED  
PWR Fail LED  
Pin Definitions (JF1)  
The Power Fail LED connection is  
located on pins 5 and 6 of JF1. Re-  
fer to the table on the right for pin  
definitions.  
Pin# Definition  
5
6
Vcc  
Ground  
A. OH/Fan Fail LED  
B. PWR Supply Fail  
20 19  
Ground  
NMI  
X
X
X7DCL-3/i  
Vcc  
Power LED  
Vcc  
Vcc  
Vcc  
Vcc  
Vcc  
HDD LED  
NIC1 LED  
NIC2 LED  
OH/Fan Fail LED  
A
PWR Fail LED  
B
Reset  
Reset Button  
Power Button  
Ground  
Ground  
PWR  
2
1
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Reset Button  
Reset Button  
Pin Definitions (JF1)  
The Reset Button connection is located  
on pins 3 and 4 of JF1. Attach it to the  
hardware reset switch on the computer  
case. Refer to the table on the right for  
pin definitions.  
Pin# Definition  
3
4
Reset  
Ground  
Power Button  
The Power Button connection is located  
on pins 1 and 2 of JF1. Momentarily  
contacting both pins will power on/off  
the system. This button can also be  
configured to function as a suspend  
button (with a setting in the BIOS - see  
Chapter 4). To turn off the power when  
set to suspend mode, press the button  
for at least 4 seconds. Refer to the table  
on the right for pin definitions.  
Power Button  
Pin Definitions (JF1)  
Pin# Definition  
1
2
Signal  
+3V Standby  
A. Reset Button  
B. PWR Button  
20 19  
Ground  
X
NMI  
X
Vcc  
Power LED  
X7DCL-3/i  
Vcc  
Vcc  
Vcc  
Vcc  
Vcc  
HDD LED  
NIC1 LED  
NIC2 LED  
OH/Fan Fail LED  
PWR Fail LED  
Reset  
Reset Button  
A
Power Button  
Ground  
Ground  
PWR  
B
2
1
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ATX Power 24-pin Connector  
2-5  
Connecting Cables  
Pin Definitions  
Pin# Definition  
Pin #  
1
Definition  
+3.3V  
+3.3V  
COM  
ATX Power Connector  
13  
14  
15  
16  
17  
18  
19  
20  
21  
22  
23  
24  
+3.3V  
-12V  
A 24-pin main power supply connec-  
tor is located at JPW2, and an 8-pin  
CPU PWR connector is locatged at  
JPW1 on the motherboard. These  
power connectors meet the SSI EPS  
12V specification. See the table on  
the right for pin definitions. For the  
8-pin PWR (JPW1), refer to the item  
below.  
2
COM  
PS_ON  
COM  
COM  
COM  
Res (NC)  
+5V  
3
4
+5V  
5
COM  
6
+5V  
7
COM  
8
PWR_OK  
5VSB  
+12V  
9
+5V  
10  
11  
12  
+5V  
+12V  
COM  
+3.3V  
Processor Power  
Connector  
12V 8-pin Power CPU  
Connector  
Pin Definitions  
In addition to the Primary ATX power  
connector, the 12V 8-pin CPU PWR  
connector at JPW1 must also be con-  
nected to provide adequate power to  
your processors. See the table on the  
right for pin definitions.  
Pins  
Definition  
Ground  
+12V  
1 through 4  
5 through 8  
Required Connection  
JPWF1  
CPU1 VRM OH LED  
LED5  
A. 24-pin ATX PWR  
SMB_PS  
JAR  
24-Pin PWR  
8-Pin PWR  
B. 8-pin Processor PWR  
A
B
DIMM2A  
CPU1  
DIMM1A  
DIMM2B  
DIMM1B  
DIMM2C  
DIMM1C  
X7DCL-3/i  
CPU2  
JPL2  
LAN  
CTRL  
Intel  
5100  
North Bridge  
I-Button  
Fan  
Fan  
2
3
LED6  
LAN  
CTRL  
CPU2 VRM OH LED  
JP2  
JP1  
Slot6 PCI-E x8  
SP1  
Buzzer  
Intel  
Slot5 PCI-E x8  
ICH9R  
PWR LED  
LED3  
South Bridge  
Slot4 PCI-E x4(in x8 slot)  
Slot3 PCI 33MHz  
VGA  
CTRL  
JBT1  
LED1  
BIOS  
JPG1  
Battery  
LSI  
SAS  
CTRL  
ITE  
SAS-GPIO1  
SAS-GPIO0  
Slot2 PCI 33MHz  
JWOL1  
S
I/O  
JWD1  
CTRL  
JPA2  
LED4  
Slot1 PCI 33MHz  
SIMLC  
USB4/5  
BPI  
System Status LED  
COM2  
USB2/3  
JL1  
2
C
Fan  
4
2-14  
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Chapter 2: Installation  
Universal Serial Bus (USB)  
Back Panel USB (0/1)  
Pin Definitions  
There are six USB 2.0 (Universal Serial  
Bus) ports/headers on the motherboard.  
Two of them are Back Panel USB ports  
(USB#0/1: JPUSB1), and the other  
four are Front Panel USB connectors  
(USB#2/3: JUSB2), or Front-Accessible  
USB headers (USB#4/#5: JUSB3). See  
the tables on the right for pin defini-  
tions.  
Pin# Definitions  
1
2
3
4
5
+5V  
PO-  
PO+  
Ground  
N/A  
Front Panel USB  
Pin Definitions (USB2/3/4/5)  
USB2/3 USB4/5  
Pin #  
Definition  
+5V  
Pin # Definition  
1
2
3
4
5
1
2
3
4
5
+5V  
PO-  
PO-  
PO+  
Ground  
Key  
PO+  
Ground  
No connection  
JPWF1  
CPU1 VRM OH LED  
LED5  
A. Backpanel USB 0/1  
B. Front Panel USB 2/3  
C. Front Panel USB 4/5  
SMB_PS  
JAR  
24-Pin PWR  
8-Pin PWR  
A
DIMM2A  
CPU1  
DIMM1A  
DIMM2B  
DIMM1B  
DIMM2C  
DIMM1C  
X7DCL-3/i  
CPU2  
JPL2  
LAN  
CTRL  
Intel  
5100  
North Bridge  
I-Button  
Fan  
Fan  
2
3
LED6  
LAN  
CTRL  
CPU2 VRM OH LED  
JP2  
JP1  
Slot6 PCI-E x8  
SP1  
Buzzer  
Intel  
Slot5 PCI-E x8  
ICH9R  
PWR LED  
LED3  
South Bridge  
Slot4 PCI-E x4(in x8 slot)  
Slot3 PCI 33MHz  
VGA  
CTRL  
JBT1  
LED1  
BIOS  
JPG1  
Battery  
LSI  
SAS  
CTRL  
ITE  
SAS-GPIO1  
SAS-GPIO0  
Slot2 PCI 33MHz  
JWOL1  
S
I/O  
JWD1  
CTRL  
JP
C
LED4  
B
Slot1 PCI 33MHz  
SIMLC  
USB4/5  
System Status LED  
COM2  
USB2/3  
JL1  
2
BPI  
C
Fan  
4
2-15  
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X7DCL-3/X7DCL-i User's Manual  
Fan Headers  
The X7DCL-3/X7DCL-i has four chassis/  
system fan headers (Fan3 to Fan6), and  
two CPU Fans (Fans 1/2). All these fans  
are 4-pin fans. However, Pins 1-3 of the fan  
headers are backward compatible with the  
traditional 3-pin fans. See the table on the  
right for pin definitions. Note: The onboard  
fan speeds are controlled by Thermal Man-  
agement via BIOS Hardware Monitoring in  
the Advanced Setting. (The default setting  
is Disabled.) Please use all 3-pin fans or  
all 4-pin fans on the motherboard.  
Fan Header  
Pin Definitions (Fan1-6)  
Pin# Definition  
1
2
3
4
Ground  
+12V  
Tachometer  
PWR Modulation  
Chassis Intrusion  
Chassis Intrusion  
Pin Definitions (JL1)  
A Chassis Intrusion header is located at  
JL1 on the motherboard. Attach an appro-  
priate cable from the chassis to inform you  
of a chassis intrusion when the chassis is  
opened.  
Pin# Definition  
1
2
Intrusion Input  
Ground  
JPWF1  
CPU1 VRM OH LED  
LED5  
A. Fan 1  
SMB_PS  
JAR  
A
24-Pin PWR  
8-Pin PWR  
B. Fan 2  
C. Fan 3  
DIMM2A  
CPU1  
D. Fan 4  
DIMM1A  
DIMM2B  
DIMM1B  
E. Fan 5  
DIMM2C  
DIMM1C  
F. Fan 6  
G. Chassis Intrusion  
X7DCL-3/i  
CPU2  
JPL2  
LAN  
CTRL  
Intel  
5100  
E
North Bridge  
F
I-Btton  
Fan  
Fan  
2
3
LED6  
LAN  
CPU2 VRM OH LED  
B
C
JP2  
JP1  
CTRL  
Slot6 PCI-E x8  
SP1  
Buzzer  
Intel  
Slot5 PCI-E x8  
ICH9R  
PWR LED  
LED3  
South Bridge  
Slot4 PCI-E x4(in x8 slot)  
Slot3 PCI 33MHz  
VGA  
CTRL  
JBT1  
LED1  
BIOS  
JPG1  
Battery  
LSI  
SAS  
CTRL  
ITE  
SAS-GPIO1  
SAS-GPIO0  
Slot2 PCI 33MHz  
JWOL1  
S
I/O  
JWD1  
CTRL  
JPA2  
LED4  
Slot1 PCI 33MHz  
SIMLC  
G
USB4/5  
BPI  
System Status LED  
COM2  
USB2/3  
JL1  
2
D
C
Fan  
4
2-16  
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Chapter 2: Installation  
ATX PS/2 Keyboard and  
PS/2 Mouse Ports  
PS/2 Keyboard and  
Mouse Port Pin  
Definitions  
Pin# Definition  
The ATX PS/2 keyboard and the PS/2  
mouse are located at JKM1. See the  
table on the right for pin definitions.  
(The mouse port is above the key-  
board port.) See the table on the right  
for pin definitions.  
1
2
3
4
5
6
Data  
NC  
Ground  
VCC  
Clock  
NC  
Serial Port Pin Definitions  
(COM1/COM2)  
Serial Ports  
Pin #  
Definition  
CD  
Pin #  
Definition  
DSR  
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
COM1 is a connector located on the  
IO Backpanel, and COM2 is a header  
located at JCOM2. See the table on  
the right for pin definitions.  
RD  
RTS  
CTS  
RI  
TD  
DTR  
Ground  
10  
NC  
(Pin 10 is available on COM2  
only. NC: No Connection.)  
JPWF1  
CPU1 VRM OH LED  
LED5  
SMB_PS  
JAR  
24-Pin PWR  
8-Pin PWR  
A
DIMM2A  
CPU1  
A. Keyboard/Mouse  
B. COM1  
DIMM1A  
DIMM2B  
DIMM1B  
B
DIMM2C  
DIMM1C  
C. COM2  
X7DCL-3/i  
CPU2  
JPL2  
LAN  
CTRL  
Intel  
5100  
North Bridge  
I-Button  
Fan  
Fan  
2
3
LED6  
LAN  
CTRL  
CPU2 VRM OH LED  
JP2  
JP1  
Slot6 PCI-E x8  
SP1  
Buzzer  
Intel  
Slot5 PCI-E x8  
ICH9R  
PWR LED  
LED3  
South Bridge  
Slot4 PCI-E x4(in x8 slot)  
Slot3 PCI 33MHz  
VGA  
CTRL  
JBT1  
LED1  
BIOS  
JPG1  
Battery  
LSI  
SAS  
CTRL  
ITE  
SAS-GPIO1  
SAS-GPIO0  
Slot2 PCI 33MHz  
JWOL1  
S
I/O  
JWD1  
CTRL  
JPA2  
LED4  
C
Slot1 PCI 33MHz  
SIMLC  
USB4/5  
BPI  
System Status LED  
COM2  
USB2/3  
JL1  
2
C
Fan  
4
2-17  
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X7DCL-3/X7DCL-i User's Manual  
Wake-On-Ring  
The Wake-On-Ring header is lo-  
cated at JWOR1. This feature allows  
your computer to receive and be  
"awakened" by an incoming call to  
the modem when the system is in  
the suspend state. See the table on  
the right for pin definitions. You must  
have a Wake-On-Ring card and cable  
to use this feature.  
