SUPER MICRO Computer Home Theater Server 6012P 6 User Manual

®
SUPER  
SUPERSERVER 6012P-6  
USER’SMANUAL  
1.0b  
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Preface  
Preface  
About This Manual  
This manual is written for professional system integrators and PC technicians.  
It provides information for the installation and use of the SuperServer 6012P-6.  
Installation and maintainance should be performed by experienced technicians  
only.  
The SuperServer 6012P-6 is a high-end, dual Xeon processor 1U rackmount  
server based on the SC812S 1U rackmount server chassis and the P4DPR-6GM+  
motherboard, which supports single or dual Xeon 512K L2 cache proces-  
sors of up to 3 GHz at a Front Side (system) Bus speed of 400 MHz and up to  
12 GB of DDR-200 (PC1600) SDRAM memory.  
Manual Organization  
Chapter 1: Introduction  
The first chapter provides a checklist of the main components included with the  
server system and describes the main features of the SUPER P4DPR-6GM+  
mainboard and the SC812S chassis, which make up the SuperServer 6012P-6.  
Chapter 2: Server Installation  
This chapter describes the steps necessary to install the SuperServer 6012P-6  
into a rack and check out the server configuration prior to powering up the  
system. If your server was ordered without processor and memory components,  
this chapter will refer you to the appropriate sections of the manual for their  
installation.  
Chapter 3: System Interface  
Refer here for details on the system interface, which includes the functions  
and information provided by the control panel on the chassis as well as  
other LEDs located throughout the system.  
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Chapter 4: System Safety  
You should thoroughly familiarize yourself with this chapter for a general overview  
of safety precautions that should be followed when installing and servicing the  
SuperServer 6012P-6.  
Chapter 5: Advanced Motherboard Setup  
Chapter 5 provides detailed information on the P4DPR-6GM+ motherboard, in-  
cluding the locations and functions of connectors, headers and jumpers. Refer  
to this chapter when adding or removing processors or main memory and  
when reconfiguring the motherboard.  
Chapter 6: Advanced Chassis Setup  
Refer to Chapter 6 for detailed information on the 1U SC812S rackmount  
server chassis. You should follow the procedures given in this chapter  
when installing, removing or reconfiguring SCSI or peripheral drives and  
when replacing the system power supply unit and cooling fans.  
Chapter 7: BIOS  
The BIOS chapter includes an introduction to BIOS and provides detailed  
information on running the CMOS Setup Utility.  
Appendix A: BIOS POST Messages  
Appendix B: BIOS POST Codes  
Appendix C: Supero Doctor III  
Appendix D: System Specifications  
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Preface  
Notes  
v
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SUPERSERVER 6012P-6 Manual  
Table of Contents  
Preface  
About This Manual ....................................................................................................... iii  
Manual Organization .................................................................................................... iii  
Chapter 1: Introduction to the SuperServer 6012P-6  
1-1 Overview ............................................................................................................ 1-1  
1-2 Mainboard Chassis Features ......................................................................... 1-2  
1-3 Server Chassis Features ................................................................................ 1-5  
1-4 Contacting Supermicro ................................................................................... 1-7  
Chapter 2: Server Installation  
2-1 Overview ............................................................................................................ 2-1  
2-2 Unpacking the SuperServer 6012P-6............................................................. 2-1  
2-3 Preparing for Setup ......................................................................................... 2-1  
Choosing a Setup Location...................................................................... 2-2  
Rack Precautions ...................................................................................... 2-2  
Server Precautions .................................................................................... 2-2  
2-4 Installing the SuperServer 6012P-6 into a Rack .......................................... 2-3  
Identifying the Sections of the Rack Rails ............................................ 2-3  
Installing the Chassis Rails .......................................................................2-4  
Installing the Rack Rails ............................................................................2-4  
Installing the Server into the Rack ...........................................................2-5  
Installing the Server into a Telco Rack .................................................... 2-6  
2-5 Checking the Motherboard Setup .................................................................. 2-7  
2-6 Checking the Drive Bay Setup ....................................................................... 2-9  
Chapter 3: System Interface  
3-1 Overview ............................................................................................................ 3-1  
3-2 Control Panel Buttons..................................................................................... 3-1  
Reset .......................................................................................................... 3-1  
NMI ............................................................................................................. 3-1  
Power ......................................................................................................... 3-2  
3-3 Control Panel LEDs ......................................................................................... 3-2  
Overheat ..................................................................................................... 3-2  
NIC2 ............................................................................................................ 3-2  
NIC1 ............................................................................................................ 3-3  
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Table of Contents  
HDD ............................................................................................................ 3-3  
Power ......................................................................................................... 3-3  
3-4 SCSI Drive Carrier LEDs ................................................................................. 3-3  
3-5 Motherboard LEDs ........................................................................................... 3-4  
Chapter 4: System Safety  
4-1 Electrical Safety Precautions...........................................................................4-1  
4-2 General Safety Precautions .............................................................................4-2  
4-3 ESD Precautions ...............................................................................................4-3  
4-4 Operating Precatutions .....................................................................................4-4  
Chapter 5: Advanced Motherboard Setup  
5-1 Handling the P4DPR-6GM+ Motherboard ....................................................... 5-1  
5-2 PGA Processor and Heatsink Installation ......................................................5-2  
5-3 Connecting Cables ............................................................................................5-5  
Connecting Data Cables ............................................................................5-5  
Connecting Power Cables ..........................................................................5-5  
Connecting the Control Panel ................................................................... 5-6  
5-4 I/O Ports .............................................................................................................5-7  
5-5 Installing Memory ..............................................................................................5-7  
5-6 Adding PCI Cards ..............................................................................................5-9  
5-7 Motherboard Layout .........................................................................................5-10  
P4DPR-6GM+ Quick Reference ............................................................ 5-11  
5-8 Connector Definitions ...................................................................................... 5-12  
ATX Power Connection ........................................................................... 5-12  
PWR_SEC Connection ........................................................................... 5-12  
NMI Button............................................................................................... 5-12  
Power LED ................................................................................................. 5-12  
HDD LED ................................................................................................... 5-12  
NIC1 LED ................................................................................................. 5-13  
NIC2 LED ................................................................................................. 5-13  
Overheat LED ............................................................................................5-13  
Power Fail LED .........................................................................................5-13  
Reset Button ............................................................................................. 5-13  
Power Button ............................................................................................. 5-14  
Universal Serial Bus ................................................................................. 5-14  
Extra USB Headers .................................................................................. 5-14  
Serial Ports ...............................................................................................5-15  
ATX PS/2 Keyboard & Mouse Ports....................................................... 5-15  
Fan Headers .............................................................................................. 5-15  
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LAN 1/2 (Ethernet Ports) ......................................................................... 5-15  
Wake-On-LAN ............................................................................................5-16  
Wake-On-Ring ........................................................................................... 5-16  
Keylock ...................................................................................................... 5-16  
5-9 Jumper Settings ...............................................................................................5-17  
Explanation of Jumpers ............................................................................ 5-17  
CMOS Clear .............................................................................................. 5-17  
LAN 1 Enable/Disable .............................................................................. 5-18  
LAN 2 Enable/Disable .............................................................................. 5-18  
VGA Enable/Disable ................................................................................. 5-18  
Chassis/Overheat Fan Select .................................................................. 5-18  
SCSI Enable/Disable ................................................................................ 5-19  
SCSI Termination Enable/Disable ........................................................... 5-19  
Watchdog Enable/Disable ........................................................................ 5-19  
Thermal Fan Enable/Disable .................................................................... 5-20  
PCI-X Bus Speed Settings ....................................................................... 5-20  
Speaker Enable/Disable ........................................................................... 5-20  
5-10 Onboard Indicators .......................................................................................... 5-20  
LAN1/LAN2 LEDs ................................................................................... 5-20  
5-11 Floppy/Hard Drive and SCSI Connections .................................................... 5-21  
Floppy Connector .................................................................................... 5-21  
IDE Connectors ....................................................................................... 5-22  
Ultra160 SCSI Connectors ....................................................................... 5-22  
5-12 Installing Software Dirvers .............................................................................. 5-23  
Chapter 6: Advanced Chassis Setup  
6-1 Static-Sensitive Devices ................................................................................ 6-1  
6-2 Control Panel .................................................................................................... 6-2  
6-3 System Fans .................................................................................................... 6-3  
System Fan Failure.................................................................................. 6-3  
Replacing System Cooling Fans ............................................................ 6-3  
6-4 Drive Bay Installation/Removal ...................................................................... 6-4  
Accessing the Drive Bays ..................................................................... 6-4  
SCSI Drive Installation ............................................................................. 6-5  
CD-ROM and Floppy Drive Installation ................................................. 6-7  
6-5 Power Supply .................................................................................................. 6-8  
Power Supply Failure ............................................................................. 6-8  
Removing/Replacing the Power Supply ............................................... 6-8  
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Table of Contents  
Chapter 7: BIOS  
7-1 Introduction ....................................................................................................... 7-1  
7-2 Running Setup .................................................................................................. 7-2  
7-3 Main BIOS Setup.............................................................................................. 7-2  
The Main BIOS Setup Menu ......................................................................7-3  
7-4 Advanced BIOS Setup ......................................................................................7-4  
7-5 Security ............................................................................................................ 7-13  
7-6 Power ................................................................................................................ 7-15  
7-7 Boot................................................................................................................... 7-17  
7-8 PIR ....................................................................................................................7-19  
7-9 Exit ....................................................................................................................7-21  
Appendices:  
Appendix A: PhoenixBIOS POST Messages ....................................................... A-1  
Appendix B: PhoenixBIOS Post Codes..................................................................B-1  
Appendix C: Supero Doctor III .................................................................................. C-1  
Appendix D: System Specifications ........................................................................ D-1  
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SUPERSERVER 6012P-6 User's Manual  
Notes  
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Chapter 1: Introduction  
Chapter 1  
Introduction to the SuperServer 6012P-6  
1-1  
Overview  
The Supermicro SuperServer 6012P-6 is a high-end dual processor, 1U  
rackmount server that features some of the most advanced technology  
currently available. The SuperServer 6012P-6 is comprised of two main  
subsystems: the SC812S 1U rackmount chassis and the P4DPR-6GM+ dual  
Xeon processor mainboard. Please refer to our web site for information on  
operating systems that have been certified for use with the SuperServer 6012P-  
6. (www.supermicro.com)  
In addition to the mainboard and chassis, various hardware components  
may have been included with your SuperServer 6012P-6, as listed below:  
!
Up to two (2) 603-pin Intel Xeon 512K L2 cache processors of up to  
3 GHz (optional)  
!
!
!
!
!
!
!
!
Two (2) CPU passive heatsinks (SNK-0039)  
Up to 12 GB ECC registered DDR-200 SDRAM main memory (optional)  
One (1) 3.5" slim floppy drive  
One (1) slim CD-ROM drive  
One "butterfly" riser card (CSE-RR1U-XLP)  
One (1) SCA SAF-TE compliant SCSI backplane  
Three (3) SCA 1-inch high SCSI drive carriers  
SCSI Accessories  
One (1) internal 68-pin Ultra160 SCSI cable for SCA SCSI backplane  
One (1) set of SCSI driver diskettes  
One (1) SCSI manual  
1-1  
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!
!
Rackmount hardware (with screws):  
Two (2) rack rail assemblies  
Six (6) brackets for mounting the rack rails to a rack/telco rack  
One (1) CD-ROM containing drivers and utilities:  
Intel LANDesk Client Manager  
ATI Rage XL 8MB PCI graphics controller driver  
LAN driver  
SCSI driver  
!
SuperServer 6012P-6 User's Manual  
1-2 Mainboard Features  
At the heart of the SuperServer 6012P-6 lies the P4DPR-6GM+, a dual Intel Xeon  
processor motherboard designed to provide maximum performance. Below  
are the main features of the P4DPR-6GM+.  
Chipset  
The P4DPR-6GM+ is based on Intel's E7500 chipset, which is a high-perfor-  
mance core logic chipset designed for dual-processor servers (See Figure 1-1).  
The E7500 chipset consists of four major components: the Memory Controller  
Hub (MCH), the I/O Controller Hub 3 (ICH3), the PCI-X 64-bit Hub 2.0 (P64H2) and  
the 82808AA Host Channel Adapter (VxB).  
The MCH has four hub interfaces, one to communicate with the ICH3 and three  
for high-speed I/O communications. The MCH employs a 144-bit wide memory  
bus for a PC1600 (DDR-200) memory interface, which provides a total bandwidth  
of 3.2 GB/s. The ICH3 interface is a 266 MB/sec point-to-point connection using  
an 8-bit wide, 66 MHz base clock at a 4x data transfer rate. The P64H2 interface  
is a 1 GB/s point-to-point connection using a 16-bit wide, 66 MHz base clock at  
a 8x data transfer rate.  
The ICH3 I/O Controller Hub provides various integrated functions, including a  
two-channel UDMA100 bus master IDE controller, USB host controllers, an in-  
tegrated LAN controller, a System Management Bus controller and an  
AC'97 compliant interface.  
The P64H2 PCI-X Hub provides a 16-bit connection to the MCH for high-  
performance IO capability and the 64-bit PCI-X interface.  
1-2  
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Chapter 1: Introduction  
Processors  
The P4DPR-6GM+ supports single or dual Intel Xeon 512K L2 cache processors  
of up to 3 GHz at a 400 MHz FSB. Please refer to the support section of our  
web site for  
a
complete listing of supported processors (http://  
www.supermicro.com/TechSupport.htm).  
Memory  
The P4DPR-6GM+ has 4 184-pin, 25 degree DIMM slots that can support up to  
8 GB of registered ECC DDR-200 DDR SDRAM. Module sizes of 128 MB, 256  
MB, 512 MB, 1 GB and 2 GB may be used to populate the DIMM slots. (DDR-  
266 is also supported, but only at a speed of 200 MHz.)  
Onboard SCSI  
Onboard SCSI is provided with an Adaptec AIC-7899W SCSI controller chip,  
which supports dual channel, Ultra160 SCSI at a burst throughput rate of  
160 MB/sec. The P4DPR-6GM+ provides two SCSI ports. A QLogic GEM318  
controller is used for the SAF-TE compliant SCSI backpanel.  
PCI Expansion Slots  
The P4DPR-6GM+ has one 64-bit, 133 MHz PCI-X slot and one 64-bit, 66 MHz  
PCI slot. A "butterfly" riser card is included with the server. This riser card fits  
into the 133 MHz PCI-X slot and was designed specially for the SC812S  
chassis to support the use of one standard PCI card and one low profile  
(half-height, half-length) PCI card. Several jumpers on the motherboard are  
used to change the speeds of these slots if needed (see Chapter 5).  
