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1. J28 Keyboard J15 I DIMM 341 A ATX POWER BANK 1 329 Mouse DIMM 1B PS I USBO 1 DIMM 2A SI CPU1 T r BANK 2 JP36 3 DIMM 2B Jd COM DIMM 3A a CPU1 Chassis FAN BANK 3 DIMM 3B J JF2 CPU2 Chassis FAN CPU2 MCH ups GLAM PO Jp7 e PCIX 1 ap OHLED E Gap gt lais SMB amp ulu Zero Channel RAID Socket E E EPs P64H2 IPMI VGA E m o a O Ja 9 H Rage XL 8 a Kos E BATTERY 2 a g ri AIC 7902 C BIOS SE 5 JPA1 5 404 spp Vi Speaker JA2 CHS wor wo COM2 O FAN3 ES 1 FPUSBO 1 SLP JBT1 WD IR CIR USB2 PWRLED Speaker JL1 Notes The IPMI socket is an optional feature Jumpers not noted are for test purposes only 1 2 Chapter 1 Introduction Quick Reference Jumper Description Default Setting JBT1 CMOS Clear See Jumper Section JD1 Speaker Enable Pins 6 7 Enabled JPA1 JPA2 SCSI Channel A B Termination Open Terminated JD4 GLAN Enable Disable Pins 1 2 Enabled JP4 VGA Enable Disable Pins 1 2 Enabled JP9 Power Fail Alarm En Disable Open Disabled JP22 SCSI Enable Disable Pins 1
2. Chapter 2 Installation Power Button 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 Chassis Intrusion A Chassis Intrusion header is lo cated at JL1 Attach the appropri ate cable to inform you of a chas sis intrusion Universal Serial Bus USBO 1 Two Universal Serial Bus ports are located beside the PS 2 key board mouse ports USBO is the bottom connector and USB1 is the top connector See the table on the right for pin definitions Extra Universal Serial Bus Headers Extra USB headers can be used for front side USB access You will need a USB cable not in cluded to use either connection Refer to the tables on the right for pin definitions 2 9 Power Button Connector Pin Definitions JF2 Pin Number Definition 1 PW ON 2 Ground Universal Serial Bus Pin Definitions USBO USB1 Pin Pin Number Definition Number Definition 1 5V 1 5V 2 Po 2 Po 3 PO 3 PO 4 Ground 4 Ground 5 N A 5 Key Front Panel Universal Serial Bus Pin Definitions USB2 FPUSBO USB3 FPUSB1 Pin Pin Number Definition Nu
3. NIC1 LED 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 NIC2 LED 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 Overheat LED OH 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 Power Fail LED The Power Fail LED connection is located on pins 5 and 6 of JF2 Refer to the table on the right for pin definitions Reset Button 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 2 8 NIC1 LED Pin Definitions JF2 Pin Number Definition 11 Vcc 12 GND NIC2 LED Pin Definitions JF2 Pin Number Definition 9 Vcc 10 GND Overheat OH LED Pin Definitions JF2 Pin Number Definition 7 Vec 8 GND Power Fail LED Pin Definitions JF2 Pin Number Definition 5 Vcc 6 GND Reset Pin Definitions JF2 Pin Number Definition 3 Reset 4 Ground
4. JD4 Jumper Position Definition Pins 1 2 Enabled Pins 2 3 Disabled Chapter 2 Installation CMOS Clear JBT1 is used to clear CMOS lIn stead of pins this jumper consists of contact pads to prevent accidentally clearing the contents of CMOS To clear CMOS 1 First power down the system and unplug the power cord s 2 With the power disconnected short the CMOS pads with a metal object such as a small screwdriver 3 Remove the screwdriver or shorting device 4 Reconnect the power cord s and power on the system Note Do not use the PW ON con nector to clear CMOS VGA Enable Disable VGA Enable Disable Jumper Settings JP4 JP4 allows you to enable or disable damper the VGA port The default position Position Definition e 1 2 Enabled is on pins 1 and 2 to enable VGA 2 3 Disabled See the table on the right for jumper settings Front Side Bus Speed JP38 is used to set the system front side bus speed for the pro Front Side Bus Speed cessors lt is best to keep this eo jumper set to Auto This jumper is Position Definition 5 Pins 1 2 Auto used together with the CPU Clock Pins 2 3 400 MHz setting in BIOS See the table on the right for jumper settings 2 13 Chapter 2 Installation SCSI Enable Disable The SCSI Termination jumper at JP22 allows you to enable or dis Scot Enable Disaple Jumper Settings able the onboard SCS
5. 4 19 Chapter 4 BIOS 4 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 P Processor Info ROM Data gt Hardware Monitor Logic Fl Help TL Select Item Change Values F9 Setup Defaults Esc Exit Select Menu Enter Select gt Sub Menu F10 Save and Exit Select the Processor s PIR Selects the processor PIR Options are AOh 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 4 20 Chapter 4 BIOS 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 Oth
6. 0 64 HO 31 DB 8 65 DB 8 32 DB 9 66 DB 9 33 DB 10 67 DB 10 34 DB 11 68 DB 11 2 16 Chapter 3 Troubleshooting Chapter 3 Troubleshooting 3 1 Technical Support Procedures 1 Please go through the Troubleshooting Procedures and Frequently Asked Question FAQ sections in this chapter or see the FAQs on our web site http service advantech com tw eservice before con tacting Technical Support 2 BIOS upgrades can be downloaded from our web site at http service advantech com tw eservice Note Not all BIOS can be flashed depending on the modifications to the boot block code 3 2 Troubleshooting Procedures Use the following procedures to troubleshoot your system Note Always disconnect the power cord before adding changing or installing any hardware components Before Power On 1 Make sure no short circuits exist between the motherboard and chassis 2 Disconnect all ribbon wire cables from the motherboard including those for the keyboard and mouse 3 Remove all add on cards 4 Install one CPU making sure it is fully seated and connect the chassis speaker and the power LED to the motherboard Check all jumper settings as well No Power 1 Make sure no short circuits exist between the motherboard and the chas Sis Verify that all jumpers are set to their default positions Check that the 115V 230V switch on the power supply is properly set Turn the p
7. 12V 8 pin power connector an even higher wattage power supply is recommended for high load configurations Also your power supply must supply 1 5A for LAN1 and LANZ NOTE Auxiliary 12v power J15 is necessary to support Intel Xeon CPUs Failure to provide this extra power will result in the CPUs becoming unstable after only a few minutes of operation See Section 2 5 for details on connecting the power supply cables It is strongly recommended that you use a high quality power supply that meets ATX power supply Specification 2 02 or above It must also be SSI compliant info at http service advantech com tw eservice Additionally in areas where noisy power transmission is present you may choose to install a line filter to shield the computer from noise It is recommended that you also install a power surge protector to help avoid problems caused by power surges 1 7 Super UO The disk drive adapter functions of the Super I O chip include a floppy disk drive controller that is compatible with industry standard 82077 765 a data separator write pre compensation circuitry decode logic data rate selec tion a clock generator drive interface control logic and interrupt and DMA logic The wide range of functions integrated onto the Super UO greatly reduces the number of components required for interfacing with floppy disk drives The Super I O supports 360 K 720 K 1 2 M 1 44 M or 2 88 M disk drives and data transfer rates of 250 Kb s