Wake-On-Ring  
Pin Definitions  
Pin# Definition  
1
2
Ground  
Wake-up  
Wake-On-LAN  
Wake-On-LAN  
Pin Definitions  
The Wake-On-LAN header is located  
at JWOL1 on the motherboard. See  
the table on the right for pin defini-  
tions. (You must have a LAN card  
with a Wake-On-LAN connector, and  
cable to use this feature.)  
Pin# Definition  
1
2
3
+5V Standby  
Ground  
Wake-up  
JPWF1  
CPU1 VRM OH LED  
LED5  
A. WOR  
B. WOL  
SMB_PS  
JAR  
24-Pin PWR  
8-Pin PWR  
DIMM2A  
CPU1  
DIMM1A  
DIMM2B  
DIMM1B  
DIMM2C  
DIMM1C  
X7DCL-3/i  
CPU2  
JPL2  
LAN  
CTRL  
Intel  
5100  
North Bridge  
I-Button  
Fan  
Fan  
2
3
LED6  
LAN  
CTRL  
CPU2 VRM OH LED  
JP2  
JP1  
Slot6 PCI-E x8  
SP1  
Buzzer  
Intel  
Slot5 PCI-E x8  
ICH9R  
PWR LED  
LED3  
South Bridge  
Slot4 PCI-E x4(in x8 slot)  
Slot3 PCI 33MHz  
VGA  
CTRL  
JBT1  
LED1  
BIOS  
JPG1  
Battery  
LSI  
SAS  
CTRL  
ITE  
SAS-GPIO1  
SAS-GPIO0  
Slot2 PCI 33MHz  
JWOL1  
S
I/O  
JWD1  
CTRL  
B
JPA2  
A
LED4  
Slot1 PCI 33MHz  
USB4/5  
BPI  
System Status LED  
COM2  
USB2/3  
JL1  
2
SIMLC  
C
Fan  
4
2-18  
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Chapter 2: Installation  
GLAN 1/2 (Giga-bit Ethernet  
Ports)  
Two G-bit Ethernet ports are located  
at JLAN1 and JLAN2 on the I/O  
backplane. These ports accept RJ45  
type cables.  
GLAN2  
GLAN1  
Power LED/Speaker  
On the JD1 header, pins 1-3 are for  
a power LED, and pins 4-7 are for  
the speaker. See the table on the  
right for speaker pin definitions. Note:  
The speaker connector pins are for  
use with an external speaker. If you  
wish to use the onboard speaker, you  
should close pins 6-7 with a jumper.  
Speaker Connector  
Pin Setting Definition  
Pins 6-7 Internal Speaker  
Pins 4-7 External Speaker  
A. GLAN1  
JPWF1  
CPU1 VRM OH LED  
LED5  
SMB_PS  
JAR  
24-Pin PWR  
8-Pin PWR  
B. GLAN2  
C. PWR LED/Speaker  
DIMM2A  
CPU1  
DIMM1A  
DIMM2B  
DIMM1B  
DIMM2C  
DIMM1C  
X7DCL-3/i  
A
JPL2  
CPU2  
LAN  
B
CTRL  
Intel  
5100  
North Bridge  
I-Button  
Fan  
Fan  
2
3
LED6  
LAN  
CTRL  
CPU2 VRM OH LED  
JP2  
JP1  
Slot6 PCI-E x8  
SP1  
Buzzer  
Intel  
Slot5 PCI-E x8  
ICH9R  
PWR LED  
LED3  
South Bridge  
Slot4 PCI-E x4(in x8 slot)  
Slot3 PCI 33MHz  
VGA  
CTRL  
JBT1  
LED1  
BIOS  
JPG1  
Battery  
LSI  
SAS  
CTRL  
ITE  
SAS-GPIO1  
SAS-GPIO0  
Slot2 PCI 33MHz  
JWOL1  
S
I/O  
JWD1  
CTRL  
C
JPA2  
LED4  
Slot1 PCI 33MHz  
SIMLC  
USB4/5  
BPI  
System Status LED  
COM2  
USB2/3  
JL1  
2
C
Fan  
4
2-19  
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X7DCL-3/X7DCL-i User's Manual  
Alarm Reset  
If three power supplies are installed,  
the system will notify you when any of  
the three power modules fails. Con-  
nect JAR1 to a micro-switch to turn  
off the alarm that is activated when a  
power module fails. See the table on  
the right for pin definitions.  
Alarm Reset  
Pin Definitions  
Pin Setting Definition  
Pin 1  
Pin 2  
Ground  
+5V  
PWR Supply Failure/PWR  
Fault Detect  
The system can notify you in the  
event of a power supply failure. This  
feature is available when three power  
supply units are installed in the chas-  
sis with one acting as a backup. If you  
only have one or two power supply  
units installed, you should disable  
this (the default setting) with JPWF1  
to prevent false alarms.  
PWR Supply PWR Fault  
Connector  
Jumper Setting Definition  
On  
Off  
Enabled  
Disabled (Default)  
B
JPWF1  
CPU1 VRM OH LED  
LED5  
A. Alarm Reset  
B. PWR Fault  
SMB_PS  
JAR  
24-Pin PWR  
8-Pin PWR  
A
DIMM2A  
CPU1  
DIMM1A  
DIMM2B  
DIMM1B  
DIMM2C  
DIMM1C  
X7DCL-3/i  
CPU2  
JPL2  
LAN  
CTRL  
Intel  
5100  
North Bridge  
I-Button  
Fan  
Fan  
2
3
LED6  
LAN  
CTRL  
CPU2 VRM OH LED  
JP2  
JP1  
Slot6 PCI-E x8  
SP1  
Buzzer  
Intel  
Slot5 PCI-E x8  
ICH9R  
PWR LED  
LED3  
South Bridge  
Slot4 PCI-E x4(in x8 slot)  
Slot3 PCI 33MHz  
VGA  
CTRL  
JBT1  
LED1  
BIOS  
JPG1  
Battery  
LSI  
SAS  
CTRL  
ITE  
SAS-GPIO1  
SAS-GPIO0  
Slot2 PCI 33MHz  
JWOL1  
S
I/O  
JWD1  
CTRL  
JPA2  
LED4  
Slot1 PCI 33MHz  
SIMLC  
USB4/5  
BPI  
System Status LED  
COM2  
USB2/3  
JL1  
2
C
Fan  
4
2-20  
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Chapter 2: Installation  
VGA Connector  
A VGA connector (JVGA) is located next  
to the COM1 port on the IO backplane.  
Refer to the board layout below for the  
location.  
GPIO Headers  
Four GPIO (Serial Links General Purpose  
Input/Output) headers are located at J7,  
J8, J9, J10 on the motherboard. These  
headers are used to communicate with  
the Seriel-Links System Monitoring chip  
on the backplane. J7 and J8 are used to  
monitor SATA activities, J9 and J10 are  
used to monitor SAS connections. See  
the table on the right for pin definitions.  
Refer to the board layout below for the  
locations of the headers.  
Serial-Links GPIO  
Pin Definitions  
Pin# Definition  
Pin  
2
Definition  
NC  
1
3
NC  
Ground  
4
DATA Out  
5
7
Load  
6
8
Ground  
NC  
Clock  
Note: NC= No Connections  
(J9, J10: X7DCL-3 Only.)  
JPWF1  
CPU1 VRM OH LED  
LED5  
A. VGA  
SMB_PS  
JAR  
24-Pin PWR  
8-Pin PWR  
B. J7: SATA_GPIO#0  
C. J8: SATA_GPIO#1  
D. J9: SAS_GPIO#0  
E. J10: SAS_GPIO#1  
DIMM2A  
CPU1  
DIMM1A  
DIMM2B  
DIMM1B  
DIMM2C  
DIMM1C  
A
X7DCL-3/i  
CPU2  
JPL2  
LAN  
CTRL  
Intel  
5100  
North Bridge  
I-Button  
Fan  
Fan  
2
3
LED6  
LAN  
CTRL  
CPU2 VRM OH LED  
JP2  
JP1  
Slot6 PCI-E x8  
SP1  
Buzzer  
Intel  
Slot5 PCI-E x8  
B
C
ICH9R  
PWR LED  
LED3  
South Bridge  
JBT1  
Slot4 PCI-E x4(in x8 slot)  
Slot3 PCI 33MHz  
VGA  
CTRL  
LED1  
BIOS  
JPG1  
Battery  
LSI  
E
SAS-GPIO1  
SAS-GPIO0  
JPA2  
SAS  
CTRL  
ITE  
Slot2 PCI 33MHz  
JWOL1  
S
I/O  
JWD1  
CTRL  
LED4  
Slot1 PCI 33MHz  
SIMLC  
D
USB4/5  
System Status LED  
COM2  
USB2/3  
JL1  
2
BPI  
C
Fan  
4
2-21  
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X7DCL-3/X7DCL-i User's Manual  
Power SMB (I2C) Connector  
PWR SMB  
Pin Definitions  
Power SMB (I2C) Connector (JPIC1)  
monitors the status of the power supply,  
fan and system temperature. See the  
table on the right for pin definitions.  
Pin# Definition  
1
2
Clock  
Data  
3
4
5
PWR Fail  
Ground  
+3.3V  
BP PWR SMB  
Pin Definitions  
BP PWR SMB (I2C) Connector  
Pin# Definition  
Backplane Power SMB (I2C) Connector  
(J5) monitors power supply of backplane  
IO connectors. See the table on the right  
for pin definitions.  
1
2
SMB_DAT_ICH_EXT  
Ground  
3
5
SMB_CLK_ICH_EXT  
No Connection  
JPWF1  
CPU1 VRM OH LED  
LED5  
A. PWR SMB  
B. Backplane PWR SMB  
SMB_PS  
JAR  
24-Pin PWR  
8-Pin PWR  
A
DIMM2A  
CPU1  
DIMM1A  
DIMM2B  
DIMM1B  
DIMM2C  
DIMM1C  
X7DCL-3/i  
CPU2  
JPL2  
LAN  
CTRL  
Intel  
5100  
North Bridge  
I-Button  
Fan  
Fan  
2
3
LED6  
LAN  
CTRL  
CPU2 VRM OH LED  
JP2  
JP1  
Slot6 PCI-E x8  
SP1  
Buzzer  
Intel  
Slot5 PCI-E x8  
ICH9R  
PWR LED  
LED3  
South Bridge  
Slot4 PCI-E x4(in x8 slot)  
Slot3 PCI 33MHz  
VGA  
CTRL  
JBT1  
LED1  
BIOS  
JPG1  
Battery  
LSI  
SAS  
CTRL  
ITE  
SAS-GPIO1  
SAS-GPIO0  
Slot2 PCI 33MHz  
JWOL1  
S
I/O  
JWD1  
CTRL  
JPA2  
LED4  
Slot1 PCI 33MHz  
SIMLC  
USB4/5  
BPI  
System Status LED  
COM2  
/3  
JL1  
2
B
C
Fan  
4
2-22  
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Chapter 2: Installation  
Keylock  
Keylock  
Pin Definitions  
The keyboard lock connection is desig-  
nated JKEY1. Utilizing this header allows  
you to inhibit any actions made on the  
keyboard, effectively "locking" it.  