ATI Graphics Controller  
The P4DPR-6GM+ features an integrated ATI video controller based on the Rage  
XL graphics chip. Rage XL fully supports sideband addressing and AGP  
texturing. This onboard graphics package can provide a bandwidth of up to  
512 MB/sec over a 32-bit graphics memory bus.  
1-3  
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Onboard Controllers/Ports  
The P4DPR-6GM+ includes one floppy drive controller and two onboard IDE  
controllers, which support up to four hard drives or ATAPI devices. Backpanel  
I/O ports include one COM port, two USB ports, PS/2 mouse and keyboard ports,  
a video (monitor) port, an external SCSI port, one Intel 82550 Fast Ethernet (NIC)  
controller and one Intel Gigabit Ethernet controller for two LAN ports.  
Other Features  
Other onboard features are included to promote system health. These in-  
clude various voltage monitors, two CPU temperature sensors, four fan  
speed sensors, a chassis intrusion header, auto-switching voltage regula-  
tors, chassis and CPU overheat sensors, virus protection and BIOS rescue.  
Figure 1-1. E7500 Chipset: System Block Diagram  
Processor 1  
Processor 0  
ATA 100  
Ports  
400 MHz System Bus  
ATI Graphics  
USB Ports  
SMBus  
SCSI  
ICH3-S  
P64H2  
MCH  
SXB Slot, Gb LAN  
Super IO  
10/100 LAN  
Controller  
200 MHz Memory Bus  
2-Channel  
DDR SDRAM  
1-4  
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Chapter 1: Introduction  
1-3 Server Chassis Features  
The SC812S is Supermicro's second-generation 1U chassis and features three  
hard drive bays, two front side USB ports and a revolutionary cooling design that  
can keep today's most powerful processors running well below their temperature  
thresholds. The following is a general outline of the main features of the SC812S  
chassis.  
System Power  
When configured as a SuperServer 6012P-6, the SC812S chassis includes a  
400W cold-swap power supply.  
SCSI Subsystem  
The SCSI subsystem supports three 80-pin SCA Ultra160 SCSI hard drives. (Any  
standard 1" drives are supported. SCA = Single Connection Attachment.) The  
SCSI drives are connected to an SCA backplane that provides power, bus termi-  
nation and configuration settings. The SCSI drives are also hot-swap units.  
Control Panel  
The SC812S control panel provides important system monitoring and control  
information. LEDs indicate power on, network activity, hard disk drive ac-  
tivity and system overheat conditions. Also present are a main power button, a  
system reset button and an NMI (non-maskable interrupt) button.  
I/O Backplane  
The SC812S is a 1U rackmount chassis. Its I/O backplane provides one full-  
height full-length and one half-height half-length PCI slots, one COM port (the  
other is internal), one VGA port, two USB ports, PS/2 mouse and keyboard ports  
and two Ethernet (LAN) ports and an external SCSI port. (See Figure 1-2.)  
1-5  
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Keyboard Port Mouse Port  
Low Profile PCI Slot  
Standard PCI Slot  
USB Ports COM1 Port Ethernet Ports VGA Port Ext. SCSI Port  
Figure 1-2. I/O Backplane  
Cooling System  
The SC812S chassis' revolutionary cooling design has been optimized to provide  
sufficient cooling for dual Xeon configurations. The SC812S includes two heavy  
duty 10-cm blower fans located in the middle of the chassis. These fans operate  
continuously at full rpm. If they break down, the ambient air temperature inside  
the chassis will rise and activate an overheat LED.  
1-6  
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Chapter 1: Introduction  
1-4 Contacting Supermicro  
Headquarters  
Address:  
SuperMicro Computer, Inc.  
980 Rock Ave.  
San Jose, CA 95131 U.S.A.  
+1 (408) 503-8000  
+1 (408) 503-8008  
Tel:  
Fax:  
E-mail:  
[email protected] (General Information)  
[email protected] (Technical Support)  
www.supermicro.com  
Web site:  
European Office  
Address:  
SuperMicro Computer B.V.  
Het Sterrenbeeld 28, 5215 ML,  
's-Hertogenbosch, The Netherlands  
+31 (0) 73-6400390  
Tel:  
Fax:  
+31 (0) 73-6416525  
E-mail:  
[email protected] (General Information)  
[email protected] (Technical Support)  
[email protected] (Customer Support)  
Asia-Pacific  
Address:  
SuperMicro Computer Taiwan  
3F, #753 Chung-Cheng Road  
Chung-Ho City, Taipei Hsien, Taiwan, R.O.C.  
+886-(2) 8228-1366  
Tel:  
Fax:  
+886-(2) 8221-2790  
www :  
www.supermicro.com.tw  
Technical Support:  
Email:  
Tel :  
886-2-8228-1366, ext.132 or 139  
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Notes  
1-8  
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Chapter 2: Server Installation  
Chapter 2  
Server Installation  
2-1 Overview  
This chapter provides a quick setup checklist to get your SuperServer  
6012P-6 up and running. Following these steps in the order given should  
enable you to have the system operational within a minimum amount of time.  
This quick setup assumes that your SuperServer 6012P-6 system has come  
to you with the processors and memory preinstalled. If your system is not  
already fully integrated with a motherboard, processors, system memory  
etc., please turn to the chapter or section noted in each step for details on  
installing specific components.  
2-2 Unpacking the SuperServer 6012P-6  
You should inspect the box the SuperServer 6012P-6 was shipped in and  
note if it was damaged in any way. If the server itself shows damage you  
should file a damage claim with the carrier who delivered it.  
Decide on a suitable location for the rack unit that will hold the SuperServer  
6012P-6. It should be situated in a clean, dust-free area that is well venti-  
lated. Avoid areas where heat, electrical noise and electromagnetic fields  
are generated. You will also need it placed near a grounded power outlet.  
Read the Rack and Server Precautions in the next section.  
2-3 Preparing for Setup  
The box the SuperServer 6012P-6 was shipped in should include two sets  
of rail assemblies, two rail mounting brackets and the mounting screws you  
will need to install the system into the rack. Follow the steps in the order  
given to complete the installation process in a minimum amount of time.  
Please read this section in its entirety before you begin the installation  
procedure outlined in the sections that follow.  
2-1  
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Choosing a Setup Location:  
- Leave enough clearance in front of the rack to enable you to open  
the front door completely (~25 inches).  
- Leave approximately 30 inches of clearance in the back of the rack  
to allow for sufficient airflow and ease in servicing.  
Warnings and Precautions!  
!
!
Rack Precautions:  
- Ensure that the leveling jacks on the bottom of the rack are fully  
extended to the floor with the full weight of the rack resting on them.  
- In single rack installation, stabilizers should be attached to the rack.  
- In multiple rack installations, the racks should be coupled together.  
- Always make sure the rack is stable before extending a component  
from the rack.  
- You should extend only one component at a time - extending two or  
more simultaneously may cause the rack to become unstable.  
Server Precautions:  
- Review the electrical and general safety precautions in Chapter 4.  
- Determine the placement of each component in the rack before you  
install the rails.  
- Install the heaviest server components on the bottom of the rack  
first, and then work up.  
- Use a regulating uninterruptible power supply (UPS) to protect the  
server from power surges, voltage spikes and to keep your  
system operating in case of a power failure.  
- Allow the hot plug SCSI drives and power supply units to cool before  
touching them.  
- Always keep the rack's front door and all panels and components on  
the servers closed when not servicing to maintain proper cooling.  
2-2  
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Chapter 2: Server Installation  
2-4 Installing the SuperServer 6012P-6 into a Rack  
This section provides information on installing the SuperServer 6012P-6 into  
a rack unit. If the 6012P-6 has already been mounted into a rack, you can  
skip ahead to Sections 2-5 and 2-6. There are a variety of rack units on  
the market, which may mean the assembly procedure will differ slightly.  
The following is a guideline for installing the 6012P-6 into a rack with the  
rack rails provided. You should also refer to the installation instructions  
that came with the rack unit you are using.  
Identifying the Sections of the Rack Rails:  
You should have received two rack rail assemblies with the SuperServer  
6012P-6. Each of these assemblies consist of three sections: an inner  
fixed chassis rail that secures to the 6012P-6 (A) and an outer fixed rack  
rail that secures directly to the rack itself (B). A sliding rail guide sand-  
wiched between the two should remain attached to the fixed rack rail.  
(See Figure 2-1.) The A and B rails must be detached from each other to  
install.  
To remove the fixed chassis rail (A), pull it out as far as possible - you  
should hear a "click" sound as a locking tab emerges from inside the rail  
assembly and locks the inner rail. Then depress the locking tab to pull  
the inner rail completely out. Do this for both the left and right side rack  
rail assemblies.  
Mounting Holes  
B
Locking Tab  
A
Figure 2-1. Identifying the Sections of the Rack Rails  
2-3  
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Installing the Chassis Rails:  
Position the fixed chassis rail sections you just removed along the side of  
the 6012P-6 making sure the screw holes line up. Note that these two rails  
are left/right specific. Screw the rail securely to the side of the chassis  
(see Figure 2-2). Repeat this procedure for the other rail on the other side  
of the chassis. You will also need to attach the rail brackets when installng  
into a telco rack.  
Locking Tabs: As you have seen, both chassis rails have a locking tab,  
which serves two functions. The first is to lock the server into place  
when installed and pushed fully into the rack, which is its normal position.  
Secondly, these tabs also lock the server in place when fully extended  
from the rack. This prevents the server from coming completely out of  
the rack when you pull it out for servicing.  
Figure 2-2. Installing Chassis Rails  
Installing the Rack Rails:  
Determine where you want to place the SuperServer 6012P-6 in the rack.  
(See Rack and Server Precautions in Section 2-3.) Position the fixed rack  
rail/sliding rail guide assemblies at the desired location in the rack, keeping  
the sliding rail guide facing the inside of the rack. Screw the assembly  
securely to the rack using the brackets provided. Attach the other assem-  
2-4  
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Chapter 2: Server Installation  
bly to the other side of the rack, making sure both are at the exact same height  
and with the rail guides facing inward.  
Installing the Server into the Rack:  
You should now have rails attached to both the chassis and the rack  
unit. The next step is to install the server into the rack. Do this by  
lining up the rear of the chassis rails with the front of the rack rails.  
Slide the chassis rails into the rack rails, keeping the pressure even on  
both sides (you may have to depress the locking tabs when inserting).  
See Figure 2-3.  
When the server has been pushed completely into the rack, you should  
hear the locking tabs "click". Finish by inserting and tightening the  
thumbscrews that hold the front of the server to the rack.  
Figure 2-3. Installing the Server into a Rack  
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Installing the Server into a Telco Rack:  
If you are installing the SuperServer 6012P-6 into a Telco type rack, follow  
the directions given on the previous pages for rack installation. The only  
difference in the installation procedure will be the positioning of the rack  
brackets to the rack. They should be spaced apart just enough to  
accommodate the width of the telco rack.  
Figure 2-4.  
Installing the Server into a Telco Rack  
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Chapter 2: Server Installation  
2-5 Checking the Motherboard Setup  
After you install the 6012P-6 in the rack, you will need to open the unit to  
make sure the motherboard is properly installed and all the connections  
have been made.  
1. Accessing the inside of the 6012P-6 (see Figure 2-5):  
First, release the retention screws that secure the unit to the rack.  
Grasp the two handles on either side and pull the unit straight out until it  
locks (you will hear a "click"). Next, depress the two buttons on the top  
of the chassis to release the top cover. There is a large rectangular  
recess in the middle front of the top cover to help you push the cover  
away from you until it stops. You can then lift the top cover from the  
chassis to gain full access to the inside of the server.  
2. Check the CPUs (processors):  
You should have one or two processors already installed into the  
system board. Each processor needs its own heatsink. See Chapter  
5 for instructions on processor and heatsink installation.  
3. Verify the proper CPU clock ratio setting:  
If the CPU speed is not automatically detected you will need to set the  
correct speed with the BIOS Setup utility. See the CPU Speed and Fre-  
quency Ratio settings in BIOS (Chapter 7) for setting the proper CPU  
speed.  
4. Check the system memory:  
Your 6012P-6 server system may have come with system memory al-  
ready installed. Make sure all DIMMs are fully seated in their slots. For  
details on adding system memory, refer to Chapter 5.  
5. Installing add-on cards:  
If desired, you can install add-on cards to the system. See Chapter 5 for  
details on installing PCI add-on cards.  
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Figure 2-5. Accessing the Inside of the SuperServer 6012P-6  
6. Check all cable connections and airflow:  
Make sure all power and data cables are properly connected and not  
blocking the chassis airflow. See Chapter 5 for details on cable connec-  
tions. Also, check the air seals for damage. The air seals are located  
under the blower fan and beneath the frame cross section that sepa-  
rates the drive bay area from the motherboard area of the chassis.  
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Chapter 2: Server Installation  
2-6 Checking the Drive Bay Setup  
Next, you should check to make sure the peripheral drives and the SCSI  
drives and SCA backplane have been properly installed and all connections  
have been made.  
1. Accessing the drive bays:  
All drives are accessable from the front of the server. For servicing the  
CD-ROM and floppy drives, you will need to remove the top chassis  
cover. The SCSI disk drives can be installed and removed from the front  
of the chassis without removing the top chassis cover.  
2. CD-ROM and floppy disk drives:  
A slim CD-ROM and a floppy drive should be preinstalled in your server.  
Refer to Chapter 6 if you need to reinstall a CD-ROM and/or floppy disk  
drive to the system.  
3. Check the SCSI disk drives:  
Depending upon your system's configuration, your system may have one  
or more drives already installed. If you need to install SCSI drives, please  
refer to Chapter 6.  
4. Check the airflow:  
Airflow is provided by two heavy duty 10-cm blower fans. The system  
component layout was carefully designed to direct sufficient cooling air-  
flow to the components that generate the most heat. Note that all power  
and data cables have been routed in such a way that they do not block  
the airflow generated by the fans.  
5. Supplying power to the system:  
The last thing you must do is to provide input power to the system. Plug  
the power cord from the power supply unit into a high-quality power  
strip that offers protection from electrical noise and power surges. It is  
recommended that you use an uninterruptible power supply (UPS).  
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Notes  
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Chapter 3: System Interface  
Chapter 3  
System Interface  
3-1  
Overview  
There are several LEDs on the control panel as well as others on the SCSI  
drive carriers to keep you constantly informed of the overall status of the  
system as well as the activity and health of specific components. There  
are also two buttons on the chassis control panel and an on/off switch on  
the power supply.  
3-2  
Control Panel Buttons  
There are three push-button buttons located on the front of the chassis.  
These are (in order from left to right) a reset button, an MNI (non-maskable  
interface) button and a power on/off button.  
!