8. 2 Enabled JP37 JD1 Watchdog Enable Disable Open Disabled JP38 Front Side Bus Speed Pins 1 2 Auto Connector Description ATX POWER Primary ATX Power Connector COM1 COM2 COM1 COM2 Serial Port Connector CPU1 CPU2 CPU 1 and CPU2 Sockets CPU CHS FAN CPU 1 amp 2 Chassis Fan Headers DIMM 1A DIMM 3B Memory RAM Slots GLAN1 2 Ethernet Ports IDE 1 IDE 2 IDE 1 2 Hard Disk Drive Connectors JA1 LVD SCSI CH A Connector JA2 LVD SCSI CH B Connector JD1 JBT1 WD IR CIR USB2 PWRLED SPKR JF2 Front Control Panel Connector JP7 Floppy Disk Drive Connector JP8 Third Power Supply Fail Header JP35 Keylock Header JP36 Alarm Reset Switch J15 Secondary ATX Power Connector J28 Keyboard Port J29 Mouse Port OHLED Overheat LED Header USBO 1 Universal Serial Bus Ports VGA VGA Display Monitor Port WOL Wake on LAN Header WOR Wake on Ring Header 1 3 Chapter 1 Introduction Motherboard Features CPU Single or dual Intel 604 and 603 pin Xeon processors of up to 3 20 GHz at a 533 400 MHz front side system bus speed Note Please refer to the support section of our web site for a complete listing of supported processors http service advantech com tw eservice Memory Six 184 pin DIMM sockets supporting up to 12 GB of registered ECC DDR 266 200 SDRAM Note Interleaved memory requires memory modules to be installed in pairs DDR 266 memory must be used with 533 MHz FSB speed processors See Section 2 3 for detail
9. 500 Kb s or 1 Mb s It also 1 11 Chapter 1 Introduction provides two high speed 16550 compatible serial communication ports UARTS one of which supports serial infrared communication Each UART includes a 16 byte send receive FIFO a programmable baud rate generator complete modem control capability and a processor interrupt system Each UART includes a 16 byte send receive FIFO a programmable baud rate generator complete modem control capability and a processor inter rupt system Both UARTs provide legacy speed with baud rate of up to 115 2 Kbps as well as an advanced speed with baud rates of 250 K 500 K or 1 Mb s which support higher speed modems The Super UO provides functions that comply with ACPI Advanced Con figuration and Power Interface which includes support of legacy and ACPI power management through an SMI or SCI function pin It also features auto power management to reduce power consumption The IRQs DMAs and UO space resources of the Super UO can flexibly adjust to meet ISA PnP requirements which suppport ACPI and APM Ad vanced Power Management Chapter 2 Installation Chapter 2 Installation 2 1 Static Sensitive Devices Electric Static Discharge ESD can damage electronic components To pre vent damage to your system board it is important to handle it very carefully The following measures are generally sufficient to protect your equipment from ESD Precautions Use a grounde
10. Pin Definitions JD1 Pin Number Function Definition 4 Red wire Speaker data 5 Key No connection 6 Key 7 Speaker data Chapter 2 Installation Third Power Supply Fail Header Connect a cable from your power supply to the JP8 header to pro vide warning of power supply fail ure This warning signal is passed through the PWR LED pin on JF2 to indicate of a power fail ure on the chassis See the table on the right for pin definitions ATX PS 2 Keyboard and PS 2 Mouse Ports The ATX PS 2 keyboard and PS 2 mouse are located on J28 and J29 See the table at right for pin defini tions See Figure 2 3 for the lo cations of each Wake On LAN The Wake On LAN header is des ignated WOL See the table on the right for pin definitions You must enable the LAN Wake Up setting in BIOS to use this feature You must also have a LAN card with a Wake on LAN connector and cable Wake On Ring The Wake On Ring header is des ignated JWOR This function al lows your computer to receive and wake up by an incoming call to the modem when in suspend state See the table on the right for pin definitions You must have a Wake On Ring card and cable to use this feature 2 11 Third Power Supply Fail Header Pin Definitions JP8 Pin Number Definition 1 P S 1 Fail Signal 2 P S 2 Fail Signal 3 P S 3 Fail Signal 4 Reset from MB Note This feature is only available when u
11. as read 4 13 Chapter 4 BIOS Clear All DMI Event Logs Select Yes and press Enter to clear all DMI event logs P 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 4 14 Chapter 4 BIOS 4 5 Security Choose Security from the Phoenix BIOS Setup Utility main menu with the arrow keys You should see the following display Security setting options are displayed by highlighting the setting using the arrow keys and pressing Enters 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 Clear User Passwor
12. is a 1 GB s point to point con nection using a 16 bit wide 66 MHz base clock at a 8x data transfer rate The ICH3 UO Controller Hub provides various integrated functions including a two channel UDMA100 bus master IDE controller USB host controllers a System Management Bus controller and an AC 97 compliant interface Each of the P64H2 PCI X Hubs provides a 16 bit connection to the MCH for high performance IO capability and two 64 bit PCI X interfaces 1 3 Special Features ATI Graphics Controller The motherboard has an integrated ATI video controller based on the Rage XL graphics chip The 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 bits graphics memory bus Recovery from AC Power Loss BIOS provides a setting for you to determine how the system will respond when AC power is lost and then restored to the system You can choose for the system to remain powered off in which case you must hit the power switch to turn it back on or for it to automatically return to a power on state See the Power Lost Control setting in the Advanced BIOS Setup section Peripheral Device Configuration to change this setting The de fault setting is Always On 1 7 Chapter 1 Introduction 1 4 PC Health Monitoring This section describes the PC health monitoring features of the motherboard All have an onboard System Hardware Monitor chip th
13. 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 POST Code Description 02h Verify Real Mode 03h Disable Non Maskable Interrupt NMI 04h Get CPU type 06h Initialize system hardware 07h Disable shadow and execute code from the ROM 08h Initialize chipset with initial POST values 09h Set IN POST flag OAh Initialize CPU registers OBh Enable CPU cache OCh Initialize caches to initial POST values OEh Initialize UO component OFh Initialize the local bus IDE 10h Initialize Power Management 11h Load alternate registers with initial POST values 12h Restore CPU control word during warm boot 13h Initialize PCI Bus Mastering devices 14h Initialize keyboard controller 16h 1 2 2 3 BIOS ROM checksum 17h Initialize cache before memory Auto size B 1 Appendix B BIOS POST Codes POST Code 18h 1Ah 1Ch 20h 22h 24h 28h 29h 2Ah 2Ch 2Eh 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