Pin# Definition  
1
2
Ground  
Keylock R-N  
JPWF1  
CPU1 VRM OH LED  
LED5  
A. Keylock  
SMB_PS  
JAR  
24-Pin PWR  
8-Pin PWR  
DIMM2A  
CPU1  
DIMM1A  
DIMM2B  
DIMM1B  
DIMM2C  
DIMM1C  
X7DCL-3/i  
CPU2  
JPL2  
LAN  
CTRL  
Intel  
5100  
North Bridge  
I-Button  
Fan  
Fan  
2
3
LED6  
LAN  
CTRL  
CPU2 VRM OH LED  
JP2  
JP1  
Slot6 PCI-E x8  
SP1  
Buzzer  
Intel  
Slot5 PCI-E x8  
ICH9R  
PWR LED  
LED3  
South Bridge  
Slot4 PCI-E x4(in x8 slot)  
Slot3 PCI 33MHz  
VGA  
CTRL  
JBT1  
LED1  
BIOS  
JPG1  
Battery  
LSI  
SAS  
CTRL  
ITE  
SAS-GPIO1  
SAS-GPIO0  
Slot2 PCI 33MHz  
JWOL1  
S
I/O  
JWD1  
CTRL  
A
JPA2  
LED4  
Slot1 PCI 33MHz  
SIMLC  
USB4/5  
BPI  
System Status LED  
COM2  
USB2/3  
JL1  
2
C
Fan  
4
2-23  
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X7DCL-3/X7DCL-i User's Manual  
2-6  
Jumper Settings  
Explanation of  
Jumpers  
3
2
1
Connector  
Pins  
To modify the operation of the  
motherboard, jumpers can be used  
to choose between optional settings.  
Jumpers create shor ts between two pins  
to change the function of the connector.  
Pin 1 is identified with a square solder  
pad on the printed circuit board. See  
themotherboardlayoutpagesforjumper  
locations.  
Jumper  
Cap  
3
2
1
Setting  
Pin 1-2 short  
Note: On two pin jumpers, "Closed"  
means the jumper is on and "Open"  
means the jumper is off the pins.  
GLAN Enable/Disable  
GLAN Enable  
Jumper Settings  
JPL1/JPL2 enable or disable GLAN  
Port1/GLAN Port2 on the mother-  
board. See the table on the right for  
jumper settings. The default setting is  
Enabled.  
Pin# Definition  
1-2  
2-3  
Enabled (default)  
Disabled  
JPWF1  
CPU1 VRM OH LED  
LED5  
A. GLAN Port1 Enable  
B. GLAN Port2 Enable  
SMB_PS  
JAR  
24-Pin PWR  
8-Pin PWR  
DIMM2A  
CPU1  
DIMM1A  
DIMM2B  
DIMM1B  
DIMM2C  
DIMM1C  
X7DCL-3/i  
B
CPU2  
JPL2  
LAN  
CTRL  
Intel  
5100  
North Bridge  
I-Button  
Fan  
Fan  
2
3
LED6  
LAN  
CTRL  
CPU2 VRM OH LED  
JP2  
JP1  
Slot6 PCI-E x8  
SP1  
Buzzer  
A
Intel  
Slot5 PCI-E x8  
ICH9R  
PWR LED  
LED3  
South Bridge  
Slot4 PCI-E x4(in x8 slot)  
Slot3 PCI 33MHz  
VGA  
CTRL  
JBT1  
LED1  
BIOS  
JPG1  
Battery  
LSI  
SAS  
CTRL  
ITE  
SAS-GPIO1  
SAS-GPIO0  
Slot2 PCI 33MHz  
JWOL1  
S
I/O  
JWD1  
CTRL  
JPA2  
LED4  
Slot1 PCI 33MHz  
SIMLC  
USB4/5  
BPI  
System Status LED  
COM2  
USB2/3  
JL1  
2
C
Fan  
4
2-24  
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Chapter 2: Installation  
CMOS Clear  
JBT1 is used to clear CMOS. Instead of pins, this "jumper" consists of contact  
pads to prevent the accidental clearing of CMOS. To clear CMOS, use a metal  
object such as a small screwdriver to touch both pads at the same time to short  
the connection. Always remove the AC power cord from the system before clear-  
ing CMOS.  
Note: For an ATX power supply, you must completely shut down the system,  
remove the AC power cord and then short JBT1 to clear CMOS.  
Watch Dog Enable/Disable  
Watch Dog  
Jumper Settings  
Watch Dog is a system monitor that can reboot  
Jumper Setting Definition  
the system when a software application hangs.  
Close pins 1-2 to reset the system if an applica-  
tion hangs. Close pins 2-3 to generate a non-  
maskable interrupt signal for the application that  
hangs. See the table on the right for jumper set-  
tings. Watch Dog must also be enabled in the  
BIOS.  
Pins 1-2  
Reset  
(default)  
Pins 2-3  
Open  
NMI  
Disabled  
JPWF1  
CPU1 VRM OH LED  
LED5  
A. Clear CMOS  
SMB_PS  
JAR  
24-Pin PWR  
8-Pin PWR  
B. Watch Dog Enable  
DIMM2A  
CPU1  
DIMM1A  
DIMM2B  
DIMM1B  
DIMM2C  
DIMM1C  
X7DCL-3/i  
CPU2  
JPL2  
LAN  
CTRL  
Intel  
5100  
North Bridge  
I-Button  
Fan  
Fan  
2
3
LED6  
LAN  
CTRL  
CPU2 VRM OH LED  
JP2  
JP1  
Slot6 PCI-E x8  
SP1  
Buzzer  
Intel  
Slot5 PCI-E x8  
ICH9R  
PWR LED  
LED3  
South Bridge  
Slot4 PCI-E x4(in x8 slot)  
Slot3 PCI 33MHz  
VGA  
CTRL  
JBT1  
A
LED1  
BIOS  
JPG1  
Battery  
LSI  
SAS  
CTRL  
ITE  
SAS-GPIO1  
SAS-GPIO0  
Slot2 PCI 33MHz  
JWOL1  
S
I/O  
JWD1  
CTRL  
B
JPA2  
LED4  
Slot1 PCI 33MHz  
SIMLC  
USB4/5  
BPI  
System Status LED  
COM2  
USB2/3  
JL1  
2
C
Fan  
4
2-25  
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VGA Enable/Disable  
VGA Enable/Disable  
Jumper Settings  
JPG1 allows you to enable or disable the  
VGA port. The default position is on pins  
1 and 2 to enable VGA. See the table on  
the right for jumper settings.  
Both Jumpers Definition  
Pins 1-2  
Pins 2-3  
Enabled (Default)  
Disabled  
I2C Bus to PCI/PCI-Exp. Slots  
Jumpers JPI2C1/JPI2C2 allow you to  
connect the System Management Bus  
(I2C) to PCI/PCI-Exp. slots. The default  
setting is Open to disable the connec-  
tion. See the table on the right for jumper  
settings.  
I2C to PCI/PCI-Exp. Slots  
Jumper Settings  
Jumper Setting Definition  
Closed  
Open  
Enabled  
Disabled (Default)  
JPWF1  
CPU1 VRM OH LED  
LED5  
A. VGA Enabled  
SMB_PS  
JAR  
B. JPI2C1  
C. JPI2C2  
24-Pin PWR  
8-Pin PWR  
DIMM2A  
CPU1  
DIMM1A  
DIMM2B  
DIMM1B  
DIMM2C  
DIMM1C  
X7DCL-3/i  
CPU2  
JPL2  
LAN  
CTRL  
Intel  
5100  
North Bridge  
I-Button  
Fan  
Fan  
2
3
LED6  
LAN  
CPU2 VRM OH LED  
JP2  
JP1  
CTRL  
Slot6 PCI-E x8  
SP1  
Buzzer  
Intel  
Slot5 PCI-E x8  
ICH9R  
PWR LED  
LED3  
B
South Bridge  
C
Slot4 PCI-E x4(in x8 slot)  
VGA  
CTRL  
JBT1  
LED1  
BIOS  
JPG1  
Slot3 PCI 33MHz  
A
Battery  
LSI  
SAS  
CTRL  
ITE  
SAS-GPIO1  
SAS-GPIO0  
Slot2 PCI 33MHz  
JWOL1  
S
I/O  
JWD1  
CTRL  
JPA2  
LED4  
Slot1 PCI 33MHz  
SIMLC  
USB4/5  
BPI  
System Status LED  
COM2  
USB2/3  
JL1  
2
C
Fan  
4
2-26  
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Chapter 2: Installation  
SAS Enable/Disable  
JPA1 allows you to enable or disable  
SAS Connectors. The default position is  
on pins 1 and 2 to enable SAS. See the  
table on the right for jumper settings.  
SAS Enable/Disable  
Jumper Settings  
Jumper Settings Definition  
Pins 1-2  
Pins 2-3  
Enabled (Default)  
Disabled  
(Note: This feature is available on the  
X7DCL-3 only.)  
Software RAID Enable  
JPA2 allows you to select the SAS RAID  
mode. You can use either Software  
RAID or IT RAID. Close this jumper to  
use Software RAID (Default). Set this  
jumper to open to use the IT RAID mode.  
Contact Tech. Support at Supermicro for  
more information. See the table on the  
right for jumper settings.  
Software RAID  
Jumper Settings  
Jumper Settings  
Close (Default)  
Open (Note)  
Definition  
Software RAID Enabled  
IT Mode Enabled  
(Note: Also contact tech support at Super Micro for  
further instructions.)  
(Note: This feature is available on the  
X7DCL-3 only.)  
A. SAS Enabled  
JPWF1  
CPU1 VRM OH LED  
LED5  
SMB_PS  
JAR  
24-Pin PWR  
8-Pin PWR  
B. Software RAID Enable  
DIMM2A  
CPU1  
DIMM1A  
DIMM2B  
DIMM1B  
DIMM2C  
DIMM1C  
X7DCL-3/i  
CPU2  
JPL2  
LAN  
CTRL  
Intel  
5100  
North Bridge  
I-Button  
Fan  
Fan  
2
3
LED6  
LAN  
CTRL  
CPU2 VRM OH LED  
JP2  
JP1  
Slot6 PCI-E x8  
SP1  
Buzzer  
Intel  
Slot5 PCI-E x8  
ICH9R  
PWR LED  
LEAD
South Bridge  
Slot4 PCI-E x4(in x8 slot)  
Slot3 PCI 33MHz  
VGA  
CTRL  
JBT1  
LED1  
BIOS  
JPG1  
Battery  
LSI  
SAS  
CTRL  
ITE  
SAS-GPIO1  
SAS-GPIO0  
Slot2 PCI 33MHz  
JWOL1  
S
I/O  
JWD1  
CTRL  
JPA2  
B
LED4  
Slot1 PCI 33MHz  
SIMLC  
USB4/5  
2
System Status LED  
COM2  
USB2/3  
JL1  
BPI  
C
Fan  
4
2-27  
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Onboard LED Indicators  
GLAN LEDs  
Activity  
LED  
L i n k  
LED  
2-7  
Rear View  
(when viewing from the back of the chassis.)  
There are two GLAN ports on the moth-  
erboard. Each Gigabit Ethernet LAN port  
has two LEDs. The yellow LED indicates  
activity, while the power LED may be  
green, orange or off to indicate the speed  
of the connection. See the tables at right  
for more information.  
GLAN Activity Indicator  
Settings  
Color  
Status  
Definition  
Yellow  
Flashing  
LAN Active  
GLAN Link Indicator  
Settings  
LED Color Definition  
Off  
No Connection or 10 Mbps  
Green  
Amber  
100 Mbps  
1 Gbps  
Onboard Power LED (LED3)  
An Onboard Power LED is located at  
LED3 on the motherboard. When this  
LED is lit, the system is on. Be sure  
to turn off the system and unplug the  
power cord before removing or installing  
components. See the layout below for the  
LED location.  