RESET: Use the reset button to reboot the system.  
!
NMI: NMI stands for "non-maskable interrupt". Pressing this button  
issues a non-maskable interrupt to force the server into a halt state. This is  
used for diagnostic purposes, and allows you to perform a memory down-  
load to determine the cause of a problem.  
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!
POWER: This is the main power button, which is used to apply or turn  
off the main system power. Turning off system power with this button  
removes the main power but keeps standby power supplied to the system.  
3-3  
Control Panel LEDs  
The control panel located on the front of the SC812-SP chassis has five  
LEDs. These LEDs provide you with critical information related to different  
parts of the system. This section explains what each LED indicates when  
illuminated and any corrective action you may need to take.  
!
Overheat: Indicates an overheat condition in the chassis. This may  
be caused by cables obstructing the airflow in the system or the ambient  
room temperature being too warm. You should also check to make sure  
that the chassis cover is installed and that all fans are present and operat-  
ing normally. Verify that the heatsinks are installed properly (see Chapter  
5). Finally, check the air seals for damage. The air seals are vertical  
pieces located to the left and right of the fans and against the front side of  
the chassis frame cross section that separates the drive bay area from the  
motherboard area of the chassis. There is also a small air seal positioned  
between the two fans.  
NIC2  
!
NIC2: Indicates network activity on LAN2 when flashing.  
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Chapter 3: System Interface  
NIC1  
!
NIC1: Indicates network activity on LAN1 when flashing.  
!
HDD: Indicates IDE channel activity. On the SuperServer 6012P-6,  
this LED indicates CD-ROM drive activity when flashing.  
!
Power: Indicates power is being supplied to the system's power  
supply units. This LED should normally be illuminated when the system is  
operating.  
3-4  
SCSI Drive Carrier LEDs  
Each SCSI drive carrier has two LEDs.  
!
Green: When illuminated, the green LED on the front of a SCSI drive  
carrier indicates drive activity. A connection to the SCSI SCA backplane  
enables this LED to blink on and off when that particular drive is being  
accessed.  
!
Red: A SAF-TE compliant backplane (standard on the 6012P-6) acti-  
vates the red LED, which indicates a drive failure. If one of the SCSI drives  
fail, you should be notified by your system management software. Please  
refer to Chapter 6 for instructions on replacing failed SCSI drives.  
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3-5  
Motherboard LEDs  
There are several LEDs on the motherboard. LE1, located near the CPU1  
chassis fan connector, indicates that system power is present on the  
motherboard when illuminated. DA3 and DA4 are located near the AIC-7899  
SCSI controller chip. These LEDs indicate activity on each of the SCSI  
channels when flashing. DL2 is located near the JD4 jumper and indicates  
connectivity to the LAN when illluminated.  
3-4  
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Chapter 4: System Safety  
Chapter 4  
System Safety  
4-1 Electrical Safety Precautions  
!
Basic electrical safety precautions should be followed to protect  
yourself from harm and the SuperServer 6012P-6 from damage:  
! Be aware of the locations of the power on/off switch on the chassis as  
well as the room's emergency power-off switch, disconnection switch or  
electrical outlet. If an electrical accident occurs, you can then quickly  
remove power from the system.  
! Do not work alone when working with high voltage components.  
! Power should always be disconnected from the system when removing or  
installing main system components, such as the motherboard, memory  
modules and the CD-ROM and floppy drives. When disconnecting  
power, you should first power down the system with the operating  
system and then unplug the power cords of all the power supply units  
in the system.  
! When working around exposed electrical circuits, another person who is  
familiar with the power-off controls should be nearby to switch off the  
power if necessary.  
! Use only one hand when working with powered-on electrical equipment.  
This is to avoid making a complete circuit, which will cause electrical  
shock. Use extreme caution when using metal tools, which can easily  
damage any electrical components or circuit boards they come into  
contact with.  
! Do not use mats designed to decrease electrostatic discharge as  
protection from electrical shock. Instead, use rubber mats that have  
been specifically designed as electrical insulators.  
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! The power supply power cord must include a grounding plug and must be  
plugged into grounded electrical outlets.  
! Motherboard Battery: CAUTION - There is a danger of explosion if the  
onboard battery is installed upside down, which will reverse its  
polarities. On the P4DPR-6GM+, the positive side should be facing up.  
This battery must be replaced only with the same or an equivalent type  
recommended by the manufacturer. Dispose of used batteries  
according to the manufacturer's instructions.  
! CD-ROM Laser: CAUTION - this server may have come equipped with a  
CD-ROM drive. To prevent direct exposure to the laser beam and  
hazardous radiation exposure, do not open the enclosure or use the  
unit in any unconventional way.  
4-2 General Safety Precautions  
!
Follow these rules to ensure general safety:  
! Keep the area around the SuperServer 6012P-6 clean and free of clutter.  
! The SuperServer 6012P-6 weighs approximately 30 lbs (13.6 kg) when  
fully loaded. When lifting the system, two people at either end should  
lift slowly with their feet spread out to distribute the weight. Always  
keep your back straight and lift with your legs.  
! Place the chassis top cover and any system components that have been  
removed away from the system or on a table so that they won't  
accidentally be stepped on.  
! While working on the system, do not wear loose clothing such as  
neckties and unbuttoned shirt sleeves, which can come into contact  
with electrical circuits or be pulled into a cooling fan.  
! Remove any jewelry or metal objects from your body, which are excellent  
metal conductors that can create short circuits and harm you if they  
come into contact with printed circuit boards or areas where power is  
present.  
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Chapter 4: System Safety  
! After accessing the inside of the system, close the system back up and  
secure it to the rack unit with the retention screws after ensuring that  
all connections have been made.  
4-3 ESD Precautions  
!
Electrostatic discharge (ESD) is generated by two objects with different  
electrical charges coming into contact with each other. An electrical  
discharge is created to neutralize this difference, which can damage  
electronic components and printed circuit boards. The following measures  
are generally sufficient to neutralize this difference before contact is made  
to protect your equipment from ESD:  
! Use a grounded wrist strap designed to prevent static discharge.  
! Keep all components and printed circuit boards (PCBs) in their  
antistatic bags until ready for use.  
! Touch a grounded metal object before removing the board from the  
antistatic bag.  
! Do not let components or PCBs come into contact with your clothing,  
which may retain a charge even if you are wearing a wrist strap.  
! Handle a board by its edges only; do not touch its components,  
peripheral chips, memory modules or 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.  
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4-4 Operating Precautions  
!
Care must be taken to assure that the chassis cover is in place when the  
6012P-6 is operating to assure proper cooling. Out of warranty damage to  
the 6012P-6 system can occur if this practice is not strictly followed.  
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Chapter 5: Advanced Motherboard Setup  
Chapter 5  
Advanced Motherboard Setup  
This chapter covers the steps required to install processors and heatsinks to the  
P4DPR-6GM+ motherboard, connect the data and power cables and install add-  
on cards. All motherboard jumpers and connections are also described.  
A
layout and quick reference chart are also included in this chapter. Remember  
to close the chassis completely when you have finished working on the  
motherboard to protect and cool the system sufficiently.  
5-1 Handling the P4DPR-6GM+ Motherboard  
Static electrical discharge can damage electronic components. To prevent  
damage to printed circuit boards, it is important to handle them very care-  
fully (see Chapter 4). Also note that the size and weight of the mother-  
board can cause it to bend if handled improperly, which may result in dam-  
age. To prevent the motherboard from bending, keep one hand under the  
center of the board to support it when handling. The following measures  
are generally sufficient to protect your equipment from static discharge.  
Precautions  
Use a grounded wrist strap designed to prevent static discharge.  
Touch a grounded metal object before removing any board from its anti-  
static bag.  
Handle a board by its edges only; do not touch its components, periph-  
eral chips, memory modules or gold contacts.  
When handling chips or modules, avoid touching their pins.  
Put the motherboard, add-on cards and peripherals back into their anti-  
static bags when not in use.  
Unpacking  
The motherboard is shipped in antistatic packaging to avoid static damage.  
When unpacking the board, make sure the person handling it is static pro-  
tected.  
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5-2 PGA Processor and Heatsink Installation  
When handling the processor package, avoid placing direct  
pressure on the label area of the fan. Also, do not place the  
motherboard on a conductive surface, which can damage the  
BIOS battery and prevent the system from booting up.  
!
IMPORTANT: Always connect the power cord last and always remove it before  
adding, removing or changing any hardware components. Make sure that you  
install the processor into the CPU socket before you install the heatsink. The  
P4DPR-6GM+ can support either one or two Xeon 512K L2 cache processors of  
up to 3 GHz. If installing one processor only, install it into CPU socket #1.  
1. Lift the lever on the CPU socket.  
Lift the lever completely or you will  
damage the CPU socket when  
power is applied. (Install a  
processor into CPU #1 socket  
first.)  
Socket lever  
2. Install the CPU in the socket.  
Make sure that pin 1 of the CPU is  
seated on pin 1 of the socket (both  
corners are marked with a  
Pin 1  
triangle). When using only one  
CPU, install it into CPU socket #1  
(CPU socket #2 is automatically  
disabled if only one CPU is used).  
3. Press the lever down until you  
hear it *click* into the locked  
position. See Figure 5-1 for  
pictures of the 603-pin CPU socket  
before and after the processor is  
installed.  
Socket lever in  
locked position  
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Chapter 5: Advanced Motherboard Setup  
4. Apply the proper amount of thermal compound to the CPU die and place  
the heatsink on top of the CPU. Make sure the heatsink sits completely  
flat on the CPU. If it's not completely flat, the space between the two will  
degrade the heat dissipation function of the heatsink, which may cause  
the processor to overheat.  
5. Secure the heatsink by locking the retention clips into their proper  
position. When correctly installed, the retention clips should *click* into  
place and the three black tabs on the CPU retention pieces should  
protrude fully through the corresponding holes on the retention clips. See  
Figure 5-2 for a diagram of the heatsink installation procedure.  
6. If installing two processors, repeat these steps to install the second  
processor in the CPU #2 slot.  
Figure 5-1. PGA Socket: Empty and with Processor Installed  
Warning! Make sure you lift the lever completely when  
installing the CPU. If the lever is only partly raised, damage  
!
to the socket or CPU may result.  
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Figure 5-2. Heatsink Installation  
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Chapter 5: Advanced Motherboard Setup  
5-3 Connecting Cables  
Now that the processors are installed, the next step is to connect the  
cables to the board. These include the data (ribbon) cables for the periph-  
erals and control panel and the power cables.  
Connecting Data Cables  
The ribbon cables used to transfer data from the peripheral devices have  
been carefully routed in preconfigured systems to prevent them from block-  
ing the flow of cooling air that moves through the system from front to back.  
If you need to disconnect any of these cables, you should take care to keep  
them routed as they were originally after reconnecting them (make sure the  
red wires connect to the pin 1 locations). If you are configuring the sys-  
tem, keep the airflow in mind when routing the cables. The following data  
cables (with their motherboard connector locations noted) should be con-  
nected. See the motherboard layout figure in this chapter for connector  
locations.  
!
!
!
!
IDE Device Cables (J2A and J3A)  
Floppy Drive Cable (JP7)  
Ultra 160 LVD SCSI Cables (JA1 and JA2)  
Control Panel Cable (JF2, see next page)  
Connecting Power Cables  
The P4DPR-6GM+ has a 20-pin primary power supply connector designated  
"ATX Power" for connection to the ATX power supply. Connect the  
appropriate connector from the power supply to the "ATX Power"  
connector to supply power to the motherboard. See the Connector  
Definitions section in this chapter for power connector pin definitions.  
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Connecting the Control Panel  
JF2 contains header pins for various front control panel connectors. See  
Figure 5-3 for the pin locations of the various front control panel buttons  
and LED indicators. Please note that even and odd numbered pins are on  
opposite sides of each header.  
All JF2 wires have been bundled into single ribbon cable to simplify their  
connection. Make sure the red wire plugs into pin 1 as marked on the  
board. The other end connects to the Control Panel printed circuit board,  
located just behind the system status LEDs in the chassis.  
See the Connector Definitions section in this chapter for details and pin  
descriptions of JF2.  
Figure 5-3. P4DPR-6GM+ Front Control Panel Header Pins  
20  
19  
NMI  
X
Ground  
X
Vcc  
Power LED  
HDD LED  
Vcc  
Vcc  
NIC1 LED  
Vcc  
NIC2 LED  
Vcc  
Overheat LED  
Power Fail Button  
Vcc  
Reset  
Reset Button  
Power Button  
Ground  
Ground  
Pwr  
2
1
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Chapter 5: Advanced Motherboard Setup  
5-4 I/O Ports  
The I/O ports are color coded in conformance with the PC 99 specification.  
See Figure 5-4 below for the colors and locations of the various I/O ports.  
Figure 5-4. P4DPR-6GM+ Rear Panel I/O Ports  
5-5 Installing Memory  
Note: Check the Supermicro web site for recommended memory modules:  
http://www.supermicro.com/TECHSUPPORT/FAQs/Memory_vendors.htm  
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 (see step 1).  
DIMM Installation (See Figure 5-5)  
1. Insert the desired number of DIMMs into the memory slots, starting with  
Bank 1 (DIMM#1A, DIMM#1B). The memory scheme is interleaved so  
you must install two modules at a time, beginning with Bank 1, then  
Bank 2.  
2. Insert each DIMM module into its slot. Pay attention to the notch along  
the bottom of the module to prevent inserting the DIMM module incor-  
rectly.  
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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4. When installing modules into the two Bank 2 slots, you will need to  
remove the power supply due to space constraints. Memory slots are  
positioned at a 25 degree angle to fit full-sized memory modules into a  
1U chassis.  
Memory Support  
The P4DPR-6GM+ only supports ECC registered DDR-200 (PC1600) SDRAM  
memory. DDR-266 (PC2100) SDRAM is supported but only at 200 MHz (DDR-  
200 speed). PC100/133 SDRAM is not supported. You should not mix DIMMs  
of different sizes and speeds.  
See Figures 5-5a and 5-5b for installing and removing memory modules.  
Figure 5-5a. Side View of DIMM Installation into Slot  
To Install: Insert module vertically and press down until it snaps into  
place. Pay attention to the bottom notch.  
To Remove: Use your thumbs to gently push each release tab outward  
to free the DIMM from the slot.  
Figure 5-5b. Top View of DIMM Slot  
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Chapter 5: Advanced Motherboard Setup  
5-6 Adding PCI Cards  
1.  
PCI slots:  
The P4DPR-6GM+ has one 64-bit 133 MHz PCI-X slot for a full-length  
(standard) PCI card and one slim 64-bit 66 MHz PCI slot. The 64-bit 133  
MHz PCI-X slot should have a butterfly riser card installed, which can accept  
one standard sized PCI card and one low profile PCI card (see Figures 5-6a  
and 5-6b).  