14. the edge L L of both ends of the module This should release it from th 2 5 Chapter 2 Installation 2 4 l OPorts Control Panel Connectors The I O ports are color coded in conformance with the PC 99 specification See Figure 2 3 below for the colors and locations of the various I O ports Figure 2 3 UO Port Locations and Definitions 3 Keyboard Mouse USBO USB1 COM Port LAN1 LAN2 VGA Graphics External SCSI Purple Green Ports Turquoise Port Port Port Blue Notes COM is a header located on the motherboard see the motherboard layout pages in Chapter 1 for location Front Control Panel JF2 contains header pins for various buttons and indicators that are nor mally located on a control panel at the front of the chassis These connec tors are designed specifically for use with Supermicro server chassis See Figure 2 4 for the descriptions of the various control panel buttons and LED indicators Refer to the following section for descriptions and pin defini tions Figure 2 4 JF2 Header Pins X5DPR 8G2 X5DPR iG2 20 19 Ground ciel NMI X oyo x Power LED Olio Vcc HDD LED Vor NIC1 LED Oo Vcc NIC2 LED O0 Vcc Overheat LED e O Vcc Power Fail LED Lo o Vcc Ground O O Reset Reset Button Ground O pwr gt Power Button Chapter 2 Installation 2 5 Connecting Cables ATX Power
15. the three wires of wires the CPU fan to the respective CPU fan connector CPU fan connector 2 3 Chapter 2 Installation IMPORTANT Please note that special new silver heatsink retention clips must be used with all Xeon 533 MHz FSB front side bus 604 pin processors These new retention clips have 604P clearly marked on them Using the old clips will not keep the proper amount of pressure applied and may cause the processor to overheat You should not use these new retention clips with Xeon 400 MHz FSB processors even if the CPU socket is 604 pin as they will too tight and damage the CPU socket Figure 2 1 PGA604 Socket Empty and with Processor Installed A Warning Make sure you lift the lever completely when installing the CPU f the lever is only partly raised damage to the socket or CPU may result Processor installed Notched Corner Mounting the Motherboard in the Chassis All motherboards have standard mounting holes to fit different types of chassis Make sure the location of all the mounting holes for both the motherboard and the chassis match Although a chassis may have both plastic and metal mounting fasteners metal ones are highly recommended because they ground the motherboard to the chassis Make sure the metal standoffs click in or are screwed in tightly Then use a screwdriver to secure the motherboard onto the motherboard tray 2 4 Chapter 2 Installation 2 3 In
16. 1 or 232 above for offset address of the failure in System Extended or Shadow memory A 3 Appendix A BIOS POST Messages Fixed Disk n Fixed disk n 0 3 identified Invalid System Configuration Data Problem with NVRAM CMOS data UO device IRQ conflict UO 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 DO Block Storage Devices were excluded from the Setup Boot Menu There was not enough room in the IPL table to display all installed 120 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 A4 Appendix A BIOS POST Messages Parity Check 2 nnnn Parit
17. 58h 59h 5Ah 5Bh Description 8254 timer initialization 8237 DMA controller initialization Reset Programmable Interrupt Controller 1 3 1 1 Test DRAM refresh 1 3 1 3 Test 8742 Keyboard Controller Set ES segment register to 4 GB Auto size DRAM Initialize POST Memory Manager Clear 512 kB base RAM 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 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 120 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 Appendix B BIOS POST Codes POST Code 5Ch 60h 62h 64h 66h 67h 68h 69h 6Ah 6Bh 6Ch 6Eh 70h 72h 76h 7Ch 7Dh 7Eh 80h 81h 82h 83h 84h 85
18. BIOS 4 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 4 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 k icon With the item highlighted press the Enter key to access the submenu 4 2 Chapter 4 BIOS Main BIOS Setup Menu Phoenix BIOS Setup Utility Main Advanced Secu
19. I controller JP22 The normal default position is on Jumper D Position Definition pins 1 2 to enable SCSI termina Pins 1 2 Enabled Pins 2 3 Disabled tion See the table on the right for jumper settings SCSI Termination Enable Disable Jumpers JPA1 and JPA2 allow you Ses Channel Termination Enable Disable to enable or disable termination for Jumper Settings the individual SCSI channels mci Jumper JPA1 controls SCSI channel Position Definition A and JPA2 controls SCSI channel e See B The normal default setting is open to enable teminate both SCSI channels If you wish to connect external SCSI devices you should disable termination for the channnel s you will be connecting them to See the table on the right for jumper settings Watch Dog Enable Disable Watch Dog Timer Enable Disable Jumper Settings The Watch Dog jumper located on Jumper gan JP37 allows you to enableor dis Position Definition able the Watch Dog feature The e CS default position is open to disable the Watch Dog timer When en abled Watch Dog can reboot your PC if an application is hung up or the system goes down See the table on the right for jumper set tings 2 14 Chapter 2 Installation 2 7 Onboard Indicators GLAN1 GLAN2 LEDs GLAN Right LED Indicator The Ethernet ports located beside LED the VGA port have two LEDs ran eran See the table on the
20. O3 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 This display informs you how much extended memory is recognized as being present in the system 4 5 Chapter 4 BIOS 4 4 Advanced Setup Choose Advanced from the Phoenix BIOS Setup Utility main menu with the arrow keys You should see the following display The items with a triangle beside them have sub menus that can be accessed by highlighting the item and pressing Enter 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 Quick Boot Mode Enabled Quiet Boot Disabled P PCI PnP Configuration gt Cache Memory I O Device Configuration gt Advanced Chipset Control b Advanced Processor Options gt DMI Event Logging gt Console Redirection Fl Help N select Item Change Values F9 Setup Defaults Esc Exit Select Menu Enter Select b Sub Menu F10 Save and Exit 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 En
21. OMs One long two short beeps on checksum failure B 3 Appendix B BIOS POST Codes POST Code 99h 9Ah 9Ch 9Dh 9Eh 9Fh AOh A2h A4h A8h AAh ACh AEh BOh Bih B2h B4h B5h B6h B7h B9h BAh BBh BCh BDh BEh BFh COh Cih C2h C3h C4h C5h C6h C7h C8h C9h CAh CBh CCh Description Check for SMART Drive optional Shadow option ROMs Set up Power Management Initialize security engine optional Enable hardware interrupts Determine number of ATA and SCSI drives Set time of day Check key lock Initialize typematic rate Erase F2 prompt Scan for F2 key stroke 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 Red