JPWF1  
CPU1 VRM OH LED  
LED5  
A. GLAN Port1 LEDs  
B. GLAN Port2 LEDs  
C. Onboard PWR LED  
SMB_PS  
JAR  
24-Pin PWR  
8-Pin PWR  
DIMM2A  
CPU1  
DIMM1A  
DIMM2B  
DIMM1B  
DIMM2C  
DIMM1C  
X7DCL-3/i  
A
JPL2  
CPU2  
LAN  
B
CTRL  
Intel  
5100  
North Bridge  
I-Button  
Fan  
Fan  
2
3
LED6  
LAN  
CTRL  
CPU2 VRM OH LED  
JP2  
JP1  
Slot6 PCI-E x8  
SP1  
Buzzer  
Intel  
Slot5 PCI-E x8  
C
ICH9R  
PWR LED  
LED3  
South Bridge  
Slot4 PCI-E x4(in x8 slot)  
Slot3 PCI 33MHz  
VGA  
CTRL  
JBT1  
LED1  
BIOS  
JPG1  
Battery  
LSI  
SAS  
CTRL  
ITE  
SAS-GPIO1  
SAS-GPIO0  
Slot2 PCI 33MHz  
JWOL1  
S
I/O  
JWD1  
CTRL  
JPA2  
LED4  
Slot1 PCI 33MHz  
SIMLC  
USB4/5  
BPI  
System Status LED  
COM2  
USB2/3  
JL1  
2
C
Fan  
4
2-28  
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Chapter 2: Installation  
System Status LED (LED4)  
Status LED Indicator  
Settings  
A Status LED Indicator is located at  
LED4 on the motherboard. This LED dis-  
plays different colors to show the status  
of the system. Refer to the table on the  
right for system status. See the layout  
below for the LED location.  
LED Color Definition  
Green  
Red  
Power On, system: normal  
PWR on, PWR problem(s)  
occur(s) or the 3rd PWR  
not properly installed  
Yellow  
System Off, AC PWR:  
connected  
CPU_VRM Overheating LED  
Indicators (LED5/LED6)  
CPU_VRM Overheat LED Indicator  
Settings  
Two CPU_VRM Overheat LEDs are locat-  
ed at LED5 and LED 6 on the mother board.  
These LEDs provide indications for  
CPU_VRM Overheating. Refer to the  
table on the right for LED5 and LED6  
settings. See the layout below for the  
LED locations.  
LED#  
Description  
LED5: On  
LED6: On  
CPU1_VRM Overheating  
CPU2_VRM Overheating  
JPWF1  
CPU1 VRM OH LED  
LED5  
A. LED4: System Status LED  
B. LED5: CPU1_VRM OH LED  
C. LED6: CPU2_VRM OH LED  
SMB_PS  
JAR  
B
24-Pin PWR  
8-Pin PWR  
DIMM2A  
CPU1  
DIMM1A  
DIMM2B  
DIMM1B  
DIMM2C  
DIMM1C  
X7DCL-3/i  
CPU2  
JPL2  
LAN  
CTRL  
Intel  
5100  
North Bridge  
I-Button  
Fan  
Fan  
2
3
LED6  
LAN  
CTRL  
CPU2 VRM OH LED  
JP2  
JP1  
C
Slot6 PCI-E x8  
SP1  
Buzzer  
Intel  
Slot5 PCI-E x8  
ICH9R  
PWR LED  
LED3  
South Bridge  
Slot4 PCI-E x4(in x8 slot)  
Slot3 PCI 33MHz  
VGA  
CTRL  
JBT1  
LED1  
BIOS  
JPG1  
Battery  
LSI  
SAS  
CTRL  
ITE  
SAS-GPIO1  
SAS-GPIO0  
Slot2 PCI 33MHz  
JWOL1  
S
I/O  
JWD1  
CTRL  
A
JPA2  
LED4  
Slot1 PCI 33MHz  
SIMLC  
USB4/5  
BPI  
System Status LED  
COM2  
USB2/3  
JL1  
2
C
Fan  
4
2-29  
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SAS LED Indicator (LED1)  
A SAS LED is located at LED1 on the  
motherboard.ThisLEDindicatesthestatus  
of SAS connections. Refer to the table on  
the right for LED1 settings. See the layout  
below for the LED location.  
SAS LED Indicator  
Settings  
LED#  
Description  
LED1: On  
LED1: Off  
SAS: Active  
SAS: Not Active  
(Available on the X7DCL-3 only)  
JPWF1  
CPU1 VRM OH LED  
LED5  
A. LED1: SAS LED  
SMB_PS  
JAR  
24-Pin PWR  
8-Pin PWR  
DIMM2A  
CPU1  
DIMM1A  
DIMM2B  
DIMM1B  
DIMM2C  
DIMM1C  
X7DCL-3/i  
CPU2  
JPL2  
LAN  
CTRL  
Intel  
5100  
North Bridge  
I-Button  
Fan  
Fan  
2
3
LED6  
LAN  
CTRL  
CPU2 VRM OH LED  
JP2  
JP1  
Slot6 PCI-E x8  
SP1  
Buzzer  
Intel  
Slot5 PCI-E x8  
ICH9R  
PWR LED  
LED3  
South Bridge  
Slot4 PCI-E x4(in x8 slot)  
Slot3 PCI 33MHz  
VGA  
A
CTRL  
JBT1  
LED1  
BIOS  
JPG1  
Battery  
LSI  
SAS  
CTRL  
ITE  
SAS-GPIO1  
SAS-GPIO0  
Slot2 PCI 33MHz  
JWOL1  
S
I/O  
JWD1  
CTRL  
JPA2  
LED4  
Slot1 PCI 33MHz  
SIMLC  
USB4/5  
BPI  
System Status LED  
COM2  
USB2/3  
JL1  
2
C
Fan  
4
2-30  
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Chapter 2: Installation  
2-8  
Floppy Drive, SIMLC IPMI and Hard Disk Drive  
Connections  
Note the following when connecting the floppy and hard disk drive cables:  
The floppy disk drive cable has seven twisted wires.  
A red mark on a wire typically designates the location of pin 1.  
Floppy Drive Connector  
Pin Definitions (Floppy)  
Floppy Connector  
Pin# Definition  
Pin #  
2
Definition  
The floppy connector is located at  
JFDD1. See the table below for pin  
definitions.  
1
Ground  
Ground  
Key  
FDHDIN  
3
4
Reserved  
FDEDIN  
5
6
7
Ground  
Ground  
Ground  
Ground  
Ground  
Ground  
Ground  
Ground  
Ground  
Ground  
Ground  
Ground  
Ground  
Ground  
8
Index  
9
10  
12  
14  
16  
18  
20  
22  
24  
26  
28  
30  
32  
34  
Motor Enable  
Drive Select B  
Drive Select B  
Motor Enable  
DIR  
11  
13  
15  
17  
19  
21  
23  
25  
27  
29  
31  
33  
STEP  
Write Data  
Write Gate  
Track 00  
Write Protect  
Read Data  
Side 1 Select  
Diskette  
JPWF1  
CPU1 VRM OH LED  
LED5  
SMB_PS  
JAR  
24-Pin PWR  
8-Pin PWR  
A. Floppy Disk Drive  
DIMM2A  
CPU1  
DIMM1A  
DIMM2B  
DIMM1B  
DIMM2C  
DIMM1C  
X7DCL-3/i  
CPU2  
JPL2  
LAN  
CTRL  
Intel 5100  
North Bridge  
I-Button  
Fan  
Fan  
2
3
LED6  
LAN  
CTRL  
CPU2 VRM OH LED  
JP2  
JP1  
Slot6 PCI-E x8  
SP1  
Buzzer  
Intel  
Slot5 PCI-E x8  
ICH9R  
PWR LED  
LED3  
South Bridge  
Slot4 PCI-E x4(in x8 slot)  
Slot3 PCI 33MHz  
A
VGA  
CTRL  
JBT1  
LED1  
BIOS  
JPG1  
Battery  
LSI  
SAS  
CTRL  
ITE  
SAS-GPIO1  
SAS-GPIO0  
Slot2 PCI 33MHz  
JWOL1  
S
I/O  
JWD1  
CTRL  
JPA2  
LED4  
Slot1 PCI 33MHz  
SIMLC  
USB4/5  
BPI  
System Status LED  
COM2  
USB2/3  
JL1  
2
C
Fan  
4
2-31  
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IDE Connector  
IDE Drive Connector  
Pin Definitions  
An IDE Connector is located at JIDE1  
on the motherboard. This motherboard  
uses the ITE IT8213F Controller. An  
IDE Driver is required for the IDE drive  
to function properly. See the table on  
the right for pin definitions.  
Pin# Definition  
Pin #  
2
Definition  
1
Reset IDE  
Host Data 7  
Host Data 6  
Host Data 5  
Host Data 4  
Host Data 3  
Host Data 2  
Host Data 1  
Host Data 0  
Ground  
Ground  
3
4
Host Data 8  
Host Data 9  
Host Data 10  
Host Data 11  
Host Data 12  
Host Data 13  
Host Data 14  
Host Data 15  
Key  
5
6
7
8
9
10  
12  
14  
16  
18  
20  
22  
24  
26  
28  
30  
32  
34  
36  
38  
40  
11  
13  
15  
17  
19  
21  
23  
25  
27  
29  
31  
33  
35  
37  
39  
DRQ3  
Ground  
I/O Write  
I/O Read  
IOCHRDY  
DACK3  
Ground  
Ground  
SIMLC IPMI Slot  
BALE  
A
Low Profile SIMLC IPMI Slot is  
Ground  
located on the motherboard. Refer  
to the layout below for the IPMI Slot  
location.  
IRQ14  
IOCS16  
Addr1  
Ground  
Addr0  
Addr2  
Chip Select 0  
Activity  
Chip Select 1  
Ground  
A. IDE  
JPWF1  
CPU1 VRM OH LED  
LED5  
SMB_PS  
JAR  
24-Pin PWR  
8-Pin PWR  
B. SIMLC  
DIMM2A  
CPU1  
DIMM1A  
DIMM2B  
DIMM1B  
DIMM2C  
DIMM1C  
X7DCL-3/i  
CPU2  
JPL2  
LAN  
CTRL  
Intel  
5100  
North Bridge  
I-Button  
Fan  
Fan  
2
3
LED6  
LAN  
CTRL  
CPU2 VRM OH LED  
JP2  
JP1  
Slot6 PCI-E x8  
SP1  
Buzzer  
Intel  
Slot5 PCI-E x8  
ICH9R  
PWR LED  
LED3  
South Bridge  
Slot4 PCI-E x4(in x8 slot)  
Slot3 PCI 33MHz  
VGA  
CTRL  
JBT1  
LED1  
BIOS  
JPG1  
Battery  
LSI  
SAS  
CTRL  
ITE  
A
SAS-GPIO1  
SAS-GPIO0  
Slot2 PCI 33MHz  
JWOL1  
S
I/O  
JWD1  
CTRL  
JPA2  
LED4  
B
Slot1 PCI Hz  
USB4/5  
BPI  
System Status LED  
COM2  
USB2/3  
JL1  
2
SIMLC  
C
Fan  
4
2-32  
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Chapter 3: Troubleshooting  
Chapter 3  
Troubleshooting  
3-1  
Troubleshooting Procedures  
Use the following procedures to troubleshoot your system. If you have followed all  
of the procedures below and still need assistance, refer to the ‘Technical Support  
Procedures’ and/or ‘Returning Merchandise for Service’ section(s) in this chapter.  
Note: Always disconnect the power cord before adding, changing or install-  
ing any hardware components.  