2.  
PCI card installation:  
Before installing a PCI add-on card, see step 1, above. Begin by swing-  
ing the release tab on the I/O backpanel shield out to the left for the PCI  
slot. Insert the PCI card into the correct slot on the butterfly riser card  
(depending on whether it is a standard or low-profile card), pushing  
down with your thumbs evenly on both sides of the card. Finish by  
pushing the release tab back to its original (locked) position. Follow this  
procedure when adding a card to either slot.  
Standard PCI  
Expansion Card  
Low Profile PCI  
Expansion Card  
Standard PCI and Low Profile PCI Expansion Card Comparison  
Figure 5-6a Low Profile vs. Standard PCI Card Form Factor  
Figure 5-6b Low Profile PCI Card Dimensions  
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5-7 Motherboard Layout  
Figure 5-7. SUPER P4DPR-6GM+ Layout  
(not drawn to scale)  
J15  
J28  
Keyboard  
ATX POWER  
JP8  
J29 Mouse  
USB0/1  
DIMM #2A  
CPU1  
BANK 2  
BANK 1  
DIMM #2B  
DIMM #1A  
DIMM #1B  
COM1  
CPU1 Chassis FAN  
JF2  
CPU2 Chassis FAN  
CPU2  
MCH  
J2A J3A  
PCIX #2  
JP7  
LAN1  
LAN2  
PCIX #1  
VXB  
OHLED  
JP15  
JP14  
JP13  
JD3  
IPMB  
SMB  
SCSI RAID  
JP3  
JP27  
JP4  
IPMI  
P64H2  
VGA  
Rage XL  
JP12  
JP11  
JP10  
JA1  
JPA2  
BATTERY  
ICH3  
JP35  
Speaker  
AIC-7899  
BIOS  
JPA1  
JD4  
JP22  
JA2  
CHS  
FAN3  
COM2  
WOR WOL  
SUPER ® P4DPR-6GM+  
JD1  
FPUSB0,1/SLP/JBT1/WD/IR/CIR/USB2/PWRLED/Speaker/JL1  
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Chapter 5: Advanced Motherboard Setup  
P4DPR-6GM+ Quick Reference  
Jumper  
JBT1  
JD1  
Description  
CMOS Clear  
Speaker Enable (Pins 6-7)  
Default Setting  
Pins 1-2 (Normal)  
Closed (Enabled)  
JPA1/JPA2 SCSI Channel A/B Termination Open (Terminated)  
JP3/JD4  
JP4  
LAN1/LAN2 Enable/Disable  
VGA Enable/Disable  
Pins 1-2 (Enabled)  
Pins 1-2 (Enabled)  
See Section 5-9  
JP10-JP15 PCI-X Bus Speed Setting  
JP22  
JP37/WD  
JP38  
SCSI Enable/Disable  
Pins 1-2 (Enabled)  
Open (Disabled)  
Open (Disabled)  
Closed (Chassis)  
Watchdog Enable/Disable  
Thermal Fan Enable/Disable  
Chassis/Overheat Fan Select  
JP48  
Connector  
Description  
ATX POWER  
COM1/COM2  
CPU1/CPU2  
CPU CHS FAN  
Primary ATX Power Connector  
COM1/COM2 Serial Port Connector  
CPU 1 and CPU2 Sockets  
CPU 1 & 2 Chassis Fan Headers  
DIMM#1A-DIMM#2B Memory (RAM) Slots  
JA1  
Ultra160 LVD SCSI CH A Connector  
JA2  
JD1  
JF2  
JP7  
Ultra160 LVD SCSI CH B Connector  
JBT1/WD/IR/CIR/USB2/PWRLED/SPKR  
Front Control Panel Connector  
Floppy Disk Drive Connector  
Third Power Supply Fail Header  
Keylock Header  
IDE#1/#2 Hard Disk Drive Connectors  
Secondary ATX Power Connector  
Keyboard Port  
JP8  
JP35  
J2A/J3A  
J15  
J28  
J29  
Mouse Port  
LAN1/2  
OHLED  
USB0/1  
VGA  
WOL  
WOR  
Ethernet Ports  
Overheat LED Header  
Universal Serial Bus Ports  
VGA Display (Monitor) Port  
Wake-on-LAN Header  
Wake-on-Ring Header  
5-11  
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5-8 Connector Definitions  
ATX Power Connection  
ATX Power Supply 20-pin Connector  
Pin Number Definition Pin Number Definition  
11  
12  
13  
14  
15  
16  
17  
18  
19  
20  
+3.3V  
-12V  
COM  
PS_ON  
COM  
COM  
COM  
-5V  
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
+3.3V  
+3.3V  
COM  
+5V  
COM  
+5V  
COM  
PW -OK  
5VSB  
+12V  
The power supply connector  
meets the SSI (Superset ATX) 20-  
pin specification. Make sure that  
the orientation of the connector is  
correct. See the table on the right  
for pin definitions.  
+5V  
+5V  
10  
PWR_SEC Connection  
8-Pin +12v Power Supply  
Connector (J15)  
In addition to the Primary ATX power  
connector (above), the Secondary  
12v 8-pin J15 connector must also  
be connected to your power supply.  
See the table on the right for pin defi-  
nitions.  
Pins Definition  
1 thru 4 Ground  
5 thru 8  
+12v  
NMI Button  
NMI Button Pin  
Definitions (JF2)  
The non-maskable interrupt button  
header is located on pins 19 and  
20 of JF2. Refer to the table on  
the right for pin definitions.  
Pin  
Number  
19  
20  
Definition  
Ground  
Control  
Power LED  
PWR_LED Pin Definitions  
(JF2)  
The Power LED connection is lo-  
cated on pins 15 and 16 of JF2.  
Refer to the table on the right for  
pin definitions.  
Pin  
Number  
15  
Definition  
Vcc  
Control  
16  
HDD LED  
HDD LED Pin  
Definitions  
(JF2)  
The HDD (IDE Hard Disk Drive) LED  
connection is located on pins 13  
and 14 of JF2. Attach the IDE hard  
drive LED cable to display disk ac-  
tivity. Refer to the table on the  
right for pin definitions.  
Pin  
Number Definition  
13  
14  
Vcc  
HD Active  
5-12  
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Chapter 5: Advanced Motherboard Setup  
NIC1 LED  
NIC1 LED Pin  
Definitions  
(JF2)  
The NIC1 (Network Interface Con-  
troller) LED connection is located  
on pins 11 and 12 of JF2. Attach  
the NIC1 LED cable to display net-  
work activity. Refer to the table  
on the right for pin definitions.  
Pin  
Number Definition  
11  
12  
Vcc  
GND  
NIC2 LED  
NIC2 LED Pin  
Definitions  
(JF2)  
The NIC2 (Network Interface Con-  
troller) LED connection is located  
on pins 9 and 10 of JF2. Attach  
the NIC2 LED cable to display net-  
work activity. Refer to the table  
on the right for pin definitions.  
Pin  
Number Definition  
9
Vcc  
10  
GND  
Overheat LED (OH)  
Overheat (OH) LED  
Pin Definitions  
(JF2)  
Connect an LED to the OH connec-  
tion on pins 7 and 8 of JF2 to pro-  
vide advanced warning of chassis  
overheating. Refer to the table on  
the right for pin definitions.  
Pin  
Number Definition  
7
8
Vcc  
GND  
Power Fail LED  
Power Fail Button  
Pin Definitions  
(JF2)  
The Power Fail LED connection is  
located on pins 5 and 6 of JF2.  
Refer to the table on the right for  
pin definitions. This only applies  
to redundant power supplies and  
so does not apply to the 6012P-6.  
Pin  
Number Definition  
5
6
Vcc  
GND  
Reset Button  
Reset Pin  
Definitions  
(JF2)  
The Reset Button connection is lo-  
cated on pins 3 and 4 of JF2. At-  
tach it to the hardware reset  
switch on the computer case.  
Refer to the table on the right for  
pin definitions.  
Pin  
Number Definition  
3
4
Reset  
Ground  
5-13  
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Power Button  
Power Button  
Connector  
Pin Definitions  
(JF2)  
The Power Button connection is  
located on pins 1 and 2 of JF2.  
Momentarily contacting both pins  
will power on/off the system. This  
button can also be configured to  
function as a suspend button (see  
the Power Button Mode setting in  
BIOS). To turn off the power  
when set to suspend mode, de-  
press the button for at least 4  
seconds. Refer to the table on the  
right for pin definitions.  
Pin  
Number Definition  
1
2
PW _ON  
Ground  
Universal Serial Bus  
(USB0/1)  
Universal Serial Bus Pin Definitions  
USB0  
USB1  
Pin  
Number  
Pin  
Definition Number  
Definition  
+5V  
P0-  
P0+  
Ground  
Key  
Two Universal Serial Bus ports  
are located beside the PS/2 key-  
board/mouse ports. USB0 is the  
bottom connector and USB1 is the  
top connector. See the table on  
the right for pin definitions.  
1
2
3
4
5
+5V  
P0-  
P0+  
Ground  
N/A  
1
2
3
4
5
Extra Universal Serial Bus  
Headers (FPUSB0/1)  
Front Panel Universal Serial Bus Pin  
Definitions  
FPUSB0  
FPUSB1  
Pin  
Number  
Pin  
Definition Number  
The Front Panel USB0/USB1 head-  
ers are located at JD2. These are  
separate from the ports on the I/O  
panel. You will need a USB cable  
(not included) to use either con-  
nection. Refer to the table on the  
right for pin definitions.  
Definition  
+5V  
P0-  
P0+  
Ground  
Key  
1
2
3
4
5
+5V  
P0-  
1
2
3
4
5
P0+  
Ground  
N/A  
5-14  
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Chapter 5: Advanced Motherboard Setup  
Serial Ports  
Serial Port Pin Definitions  
(COM1, COM2)  
The COM1 serial port is located  
under the parallel port. See the  
table on the right for pin defini-  
tions. The COM2 connector is a  
header located near the BIOS chip  
on the motherboard.  
Pin Number Definition Pin Number Definition  
1
2
3
4
5
CD  
RD  
TD  
DTR  
Ground  
6
7
8
9
10  
DSR  
RTS  
CTS  
RI  
NC  
Note: Pin 10 is included on the header but  
not on the port.  
ATX PS/2 Keyboard and  
PS/2 Mouse Ports  
PS/2 Keyboard  
and Mouse Port  
Pin Definitions  
(J29)  
Pin  
The ATX PS/2 keyboard and the  
PS/2 mouse are located on J29.  
See the table on the right for pin  
definitions. (The mouse port is  
above the keyboard port. See Fig-  
ure 2-3.)  
Number Definition  
1
2
3
4
5
6
Data  
NC  
Ground  
VCC  
Clock  
NC  
Fan Headers  
Fan Header Pin Definitions  
The motherboard has three fan  
headers. These are designated  
CPU 1 Chassis Fan, CPU 2 Chas-  
sis Fan and Chassis Fan 3. See  
the table on the right for pin defini-  
tions.  
Pin  
Number  
1
2
3
Definition  
Ground (black)  
+12V (red)  
Tachometer  
Caution: These fan headers  
are DC power.  
LAN1/2 (Ethernet Ports)  
Two Ethernet ports (designated  
LAN1 and LAN2) are located be-  
side the VGA port on the IO  
backplane. These ports accept  
RJ45 type cables.  
5-15  
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SUPERSERVER 6012P-6 User’s Manual  
Wake-On-LAN  
Wake-On-LAN Pin  
Definitions (WOL)  
The Wake-On-LAN header is des-  
ignated as WOL. See the table on  
the right for pin definitions. You  
must enable the LAN Wake-Up set-  
ting in BIOS to use this feature.  
You must also have a LAN card  
with a Wake-on-LAN connector  
and cable.  
Pin  
Number  
1
2
3
Definition  
+5V Standby  
Ground  
Wake-up  
Wake-On-Ring  
Wake-on-Ring  
Pin Definitions  
(WOR)  
The Wake-On-Ring header is des-  
ignated WOR. This function al-  
lows your computer to receive  
and "wake-up" by an incoming call  
to the modem when in sustpend  
state. See the table on the right  
for pin definitions. You must have  
a WOR card and cable to use this  
feature.  
Pin  
Number Definition  
1
2
Ground  
W ake-up  
Keylock  
The keyboard lock connection is lo-  
cated on JP35. Utilizing this header  
allows you to inhibit any actions  
made on the keyboard, effectively  
"locking" it.  
5-16  
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Chapter 5: Advanced Motherboard Setup  
5-9 Jumper Settings  
Explanation of  
Jumpers  
Connector  
Pins  
3
2
1
To modify the operation of the  
motherboard, jumpers can be  
used to choose between  
Jumper  
Cap  
optional settings.  
Jumpers  
3
2
1
create shorts 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  
the motherboard layout page  
for jumper locations.  
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.  
CMOS Clear  
Refer to the table on the right for  
the JBT1 jumper settings to clear  
CMOS. Always remove the AC  
power cord from the system be-  
fore clearing CMOS.  
CMOS Clear Jumper Settings  
(JBT1)  
Jumper  
Position  
1-2  
Definition  
Normal  
2-3  
CMOS Clear  
Note: For an ATX power supply,  
you must completely shut down  
the system, remove the AC power  
cord and then use JBT1 to clear  
CMOS. Replace JBT1 back to the  
pin 1-2 position before powering  
up the system again. Do not use  
the PW_ON connector to clear  
CMOS.  
Position  
1-2  
Position  
2-3  
5-17  
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SUPERSERVER 6012P-6 User’s Manual  
LAN1 Enable/Disable  
LAN1 (NIC)  
Enable/Disable  
Jumper Settings  
(JP3)  
Change the setting of jumper JP3  
to enable or disable the onboard  
LAN1 or NIC (Network Interface  
Card) on the motherboard. See  
the table on the right for jumper  
settings. The default setting is  
enabled  
Jumper  
Position  
Pins 1-2  
Pins 2-3  
Definition  
Enabled  
Disabled  
LAN2 Enable/Disable  
LAN2 (NIC)  
Enable/Disable  
Jumper Settings  
(JP27)  
Change the setting of jumper JP27  
to enable or disable the onboard  
LAN2 or NIC (Network Interface  
Card) on the motherboard. See  
the table on the right for jumper  
settings. The default setting is  
enabled.  
Jumper  
Position  
Pins 1-2  
Pins 2-3  
Definition  
Enabled  
Disabled  
VGA Enable/Disable  
VGA Enable/Disable  
Jumper Settings  
(JP4)  
JP4 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.  