22. RS 200 RPS D Motherboard User s Manual Date of Publicatoin December 1 2003 Preface Preface About This Manual This manual is written for system integrators PC technicians and knowledgeable PC users It provides information for the installation and use of the motherboard The motherboard supports single or dual Intel 603 604 pin Xeon processors at up to 3 20 GHz at a 533 400 MHz front side bus Please refer to the support section of our web site http service advantech com tw eservice for a complete listing of supported pro cessors This product is intended to be professionally installed Manual Organization Chapter 1 describes the features specifications and performance of the motherboard and provides detailed information about the chipset Chapter 2 begins with instructions on handling static sensitive devices Read this chapter when you want to install the processor and DIMM memory modules and when mounting the mainboard in the chassis Also refer to this chapter to connect the floppy and hard disk drives SCSI drives the IDE interfaces the parallel and serial ports the keyboard and mouse the power supply and various control panel buttons and indicators If you encounter any problems see Chapter 3 which describes trouble shooting procedures for the video the memory and the setup configuration stored in CMOS For quick reference a general FAQ Frequently Asked Questions section is provided Instruction
23. 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 x20 x21 x22 x23 and x24 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 4 12 Chapter 4 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 ECC Event Logging This setting allows you to Enable or Disable ECC event logging Mark DMI Events as Read Highlight this item and press Enter to mark the DMI events
24. Supply 20 pin Connector Pin Number Definition Pin Number Definition ATX Power Connection T1 TOON 1 ERON 12 12V 2 3 3V 13 COM 3 COM S 14 PS ON 4 45V The motherboard has the 20 pin e COM E COM connector See the tables on the 16 COM 6 5V b ee 17 COM 7 COM right for pin definitions 18 5V 8 PW OK 19 45V 9 5VSB 20 45V 10 12V PWR_SEC Connection 8 Pin 12v Power Supply In addition to the Primary ATX Connector J15 power connector above the Pins Definition Secondary 12v 8 pin J15 connec 1 thru 4 Ground tor must also be connected to SURE GE your power supply See the table on the right for pin definitions Power LED PWR LED Pin Definitions JF2 Pin The Power LED connection is lo Number Definition 15 Vcc cated on pins 15 and 16 of JF2 16 Control Refer to the table on the right for pin definitions NMI Button NMI Button Pin Definitions JF2 The non maskable interrupt button Pin header is located on pins 19 and Nuper Definition 20 of JF2 Refer to the table on 20 Ground the right for pin definitions HDD LED The HDD LED for IDE and SCSI Rose Pin etinitions Disk Drives connection is located JF2 on pins 13 and 14 of JF2 Attach Pin N Detiniti the IDE hard drive LED cable to ip a these pins to display disk activity ee Refer to the table on the right for pin definitions 2 7 Chapter 2 Installation
25. abled and Disabled If Disabled the POST routine will run at normal speed Quiet Boot This setting allows you to Enable or Disable the diagnostic screen during boot up 4 6 Chapter 4 BIOS PCI PnP Configuration Access the submenu to make changes to the following settings Onboard LAN1 OPROM Configure Enabling this option provides the ability to boot from LAN1 The options are Enabled and Disabled Onboard LAN2 OPROM Configure Enabling this option provides the ability to boot from LAN2 The options are Enabled and Disabled Legacy USB Support This setting allows you to enable support for Legacy USB devices The settings are Enabled and Disabled 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 NTA Installation Workaround When enabled this setting provides a workaround for the absent floppy drive during NT4 installation Options are Enabled and Disabled Reset Configuration Data If set to Yes this setting clears the Extended System Configuration Data area Options are Yes and No Chapter 4 BIOS P PCI Slot Configuration PCI PCIX Frequency Slot 1 3 Use this setting to change the speed of PCI PCIX slots 1 though 3 Options are Auto 33 MHz 66 MHz 100 MHz and 133 MHz PCI PCIX Frequency Slot 4 Use this setting to change the speed of PCI PCIX slot 4 Options are Auto 33 MH
26. at supports PC health monitoring Onboard Voltage Monitors for the CPU Cores Chipset Voltage 3 3V 5V 12V and 3 3V Standby An onboard voltage monitor will scan these voltages continuously Once a voltage becomes unstable a warning is given or an error message is sent to the screen Users can adjust the voltage thresholds to define the sensitivity of the voltage monitor Fan Status Monitor with Firmware Software On Off Control The PC health monitor can check the RPM status of the cooling fans The onboard 3 pin CPU and chassis fans are controlled by the power manage ment functions The thermal fan is controlled by the overheat detection logic Environmental Temperature Control The thermal control sensor monitors the CPU temperature in real time and will turn on the thermal control fan whenever the CPU temperature exceeds a user defined threshold The overheat circuitry runs independently from the CPU It can continue to monitor for overheat conditions even when the CPU is in sleep mode Once it detects that the CPU temperature is too high it will automatically turn on the thermal control fan to prevent any overheat damage to the CPU The onboard chassis thermal circuitry can monitor the overall system temperature and alert users when the chassis temperature is too high CPU Fan Auto Off in Sleep Mode The CPU fan activates when the power is turned on It continues to operate when the system enters Standby mode When in sleep m
27. cess 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 Watch Dog This setting is for enabling the Watch Dog feature The options are Enabled and Disabled KBC Clock Input Use this setting to set the clock frequency for the keyboard Options are 6 MHz 8 MHz and 12 MHz 4 9 Chapter 4 BIOS Serial Port A This setting allows you to assign control of serial port A The options are Enabled user defined Disabled and Auto BIOS controlled Base I O Address Select the base I O address for serial port A The options are 3F8 2F8 3E8 and 2E8 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 and Auto BIOS 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 UO 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 Base UO Address Select the base I O address for the parallel port 378 278 or 3BC 4 10 Chapter 4 BIOS In
28. configure the system A 1 Appendix A BIOS POST Messages 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 s
29. ct 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 4 18 Chapter 4 BIOS 4 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 Advanced Security Exit Item Specific Help Removable Devices CD ROM Drive Hard Drive Fl Help N Select Item Change Values F9 Setup Defaults Esc Exit Select Menu Enter Select b Sub Menu 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 devices in the Item Specific Help window CD ROM Drive See details on how to change the order and specs of the CD ROM drive in the Item Specific Help window 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
30. d Is Clear Set Supervisor Password Enter Set User Password Enter Password on Boot Disabled Fixed Disk Boot Sector Normal Fl Help N Select Item Change Values F9 Setup Defaults Esc Exit Select Menu Enter Select b Sub Menu F10 Save and Exit Supervisor Password ls 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 4 15 Chapter 4 BIOS 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 vir