Before Power On  
1. Make sure that there are no short circuits between the motherboard and the  
chassis.  
2. Disconnect all ribbon/wire cables from the motherboard, including those for  
the keyboard and mouse. Remove all add-on cards.  
3. Install a CPU in CPU Socket and connect the chassis speaker and the power  
LED to the motherboard. (Make sure that the CPU is properly seated. Be sure  
to check all jumper settings as well.)  
No Power  
1. Make sure that there are no short circuits between the motherboard and the  
chassis.  
2. Make sure that all jumpers are set to their default positions.  
3. Make sure that the 115V/230V switch on the power supply is properly set.  
4. Turn the power switch on and off to test the system. The battery on your  
motherboard may be old. Check to verify that it still supplies ~3VDC. If it  
does not, replace it with a new one.  
No Video  
1. If the power is on but you have no video, remove all the add-on cards and  
cables.  
2. Use the speaker to determine if any beep codes exist. Refer to the Appendix  
for details on beep codes.  
Losing the System’s Setup Configuration  
1. Make sure that you are using a high quality power supply. A poor quality  
power supply may cause the system to lose the CMOS setup information.  
Refer to Section 1-6 for details on recommended power supplies.  
2. The battery on your motherboard may be old. Check to verify that it still  
3-1  
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X7DCL-3/X7DCL-i User's Manual  
supplies ~3VDC. If it does not, replace it with a new one.  
3. If the above steps do not fix the Setup Configuration problem, contact your  
vendor for repairs.  
NOTE  
If you are a system integrator, VAR or OEM, a POST diagnostics  
card is recommended. For I/O port 80h codes, refer to App. B.  
Memory Errors  
1. Make sure the DIMM modules are properly and fully installed. Check if  
DIMMs of different speeds or types have been installed. Also make sure that  
the BIOS setup is configured for the fastest speed of RAM used.  
2. It is recommended to use the same RAM speed for all DIMMs in the system.  
Make sure you are using the correct type of Single-Rank, Registered ECC  
DDR2 667/533 SDRAM (recommended by the manufacturer.)  
3. Check for bad DIMM modules or slots by swapping a single module between  
four slots and noting the results. Make sure all memory modules are fully  
seated in their slots. As an interleaved memory scheme is used, you must  
install two modules at a time, beginning with DIMM 1A, then DIMM 2A, and  
so on (see Section 2-3). Check the position of the 115V/230V switch on the  
power supply.  
3-2  
Technical Support Procedures  
Before contacting Technical Support, please take the following steps. Also, note  
that as a motherboard manufacturer, Super Micro does not sell directly to end-us-  
ers, so it is best to first check with your distributor or reseller for troubleshooting  
services. They should know of any possible problem(s) with the specific system  
configuration that was sold to you.  
1. Please go through the ‘Troubleshooting Procedures’ and 'Frequently Asked  
Question' (FAQ) sections in this chapter or see the FAQs on our web site (http://  
com/support/bios/.  
3. If you still cannot resolve the problem, include the following information when  
contacting Super Micro for technical support:  
Motherboard model and PCB revision number  
BIOS release date/version (this can be seen on the initial display when your  
system first boots up)  
3-2  
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Chapter 3: Troubleshooting  
System configuration  
supermicro.com/support/contact.cfm/.  
Distributors: For immediate assistance, please have your account number  
ready when placing a call to our technical support department. We can be  
reached by e-mail at [email protected] or by fax at: (408) 503-8000,  
option 2.  
3-3  
Frequently Asked Questions  
Question: What are the various types of memory that my motherboard can  
support?  
Answer: The X7DCL-3/X7DCL-i has six 240-pin DIMM slots that support Single-  
Rank, Registered ECC DDR2 667/533 SDRAM modules. It is strongly recom-  
mended that you do not mix memory modules of different speeds and sizes. (See  
Chapter 2 for detailed Information.)  
Question: Why does Microsoft Windows XP (SP2) and Windows Vista show  
less memory than what is physically installed?  
Answer: Microsoft implemented a design change in Windows XP with Service  
Pack 2 (SP2) and Windows Vista. This change is specific to the Physical Address  
Extension (PAE) mode behavior which improves driver compatibility. For more in-  
formation, please read the following article at Microsoft’s Knowledge Base website  
Question: How do I update my BIOS?  
Answer: It is recommended that you do not upgrade your BIOS if you are not  
experiencing any problems with your system. Updated BIOS files are located on  
our web site at http://www.supermicro.com/support/bios/. Please check our BIOS  
warning message and the information on how to update your BIOS on our web  
site. Select your motherboard model and download the BIOS file to your computer.  
Also, check the current BIOS revision and make sure that it is newer than your  
BIOS before downloading. You can choose from the zip file and the .exe file. If  
you choose the zip BIOS file, please unzip the BIOS file onto a bootable device or  
a USB pen. Run the batch file using the format flash.bat filename.rom from your  
bootable device or USB pen to flash the BIOS. Then, your system will automati-  
cally reboot. If you choose the .exe file, please run the .exe file under Windows to  
create the BIOS flash floppy disk. Insert the floppy disk into the system you wish  
to flash the BIOS. Then, bootup the system to the floppy disk. The BIOS utility will  
automatically flash the BIOS without any prompts. Please note that this process  
may take a few minutes to complete. Do not be concerned if the screen is paused  
for a few minutes.  
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(Warning: Do not shut down or reset the system while updating BIOS to  
prevent possible system boot failure!)  
Question: What's on the CD that came with my motherboard?  
Answer: The supplied compact disc has quite a few drivers and programs that will  
greatly enhance your system. We recommend that you review the CD and install  
the applications you need. Applications on the CD include chipset drivers for the  
Windows OS, and security and audio drivers.  
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Returning Merchandise for Service  
A receipt or copy of your invoice marked with the date of purchase is required  
before any warranty service will be rendered. You can obtain service by calling  
your vendor for a Returned Merchandise Authorization (RMA) number. When  
returning to the manufacturer, the RMA number should be prominently displayed  
on the outside of the shipping carton, and mailed prepaid or hand-carried. Ship-  
ping and handling charges will be applied for all orders that must be mailed when  
service is complete.  
This warranty only covers normal consumer use and does not cover damage in-  
curred in shipping or from failure due to the alternation, misuse, abuse or improper  
maintenance of products.  
During the warranty period, contact your distributor first for any product prob-  
lems.  
supermicro.com/support/rma/).  
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Chapter 4: BIOS  
Chapter 4  
BIOS  
4-1  
Introduction  
This chapter describes the Phoenix BIOS™ Setup utility for the X7DCL-3/X7DCL-i.  
Phoenix ROM BIOS is stored in a flash chip and can be easily upgraded using a  
floppy disk-based program.  
Note: Due to periodic changes to the BIOS, some settings may have been added  
or deleted and might not yet be recorded in this manual. Please refer to the Manual  
changes to the BIOS that may not be reflected in this manual.  
System BIOS  
BIOS is the Basic Input Output System used in all IBM® PC, XT™, AT®, and PS/2®  
compatible computers. Phoenix BIOS stores the system parameters, types of disk  
drives, video displays, etc. in the CMOS. CMOS memory requires very little electrical  
power. When the computer is turned off, a backup battery provides power to the  
CMOS Logic, enabling it to retain system parameters. Each time the computer is  
powered on, the computer is configured with the values stored in the CMOS Logic  
by the system BIOS, which gains control at boot up.  
How To Change the Configuration Data  
The CMOS information that determines the system parameters may be changed by  
entering the BIOS Setup utility. This Setup utility can be accessed by pressing the  
<Delete> key at the appropriate time during system boot. (See below.)  
Starting the Setup Utility  
Normally, the only visible POST (Power On Self Test) routine is the memory test. As  
the memory is being tested, press the <Delete> key to enter the main menu of the  
BIOS Setup utility. From the main menu, you can access the other setup screens,  
such as the Security and Power menus. Beginning with Section 4-3, detailed de-  
scriptions are given for each parameter setting in the Setup utility.  
Warning: Do not shut down or reset the system while updating BIOS  
to prevent possible boot failure.  
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4-2  
Running Setup  
Default settings are in bold text unless otherwise noted.  
The BIOS setup options described in this section are selected by choosing the ap-  
propriate text from the main BIOS Setup screen. All displayed text is described in  
this section, although the screen display is often all you need to understand how  
to set the options.  
When you first power on the computer, Phoenix BIOS™ is immediately activated.  
While the BIOS is in control, the Setup program can be activated in one of two  
ways:  
1.  
By pressing <Delete> immediately after turning the system on, or  
2.  
When the message shown below appears briefly at the bottom of the screen  
during the POST (Power On Self-Test), press the <Delete> key to activate the main  
Setup menu:  
Press the <Delete> key to enter Setup  
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Main BIOS Setup  
All main Setup options are described in this section. The main BIOS Setup screen  
is displayed below.  
Use the Up/Down arrow keys to move among the different settings in each menu.  
Use the Left/Right arrow keys to change the options for each setting.  
Press the <Esc> key to exit the CMOS Setup Menu. The next section describes in  
detail how to navigate through the menus.  
Items that use submenus are indicated with the icon. With the item highlighted,  
press the <Enter> key to access the submenu.  
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Chapter 4: BIOS  
Main BIOS Setup Menu  
Main Setup Features  
System Time  
To set the system date and time, key in the correct information in the appropriate  
fields. Then press the <Enter> key to save the data.  
System Date  
Using the arrow keys, highlight the month, day and year fields, and enter the correct  
data. Press the <Enter> key to save the data.  
BIOS Date  
This item displays the date when this version of BIOS was built.  
Legacy Diskette A  
This setting allows the user to set the type of floppy disk drive installed as diskette A.  
The options are Disabled, 360Kb 5.25 in, 1.2MB 5.25 in, 720Kb 3.5 in, 1.44/1.25MB,  
3.5 in and 2.88MB 3.5 in.  
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SATA Port 1 ~ SATA Port 6, Ext. Primary Master/Slave  
These settings allow the user to set the parameters of the slots indicated above.  
Press <Enter> to activate the following submenu screen for detailed options of  
these items. Set the correct configurations accordingly. The items included in the  
submenu are:  
Type  
This option allows the user to select the type of IDE hard drive. The option Auto  
allows the BIOS to automatically configure the parameters of the HDD installed at  
the connection. Enter a number between 1 to 39 to select a predetermined HDD  
type. Select User to allow the user to enter the parameters of the HDD installed.  
Select CDROM if a CDROM drive is installed. Select ATAPI if a removable disk  
drive is installed.  
Multi-Sector Transfers  
This item allows the user to specify the number of sectors per block to be used  
in multi-sector transfer. The options are Disabled, 4 Sectors, 8 Sectors, and  
16 Sectors.  
LBA Mode Control  
This item determines whether the Phoenix BIOS will access the IDE Channel 0  
Master Device via the LBA mode. The options are Enabled and Disabled.  
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Chapter 4: BIOS  
32 Bit I/O  
This option allows the user to enable or disable the function of 32-bit data transfer.  
The options are Enabled and Disabled.  
Transfer Mode  
This option allows the user to set the transfer mode. The options are Standard,  
Fast PIO1, Fast PIO2, Fast PIO3, Fast PIO4, FPIO3/DMA1 and FPIO4/DMA2.  
Ultra DMA Mode  
This option allows the user to select Ultra DMA Mode. The options are Disabled,  
Mode 0, Mode 1, Mode 2, Mode 3, Mode 4, and Mode 5.  
Serial ATA  
This setting allows the user to enable or disable the function of the Serial ATA. The  
options are Disabled and Enabled.  
Native Mode Operation  
Select the native mode for ATA. The options are: Serial ATA and Auto.  