Jumper  
Position  
1-2  
Definition  
Enabled  
Disabled  
2-3  
Chassis/Overheat Fan  
Select  
CPU Chassis/CPU Fan  
Select Jumper Settings  
(JP33)  
Jumper  
Position  
Open  
JP33 allows you to select to use ei-  
ther the CPU fan or the Chassis  
fan. The default position is open to  
select the CPU fan. The CPU Chas-  
sis fan is intended for use with  
Supermicro chassis. See the table  
on the right for jumper settings.  
Definition  
CPU  
CPU Chassis  
Closed  
5-18  
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Chapter 5: Advanced Motherboard Setup  
SCSI Enable/Disable  
SCSI Enable/Disable  
Jumper Settings  
(JP22)  
The SCSI Termination jumper at  
JP22 allows you to enable or dis-  
able the onboard SCSI controller.  
The normal (default) position is on  
pins 1-2 to enable SCSI termina-  
tion. See the table on the right for  
jumper settings.  
Jumper  
Position  
Pins 1-2  
Pins 2-3  
Definition  
Enabled  
Disabled  
SCSI Termination Enable/  
Disable  
SCSI Channel Termination  
Enable/Disable  
Jumper Settings  
(JPA1, JPA2)  
Jumpers JPA1 and JPA2 allow you  
to enable or disable termination for  
the individual SCSI channels.  
Jumper JPA1 controls SCSI channel  
A and JPA2 controls SCSI channel  
B. The normal (default) setting is  
open to enable (teminate) both SCSI  
channels. If you wish to connect  
external SCSI devices, you should  
Jumper  
Position  
Open  
Closed  
Definition  
Enabled  
Disabled  
disable  
termination  
for  
the  
channnel(s) you will be connecting  
them to. See the table on the right  
for jumper settings.  
Watchdog Enable/Disable  
Watchdog Timer Enable/  
Disable Jumper Settings  
(WD on JD1)  
The WD jumper (located on JD1) al-  
lows you to enableor disable the  
Watchdog feature. The default po-  
sition is open to disable the Watch-  
dog timer. When enabled, Watch-  
dog can reboot your PC if an appli-  
cation is "hung up" or the system  
goes down. See the table on the  
right for jumper settings.  
Jumper  
Position  
Open  
Closed  
Definition  
Disabled  
Enabled  
5-19  
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SUPERSERVER 6012P-6 User’s Manual  
Thermal Fan Enable/Disable  
Thermal Fan  
Enable/Disable  
Jumper Settings (JP38)  
JP38 allows you to enable or disable  
the thermal fan. When enabled, the  
fan will operate continuously. When  
disabled, it will operate only when a  
predefined temperature threshold  
has been exceeded. See the table  
on the right for jumper settings.  
Jumper  
Position  
Open  
Closed  
Definition  
Disabled  
Enabled  
PC Slot 1 Bus Speed Settings  
(JP13, JP14, JP15)  
PCI-X Bus Speed Settings  
Mode  
JP14  
Off  
Off  
Off  
Off  
JP15  
Off  
On  
On  
On  
JP13  
Off  
Off  
Pins 1-2  
Pins 2-3  
Jumpers JP10 through JP15 are  
used to set the speed for the PCI-X  
buses. See the tables on the right  
for the jumper settings to select the  
speed for each slot.  
PCI-X 133 MHz  
PCI-X 100 MHz  
PCI-X 66 MHz  
PCI 66 MHz  
PCI Slot 2 Bus Speed Settings  
(JP10, JP11, JP12)  
Mode  
PCI-X 66 MHz  
PCI 66 MHz  
JP10  
Off  
Off  
JP11  
On  
On  
JP12  
Pins 1-2  
Pins 2-3  
Speaker Enable/Disable  
On the JD1 header, add a jumper  
to pins 6-7 to enable the onboard  
speaker. If you wish to use an  
external speaker, remove it to dis-  
able the onboard speaker.  
5-10 Onboard Indicators  
LAN1/LAN2 LEDs  
100 Mb LAN LED  
Indicators (LAN1)  
The Ethernet ports (located beside  
the VGA port) have two LEDs.  
See the tables below for the func-  
tions associated with these LEDs.  
On the Gb LAN port, the yellow  
LED indicates activity while the  
other LED may be green, orange  
or off to indicate the speed of the  
connection. See the tables below  
for descriptions.  
LED  
Color  
Green  
Yellow  
Definition  
Connected  
Active  
1 Gb LAN Right LED  
Indicator (LAN2)*  
LED  
Color  
Off  
Green  
Orange  
Definition  
No Connection  
100 MHz  
1 GHz  
5-20  
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Chapter 5: Advanced Motherboard Setup  
5-11 Floppy/Hard Disk Drive and SCSI 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.  
A single floppy disk drive ribbon cable has 34 wires and two connectors  
to provide for two floppy disk drives. The connector with twisted wires  
always connects to drive A, and the connector that does not have  
twisted wires always connects to drive B.  
Floppy Connector  
The floppy connector is located  
on JP7. See the table below for  
pin definitions.  
Floppy Connector Pin Definitions (JP7)  
Pin Number Function Pin Number  
Function  
FDHDIN  
Reserved  
1
GND  
GND  
Key  
2
3
4
5
6
FDEDIN  
7
9
GND  
GND  
GND  
GND  
GND  
GND  
GND  
GND  
GND  
GND  
GND  
GND  
GND  
GND  
8
Index-  
10  
12  
14  
16  
18  
20  
22  
24  
26  
28  
30  
32  
34  
Motor Enable  
Drive Select B-  
Drive Select A-  
Motor Enable  
DIR-  
11  
13  
15  
17  
19  
21  
23  
25  
27  
29  
31  
33  
STEP-  
W rite Data-  
W rite Gate-  
Track 00-  
W rite Protect-  
Read Data-  
Side 1 Select-  
Diskette  
5-21  
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SUPERSERVER 6012P-6 User’s Manual  
IDE Connectors  
IDE Connector Pin Definitions  
(J2A, J3A)  
Pin Number  
1
3
5
7
9
Function  
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  
GND  
Pin Number  
2
4
6
Function  
GND  
There are no jumpers to  
configure the onboard IDE#1  
and #2 connectors (J2A and  
J3A, respectively). See the  
table on the right for pin  
definitions.  
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  
GND  
GND  
GND  
BALE  
GND  
IOCS16-  
GND  
Addr 2  
Chip Select 1-  
GND  
8
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  
I/O W rite-  
I/O Read-  
IOCHRDY  
DACK3-  
IRQ14  
Addr 1  
Addr 0  
Chip Select 0  
Activity  
68-pin Ultra160 SCSI Connectors (JA1, JA2, JA4)  
Connector  
Contact  
Number  
Connector  
Contact  
Number  
Ultra160 SCSI  
Connectors  
Signal Names  
Signal Names  
1
+DB(12)  
+DB(13)  
+DB(14)  
+DB(15)  
+DB(P1)  
+DB(0)  
+DB(1)  
+DB(2)  
+DB(3)  
+DB(4)  
+DB(5)  
+DB(6)  
+DB(7)  
+DB(P)  
GROUND  
DIFFSENS  
TERMPW R  
TERMPW R  
RESERVED  
GROUND  
+ATN  
GROUND  
+BSY  
+ACK  
+RST  
+MSG  
+SEL  
+C/D  
+REQ  
+I/O  
35  
36  
37  
38  
39  
40  
41  
42  
43  
44  
45  
46  
47  
48  
49  
50  
51  
52  
53  
54  
55  
56  
57  
58  
59  
60  
61  
62  
63  
64  
65  
66  
67  
68  
-DB(12)  
-DB(13)  
-DB(14)  
-DB(15)  
-DB(P1)  
-DB(0)  
-DB(1)  
-DB(2)  
-DB(3)  
-DB(4)  
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Refer to the table on  
the right for the pin defi-  
nitions of the Ultra160  
SCSI connectors lo-  
cated at JA1 and JA2.  
10  
11  
12  
13  
14  
15  
16  
17  
18  
19  
20  
21  
22  
23  
24  
25  
26  
27  
28  
29  
30  
31  
32  
33  
34  
-DB(5)  
-DB(6)  
-DB(7)  
-DB(P)  
GROUND  
GROUND  
TERMPW R  
TERMPW R  
RESERVED  
GROUND  
-ATN  
GROUND  
-BSY  
-ACK  
-RST  
-MSG  
-SEL  
-C/D  
-REQ  
-I/O  
-DB(8)  
-DB(9)  
-DB(10)  
-DB(11)  
+DB(8)  
+DB(9)  
+DB(10)  
+DB(11)  
5-22  
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Chapter 5: Advanced Motherboard Setup  
5-12 Installing Software Drivers  
After all the hardware has been installed you must install the software  
drivers. The necessary drivers are all included on the Supermicro CD that  
came packaged with your motherboard. After inserting this CD into your  
CD-ROM drive, the display shown in Figure 5-8 should appear. (If this  
display does not appear, double click on the "My Computer" icon and then  
on the icon representing your CD-ROM drive. Finally, double click on the S  
"Setup" icon.)  
Figure 5-8 Driver/Tool Installation Display Screen  
Click the icons showing a hand writing on paper to view the readme files  
for each item. The bottom icon with a CD on it allows you to view the  
entire contents of the CD.  
5-23  
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SUPERSERVER 6012P-6 User’s Manual  
Notes  
5-24  
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Chapter 6: Advanced Chassis Setup  
Chapter 6  
Advanced Chassis Setup  
This chapter covers the steps required to install components and perform  
maintenance on the SC812S chassis. For component installation, follow the  
steps in the order given to eliminate the most common problems encoun-  
tered. If some steps are unnecessary, skip ahead to the next step.  
Tools Required  
The only tool you will need to install components and perform maintenance  
is a Philips screwdriver.  
6-1 Static-Sensitive Devices  
Electricstatic discharge (ESD) can damage electronic components. To pre-  
vent damage to any printed circuit boards (PCBs), it is important to handle  
them very carefully. The following measures are generally sufficient to  
protect your equipment from ESD damage.  
Precautions  
! Use a grounded wrist strap designed to prevent static discharge.  
! Touch a grounded metal object before removing any board from its anti-  
static bag.  
! Handle a board by its edges only; do not touch its components, periph-  
eral chips, memory modules or gold contacts.  
! When handling chips or modules, avoid touching their pins.  
! Put the motherboard, add-on cards and peripherals back into their anti-  
static bags when not in use.  
! For grounding purposes, make sure your computer chassis provides ex-  
cellent conductivity between the power supply, the case, the mounting  
fasteners and the motherboard.  
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Floppy Drive  
Slim-Line CD-ROM Drive  
System LEDs  
Control Panel  
SCSI Drives  
NMI  
System Reset Main Power  
Figure 6-1. Chassis: Front and Rear Views  
6-2 Control Panel  
The control panel (located on the front of the chassis) must be connected  
to the JF2 connector on the motherboard to provide you with system status  
indications. A ribbon cable has bundled these wires together to simplify the  
connection. Connect the cable from JF2 on the motherboard to the appro-  
priate header on the Control Panel PCB (printed circuit board). Make sure  
the red wire plugs into pin 1 on both connectors. Pull all excess cabling out  
of the airflow path.  
The control panel LEDs inform you of system status. See "Chapter 3:  
System Interface" for details on the LEDs and the control panel buttons.  
Details on JF2 can be found in "Chapter 5: Advanced Motherboard Installa-  
tion."  
6-2  
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Chapter 6: Advanced Chassis Setup  
6-3 System Fans  
Two 10-cm blower fans provide all the cooling needed for the SuperServer  
6012P-6. It is very important that the chassis top cover is properly installed  
and making a good seal in order for the cooling air to circulate properly  
through the chassis and cool the components. See Figure 6-2.  
System Fan Failure  
The fans run at 3200 rpm. If a fan fails, the ambient air temperature in the  
chassis will rise and activate the overheat LED on the control panel. Re-  
place any failed fan immediately with the same type and model. You must  
power down the system before replacing a cooling fan (removing the power  
cord is also recommended as a safety precaution).  
Replacing System Cooling Fans  
1.  
Removing a fan:  
Remove the chassis cover. Detach the fan wires from their connection  
to the motherboard. Remove the screws that secure the fan to the  
chassis and lift the blower fan out.  
2.  
Installing a new fan:  
Replace the failed fan with an identical 10-cm, 12 volt fan (available from  
Supermicro: p/n FAN-038). Install the new fan in its proper place in the  
chassis by positioning it on the two mounting posts. Secure the fan to  
the chassis with the screws you removed previously, then attach the fan  
wires to the connector on the motherboard. Finish by replacing the  
chassis cover and power cord and restoring power to the system.  
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Figure 6-2. System Cooling Fans  
6-4 Drive Bay Installation/Removal  
Accessing the Drive Bays  
SCSI Drives: You do not need to access the inside of the chassis to  
replace or swap SCSI drives. Proceed to the next step for instructions.  
Note: You must use standard 1" high, 80-pin SCA SCSI drives in  
the SuperServer 6012P-6.  
CD-ROM/Floppy Disk Drive: For installing/removing the CD-ROM or floppy  
disk drive, you will need to gain access to the inside of the 6012P-6 by  
removing the top cover of the chassis. Proceed to the "CD-ROM and  
Floppy Drive Installation" section later in this chapter for instructions.  
6-4  
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Chapter 6: Advanced Chassis Setup  
SCSI Drive Installation  
1.  
Mounting a SCSI drive in a drive carrier:  
The SCSI drives are mounted in drive carriers to simplify their installation  
and removal from the chassis. These carriers also help promote proper  
airflow for the SCSI drive bays. For this reason, even empty carriers  
without SCSI drives installed must remain in the chassis. To add a new  
SCSI drive, install a drive into the carrier with the printed circuit board  
side toward the carrier so that the mounting holes align with those in the  
carrier. Secure the drive to the carrier with four screws, as shown in  
Figure 6-3.  
Figure 6-3. Mounting a SCSI Drive in a Carrier  
Use caution when working around the SCSI backplane.  
Do not touch the backplane with any metal objects  
!
!
and make sure no ribbon cables touch the backplane  
or obstruct the holes, which aid in proper airflow.  
Important: Regardless of how many SCSI hard drives  
are installed, all SCSI drive carriers must remain in the  
drive bays for proper airflow.  
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2.  
Installing/removing hot-swap SCSI drives:  
The SCSI drive bays are located in the front of the chassis, making them  
easily accessible for installation and removal. The SCSI drives are hot-  
swap units, meaning that they can be installed and removed while the  
system is running. To remove a SCSI drive, first push the colored  
release button located beside the drive's LEDs, then swing the handle  
fully out and use it to pull the SCSI drive carrier straight out (see Figure  
6-4).  