31. d wrist strap designed to prevent static discharge Touch a grounded metal object before removing the board from the anti static bag Handle the 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 and peripherals back into their antistatic 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 2 1 Chapter 2 Installation 2 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 CPU heat sink 1 Locate the following components which are included in the shipping package Clips 2 T 111 f Screws 4 Retention brackets 2 MELO Black anchors 4 White pegs 4 These screws are for mounting the motherboard to the back panel of a chassis that ha
32. e the system malfunctions and you want to turn off the power just depress and hold the power button for 4 seconds This option can be set in the Power section of the BIOS Setup routine External Modem Ring On Wake up events can be triggered by a device such as the external modem ringing when the system is in the SoftOff state Note that external modem ring on can only be used with an ATX 2 01 or above compliant power supply Wake On LAN WOL Wake On LAN is defined as the ability of a management application to re motely power up a computer that is powered off Remote PC setup up dates and asset tracking can occur after hours and on weekends so that daily LAN traffic is kept to a minimum and users are not interrupted The motherboards have a 3 pin header WOL to connect to the 3 pin header on Chapter 1 Introduction a Network Interface Card NIC that has WOL capability Wake On LAN must be enabled in BIOS Note that Wake On Lan can only be used with an ATX 2 01 or above compliant power supply 1 6 Power Supply As with all computer products a stable power source is necessary for proper and reliable operation It is even more important for processors that have high CPU clock rates The motherboard accommodates ATX power supplies Although most power supplies generally meet the specifications required by the CPU some are inadequate You should use one that will supply at least 400W of power and includes the additional
33. ee 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 A2 Appendix A BIOS 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 ServerBlOS2 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 ServerBlOS2 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 23
34. er Data OEM Data b 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 4 21 Chapter 4 BIOS Chassis Fan 2 Processor Vcore 3 3V Standby 3 3V Vcc 5V Vcc 12V Vcc 1 8V Vcc 12V Vcc 4 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 N select Item Change Values F9 Setup Defaults Esc Exit 9 Select Menu Enter Select gt Sub Menu F10 Save and Exit 4 22 Chapter 4 BIOS 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
35. figuration Ensure that you are using a high quality power supply A poor quality power supply may cause the system to lose the CMOS setup informa tion Refer to Section 1 6 for details on recommended power supplies The battery on your motherboard may be old Check to verify that it still supplies 3VDC f it does not replace it with a new one If the above steps do not fix the Setup Configuration problem contact your vendor for repairs Chapter 3 Troubleshooting 3 3 Frequently Asked Questions Question What are the various types of memory that my mother board can support Answer The motherboard has six DIMM slots that support 184 pin regis tered ECC DDR 266 or DDR 200 SDRAM DIMM modules If using 533 MHz processors you must use DDR 266 memory DDR 200 is not supported at a 533 MHz front side bus speed It is strongly recommended that you do not mix memory modules of different speeds and sizes Unbuffered SDRAM non ECC memory and PC100 133 SDRAM modules are not supported Question How do update my BIOS Answer It is recommended that you do not upgrade your BIOS if you are experiencing no problems with your system Updated BIOS files are located on our web site http service advantech com tw eservice Please check our BIOS warning message and the info on how to update your BIOS on our web site Also check the current BIOS revision and make sure it is newer than your BIOS before downloading Select your m
36. g Cables ico eden dee ae edo Ee ceo 2 7 ATX Power Connection sss enne nnne 2 7 PWR SEC Connection Power LED rc n EET XR E ERR EP PERS NM Button cioe Dei Det e vlad dee D dp P te oe deed el EIN GREEN IC en RN Ke KE Overheat LED Power Fail Button sssssssssssssseseeeeeeeneeennnene nnne nnne nnn tennis Reset BUON oi EEN Power ButtOn incen eae ae eaa kn nda e vaa ias Table of Contents Chassis Intr siOhi 2 ote citt ntt cot tette cate e d etude 2 9 Universal Serial Bus USBO 1 sse 2 9 Extra Universal Serial Bus Headers USB 2 9 Serial Ports Es GLAN1 2 Ethernet Ports ees 2 10 Fan Headers eene nnne nnn nnntnn ernst niente three 2 10 Power LED Speaker NMI Header A 2 10 Third Power Supply Fail Header 2 11 ATX PS 2 Keyboard and Mouse Ports 2 11 Wake On LAN ENEE 2 11 Wake On Hirng etn tenter dd ce 2 11 IC ele 2 6 Jumper Settings Explanation of Jumpers c oooccnncccnoconoccnoncnnannonnonanana conocio nana no nanncnananinanos GLAN Enable Disable nens CMOS Cl a E ANEA VGA Enable Disable trie treten e e geed e en ene et Front Side Bus Speed Go SCSI Enable Disable sse SCSI Termination Enable Disable sse 2 14 Watch Dog Enable Disable A 2 14 2 7 Onboard IndiGatOrs oett AA istic net 2 15 EANT EAN2 BEDS eiie uisi iens 2 15 2 8 Floppy Hard Disk Drive and SCSI Connections oococccnccicnicninnco
37. h 86h 87h 88h 89h 8Ah 8Bh 8Ch 8Fh 90h 91h 92h 93h 95h 96h 97h 98h 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 l 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 UO ports Configure Motherboard Configurable Devices optional 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 R
38. irect Int 10h to enable remote serial video B 4 Appendix B BIOS POST Codes POST Code CDh CEh D2h Description Re map l O and memory for PCMCIA Initialize digitizer and display message Unknown interrupt The following are for boot block in Flash ROM POST Code EOh Eth E2h E3h E4h E5h E6h E7h E8h E9h EAh EBh ECh EDh EEh EFh FOh Fih F2h F3h F4h F5h F6h F7h 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 Initialize System Management Manager Output one beep Clear Huge Segment Boot to Mini DOS 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 err
39. ities BIOS flash upgrade utility and device drivers Dimension Extended ATX 12 x13 304 8x330 2 mm Chapter 1 Introduction ATA 100 Ports USB 1 1 Ports Dual GLAN amp SXB LJ ices MCH P64H2 SCSI amp Slim PCI Slot SMBus SXB Supermicro Extended MHz Superio 286 MHz Memory Bus Bus PCI Slot A L M CL 2Channel DDR SDRAM Figure 1 3 Intel E7501 Chipset System Block Diagram Note These are general block diagrams Please see the previous Motherboard Features pages for details on the features of each motherboard 1 6 Chapter 1 Introduction 1 2 Chipset Overview The Intel E7501 chipset is a high performance chipset with a performance and feature set designed for mid range dual processor servers The E7501 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 DDR 266 memory interface which provides a total band width of 4 2 GB s 3 2 GB s for DDR 200 The ICHSG 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