SATA Controller Mode  
SelectCompatibletoallowtheSATAandPATAdrivestobeautomatically-detected  
and be placed in the Legacy Mode by the BIOS. Select Enhanced to allow the  
SATA and PATA drives to be to be automatically-detected and be placed in the  
Native IDE Mode. (Note: The Enhanced mode is supported by the Windows  
2000 OS or a later version.)  
When the SATA Controller Mode is set to "Enhanced", the following items  
will display:  
Serial ATA (SATA) RAID Enable  
Select Enable to enable Serial ATA RAID Functions. (For the Windows OS  
environment, use the RAID driver if this feature is set to Enabled. If this  
item is set to Disabled, the item-SATA AHCI Enable will be available.) The  
options are Enabled and Disabled.  
ICH RAID Code Base  
Select Intel to enable Intel's SATA RAID firmware to configure Intel's SATA  
RAID settings. The options are Intel and Adaptec.  
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SATA AHCI Enable  
Select Enable to enable the function of Serial ATA Advanced Host Interface.  
(Takecautionwhenusingthisfunction.Thisfeatureisforadvancedprogrammers  
only.The options are Enabled and Disabled.)  
System Memory  
This display informs you how much system memory is detected by the BIOS.  
Extended Memory  
This display informs you how much extended memory is detected by the BIOS.  
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Chapter 4: BIOS  
4-4  
Advanced Setup  
Choose Advanced from the Phoenix BIOS Setup Utility main menu with the arrow  
keys. You should see the following display.The items with a triangle beside them have  
sub menus that can be accessed by highlighting the item and pressing <Enter>.  
Boot Features  
Access the submenu to make changes to the following settings.  
QuickBoot Mode  
If enabled, this feature will speed up the POST (Power On Self Test) routine by  
skipping certain tests after the computer is turned on. The settings are Enabled  
and Disabled. If Disabled, the POST routine will run at normal speed.  
QuietBoot Mode  
This setting allows you to Enable or Disable the graphic logo screen during boot-  
up.  
POST Errors  
Set to Enabled to display POST Error Messages if an error occurs during bootup.  
If set to Disabled, the system will continue to boot without displaying any error  
message even when a boot error occurs.  
ACPI Mode  
Use the setting to determine if you want to employ ACPI (Advanced Configuration  
and Power Interface) power management on your system. The options are Yes  
and No.  
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Power Button Behavior  
If set to Instant-Off, the system will power off immediately as soon as the user  
hits the power button. If set to 4-sec., the system will power off when the user  
presses the power button for 4 seconds or longer. The options are instant-off and  
4-sec override.  
Resume On Modem Ring  
Select On to “wake your system up” when an incoming call is received by your  
modem. The options are On and Off.  
Power Loss Control  
This setting allows you to choose how the system will react when power returns  
after an unexpected loss of power. The options are Stay Off, Power On, and  
Last State.  
Watch Dog  
If enabled, this option will automatically reset the system if the system is not active  
for more than 5 minutes. The options are Enabled and Disabled.  
Summary Screen  
This setting allows you to Enable or Disable the summary screen which displays  
the system configuration during bootup.  
Memory Cache  
Cache System BIOS Area  
This setting allows you to designate a reserve area in the system memory to be used  
as a System BIOS buffer to allow the BIOS to write (cache) data into this reserved  
memory area. Select Write Protect to enable this function, and this area will be  
reserved for BIOS ROM access only. Select Uncached to disable this function and  
make this area available for other devices.  
Cache Video BIOS Area  
This setting allows you to designate a reserve area in the system memory to be  
used as a Video BIOS buffer to allow the BIOS to write (cache) data into this  
reserved memory area. Select Write Protect to enable the function and this area  
will be reserved for Video BIOS ROM access only. Select Uncached to disable this  
function and make this area available for other devices.  
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Chapter 4: BIOS  
Cache Base 0-512K  
If enabled, this feature will allow the data stored in the base memory area: block  
0-512K to be cached (written) into a buffer, a storage area in the Static DROM  
(SDROM) or to be written into L1, L2 cache inside the CPU to speed up CPU  
operations. Select Uncached to disable this function. Select Write Through to allow  
data to be cached into the buffer and written into the system memory at the  
same time. Select Write Protect to prevent data from being written into the base  
memory area of Block 0-512K. Select Write Back to allow the CPU to write data  
back directly from the buffer without writing data to the System Memory for fast  
CPU data processing and operation. The options are Uncached, Write Through,  
Write Protect, and Write Back.  
Cache Base 512K-640K  
If enabled, this feature will allow the data stored in the memory area: 512K-640K  
to be cached (written) into a buffer, a storage area in the Static DROM (SDROM)  
or written into L1, L2, L3 cache inside the CPU to speed up CPU operations.  
Select Uncached to disable this function. Select Write Through to allow data to  
be cached into the buffer and written into the system memory at the same time.  
Select Write Protect to prevent data from being written into the base memory  
area of Block 512-640K. Select Write Back to allow the CPU to write data back  
directly from the buffer without writing data to the System Memory for fast CPU  
data processing and operation. The options are Uncached, Write Through, Write  
Protect, and Write Back.  
Cache Extended Memory  
If enabled, this feature will allow the data stored in the extended memory area to  
be cached (written) into a buffer, a storage area in the Static DROM (SDROM)  
or written into L1, L2, L3 cache inside the CPU to speed up CPU operations.  
Select Uncached to disable this function. Select Write Through to allow data  
to be cached into the buffer and written into the system memory at the same  
time. Select Write Protect to prevent data from being written into the extended  
memory area above 1MB. Select Write Back to allow the CPU to write data back  
directly from the buffer without writing data to the System Memory for fast CPU  
data processing and operation. The options are Uncached, Write Through, Write  
Protect, and Write Back.  
Discrete MTRR Allocation  
If enabled, MTRRs (-Memory Type Range Registers) are configured as distinct,  
separate units and cannot be overlapped. If enabled, the user can achieve better  
graphic effects when using a Linux graphic driver that requires the write-combining  
configuration with 4GB or more memory. The options are Enabled and Disabled.  
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PCI Configuration  
Access the submenu to make changes to the following settings for PCI devices.  
Onboard GLAN-1/Onboard GLAN-2 (Gigabit- LAN) OPROM  
Configure  
Select Enabled to allow the system to boot from the GLAN-1 connection or the  
GLAN-2 connection. The options are Disabled and Enabled.  
Onboard Storage OPROM Configure  
Select Enabled to allow the system to boot from the onboard storage device. The  
options are Disabled and Enabled.  
Reset Configuration Data  
If set to Yes, this setting clears the Extended System Configuration Data- (ESCD)  
area. The options are Yes and No.  
Slot1 PCI 33MHz, Slot2 PCI 33MHz, Slot3 PCI 33MHz, Slot4 PCI-Exp.  
x4, Slot5 PCI-Exp. x8, and Slot6 PCI-Exp. x8  
Access the submenu for each of the settings above to make changes to the  
following:  
Option ROM Scan  
When enabled, this setting will initialize the device expansion ROM. The options  
are Enabled and Disabled.  
Enable Master  
This setting allows you to enable the selected device as the PCI bus master.  
The options are Enabled and Disabled.  
Latency Timer  
This setting allows you to set the clock rate for Bus Master. A high-priority, high-  
throughout device may benefit from a greater clock rate. The options are Default,  
0020h, 0040h, 0060h, 0080h, 00A0h, 00C0h, and 00E0h. For Unix, Novell and  
other Operating Systems, please select the option: other. If a drive fails after  
the installation of a new software, you might want to change this setting and  
try again. A different OS requires a different Bus Master clock rate.  
Large Disk Access Mode  
This setting determines the size of hard drive disk to be accessed by the system.  
The options are DOS or Other (for Unix, Novelle NetWare and other operating  
systems).  
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Chapter 4: BIOS  
Advanced Chipset Control  
Access the submenu to make changes to the following settings.  
Warning: Take Caution when changing the Advanced settings. An incorrect  
setup, a very high DRAM frequency or an incorrect DRAM timing may cause  
the system become unstable. When this occurs, reset the setting to the default  
setting.  
Accelerate MRC  
If Enabled, the BIOS will skip MRC calculation if there aren't any changes in DIMM  
population. The options are Enabled and Disabled.  
Clock Spectrum Feature  
If Enabled, the BIOS will monitor the level of Electromagnetic Interference caused  
by the components and will attempt to decrease the interference whenever needed.  
The options are Enabled and Disabled.  
Crystal Beach Configure Enable  
This feature cooperates with the Intel I/OAT (Acceleration Technology) to accelerate  
the performance of TOE devices. (Note: A TOE device is a specialized, dedicated  
processor that is installed on an add-on card or a network card to handle some or all  
packet processing of this add-on card. For this motherboard, the TOE device is built  
inside the ICH9R South Bridge chip.) The options are Enabled and Disabled.  
SERR Signal Condition  
This setting specifies the ECC Error conditions that an SERR# is to be asserted.  
The options are None, Single Bit, Multiple Bit, and Both.  
4GB PCI Hole Granularity  
This feature allows you to select the granularity of PCI hole for PCI slots. If MTRRs  
are not enough, this option may be used to reduce MTRR occupation. The options  
are: 256 MB, 512 MB, 1GB and 2GB.  
Channel 0 Rank Sparing/Channel 1 Rank Sparing  
Select Enable to enable the function of memory sparing for Memory Bus Branch 0  
or Branch 1. The options are Enabled and Disabled.  
Enhanced x8 Detection  
Select Enabled to enable Enhanced x8 DRAM UC Error Detection. The options  
are Disabled and Enabled.  
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Demand Scrubbing  
Scrubbing is a process that allows the North Bridge to correct correctable memory  
errors found on a memory module. When the CPU or I/O issues a demand- read  
command, and the read data from memory turns out to be a correctable error, the  
error is corrected and sent to the requestor (the original source). Memory is updated  
as well. Select Enabled to use Demand Scrubbing for ECC memory correction.  
Patrol Scrubbing  
Scrubbing is a process that allows the North Bridge to correct correctable memory  
errors detected on a memory module, and send the correction to the requestor (the  
original source). When this item is set to Enabled, the North Bridge will read and  
write back one cache line every 16K cycles, if there is no delay caused by internal  
processing. By using this method, roughly 64 GB of memory behind the North Bridge  
will be scrubbed every day. The options are Enabled and Disabled.  
Route Port 80h Cycles to  
This feature allows the user to decide which bus to send debug information to. The  
options are Disabled, PCI and LPC.  
Enable Multi-Media Timer  
Select Yes to activate a set of timers that are alternative to the traditional 8254  
timers for the OS use. The options are Yes and No.  
USB Host Controller  
Select Enabled to enable USB Host Controller 1. The options are Enabled and  
Disabled.  
Legacy USB Support  
This setting allows you to enable support for Legacy USB devices. The settings  
are Enabled and Disabled.  
Advanced Processor Options  
Access the submenu to make changes to the following settings.  
CPU Speed  
This is a display that indicates the speed of the installed processor.  
Frequency Ratio (Available if supported by the CPU.)  
The feature allows the user to set the internal frequency multiplier for the CPU.  
The options are: Default, x12, x13, x14, x15, x16, x17 and x18. Note: the options  
will vary depending on the type of CPU installed.  
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Core-Multi-Processing (Available if supported by the CPU.)  
Set to Enabled to use a processor's Second Core and beyond. (Please refer to  
Intel's web site for more information.) The options are Disabled and Enabled.  
Machine Checking (Available when supported by the CPU.)  
Set to Enabled to activate the function of Machine Checking and allow the CPU to  
detect and report hardware (machine) errors via a set of model-specific registers  
(MSRs). The options are Disabled and Enabled.  
Thermal Management 2 (Available if supported by the CPU.)  
Set to Enabled to use Thermal Management 2 (TM2) which will lower CPU voltage  
and frequency when the CPU temperature reaches a predefined overheat threshold.  