Figure 6-4. Removing SCSI Drives  
Important:  
All of the SCSI drive carriers must remain  
!
in the drive bay to maintain proper cooling airflow.  
6-6  
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Chapter 6: Advanced Chassis Setup  
SCA Backplane  
The SCSI drives plug into a SAF-TE compliant SCA backplane that provides  
power, SCSI ID and bus termination. A RAID controller can be used with  
the SCA backplane to provide data security. The operating system you use  
must have RAID support to enable the hot-swap capability of the SCSI  
drive. The SCA SCSI backplane is already preconfigured; there are no  
jumpers or switches.  
CD-ROM and Floppy Drive Installation  
The top cover of the chassis must be opened to gain full access to the CD-  
ROM and floppy drive bays. The 6012P-6 accomodates only slim-line CD-  
ROM drives. Side mounting brakets are needed to mount a slim-line CD-ROM  
drive in the 6012P-6 server.  
You must power down the system before installing or removing a floppy  
or CD-ROM drive. First, release the retention screws that secure the  
server unit to the rack. Grasp the two handles on either side and pull  
the unit straight out until it locks (you will hear a "click"). Next, depress  
the two buttons on the top of the chassis to release the top cover and at  
the same time, push the cover away from you until it stops. You can  
then lift the top cover from the chassis to gain full access to the inside of  
the server.  
With the chassis cover removed, unplug the power and data cables from  
the drive you want to remove. Then locate the locking tab at the rear of  
the drive. It will be on the left side of the drive when viewed from the  
front of the chassis. Pull the tab away from the drive and push the drive  
unit out the front of the chassis. Add a new drive by following this  
procedure in reverse order. You may hear a faint *click* of the locking  
tab when the drive is fully inserted. Remember to reconnect the data and  
power cables to the drive before replacing the chassis cover and  
restoring power to the system. Please be aware of the following:  
The floppy disk drive cable has seven twisted wires.  
A color mark on a cable typically designates the location of pin 1.  
A single floppy disk drive ribbon cable has 34 wires and two connectors  
to provide for two floppy disk drives. The connector with twisted wires  
always connects to drive A, and the connector that does not have  
twisted wires always connects to drive B. (You can only install one  
internal floppy drive into the 6012P-6.)  
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6-5 Power Supply  
The SuperServer 6012P-6 has a single 400 watt power supply, which is  
auto-switching capable. This enables it to automatically sense and  
operate anywhere within the range of 100 to 260 input volts. An amber  
light will be illuminated on the power supply when the power is off. An  
illuminated green light indicates that the power supply is operating.  
Power Supply Failure  
If the power supply unit fails, the system will shut down and you will  
need to replace the power supply unit. Replacement units can be  
ordered directly from Supermicro (see contact information in the Preface).  
As there is only one power supply unit in the 6012P-6, the server must  
be powered down before removing and replacing the power supply unit  
for whatever reason.  
Removing/Replacing the Power Supply  
1.  
Removing the power supply:  
First turn the power switch on the control panel off, then unplug the  
power cord from the system. Remove the chassis cover by pressing the  
two release buttons on the top of the chassis (near the front) and push  
the chassis top rearward about one inch. To remove the failed power  
unit, push the beige colored release tab to the right and then carefully lift  
the unit up about 1/2 inch only. If you lift too high, you may damage the  
power distribution board that the other end of the unit is connected to.  
Then, pull the power unit straight back to unplug it from the power  
distribution board. See Figure 6-5.  
2.  
Installing a new power supply:  
Replace the failed unit with another unit of the same input voltage, output  
voltage and wattage. It is highly recommended to replace it with exactly  
the same model power supply. Carefully insert the new unit into position  
to plug it into the power distribution board, making sure you are not  
holding it at too great an angle, which may damage the power distribution  
board. Push it completely into the power distribution board and seat it in  
the chassis. When correctly installed it should be laying flat - make sure  
the end of the power supply is not sitting on the stop in the chassis.  
Reconnect the power cord, replace the chassis top cover and reposition  
the unit back into the rack. Finish by depressing the power button on the  
chassis front control panel.  
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Chapter 6: Advanced Chassis Setup  
Figure 6-5. Removing/Replacing the Power Supply  
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Notes  
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Chapter 7: BIOS  
Chapter 7  
BIOS  
7-1 Introduction  
This chapter describes the PhoenixBIOS™ Setup utility for the P4DPR-6GM+.  
The 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 Download area of the Supermicro web site  
<http://www.supermicro.com> for any changes to BIOS that may not be  
reflected in this manual.  
System BIOS  
The BIOS is the Basic Input Output System used in all IBM® PC, XT™, AT®,  
and PS/2® compatible computers. The PhoenixBIOS flash chip stores the  
system parameters, such type of disk drives, video displays, etc. in the  
CMOS. The CMOS memory requires very little electrical power. When the  
computer is turned off, a back-up battery provides power to the BIOS flash  
chip, enabling it to retain system parameters. Each time the computer is  
powered-on the computer is configured with the values stored in the BIOS  
ROM 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 ac-  
cessed 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. Begin-  
ning with Section 4-3, detailed descriptions are given for each parameter  
setting in the Setup utility.  
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7-2 Running Setup  
*Default settings are in bold text unless otherwise noted.  
The BIOS setup options described in this section are selected by choos-  
ing the appropriate 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 (see on next page).  
When you first power on the computer, the PhoenixBIOS™ 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  
7-3  
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.  
7-2  
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Chapter 7: BIOS  
Main BIOS Setup Menu  
Phoenix BIOS Setup Utility  
Main  
Advanced  
Security  
Power  
Boot  
Exit  
Item Specific Help  
System Time  
System Date  
[16:19:20]  
[02/02/02]  
Legacy Diskette A:  
Legacy Diskette B:  
[1.44/1.25 MB]  
[Not Installed]  
! Primary Master  
! Primary Slave  
! Secondary Master  
! Secondary Slave  
[120 GB]  
[None]  
[CD-ROM]  
[None]  
System Memory  
256 MB  
Extended Memory  
3967 KB  
F1 Help  
Esc Exit  
↑↓ Select Item  
Select Menu  
-/+ Change Values  
Enter Select!Sub-Menu  
F9 Setup Defaults  
F10 Save and Exit  
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.  
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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.  
Legacy Diskette B  
This setting allows the user to set the type of floppy disk drive installed as  
diskette B. 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.  
!Primary Master/Primary Slave/Secondary Master/Secondary  
Slave  
These settings allow the user to set the parameters of the IDE Primary  
Master/Slave and IDE Secondary Master/Slave slots. Hit <Enter> to activate  
the following sub-menu screen for detailed options of these items. Set the  
correct configurations accordingly. The items included in the sub-menu are:  
Phoenix BIOS Setup Utility  
Main  
Advanced  
Security  
Power  
Boot  
Exit  
Item Specific Help  
Type:  
[Auto]  
Select the drive  
type of the fixed  
disk installed in  
your system. If type  
User is selected,  
Cylinders, Heads,  
and Sectors can be  
Multi Sector Transfer; [16 Sectors]  
LBA Mode Control:  
32-bit I/O:  
[Enabled]  
[Enabled]  
Transfer Mode:  
Ultra DMA Mode  
[Fast PIO 4]  
[Disabled]  
edited directly.  
Auto attempts to  
automatically detect  
the drive type for  
drives that comply  
with ANSI  
specifications.  
↑↓  
F1 Help  
Esc Exit  
Select Item  
Select Menu  
-/+ Change Values  
Enter Select Sub-Menu  
!
F9 Setup Defaults  
F10 Save and Exit  
7-4  
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Chapter 7: BIOS  
Type  
Selects the type of IDE hard drive. The options are Auto (allows BIOS  
to automatically determine the hard drive's capacity, number of heads,  
etc.), a number from 1-39 to select a predetermined type of hard drive,  
CD-ROM and ATAPI Removable.  
Multi-Sector Transfers  
Select the number of transfer sectors. Options are 2, 4, 6, 8 and 16  
Sectors.  
LBA Mode Control  
This item determines whether Phoenix BIOS will access the IDE Primary  
Master Device via LBA mode. The options are Enabled and Disabled.  
32-bit I/O  
Selects 32-bit I/O operation. Options are Enabled and Disabled.  
Transfer Mode  
Selects the transfer mode. Options are Standard, Fast PIO1, Fast PIO2,  
Fast PIO3, Fast PIO4, FPIO3/DMA1 and FPIO4/DMA2.  
Ultra DMA Mode  
Selects Ultra DMA Mode. Options are Disabled, Mode 0, Mode 1, Mode  
2, Mode 3, Mode 4 and Mode 5.  
System Memory  
This display informs you how much system memory is recognized as being  
present in the system.  
Extended Memory  
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7-4 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>. Options for PIR settings are displayed by highlighting the setting option  
using the arrow keys and pressing <Enter>. All Advanced BIOS Setup options  
are described in this section.  
Phoenix BIOS Setup Utility  
Main  
Advanced  
Security  
Power  
Boot  
Exit  
Item Specific Help  
Installed OS  
Quick Boot Mode  
Quiet Boot  
[Win95]  
[Enabled]  
[Disabled]  
Legacy USB Support  
Reset Configuration Data  
[Enabled]  
[No]  
! Cache Memory  
! I/O Device Configuration  
Large Disk Access Mode  
Local Bus IDE Adapter  
! Advanced Chipset Control  
! Advanced Processor Options  
! DMI Event Logging  
[DOS]  
[Both]  
! Console Redirection  
↑↓  
F1 Help  
Esc Exit  
Select Item  
Select Menu  
-/+ Change Values  
F9 Setup Defaults  
F10 Save and Exit  
Enter Select Sub-Menu  
!
Installed OS  
This setting allows you to choose which operating system you are using to  
run the system. Options are Other, Win95, Win98, WinMe and Win2000.  
Quick Boot Mode  
If enabled, this feature will speed up the POST (Power On Self Test) routine  
after the computer is turned on. The settings are Enabled and Disabled. If  
Disabled, the POST routine will run at normal speed.  
7-6  
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Chapter 7: BIOS  
Quiet Boot  
This setting allows you to Enable or Disable the diagnostic screen during  
boot-up.  
Legacy USB Support  
This setting allows you to enable support for Legacy USB devices. The  
settings are Enabled and Disabled.  
Reset Configuration Data  
Options are Yes and No. Choosing Yes will clear the Extended System  
Configuration Data (ECSD).  
!Cache Memory  
Access the submenu for this item to specify one of the following actions  
for various sections of cache memory: Uncache, Write Protect, Write Back,  
Write Through or Disable. See the "Item Specific Help" window for details.  
!I/O Device Configuration  
Access the submenu to make changes to the following settings.  
Power Loss Control  
This setting allows you to choose how the system will react when power  
returns after an unexpected loss of power. Options are Stay Off, Power  
On and Last State.  
Serial Port A  
This setting allows you to assign control of serial port A. The options  
are Enabled (user defined), Disabled, Auto (BIOS controlled) and OS  
Controlled.  
Base I/O Address  
Select the base I/O address for serial port A. The options are 3F8,  
2F8, 3E8 and 2E8.  
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Interrupt  
Select the IRQ (interrupt request) for serial port A. Options are IRQ3  
and IRQ4.  
Serial Port B  
This setting allows you to assign control of serial port B. The options  
are Enabled (user defined), Disabled, Auto (BIOS controlled) and OS  
Controlled.  
Mode  
Specify the type of device that will be connected to serial port B.  
Options are Normal and IR (for an infrared device).  
Base I/O Address  
Select the base I/O address for serial port B. The options are 3F8,  
2F8, 3E8 and 2E8.  
Interrupt  
Select the IRQ (interrupt request) for serial port B. Options are IRQ3  
and IRQ4.  
Parallel Port  
This setting allows you to assign control of the parallel port. The options  
are Enabled (user defined), Disabled and Auto (BIOS controlled).  
Base I/O Address  
Select the base I/O address for the parallel port. The options are 378,  
278 and 3BC.  
Interrupt  
Select the IRQ (interrupt request) for the parallel port. Options are  
IRQ5 and IRQ7.  
7-8  
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Chapter 7: BIOS  
Mode  
Specify the parallel port mode. Options are Output Only, Bi-directional,  
EPP and ECP.  
DMA Channel  
Specify the DMA channel. Options are DMA1 and DMA3.  
Floppy Disk Controller  
This setting allows you to assign control of the floppy disk controller.  
The options are Enabled (user defined), Disabled and Auto (BIOS  
controlled).  
Base I/O Address  
Select the base I/O address for the parallel port. The options are  
Primary and Secondary.  
Large Disk Access Mode  
This setting determines how large hard drives are to be accessed. The  
options are DOS or Other (for Unix, Novellle NetWare and other operating  
systems).  
Local Bus IDE Adapter  
Use this setting to enable the integrated local bus IDE adapter. Options are  
Disable, Primary, Secondary and Both.  
!Advanced Chipset Control  
Access the submenu to make changes to the following settings.  
Enable Memory Gap  
This setting allows you to turn off system RAM to free up address space.  
The options for this setting are Disabled and Extended.  
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ECC Configuration  
This setting lets you enable or disable ECC (Error Correction and  
Checking). The options are ECC and Disabled.  
ECC Error Type  
This setting lets you select which type of interrupt will be activated as a  
result of an ECC error. The options are None, NMI (Non-Maskable  
Interrupt), SMI (System Management Interrupt) and SCI (System Control  
Interrupt.  
SERR Signal Condition  
This setting specifies the conditions required to qualify as an ECC error.  
Options are None, Single Bit, Multiple Bit and Both.  
!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  
This setting allows you to specify the value of tthe internal frequency  
multiplier of the processor, which is used to determine the processor  
speed. Options are x8, x16, x17, x18, x19 and x20.  
Fast String Operations  
This setting allows you to Enable or Disable fast string operations.  
Compatible FPU Code  
This setting allows you to Enable or Disable the compatible FPU code.  
7-10  
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Chapter 7: BIOS  
Split Lock Operations  
This setting allows you to Enable or Disable split lock operations.  
Hyper-threading  
This setting allows you to Enable or Disable hyper-threading. Enabling  
hyper-threading results in increased CPU performance.  
L3 Cache  
This setting allows you to Enable or Disable the L3 cache.  
!DMI Event Logging  
Access the submenu to make changes to the following settings.  
Event Log Validity  
This is a display, not a setting, informing you of the event log validity.  
Event Log Capacity  
This is a display, not a setting, informing you of the event log capacity.  
View DMI Event Log  
Highlight this item and press <Enter> to view the contents of the event  
log.  
Event Logging  
This setting allows you to Enable or Disable event logging.  
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.  
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Clear All DMI Event Logs  
Highlight this item and press <Enter> to clear all DMI event logs.  