40. mber Definition 1 5V 1 5V 2 PO 2 Po 3 PO 3 PO 4 Ground 4 Ground 5 NA 5 Key Chapter 2 Installation Serial Ports The COM1 serial port is beside USB see Figure 2 3 See the table on the right for pin defini tions The COM2 connector is a header on the motherboard 1 2 for location GLAN1 2 Ethernet Ports Two Ethernet ports designated GLAN1 and GLAN2 are located beside the VGA port on the lO backplane These ports accept RJ45 type cables Fan Headers The motherboard has three CPU and chassis fan headers Desig nations include CPU Fan1 CPU Fan2 and Chassis Fan1 See the table on the right for pin defini tions Power LED Speaker NMI On the JDI header pins 1 3 are for a power LED pins 4 7 are for the speaker and pins 8 9 are for the NMI connection See the table on the right for speaker pin defini tions Note The speaker connec tor pins are for use with an exter nal speaker f you wish to use the onboard speaker you should close pins 6 7 with a jumper 2 10 Serial Port Pin Definitions COM1 COM2 Pin Number Definition Pin Number Definition 1 CD 6 DSR 2 RD 7 RTS 3 TD 8 CTS 4 DTR 9 RI 5 Ground 10 NC Note Pin 10 is included on the header but not on the port Fan Header Pin Definitions Pin Number Definition 1 Ground black 2 12V red 3 Tachometer Caution These fan headers are DC power Speaker Connector
41. nnnnnnncnncnss 2 15 Floppy Gonne CtoE cited eter e e de cU ces 2 15 IDE Connectors oo N ie rye a pd ee ee 2 16 Ultra320 160 SCSI Connectors sssssssseeeenenes 2 16 Chapter 3 Troubleshooting 3 1 Technical Support Procedures sseeeenenneene 3 1 3 2 Troubleshooting Procedures 00 eee cece eee eee conc nnnn cnn ncnn nano nc nena na canon 3 1 Before Power On le cse Ha tette t lg de ON us 3 1 No POWOL nein er pee Dre Ee 3 1 No Video Memory Errors P 3 2 Losing the System s Setup Configuration sss 3 2 3 3 Frequently Asked Questions 0 eee eeeeeeseereeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeaeeaeeaeseeeeeeeeeaees 3 3 SUPER X5DP8 G2 DPE G2 DPR 8G2 DPR iG2 DPi G2 User s Manual Chapter 4 BIOS 451 INTO UC HO Miri nece eee ra eoe et eA Y EX EE SEU SE Fe I UE ate 4 1 4 2 Running Setup ecce tet re eS t dos 4 2 4 3 Maln SetUp ai ue eee E REPRE RERUM 4 2 4 4 Advanced Geiup nete nennen netten nennen nnne 4 6 4 5 Security Setup e ER teet Ee ae 4 15 4 6 Power Setup iecit reve e ta reed ce tear vec t UE ed iei end 4 17 4 17 lee 4 19 4 8 PIR Setup WEE 4 20 4 9 Appendices Appendix A BIOS POST Messages seen A 1 Appendix B BIOS POST Codes 2 esee B 1 Chapter 1 Introduction Chapter 1 Introduction 1 1 Overview Figure 1 1 Image not drawn to scale a f A od 1 1 Chapter 1 Introduction Figure 1 2 Layout not drawn to scale
42. ode the CPU will not run at full power thereby generating less heat 1 8 Chapter 1 Introduction CPU Overheat LED and Control This feature is available when the user enables the CPU overheat warning function in the BIOS This allows the user to define an overheat tempera ture When this temperature is exceeded both the overheat fan and the warning LED are triggered System Resource Alert This feature is available when used with Intel s LANDesk Client Manager optional LDCM is used to notify the user of certain system events For example if the system is running low on virtual memory and there is insuf ficient hard drive space for saving the data you can be alerted of the potential problem Auto Switching Voltage Regulator for the CPU Core The auto switching voltage regulator for the CPU core can support up to 20A current and auto sense voltage IDs ranging from 1 4V to 3 5V This will allow the regulator to run cooler and thus make the system more stable 1 5 ACPI Features ACPI stands for Advanced Configuration and Power Interface The ACPI specification defines a flexible and abstract hardware interface that pro vides a standard way to integrate power management features throughout a PC system including its hardware operating system and application soft ware This enables the system to automatically turn on and off peripherals such as CD ROMs network cards hard disk drives and printers This also includes cons
43. or It repeats this sequence continuously
44. ot yet be recorded in this manual Please refer to our web site http service advantech com tw eservice 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 IBM9PC XT ATS and PS 2 compatible computers The PhoenixBlOS 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 en abling 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 4 1 Chapter 4
45. otherboard model and download the BIOS file to your computer Unzip the BIOS update file and you will find the readme txt flash instructions the phlash bat BIOS flash utility the platform bin platform file and the BIOS image xxxxxx rom files Copy these files onto a bootable floppy and reboot your system t is not necessary to set BIOS boot block protection jumpers on the motherboard Flash the boot block and enter the name of the update BIOS image file Question Why can t turn off the power using the momentary power on off switch Answer The instant power off function is controlled in BIOS by the Power Button Mode setting When the On Off feature is enabled the motherboard will have instant off capabilities as long as the BIOS has control of the system When the Standby or Suspend feature is enabled or when the BIOS is not in control such as during memory count the first screen that appears when the system is turned on the momentary on off switch must be held for more than four seconds to shut down the system This feature is required to implement the ACPI features on the motherboard Chapter 4 BIOS Chapter 4 BIOS 4 1 Introduction This chapter describes the PhoenixBIOS Setup utility for the motherboard 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 n
46. ower switch on and off to test the system a fk GO nm The battery on your motherboard may be old Check to verify that it still supplies 3VDC f it does not replace it with a new one 3 1 Chapter 3 Troubleshooting No Video If the power is on but you have no video remove all the add on cards and cables Use the speaker to determine if any beep codes exist Refer to the Appendix for details on beep codes NOTE If you are a system integrator VAR or OEM a POST diagnostics card is recommended For l O port 80h codes refer to App B Memory Errors 1 Make sure the DIMM modules are properly and fully installed Determine if different speeds of DIMMs have been installed and verify that the BIOS setup is configured for the fastest speed of RAM used It is recommended to use the same RAM speed for all DIMMs in the System Make sure you are using registered ECC DDR 266 or DDR 200 SDRAM If using 533 MHz processors you must use DDR 266 memory DDR 200 is not supported at a 533 MHz front side bus speed Check for bad DIMM modules or slots by swapping a single module be tween two slots and noting the results Make sure all memory modules are fully seated in their slots As an interleaved memory scheme is used you must install two modules at a time beginning with Bank 1 then Bank 2 and so on see Section 2 3 Check the power supply voltage 115V 230V switch Losing the System s Setup Con