Set to Disabled to use Thermal Manager 1 (TM1), allowing CPU clocking to be  
regulated via CPU Internal Clock modulation when the CPU temperature reaches  
the overheat threshold.  
C1 Enhanced Mode (Available if supported by the CPU.)  
Set to Enabled to enable Enhanced Halt State to lower CPU voltage/frequency to  
prevent overheat. The options are Enabled and Disabled. (Note: please refer to  
Intel’s web site for detailed information.)  
Execute Disable Bit (Available if supported by the CPU and the  
OS.)  
Set to Enabled to enable Execute Disable Bit and allow the processor to classify  
areas in memory where an application code can execute and where it cannot, and  
thus preventing a worm or a virus from inserting and creating a flood of codes to  
overwhelm the processor or damage the system during an attack. This feature is  
available when your OS and your CPU support the function of Execute Disable  
Bit. The options are Disabled and Enabled. Note: For more information regarding  
hardware/software support for this function, please refer to Intel's and Microsoft's  
web sites.  
Adjacent Cache Line Prefetch (Available when supported by the CPU.)  
The CPU fetches the cache line for 64 bytes if this option is set to Disabled. The  
CPU fetches both cache lines for 128 bytes as comprised if Enabled. The options  
are Disabled and Enabled.  
Hardware Prefetcher (Available when supported by the CPU.)  
Set to this option to enabled to enable the hardware components that are used in  
conjunction with software programs to prefetch data in order to shorten execution  
cycles and maximize data processing efficiency. The options are Disabled and  
Enabled.  
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Intel ® Virtualization Technology (Available if supported by the  
CPU.)  
Select Enabled to use the feature of Virtualization Technology to allow one platform  
to run multiple operating systems and applications in independent partitions, creating  
multiple "virtual" systems in one physical computer. The options are Enabled and  
Disabled. Note: If there is any change to this setting, you will need to power off  
and restart the system for the change to take effect. Please refer to Intel’s web site  
for detailed information.  
Intel EIST Support (Available if supported by the CPU.)  
Select Enabled to use the Enhanced Intel SpeedStep Technology and allows the  
system to automatically adjust processor voltage and core frequency in an effort  
to reduce power consumption and heat dissipation. The options are Enabled and  
Disabled. Please refer to Intel’s web site for detailed information.  
CPU Cache Control  
DCU Prefetch (Available when supported by the CPU.)  
The CPU fetches the cache line for 64 bytes if this option is set to Disabled.  
The CPU fetches both cache lines for 128 bytes as comprised if Enabled. The  
options are Disabled and Enabled.  
IP Prefetch (Available when supported by the CPU.)  
Select Enabled to use CPU Cache Line IP Prefetch. The options are Disabled  
and Enabled.  
Direct Cache Access (Available when supported by the CPU.)  
Set to Enable to route inbound network IO traffic directly into processor caches  
to reduce memory latency and improve network performance. The options are  
Disabled and Enabled.  
I/O Device Configuration  
Access the submenu to make changes to the following settings.  
KBC Clock Input  
This setting allows you to select clock frequency for the keyboard clock. The options  
are 6MHz, 8MHz, 12MHz, and 16MHz.  
Serial Port A  
This setting allows you to decide how Serial Port A is controlled. The options are  
Enabled (user defined), Disabled, and Auto (BIOS- or OS- controlled).  
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Chapter 4: BIOS  
Base I/O Address  
This setting allows you to select the base I/O address for Serial Port A. The options  
are 3F8, 2F8, 3E8, and 2E8.  
Interrupt  
This setting allows you to select the IRQ (interrupt request) for Serial Port A. The  
options are IRQ3 and IRQ4.  
Serial Port B  
This setting allows you to decide how Serial Port B is controlled.The options are  
Enabled (user defined), Disabled, Auto (BIOS controlled) and OS Controlled.  
Mode  
This setting allows you to set the type of devices to be connected to Serial Port B.  
The options are Normal and IR (for an infrared device) and ASK-IR.  
Base I/O Address  
This setting allows you to select the base I/O address for Serial Port B. The options  
are 3F8, 2F8, 3E8 and 2E8.  
Interrupt  
This setting allows you to select the IRQ (interrupt request) for Serial Port B. The  
options are IRQ3 and IRQ4.  
Floppy Disk Controller  
This setting allows you to decide how Floppy Disk Controller is controlled.The options  
are Enabled (user defined), Disabled, and Auto (BIOS- and OS- controlled).  
Base I/O Address  
This setting allows you to select the base I/O address for the Floppy disk drive.  
The options are Primary and Secondary.  
DMI Event Logging  
Access the submenu to make changes to the following settings.  
Event Log Validity  
This is a display to inform you of the event log validity. It is not a setting.  
Event Log Capacity  
This is a display to inform you of the event log capacity. It is not a setting.  
View DMI Event Log  
Highlight this item and press <Enter> to view the contents of the event log.  
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Event Logging  
This setting allows you to Enable or Disable event logging.  
ECC Event Logging  
This setting allows you to Enable or Disable ECC event logging.  
Mark DMI Events as Read  
Highlight this item and press <Enter> to mark the DMI events as read.  
Clear All DMI Event Logs  
Select Yes and press <Enter> to clear all DMI event logs. The options are Yes  
and No.  
Console Redirection  
Access the submenu to make changes to the following settings.  
COM Port Address  
This item allows you to specify which COM port to direct the remote console to:  
On-board COM A or On-board COM B. This setting can also be Disabled. Note:  
The default is On-board COM B if IPMI is enabled.  
BAUD Rate  
This item allows you to set the BAUD rate for the remote console. The options are  
300, 1200, 2400, 9600, 19.2K, 38.4K, 57.6K, and 115.2K.  
Console Type  
This item allows you to choose Console Redirection type. The options are VT100,  
VT100/8bit, PC-ANSI/7bit, PC ANSI, VT100+, VT-UTF8 and ASCII.  
Flow Control  
This item allows you to set the flow control for Console Redirection. The options  
are: None, XON/XOFF, and CTS/RTS.  
Console Connection  
This item allows you to decide how Console Redirection is to be connected: either  
Direct or Via Modem.  
Continue CR after POST  
This item allows you to decide whether you want to continue with Console Redirection  
after POST routines. The options are On and Off.  
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Chapter 4: BIOS  
Hardware Monitor  
Highlight an item and hit <Enter> to see the status of each of the following items:  
CPU Overheat Alarm  
This option allows the user to select the CPU Overheat Alarm setting which de-  
termines when the CPU OH alarm will be activated to provide warning of possible  
CPU overheat. Refer to the the next item, CPU Temperature for more information  
regarding PECI, DTS and other thermal features of this motherboard.  
Warning: Any temperature that exceeds the CPU threshold temperature  
predefined by the CPU manufacturer may result in CPU overheat or system  
instability. When the CPU temperature reaches this predefined threshold,  
the CPU and system cooling fans will run at full speed.  
The options are:  
The Default Alarm Setting: Select this setting if you want the CPU overheat alarm  
(including the LED and the buzzer) to be triggered when the CPU temperature  
reaches about +5 PECI counts above the threshold temperature as predefined by  
the CPU manufacturer to give the CPU and system fans additional time needed  
for CPU and system cooling.  
The Early Alarm Setting: Select this setting if you want the CPU overheat alarm  
(including the LED and the buzzer) to be triggered as soon as the CPU temperature  
reaches the CPU overheat threshold as predefined by the CPU manufacturer.  
CPU1 Temperature/CPU2 Temperature  
The CPU Temperature feature will display the CPU temperature status as detected  
by the BIOS:  
Low – This level is considered as the ‘normal’ operating state. The CPU temperature  
is well below the CPU ‘Temperature Tolerance’. The motherboard fans and CPU will  
run normally as configured in the BIOS (Fan Speed Control).  
User intervention: No action required.  
Medium – The processor is running warmer. This is a ‘precautionary’ level and gen-  
erally means that there may be factors contributing to this condition, but the CPU is  
still within its normal operating state and below the CPU ‘Temperature Tolerance’.  
The motherboard fans and CPU will run normally as configured in the BIOS. The  
fans may adjust to a faster speed depending on the Fan Speed Control settings.  
User intervention: No action is required. However, consider checking the CPU  
fans and the chassis ventilation for blockage.  
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High – The processor is running hot. This is a ‘caution’ level since the CPU’s ‘Tem-  
perature Tolerance’ has been reached (or has been exceeded) and may activate  
an overheat alarm:  
The Default Alarm – the Overheat LED and system buzzer will activate if the High  
condition continues for some time after it is reached. The CPU fan will run at full  
speed to bring the CPU temperature down. If the CPU temperature still increases  
even with the CPU fan running at full speed, the system buzzer will activate and  
the Overheat LED will turn on.  
The Early Alarm – the Overheat LED and system buzzer will be activated exactly  
when the High level is reached. The CPU fan will run at full speed to bring the  
CPU temperature down.  
Note: In both the alarms above, please take immediate action as shown below.  
See CPU Overheat Alarm to modify the above alarm settings.  
User intervention: If the system buzzer and Overheat LED has activated, take  
action immediately by checking the system fans, chassis ventilation and room  
temperature to correct any problems. Note: the system may shut down if it con-  
tinues for a long period to prevent damage to the CPU.  
Notes: The CPU thermal technology that reports absolute temperatures  
(Celsius/Fahrenheit) has been upgraded to a more advanced feature by  
Intel in its newer processors. The basic concept is each CPU is embedded  
by unique temperature information that the motherboard can read. This  
Temperature Threshold’ or ‘Temperature Tolerance’ has been assigned  
at the factory and is the baseline on which the motherboard takes action  
during different CPU temperature conditions (i.e., by increasing CPU Fan  
speed, triggering the Overheat Alarm, etc). Since CPUs can have different  
Temperature Tolerances’, the installed CPU can now send information to  
the motherboard what its ‘Temperature Tolerance’ is, and not the other way  
around. This results in better CPU thermal management.  
Supermicro has leveraged this feature by assigning a temperature status to certain  
thermal conditions in the processor (Low, Medium and High). This makes it easier  
for the user to understand the CPU’s temperature status, rather than by just simply  
seeing a temperature reading (i.e., 25oC).  
The information provided above is for your reference only. For more information on  
System Temperature  
This feature displays the system's absolute temperature reading (i.e., 34oC).  
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Chapter 4: BIOS  
Fan1-Fan6 Speeds  
If the feature of Auto Fan Control is enabled, the BIOS will automatically display  
the status of the fans indicated in this item.  
Fan Speed Control Modes  
This feature allows the user to decide how the system controls the speeds of the  
onboard fans. The CPU temperature and the fan speed are correlative. When the  
CPU on-die temperature increases, the fan speed will also increase, and vise versa.  
If the option is set to 3-pin fan, the fan speed is controlled by voltage. If the option  
is set to 4-pin, the fan speed will be controlled by Pulse Width Modulation (PWM).  
Select 3-pin if your chassis came with 3-pin fan headers. Select 4-pin if your chas-  
sis came with 4-pin fan headers. Select Workstation if your system is used as a  
Workstation. Select Server if your system is used as a Server. Select Disable to  
disable the fan speed control function to allow the onboard fans to run at full speed  
(12V) at all times. The Options are: 1. Disable (Full Speed), 2. 3-pin (Server), 3.  
3-pin (Workstation), 4. 4-pin (Server) and 5. 4-pin (Workstation).  
Voltage Monitoring  
The following items will be monitored and displayed:  
Vcore A, Vcore B, -12V, P1V5, +3.3V, 5Vsb, 5VDD, P_VTT, Vbat  
Note: In the Windows OS environment, the Supero Doctor III settings take prece-  
dence over the BIOS settings. When first installed, Supero Doctor III adopts the  
temperature threshold settings previously set in the BIOS. Any subsequent changes  
to these thresholds must be made within Supero Doctor, since the SD III settings  
override the BIOS settings. For the Windows OS to adopt the BIOS temperature  
threshold settings, please change the SDIII settings to be the same as those set  
in the BIOS.  