!Console Redirection  
Access the submenu to make changes to the following settings.  
COM Port Address  
Specifies to redirect the console to On-board COMA or On-board COMB.  
This setting can also be Disabled.  
BAUD Rate  
Select the BAUD rate for console redirection.  
Console Type  
Choose from the available options to select the console type for console  
redirection.  
Flow Control  
Choose from the available options to select the flow control for console  
redirection.  
Console Connection  
Select the console connection: either Direct or Via Modem.  
Continue CR after POST  
Choose whether to continue with console redirection after the POST  
routine. Options are On and Off.  
# of Video Pages to Support  
Choose the number of video pages to allocate for redirection when video  
hardware is not available. Options are 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 and 8.  
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Chapter 7: BIOS  
7-5 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.  
Phoenix BIOS Setup Utility  
Main  
Advanced  
Security  
Power  
Boot  
Exit  
Item Specific Help  
Supervisor Password Is:  
User Password Is:  
Quiet Boot  
[Clear]  
[Clear]  
[Disabled]  
Set Supervisor Password  
Set User Password  
[Enter]  
[Enter]  
Password on Boot  
Fixed Disk Boot Sector  
[Disabled]  
[Normal]  
F1 Help  
Esc Exit  
↑↓ Select Item  
Select Menu  
-/+ Change Values  
Enter Select!Sub-Menu  
F9 Setup Defaults  
F10 Save and Exit  
Supervisor Password Is:  
This displays whether 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 displays whether 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.  
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Set Supervisor Password  
When the item "Set Supervisor Password" is highlighted, hit the <Enter> key.  
When prompted, type the Supervisor's password in the dialogue box to set  
or to change supervisor's password, which allows access to BIOS.  
Set User Password  
When the item "Set User Password" is highlighted, hit the <Enter> key.  
When prompted, type 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.  
Password on Boot  
This setting allows you to require a password to be entered when the  
system boots up. Options are Enabled (password required) and Disabled  
(password not required).  
Fixed Disk Boot Sector  
This setting may offer some protection against viruses when set to Write  
Protect, which protects the boot sector on the hard drive from having a  
virus written to it. The other option is Normal.  
7-14  
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Chapter 7: BIOS  
7-6 Power  
Choose Power from the Phoenix BIOS Setup Utility main menu with the arrow  
keys. You should see the following display. Power setting options are displayed  
by highlighting the setting using the arrow keys and pressing <Enter>. All Power  
BIOS settings are described in this section.  
Phoenix BIOS Setup Utility  
Main  
Advanced  
Security  
Power  
Boot  
Exit  
Item Specific Help  
ACPI Mode:  
Power Savings:  
Standby Timeout:  
Auto Suspend Timeout:  
Resume On Time:  
Resume Time:  
[Enabled]  
[Customized]  
[Off]  
[Off]  
[Off]  
[00:00:00]  
Resume on Modem Ring:  
[Off]  
↑↓  
F1 Help  
Esc Exit  
Select Item  
Select Menu  
-/+ Change Values  
Enter Select!Sub-Menu  
F9 Setup Defaults  
F10 Save and Exit  
ACPI Mode  
Use the setting to determine if you want to employ ACPI (Advanced  
Configuration and Power Interface) power management on your system.  
Power Savings  
This setting sets the degree of power saving for the system. The options  
are Disabled, Customized, Maximum Power Savings and Maximum  
Performance. Customized allows you to alter the other two modes.  
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Standby Timeout  
Use this setting to specify the period of system inactivity to transpire before  
entering the standby state. Options are Off, 16 sec, 32 sec, 48 sec, 1 min,  
2 min, 4 min and 8 min.  
Auto Suspend Timeout  
Use this setting to specify the period of system inactivity to transpire before  
entering the suspend state. Options are Off, 5 min, 10 min, 15 min, 20 min,  
30 min, 40 min and 60 min.  
Resume on Time  
Select either Off or On, which will wake the system up at the time specified  
in the next setting.  
Resume Time  
Use this setting to specify the time you want the system to wake up (the  
above setting must be set to On). Enter the time with the number keys.  
Resume on Modem Ring  
Use this setting to enable or disable the WOR (Wake-on Ring) feature.  
Options are On and Off.  
7-16  
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Chapter 7: BIOS  
7-7 Boot  
Choose Boot from the Phoenix BIOS Setup Utility main menu with the arrow keys.  
You should see the following display. Highlighting a setting with a + or - will  
expand or collapse that entry. 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.  
Phoenix BIOS Setup Utility  
Main  
Advanced  
Security  
Power  
Boot  
Exit  
Item Specific Help  
+Removable Devices  
CD-ROM Drive  
+Hard Drive  
Network Boot  
Intel UNDI, PXE-2.0  
Intel UNDI, PXE-2.0  
↑↓  
F1 Help  
Esc Exit  
Select Item  
Select Menu  
-/+ Change Values  
Enter Select!Sub-Menu  
F9 Setup Defaults  
F10 Save and Exit  
+Removable Devices  
Highlight and press <Enter> to expand the field. See details on how to  
change the order and specs of removable devices in the Item Specific Help  
window.  
CD-ROM Drive  
See details on how to change the order and specs of removable devices in  
the Item Specific Help window.  
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+Hard Drive  
Highlight and press <Enter> to expand the field. See details on how to  
change the order and specs of hard drives in the Item Specific Help  
window.  
Network Boot  
See details on how to change the order and specs of network boot devices  
in the Item Specific Help window.  
Intel UNDI, PXE-2.0  
See details on how to change the order and specs of Intel UNDI devices in  
the Item Specific Help window.  
7-18  
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Chapter 7: BIOS  
7-8 PIR  
Choose PIR 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>.  
PIR stands for "Processor Info ROM", which allows BIOS to read certain  
information from the processors. Options for PIR settings are displayed by  
highlighting the setting option using the arrow keys and pressing <Enter>. All  
PIR BIOS Setup options are described in this section.  
Phoenix BIOS Setup Utility  
Main  
Advanced  
Security  
Power  
Boot  
PIR  
Exit  
Item Specific Help  
Select the Processor’s PIR  
Select the Thermal Unit  
Processor Info ROM Data  
Hardware Monitor Logic  
↑↓  
F1 Help  
Esc Exit  
Select Item  
Select Menu  
-/+ Change Values  
Enter Select!Sub-Menu  
F9 Setup Defaults  
F10 Save and Exit  
Select the Processor's PIR  
Selects the processor PIR. Options are A0h/A1h, A2h/A3h, A4h/A5h, A6h/  
A7h, A8h/A8h, AAh/ABh, ACh/ADh and AEh/AFh.  
Select the Thermal Unit  
Selects the thermal unit. Options are 30h/31h, 32h/33h, 34h/35h, 52h/53h,  
54h/55h, 56h/57h, 98h/99h, 9Ah/9Bh and 9Ch/9Dh.  
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!Processor Info ROM Data  
Highlight this and hit <Enter> to see PIR data on the following items:  
Header Info  
Processor Data  
Processor Core Data  
L3 Cache Data  
Package Data  
Part Number Data  
Thermal Reference Data  
Feature Data  
Other Data  
OEM Data  
!Hardware Monitor Logic  
Highlight this and hit <Enter> to see monitor data for the following items:  
CPU1 Temperature  
CPU2 Temperature  
System Temperature  
CPU Fan1/CPU1 Chassis Fan  
CPU Fan2/CPU2 Chassis Fan  
Chassis Fan 1  
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Chapter 7: BIOS  
Chassis Fan 2  
Processor Vcore  
3.3V Standby  
3.3V Vcc  
5V Vcc  
12V Vcc  
1.8V Vcc  
-12V Vcc  
7-9 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.  
Phoenix BIOS Setup Utility  
Main  
Advanced  
Security  
Power  
Boot  
PIR  
Exit  
Item Specific Help  
Exit Saving Changes  
Exit Discarding Changes  
Load Setup Defaults  
Discard Changes  
Save Changes  
F1 Help  
Esc Exit  
↑↓ Select Item  
Select Menu  
-/+ Change Values  
Enter Select!Sub-Menu  
F9 Setup Defaults  
F10 Save and Exit  
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Exit Saving Changes  
Highlight this item and hit <Enter> to save any changes you made and to  
exit the BIOS Setup utility.  
Exit Discarding Changes  
Highlight this item and hit <Enter> to exit the BIOS Setup utility without saving  
any changes you may have made.  
Load Setup Defaults  
Highlight this item and hit <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 hit <Enter> to discard (cancel) any changes you  
made. You will remain in the Setup utility.  
Save Changes  
Highlight this item and hit <Enter> to save any changes you made. You will  
remain in the Setup utility.  
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Appendix A: PhoenixBIOS POST Messages  
Appendix A  
PhoenixBIOS POST Messages  
During thePower-OnSelf-Test(POST), theBIOSwillcheckforproblems. Ifaproblem  
is found, the BIOS will activate an alarm or display a message. The following is a list  
of such BIOS messages.  
Failure Fixed Disk  
Fixed disk is not working or not configured properly. Check to see if fixed disk is  
attached properly. Run Setup. Find out if the fixed-disk type is correctly identified.  
Stuck key  
Stuck key on keyboard.  
Keyboard error  
Keyboard not working.  
Keyboard Controller Failed  
Keyboard controller failed test. May require replacing keyboard controller.  
Keyboard locked - Unlock key switch  
Unlock the system to proceed.  
Monitor type does not match CMOS - Run SETUP  
Monitor type not correctly identified in Setup  
Shadow Ram Failed at offset: nnnn  
Shadow RAM failed at offset nnnn of the 64k block at which the error  
was detected.  
System RAM Failed at offset: nnnn  
System RAM failed at offset nnnn of in the 64k block at which the error  
was detected.  
Extended RAM Failed at offset: nnnn Extended memory not  
working or not configured properly at offset nnnn.  
System battery is dead - Replace and run SETUP  
The CMOS clock battery indicator shows the battery is dead. Replace the  
battery and run Setup to reconfigure the system.  
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System CMOS checksum bad - Default configuration used  
System CMOS has been corrupted or modified incorrectly, perhaps by an  
application program that changes data stored in CMOS. The BIOS installed Default  
Setup Values. If you do not want these values, enter Setup and enter your own  
values. If the error persists, check the system battery or contact your dealer.  
System timer error  
The timer test failed. Requires repair of system board.  
Real time clock error  
Real-Time Clock fails BIOS hardware test. May require board repair.  
Check date and time settings  
BIOS found date or time out of range and reset the Real-Time Clock. May require  
setting legal date (1991-2099).  
Previous boot incomplete - Default configuration used  
Previous POST did not complete successfully. POST loads default values and  
offers to run Setup. If the failure was caused by incorrect values and they are  
not corrected, the next boot will likely fail. On systems with control of wait  
states, improper Setup settings can also terminate POST and cause this error on  
the next boot. Run Setup and verify that the waitstate configuration is correct.  
This error is cleared the next time the system is booted.  
Memory Size found by POST differed from CMOS  
Memory size found by POST differed from CMOS.  
Diskette drive A error  
Diskette drive B error  
Drive A: or B: is present but fails the BIOS POST diskette tests. Check to see that  
the drive is defined with the proper diskette type in Setup and that the diskette  
drive is attached correctly.  
Incorrect Drive A type - run SETUP  
Type of floppy drive A: not correctly identified in Setup.  
Incorrect Drive B type - run SETUP  
Type of floppy drive B: not correctly identified in Setup.  
A-2  
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Appendix A: PhoenixBIOS POST Messages  
System cache error - Cache disabled  
RAM cache failed and BIOS disabled the cache. On older boards, check the  
cache jumpers. You may have to replace the cache. See your dealer. A disabled  
cache slows system performance considerably.  
CPUID:  
CPU socket number for Multi-Processor error.  
EISA CMOS not writeable  
ServerBIOS2 test error: Cannot write to EISA CMOS.  
DMA Test Failed  
ServerBIOS2 test error: Cannot write to extended DMA (Direct Memory  
Access) registers.  
Software NMI Failed  
ServerBIOS2 test error: Cannot generate software NMI (Non-Maskable  
Interrupt).  
Fail-Safe Timer NMI Failed  
ServerBIOS2 test error: Fail-Safe Timer takes too long.  
device Address Conflict  
Address conflict for specified device.  
Allocation Error for: device  
Run ISA or EISA Configuration Utility to resolve resource conflict for the  
specified device.  
CD ROM Drive  
CD ROM Drive identified.  
Entering SETUP ...  
Starting Setup program  
Failing Bits: nnnn  
The hex number nnnn is a map of the bits at the RAM address which failed  
the memory test. Each 1 (one) in the map indicates a failed bit. See errors  
230, 231, or 232 above for offset address of the failure in System,  
Extended, or Shadow memory.  
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Fixed Disk n  
Fixed disk n (0-3) identified.  
Invalid System Configuration Data  
Problem with NVRAM (CMOS) data.  
I/O device IRQ conflict  
I/O device IRQ conflict error.  
PS/2 Mouse Boot Summary Screen:  
PS/2 Mouse installed.  
nnnn kB Extended RAM Passed  
Where nnnn is the amount of RAM in kilobytes successfully tested.  
nnnn Cache SRAM Passed  
Where nnnn is the amount of system cache in kilobytes successfully tested.  
nnnn kB Shadow RAM Passed  
Where nnnn is the amount of shadow RAM in kilobytes successfully  
tested.  
nnnn kB System RAM Passed  
Where nnnn is the amount of system RAM in kilobytes successfully tested.  
One or more I2O Block Storage Devices were excluded from the Setup  
Boot Menu  
There was not enough room in the IPL table to display all installed I2O block-  
storage devices.  
Operating system not found  
Operating system cannot be located on either drive A: or drive C:. Enter Setup  
and see if fixed disk and drive A: are properly identified.  
Parity Check 1 nnnn  
Parity error found in the system bus. BIOS attempts to locate the address and  
display it on the screen. If it cannot locate the address, it displays ????. Parity is  
a method for checking errors in binary data. A parity error indicates that some  
data has been corrupted.  
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Appendix A: PhoenixBIOS POST Messages  
Parity Check 2 nnnn  
Parity error found in the I/O bus. BIOS attempts to locate the address and display  
it on the screen. If it cannot locate the address, it displays ????.  
Press <F1> to resume, <F2> to Setup, <F3> for previous  
Displayed after any recoverable error message. Press <F1> to start the boot  
process or <F2> to enter Setup and change the settings. Press <F3> to display  
the previous screen (usually an initialization error of an Option ROM, i.e., an  
add-on card). Write down and follow the information shown on the screen.  
Press <F2> to enter Setup  
Optional message displayed during POST. Can be turned off in Setup.  
PS/2 Mouse:  
PS/2 mouse identified.  