47. right for the Green 100 MHz Orange 1 GHz functions associated with these LEDs On each GLAN port the yellow LED indicates activity while the other LED may be green or ange or off to indicate the speed of the connection 2 8 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 Ared mark on a wire typically designates the location of pin 1 Asingle 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 Floppy Connector Pin Definitions JP7 Pin Number Function Pin Number Function 1 GND 2 FDHDIN The floppy connector is located 3 GND 4 Reserved 5 Key 6 FDEDIN on JP7 See the table below GND 3 index for pin definitions i GND 10 Motor Enable 11 GND 12 Drive Select B 13 GND 14 Drive Select A 15 GND 16 Motor Enable 17 GND 18 DIR 19 GND 20 STEP 21 GND 22 Write Data 23 GND 24 Write Gate 25 GND 26 Track 00 27 GND 28 Write Protect 29 GND 30 Read Data 31 GND 32 Side 1 Select 33 GND 34 Diskette 2 15 Chapter 2 Installation IDE Connectors There are no jumpers to configure the onboard IDE 1 and 2 connec tors See the table on the right for pin defini
48. rity Power Boot Exit Item Specific Help System Time 16 19 20 System Date 02 02 02 Legacy Diskette A 1 44 1 25 MB Legacy Diskette B Not Installed Primary Master 120 GB Primary Slave None Secondary Master CD ROM Secondary Slave None System Memory 256 MB Extended Memory 3967 KB F1 Help N Select Item Change Values F9 Setup Defaults Esc Exit Select Menu Enter Select gt Sub Menu 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 4 3 Chapter 4 BIOS 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 p 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
49. s Chipset ntel E7501 chipset Expansion Slots e One 64 bit 133 MHz PCI X SXB One slim 64 bit 66 MHz PCI X BIOS 4 Mb Phoenix Flash ROM APM 1 2 DMI 2 1 PCI 2 2 ACPI 1 0 Plug and Play PnP SMBIOS 2 3 PC Health Monitoring Onboard voltage monitors for CPU cores chipset voltage 3 3V 5V 12V and 3 3V standby Fan status monitor with firmware software on off control CPU chassis temperature monitors Environmental temperature monitor and control CPU fan auto off in sleep mode CPU slow down on temperature overheat CPU overheat LED header Power up mode control for recovery from AC power loss Auto switching voltage regulator for CPU core System overheat LED and control Chassis intrusion detection System resource alert 1 4 Chapter 1 Introduction ACPI Features optional Microsoft OnNow Slow blinking LED for suspend state indicator Main switch override mechanism Onboard UO AIC 7902 for dual channel Ultra320 SCSI Integrated ATI Rage XL graphics controller ntel 82546EB dual port Gigabit LAN Ethernet controller 2 EIDE Ultra DMA 100 bus master interfaces 1 floppy port interface up to 2 88 MB 2 Fast UART 16550A compatible serial ports PS 2 mouse and PS 2 keyboard ports Up to 5 USB Universal Serial Bus ports Other e Internal external modem ring on Wake on LAN WOL Console redirection PMI optional CD Diskette Util
50. s are also included for contact ing technical support In addition you can visit our web site http service advantech com tw eservice for more detailed information Chapter 4 includes an introduction to BIOS and provides detailed informa tion on running the CMOS Setup utility Appendix A gives information on BIOS POST messages Appendix B provides BIOS POST codes Table of Contents Preface About This Manual Manual Organization 2 2 eiat ete e aa ree e cae ee 2 Chapter 1 Introduction Ll e CC 1 1 WAGE vise P e 1 1 Ee UE 1 2 Quick Reference ueterem ERE 1 3 Motherboard Features eee nennen nente etna nen 1 4 Intel E7501 Chipset System Block Diagram sesser 1 5 1 2 Chipset Overview nennen nennen 1 7 1 3 Special Features 1 7 ATI Graphics Controller seen 1 7 Recovery from AC Power LOSS esee 1 7 1 4 PC Health Monitoring seen 1 8 1 5 Eeleren dian iii sini cain Brenan an WANA eae 1 9 1 6 Power Supply ere tenet e eir ete dee eg 1 11 A t pL RH ob e N 1 11 Chapter 2 Installation 2 1 Static Sensitive Devices sss nennen nnne nnns enhn nennen 2 1 Precautions 2 2 PGA Processor and Heatsink Installation se 2 2 2 3 Installing DIMMS nent rrr reni is 2 5 2 4 I O Ports Control Panel Connectors ooooicccncccccnnocccncconcnnncconn conc nano conc nana conca 2 6 2 5 Connectin
51. s four mounting holes as shown on right For chassis that do not have four mounting holes use the anchor peg assemblies da 2 Insert the white pegs into the Anchor peg black anchors Do not force the assemblies white pegs all the way in only about 1 3 of the way into the black anchors Two pegs in position 3 Place a retention bracket in the proper position and secure it by pressing pegs into two of the retention holes until you hear a click The clicking sound indicates that the peg is locked and secured One retention bracket in position 2 2 Chapter 2 Installation 4 Secure the other retention bracket into position by repeating Step 3 5 Lift the lever on the CPU socket lift the lever completely or you will Socket lever damage the CPU socket when power is applied Install CPU1 first 6 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 When pin using only one CPU install it into CPU socket 1 CPU socket 2 is automatically disabled if only one CPU is used 7 Press the lever down until you hear it click into the locked position Heatsink 8 Apply the proper amount of thermal glue to the CPU die and place the heatsink and fan on top of the CPU Fan 9 Secure the heatsink by locking the retention clips into their proper position Retention clip CPU fan 10 Connect
52. sing redundant Supermicro power supplies PS 2 Keyboard and Mouse Port Pin Definitions J9 Pin Number Definition Data NC Ground VCC Clock NC DOADN Wake On LAN Pin Definitions WOL Pin Number Definition 1 5V Standby 2 Ground 3 Wake up Wake on Ring Pin Definitions JWOR Pin Number Definition 1 Ground 2 Wake up Chapter 2 Installation 2 6 Keylock The keyboard lock connection is located on JP35 Utilizing this header allows you to inhibit any actions made on the keyboard effectively locking it Jumper Settings Explanation of Jumpers To modify the operation of the motherboard jumpers can be used to choose between optional settings Jumpers 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 pages for jumper locations Note On two pin jumpers Closed means the jumper is on and Open means the jumper is off the pins GLAN Enable Disable Change the setting of jumper JD4 to enable or disable the onboard GLAN ports GLAN1 and GLAN2 on the motherboard See the table on the right for jumper settings The default setting is enabled 2 12 3 2 1 Pins Lo Jumper Cap 3 2 1 p Pin 1 2 short Setting GLAN Enable Disable Jumper Settings