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IPMI (The option is available only when an IPMI card is installed  
in the system.)  
IPMI Specification Version: This item displays the current IPMI Version.  
BMC Hardware/Firmware Version: This item displays the current Firmware  
Version.  
System Event Logging  
Select Enabled to enable IPMI Event Logging. When this function is set to Disabled,  
the system will continue to log events received via system interface. The options  
are Enabled and Disabled.  
Clear System Event Logging  
Enabling this function to force the BIOS to clear the system event logs during the  
next cold boot. The options are Enabled and Disabled.  
Existing Event Log Number  
This item displays the number of the existing event log.  
Event Log Control  
System Firmware Progress  
Enabling this function to log POST progress. The options are Enabled and  
Disabled.  
BIOS POST Errors  
Enabling this function to log POST errors. The options are Enabled and  
Disabled.  
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Chapter 4: BIOS  
BIOS POST Watch Dog  
Set to Enabled to enable POST Watch Dog. The options are Enabled and Disabled.  
OS Boot Watch Dog  
Set to Enabled to enable OS Boot Watch Dog. The options are Enabled and  
Disabled.  
Timer for Loading OS (Minutes)  
This feature allows the user to set the time value (in minutes) for the previous  
item: OS Boot Watch Dog by keying-in a desired number in the blank. The default  
setting is 10 (minutes.) (Please ignore this option when OS Boot Watch Dog is set  
to "Disabled".)  
Time Out Action  
This feature allows the user to determine what action to take in an event of a system  
boot failure. The options are No Action, Reset, Power Off and Power Cycles.  
System Event Log/System Event Log (List Mode)  
These options display the System Event (SEL) Log and System Event (SEL) Log  
in List Mode. Items include: SEL (System Event Log) Entry Number, SEL Record  
ID, SEL Record Type, Time Stamp, Generator ID, SEL Message Revision, Sensor  
Type, Sensor Number, SEL Event Type, Event Description, and SEL Event Data.  
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Realtime Sensor Data  
This feature display information from motherboard sensors, such as temperatures,  
fan speeds and voltages of various components.  
IPMI LAN Configuration  
VLAN Tagging  
Select Enabled to enable Virtual LAN(s) for IPMI connections and allow the user to  
configure VLAN settings. The options are Enabled and Disabled.  
VLAN ID  
This item allows the user to change the VLAN ID. The default setting is 1h.  
IP Address Source  
This item allows the user to select the IP address source for the connection. The  
options are DHCP and Static. If Static is selected, the following items need to be  
set manually. Selecting DHCP will allow the network's DHCP server (if your network  
has one) to assign values to these items automatically:  
IP Address, IP Subnet Mask, Default Gateway  
MAC Address  
This is the system's hardware address. This do not need to be set or changed in  
most cases.  
Update LAN Settings  
Select Yes to allow BIOS update LAN setting. The options are Yes and No.  
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Chapter 4: BIOS  
4-5  
Security  
Choose Security from the Phoenix BIOS Setup Utility main menu with the arrow  
keys. You should see the following display. Security setting options are displayed  
by highlighting the setting using the arrow keys and pressing <Enter>. All Security  
BIOS settings are described in this section.  
Supervisor Password Is:  
This indicates if a supervisor password has been entered for the system. Clear  
means such a password has not been used and Set means a supervisor password  
has been entered for the system.  
User Password Is:  
This indicates if a user password has been entered for the system. Clear means  
such a password has not been used and Set means a user password has been  
entered for the system.  
Set Supervisor Password  
When the item Set Supervisor Password is highlighted, hit the <Enter> key. When  
prompted, enter the Supervisor's password in the dialogue box to set or to change  
supervisor's password, which allows access to the BIOS.  
Set User Password  
When the item Set User Password is highlighted, hit the <Enter> key. When  
prompted, enter the user's password in the dialogue box to set or to change the  
user's password, which allows access to the system at boot-up.  
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Password on Boot  
This setting allows you to determine if a password is required for a user to enter  
the system at bootup. The options are Enabled (password required) and Disabled  
(a password not required).  
4-6  
Boot  
Choose Boot from the Phoenix BIOS Setup Utility main menu with the arrow keys.  
You should see the following display. See details on how to change the order and  
specs of boot devices in the Item Specific Help window. All Boot BIOS settings are  
described in this section.  
Boot List  
Candidate  
List  
Boot Priority Order/Excluded from Boot Orders  
The devices included in the boot list section (above) are bootable devices listed in  
the sequence of boot order as specified. The boot functions for the devices included  
in the candidate list (above) are currently disabled. Use a <+> key or a <-> key to  
move the device up or down. Use the <f> key or the <r> key to specify the type of  
an USB device, either fixed or removable. You can select one item from the boot  
list and hit the <x> key to remove it from the list of bootable devices (to make its  
resource available for other bootable devices). Subsequently, you can select an  
item from the candidate list and hit the <x> key to remove it from the candidate  
list and put it in the boot list. This item will then become a bootable device. See  
details on how to change the priority of boot order of devices in the "Item Specific  
Help" window.  
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Chapter 4: BIOS  
4-7  
Exit  
Choose Exit from the Phoenix BIOS Setup Utility main menu with the arrow keys. You  
should see the following display. All Exit BIOS settings are described in this section.  
Exit Saving Changes  
Highlight this item and press <Enter> to save any changes you have made and to  
exit the BIOS Setup utility.  
Exit Discarding Changes  
Highlight this item and press <Enter> to exit the BIOS Setup utility without saving  
any changes you may have made.  
Load Setup Defaults  
Highlight this item and press <Enter> to load the default settings for all items in  
the BIOS Setup. These are the safest settings to use.  
Discard Changes  
Highlight this item and press <Enter> to discard (cancel) any changes you have  
made. You will remain in the Setup utility.  
Save Changes  
Highlight this item and press <Enter> to save any changes you made. You will  
remain in the Setup utility.  
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Appendix A: POST Error Beep Codes  
Appendix A  
POST Error Beep Codes  
This section lists POST (Power On Self Test) error beep codes for the Phoenix BIOS.  
POST error beep codes are divided into two categories: recoverable and terminal.  
This section lists Beep Codes for recoverable POST errors.  
Recoverable POST Error Beep Codes  
When a recoverable type of error occurs during POST, BIOS will display a POST  
code that describes the problem. BIOS may also issue one of the following beep  
codes:  
1 long and two short beeps - video configuration error  
1 repetitive long beep - no memory detected  
1 continuous beep with the front panel Overheat LED on - system overheat  
A-1  
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Notes  
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Appendix B: Installing the Windows OS  
Appendix B  
Installing the Windows OS  
After all hardware components have been installed, you must first configure Intel  
South Bridge RAID Settings before you install the Windows OS and other software  
drivers. To configure RAID settings, please refer to RAID Configuration User Guides  
B-1 Installing the Windows XP/2000/2003 OS for  
Systems with RAID Functions  
1. Insert Microsoft's Windows XP/2000/2003 Setup CD in the CD Driver, and the  
system will start booting up from CD.  
2. Press the <F6> key when the message-" Press F6 if you need to install a  
third party SCSI or RAID driver" displays.  
3. When the Windows XP/2000/2003 Setup screen appears, press "S" to specify  
additional device(s).  
4. Insert the driver diskette-"Intel AA RAID XP/2000/2003 Driver for ICH9R" into  
Drive A: and press the <Enter> key.  
5. Choose the Intel(R) ICH9R SATA RAID Controller from the list indicated in  
the XP/2000/2003 Setup Screen, and press the <Enter> key.  
6. Press the <Enter> key to continue the installation process. (If you need to  
specify any additional devices to be installed, do it at this time.) Once all  
devices are specified, press the <Enter> key to continue with the installation.  
7. From the Windows XP/2000/2003 Setup screen, press the <Enter> key. The  
XP/2000/2003 Setup will automatically load all device files and then, continue  
the Windows XP/2000/2003 installation.  
8. After the Windows XP/2000/2003 OS Installation is completed, the system will  
automatically reboot.  
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B-2 Installing the Windows XP/2000/2003 OS for  
Systems without RAID Functions  
1. Insert Microsoft's Windows XP/2000/2003 Setup CD in the CD Driver, and the  
system will start booting up from CD.  
2. Continue with the OS installation. The Windows OS Setup screen will display.  
3. From the Windows XP/2000/2003 Setup screen, press the <Enter> key. The  
XP/2000/2003 Setup will automatically load all device files and then continue  
with the Windows XP/2000/2003 installation.  
4. After the Windows XP/2000/2003 OS Installation is completed, the system will  
automatically reboot.  
5. Insert the Supermicro Setup CD that came with your motherboard into the CD  
Drive during system boot, and the main screen will display.  
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Appendix C: Installing Other Software Programs and Drivers  
Appendix C  
Software Installation  
C-1  
Installing other Drivers and the OS  
After you've installed the Windows Operating System, a screen as shown below  
will appear. You are ready to install software programs and drivers that have not  
yet been installed. To install these software programs and drivers, click the icons  
to the right of these items.  
Driver/Tool Installation Display Screen  
Notes:  
1. Click the icons showing a hand writing on the paper to view the readme files  
for each item. Click a computer icon on the right of an item to install an item (from  
top to the bottom) one at a time. After installing each item, you must reboot  
the system before proceeding with the next item on the list.  
2. The X7DCL-3 supports SAS RAID features. To configure the LSI SAS HostRAID,  
please refer to the LSI folder for the LSI SAS HostRAID Utility and documentation.  
The LSI folder is included in the CD-ROM that came with your motherboard.  
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C-2  
Configuring Supero Doctor III  
The Supero Doctor III program is a Web-based management tool that supports  
remote management capability. It includes Remote and Local Management tools.  
The local management is called the SD III Client. The Supero Doctor III program  
included on the CDROM that came with your motherboard allows you to monitor  
the environment and operations of your system. Supero Doctor III displays crucial  
system information such as CPU temperatures, system voltages and fan status.  
See the Figure below for a display of the Supero Doctor III interface.  
Note 1: Both default username and password are ADMIN.  
Note 2: In the Windows OS environment, the Supero Doctor III settings take  
precedence over the BIOS settings. When first installed, Supero Doctor III adopts  
the temperature threshold settings previously set in the BIOS. Any subsequent  
changes to these thresholds must be made within Supero Doctor, since the SD  
III settings override the BIOS settings. For the Windows OS to adopt the BIOS  
temperature threshold settings, please change the SDIII settings to be the same  
as those set in the BIOS.  
Supero Doctor III Interface Display Screen-I (Health Information)  
C-2  
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Appendix C: Installing Other Software Programs and Drivers  
Supero Doctor III Interface Display Screen-II (Remote Control)  
supermicro.com/utility/Supero_Doctor_III/. You can also download SDIII User's  
For the Linux OS, we will still recommend that you use Supero Doctor II.  
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Notes  
C-4  
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(Disclaimer Continued)  
The products sold by Supermicro are not intended for and will not be used in life support systems, medical equipment, nuclear facilities or systems, aircraft, aircraft devices,  
aircraft/emergency communication devices or other critical systems whose failure to perform be reasonably expected to result in significant injury or loss of life or catastrophic  
property damage. Accordingly, Supermicro disclaims any and all liability, and should buyer use or sell such products for use in such ultra-hazardous applications, it does so  
entirely at its own risk. Furthermore, buyer agrees to fully indemnify, defend and hold Supermicro harmless for and against any and all claims, demands, actions, litigation, and  
proceedings of any kind arising out of or related to such ultra-hazardous use or sale.  
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