Run the I2O Configuration Utility  
One or more unclaimed block storage devices have the Configuration Request bit  
set in the LCT. Run an I2O Configuration Utility (e.g. the SAC utility).  
System BIOS shadowed  
System BIOS copied to shadow RAM.  
UMB upper limit segment address: nnnn  
Displays the address nnnn of the upper limit of Upper Memory Blocks,  
indicating released segments of the BIOS which can be reclaimed by a virtual  
memory manager.  
Video BIOS shadowed  
Video BIOS successfully copied to shadow RAM.  
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Notes  
A-6  
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Appendix B: PhoenixBIOS POST Codes  
Appendix B  
PhoenixBIOS POST Codes  
This section lists the POST (Power On Self Test) codes for the PhoenixBIOS. POST  
codes are divided into two categories: recoverable and terminal.  
Recoverable POST Errors  
When a recoverable type of error occurs during POST, the BIOS will display  
an 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 continuous long beep - no memory detected  
Terminal POST Errors  
If a terminal type of error occurs, BIOS will shut down the system. Before  
doing so, BIOS will write the error to port 80h, attempt to initialize video and  
write the error in the top left corner of the screen.  
The following is a list of codes that may be written to port 80h.  
POSTCode  
Description  
02h  
03h  
04h  
06h  
07h  
08h  
09h  
0Ah  
0Bh  
0Ch  
0Eh  
0Fh  
10h  
11h  
12h  
13h  
14h  
16h  
Verify Real Mode  
Disable Non-Maskable Interrupt (NMI)  
Get CPU type  
Initialize system hardware  
Disable shadow and execute code from the ROM.  
Initialize chipset with initial POST values  
Set IN POST flag  
Initialize CPU registers  
Enable CPU cache  
Initialize caches to initial POST values  
Initialize I/O component  
Initialize the local bus IDE  
Initialize Power Management  
Load alternate registers with initial POST values  
Restore CPU control word during warm boot  
Initialize PCI Bus Mastering devices  
Initialize keyboard controller  
1-2-2-3 BIOS ROM checksum  
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POSTCode  
17h  
18h  
Description  
Initialize cache before memory Auto size  
8254 timer initialization  
1Ah  
1Ch  
20h  
8237 DMA controller initialization  
Reset Programmable Interrupt Controller  
1-3-1-1 Test DRAM refresh  
22h  
24h  
28h  
1-3-1-3 Test 8742 Keyboard Controller  
Set ES segment register to 4 GB  
Auto size DRAM  
29h  
2Ah  
Initialize POST Memory Manager  
Clear 512 kB base RAM  
2Ch  
2Eh  
1-3-4-1 RAM failure on address line xxxx*  
1-3-4-3 RAM failure on data bits xxxx* of low byte of  
memory bus  
2Fh  
32h  
33h  
36h  
38h  
3Ah  
3Ch  
3Dh  
41h  
42h  
45h  
46h  
47h  
48h  
49h  
4Ah  
4Bh  
4Ch  
4Eh  
4Fh  
50h  
51h  
52h  
54h  
55h  
58h  
59h  
5Ah  
5Bh  
Enable cache before system BIOS shadow  
Test CPU bus-clock frequency  
Initialize Phoenix Dispatch Manager  
Warm start shut down  
Shadow system BIOS ROM  
Auto size cache  
Advanced configuration of chipset registers  
Load alternate registers with CMOS values  
Initialize extended memory for RomPilot  
Initialize interrupt vectors  
POST device initialization  
2-1-2-3 Check ROM copyright notice  
Initialize I20 support  
Check video configuration against CMOS  
Initialize PCI bus and devices  
Initialize all video adapters in system  
QuietBoot start (optional)  
Shadow video BIOS ROM  
Display BIOS copyright notice  
Initialize MultiBoot  
Display CPU type and speed  
Initialize EISA board  
Test keyboard  
Set key click if enabled  
Enable USB devices  
2-2-3-1 Test for unexpected interrupts  
Initialize POST display service  
Display prompt “Press F2 to enter SETUP”  
Disable CPU cache  
B-2  
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Appendix B: PhoenixBIOS POST Codes  
POSTCode  
5Ch  
60h  
62h  
64h  
66h  
67h  
68h  
69h  
6Ah  
6Bh  
6Ch  
6Eh  
70h  
72h  
76h  
7Ch  
7Dh  
7Eh  
80h  
81h  
82h  
83h  
84h  
85h  
86h  
87h  
Description  
Test RAM between 512 and 640 kB  
Test extended memory  
Test extended memory address lines  
Jump to UserPatch1  
Configure advanced cache registers  
Initialize Multi Processor APIC  
Enable external and CPU caches  
Setup System Management Mode (SMM) area  
Display external L2 cache size  
Load custom defaults (optional)  
Display shadow-area message  
Display possible high address for UMB recovery  
Display error messages  
Check for configuration errors  
Check for keyboard errors  
Set up hardware interrupt vectors  
Initialize Intelligent System Monitoring  
Initialize coprocessor if present  
Disable onboard Super I/O ports and IRQs  
Late POST device initialization  
Detect and install external RS232 ports  
Configure non-MCD IDE controllers  
Detect and install external parallel ports  
Initialize PC-compatible PnP ISA devices  
Re-initialize onboard I/O ports.  
Configure Motherboard Configurable Devices  
(optional)  
88h  
89h  
8Ah  
8Bh  
8Ch  
8Fh  
90h  
91h  
92h  
93h  
95h  
96h  
97h  
98h  
Initialize BIOS Data Area  
Enable Non-Maskable Interrupts (NMIs)  
Initialize Extended BIOS Data Area  
Test and initialize PS/2 mouse  
Initialize floppy controller  
Determine number of ATA drives (optional)  
Initialize hard-disk controllers  
Initialize local-bus hard-disk controllers  
Jump to UserPatch2  
Build MPTABLE for multi-processor boards  
Install CD ROM for boot  
Clear huge ES segment register  
Fix up Multi Processor table  
1-2 Search for option ROMs. One long, two short  
beeps on checksum failure  
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POSTCode  
99h  
9Ah  
Description  
Check for SMART Drive (optional)  
Shadow option ROMs  
9Ch  
9Dh  
9Eh  
9Fh  
Set up Power Management  
Initialize security engine (optional)  
Enable hardware interrupts  
Determine number of ATA and SCSI drives  
Set time of day  
A0h  
A2h  
Check key lock  
A4h  
Initialize typematic rate  
A8h  
Erase F2 prompt  
AAh  
Scan for F2 key stroke  
ACh  
AEh  
B0h  
B1h  
B2h  
B4h  
B5h  
B6h  
B7h  
B9h  
BAh  
BBh  
BCh  
BDh  
BEh  
BFh  
C0h  
C1h  
C2h  
C3h  
C4h  
C5h  
C6h  
C7h  
C8h  
C9h  
CAh  
CBh  
Enter SETUP  
Clear Boot flag  
Check for errors  
Inform RomPilot about the end of POST.  
POST done - prepare to boot operating system  
1 One short beep before boot  
Terminate QuietBoot (optional)  
Check password (optional)  
Initialize ACPI BIOS  
Prepare Boot  
Initialize SMBIOS  
Initialize PnP Option ROMs  
Clear parity checkers  
Display MultiBoot menu  
Clear screen (optional)  
Check virus and backup reminders  
Try to boot with INT 19  
Initialize POST Error Manager (PEM)  
Initialize error logging  
Initialize error display function  
Initialize system error handler  
PnPnd dual CMOS (optional)  
Initialize note dock (optional)  
Initialize note dock late  
Force check (optional)  
Extended checksum (optional)  
Redirect Int 15h to enable remote keyboard  
Redirect Int 13h to Memory Technologies  
Devices such as ROM, RAM, PCMCIA, and serial disk  
Redirect Int 10h to enable remote serial video  
CCh  
B-4  
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Appendix B: PhoenixBIOS POST Codes  
POSTCode  
CDh  
CEh  
Description  
Re-map I/O and memory for PCMCIA  
Initialize digitizer and display message  
Unknown interrupt  
D2h  
The following are for boot block in Flash ROM  
POSTCode  
E0h  
E1h  
E2h  
E3h  
E4h  
E5h  
E6h  
E7h  
E8h  
E9h  
EAh  
EBh  
ECh  
EDh  
EEh  
EFh  
F0h  
Description  
Initialize the chipset  
Initialize the bridge  
Initialize the CPU  
Initialize system timer  
Initialize system I/O  
Check force recovery boot  
Checksum BIOS ROM  
Go to BIOS  
Set Huge Segment  
Initialize Multi Processor  
Initialize OEM special code  
Initialize PIC and DMA  
Initialize Memory type  
Initialize Memory size  
Shadow Boot Block  
System memory test  
Initialize interrupt vectors  
Initialize Run Time Clock  
Initialize video  
F1h  
F2h  
F3h  
F4h  
Initialize System Management Manager  
Output one beep  
F5h  
F6h  
Clear Huge Segment  
Boot to Mini DOS  
F7h  
Boot to Full DOS  
* If the BIOS detects error 2C, 2E, or 30 (base 512K RAM error), it displays an additional  
word-bitmap (xxxx) indicating the address line or bits that failed. For example, “2C 0002”  
means address line 1 (bit one set) has failed. “2E 1020" means data bits 12 and 5 (bits  
12 and 5 set) have failed in the lower 16 bits. The BIOS also sends the bitmap to the port-  
80 LED display. It first displays the checkpoint code, followed by a delay, the high-order  
byte, another delay, and then the loworder byte of the error. It repeats this sequence  
continuously.  
B-5  
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SUPERSERVER 6012P-6 Manual  
Notes  
B-6  
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Appendix C: Supero Doctor III  
Appendix C  
Supero Doctor III  
C-1  
Overview  
The Supero Doctor III program is a Web-based management tool that supports  
remote management capability and includes both Remote and Local Manage-  
ment tools. The local management is called the SD III Client. The Supero Doctor  
III program included on the CD-ROM 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 temperature, system voltages  
and fan status.  
Key Features  
For Windows XP, NT4, 2000 and 2003 Operating Systems  
Super Doctor III supports the following features:  
!
!
!
!
!
Web-based remote management  
Graphical Mode Console Redirection  
System Information (WMI)  
Performance Monitoring  
Remote Control  
Graceful power shutdown and reboot  
Hard power shutdown and reset without notice  
!
!
System Management  
Allows you to easily manage your entire network  
Reports  
System Information  
Health Log  
Administration  
System Management  
C-1  
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Linux Support  
The SD III Client and Supero Doctor II for Linux support the following features:*  
!
!
!
!
Applications for local management  
Pager and E-mail alerts  
SNMP support  
Health Monitoring  
CPU and system temperatures  
System voltages  
CPU and chassis fans  
Chassis intrusion  
Redundant power failure (hardware dependant)  
Note: For Linux operating systems, please refer to the Supero Doctor II informa-  
tion posted on our website at ftp://ftp.supermicro.com/utility/Supero_Doctor_II/  
Linux/ .  
The figures below display two of the key features of SDIII.  
Figure C-1. Supero Doctor III Health Information Screen  
C-2  
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Appendix C: Supero Doctor III  
Figure C-2. Supero Doctor III Remote Power/Reset Control Screen  
Note: SD III software can be downloaded from our website at ftp://  
ftp.supermicro.com/utility/Supero_Doctor_III/. You can also download the SDIII  
User's Guide at http://www.supermicro.com/PRODUCT/Manuals/SDIII/  
UserGuide.pdf. For Linux, we recommend the use of Supero Doctor II. Please  
refer to our Supero Doctor II information posted at ftp://ftp.supermicro.com/utility/  
Supero_Doctor_II/Linux/.  
C-3  
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Notes  
C-4  
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Appendix D: System Specifications  
Appendix D  
System Specifications  
Processors  
TM  
®
Single or dual Intel Xeon 512K L2 cache processors of up to 3 GHz  
and faster at a front side (system) bus speed of 400 MHz  
Note: Please refer to the support section of our web site for a complete listing of  
supported processors. (http://www.supermicro.com/TechSupport.htm)  
Chipset  
Intel E7500 (Plumas) chipset  
BIOS  
®
4 Mb Phoenix Flash ROM  
Memory Capacity  
Four 184-pin, 25 degree DIMM sockets supporting up to 8 GB of  
registered ECC DDR-200 (PC1600) DDR SDRAM  
Note: Interleaved memory - requires memory to be installed two at a time. DDR-266  
memory modules are supported but only at 200 MHz. See the memory section in  
Chapter 5 for details.  
SCSI Controller  
Adaptec AIC-7899 for dual channnel, Ultra160 onboard SCSI  
SCSI SCA Backplane Controller  
QLogic GEM318 controller for SAF-TE compliance  
SCSI Drive Bays  
Three (3) drive bays to house three (3) standard 1" 80-pin SCA SCSI  
drives  
Peripheral Drive Bays  
One (1) 3.5" slim drive  
One (1) slim CD-ROM drive  
Three (3) 3.5 x 1" drive bays (for SCSI drives)  
D-1  
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Expansion Slots (provided with butterfly riser card)  
One (1) 64-bit 133 MHz standard PCI slot and one (1) 64-bit 66 MHz  
low profile PCI slot  
Power Supply  
Type: 1 x 400W with +3.3V, +5V, +12V, -5V and -12V main DC  
outputs and a 5V standby output  
Input Voltage: 100-240VAC (w/ ± 10% tolerance - units are auto-  
switching capable)  
Fans: Two 10-cm blower fans  
Operating Environment  
Operating Temperature Range: 0 to 35 degrees C  
Humidity Range: 5-90%, non-condensing  
Form Factor  
P4DPR-6GM+ motherboard: Extended ATX (12 x 13.05"/304.8 x 332 mm)  
SC822-SP chassis: 1U rackmount  
Operating Systems Supported  
Windows NT, Windows 2000, Solaris, Netware, SCO UNIX and Linux  
Dimensions  
16.8 x 1.7 x 25.6 in.; 427 x 43 x 651 mm (W x H x D)  
Weight  
Net (Bare Bone): ~30 lbs. (13.6 kg.)  
Gross (Bare Bone): ~40 lbs. (18.2 kg.)  
Regulatory Compliance  
Electromagnetic Emissions:  
FCC Class B, EN 55022 Class B, EN 61000-3-2 & EN 61000-3-3,  
CISPR 22 Class B  
Electromagnetic Immunity:  
EN 55024/CISPR 24, (EN 61000-4-2, EN 61000-4-3, EN 61000-4-4,  
EN 61000-4-5, EN 61000-4-6, EN 61000-4-8, EN 61000-4-11)  
Safety:  
EN 60950/IEC 60950-Compliant, UL Listed (USA), CU  
D-2  
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