53. stalling DIMMs 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 2 2 1 Insert the desired number of DIMMs into the memory slots starting with Bank 1 The memory scheme is interleaved so you must install two modules at a time beginning with Bank 1 then Bank 2 and so on 2 Insert each DIMM module vertically into its slot Pay attention to the notch along the bottom of the module to prevent inserting the DIMM module incorrectly 3 Gently press down on the DIMM module until it snaps into place in the slot Repeat for all modules see step 1 above Memory Support The motherboard only supports ECC registered DDR 266 200 MHz SDRAM memory f you are using 533 MHz front side bus processors s you must use DDR 266 SDRAM If you are using 400 MHz front side bus processors s you may use either DDR 266 or DDR 200 SDRAM Figure 2 2 Installing and Removing DIMMs To Install Insert module tora BR vertically and press down A until it snaps Ge m7 into place 4 Notch A annm O Pay attention Release Release Tab Note Notch Tab to the should align alignment with the receptive point notch at the on the slot bottom To Remove Use your thumbs to Top View of DDR Slot gently push Release Tab Release Tab near
54. 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 Select the drive type of the fixed Multi Sector Transfer 16 Sectors disk installed in LBA Mode Control Enabled your system If type 32 bit I O Enabled User is selected Transfer Mode Fast PIO 4 Cylinders Heads Ultra DMA Mode Disabled and Sectors can be edited directly Auto attempts to automatically detect the drive type for drives that comply with ANSI Specifications F1 Help N Select Item Change Values F9 Setup Defaults Esc Exit lt Select Menu Enter Select b Sub Menu F10 Save and Exit 4 4 Chapter 4 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 UO Selects 32 bit UO operation Options are Enabled and Disabled Transfer Mode Selects the transfer mode Options are Standard Fast PIO1 Fast PIO2 Fast PI
55. terrupt Select the IRQ interrupt request for the parallel port Options are IRQ5 and IRQ7 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 UO Address Select the base l O address for the parallel port The options are Primary and Secondary gt Advanced Chipset Control Access the submenu to make changes to the following settings Clock Spectrum Feature The options for this setting are Disabled and Extended SMART Device Monitoring The options for this setting are Disabled and Extended Chapter 4 BIOS 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 gt Advanced Processor Options Access the submenu to make changes to the following settings CPU
56. tions Ultra320 SCSI Connector Refer to the table below for the pin definitions of the Ultra320 SCSI con nectors located at JA1 JA2 and JA4 IDE Connector Pin Definitions IDE 1 IDE 2 Pin Number Function Pin Number Function 1 Reset IDE 2 GND 3 Host Data 7 4 Host Data 8 5 Host Data 6 6 Host Data 9 7 Host Data 5 8 Host Data 10 9 Host Data 4 10 Host Data 11 11 Host Data 3 12 Host Data 12 13 Host Data 2 14 Host Data 13 15 Host Data 1 16 Host Data 14 17 Host Data 0 18 Host Data 15 19 GND 20 Key 21 DRQ3 22 GND 23 UO Write 24 GND 25 UO Read 26 GND 27 IOCHRDY 28 BALE 29 DACK3 30 GND 31 IRQ14 32 10CS16 33 Addr 1 34 GND 35 Addr 0 36 Addr 2 37 Chip Select 0 38 Chip Select 1 39 Activity 40 GND 68 pin Ultra320 160 SCSI Connectors JA1 JA2 JA4 Connector Connector Contact Contact Number Signal Names Number Signal Names 1 DB 12 35 DB 12 2 DB 13 36 DB 13 3 DB 14 37 DB 14 4 DB 15 38 DB 15 5 DB P1 39 DB P1 6 DB 0 40 DB 0 7 DB 1 41 DB 1 8 DB 2 42 DB 2 9 DB 3 43 DB 3 10 DB 4 44 DB 4 11 DB 5 45 DB 5 12 DB 6 46 DB 6 13 DB 7 47 DB 7 14 DB P 48 DB P 15 GROUND 49 GROUND 16 DIFFSENS 50 GROUND 17 TERMPWR 51 TERMPWR 18 TERMPWR 52 TERMPWR 19 RESERVED 53 RESERVED 20 GROUND 54 GROUND 21 ATN 55 ATN 22 GROUND 56 GROUND 23 BSY 57 BSY 24 ACK 58 ACK 25 RST 59 RST 26 MSG 60 MSG 27 SEL 61 SEL 28 C D 62 C D 29 REQ 63 REQ 30 1
57. umer devices connected to the PC such as VCRs TVs tele phones and stereos In addition to enabling operating system directed power management ACPI provides a generic system event mechanism for Plug and Play and an oper ating system independent interface for configuration control ACPI lever ages the Plug and Play BIOS data structures while providing a processor architecture independent implementation that is compatible with both Win dows 2000 and Windows 2003 1 9 Chapter 1 Introduction Microsoft OnNow The OnNow design initiative is a comprehensive system wide approach to system and device power control OnNow is a term for a PC that is always on but appears to be off and responds immediately to user or other re quests Slow Blinking LED for Suspend State Indicator When the CPU goes into a suspend state the chassis power LED will start blinking to indicate that the CPU is in suspend mode When the user presses any key the CPU will wake up and the LED will automatically stop blinking and remain on Main Switch Override Mechanism When an ATX power supply is used the power button can function as a system suspend button to make the system enter a SoftOff state The monitor will be suspended and the hard drive will spin down Depressing the power button again will cause the whole system to wake up During the SoftOff state the ATX power supply provides power to keep the re quired circuitry in the system alive In cas
58. uses 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 4 16 Chapter 4 BIOS 4 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 Yes Power Savings Customized Suspend Timeout Off Resume On Time Off Resume on Modem Ring Off Fl Help N select Item Change Values F9 Setup Defaults Esc Exit 9 Select Menu Enter Select gt Sub Menu 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 Options are Yes and No 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 4 17 Chapter 4 BIOS 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 Sele
59. 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 4 23 Appendix A BIOS POST Messages Appendix A BIOS POST Messages During the Power On Self Test POST the BIOS will check for problems If a problem 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 re
60. y 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 120 Configuration Utility One or more unclaimed block storage devices have the Configuration Request bit set in the LCT Run an 120 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 AS Appendix B BIOS POST Codes Appendix B BIOS 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
61. z 66 MHz 100 MHz and 133 MHz PCI PCIX Frequency Slot 5 Use this setting to change the speed of PCI PCIX slot 5 Options are Auto 33 MHz 66 MHz 100 MHz and 133 MHz PCI PCIX Frequency Slot 6 Use this setting to change the speed of PCI PCIX slot 6 Options are Auto 33 MHz 66 MHz 100 MHz and 133 MHz P PCI Device Slot 1 Slot 6 Access the submenu for each of the six settings above to make changes to the following Option ROM Scan When enabled this setting will initialize the device expansion ROM Options are Enabled and Disabled Enable Master This setting allows you to enable the selected device as the PCI bus master Options are Enabled and Disabled Latency Timer This setting allows you to enable the Latency Timer Options are Default 0020h 0040h 0060h 0080h 00A0h 00COh and OOEOh 4 8 Chapter 4 BIOS 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 P 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 KkuO Device Configuration Ac
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