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AS1010S-T - Supermicro

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1. Keyboard COM1 Port VGA Port Blue JLAN1 JLAN2 Purple Turquoise 5 6 Installing Memory CAUTION Exercise extreme care when installing or removing memory modules to prevent any possible damage 1 Insert each memory module vertically into its slot beginning with CPU1 slot 1A then 2A etc Pay attention to the notch along the bottom of the module to prevent inserting the module incorrectly see Figure 5 4 See support information below 2 Gently press down on the memory module until it snaps into place Note each processor has its own built in memory controller so CPU2 DIMMs cannot be addressed if only a single CPU is installed 256 MB 512 MB and 1 GB memory modules are supported AS1010S T User s Manual Support The H8SSL i supports single or dual channel unbuffered ECC DDR400 333 SDRAM Both interleaved and non interleaved memory are supported so you may populate any number of DIMM slots Low profile memory should be used in the 1U server chassis Populating two adjacent slots at a time with memory modules of the same size and type will result in interleaved 128 bit memory which is faster than non interleaved 64 bit memory Maximum memory 4 GB of unbuffered ECC DDR400 333 Figure 5 4 Side and Top Views of DDR Installation To Install Insert module vertically and press down until it snaps into place The release tabs should close if they do not you should close th
2. 5 10 Jumper Settings Explanation of Jumpers To modify the operation of the 3 2 1 motherboard jumpers can be used Connector Telele to choose between optional settings Jumpers create shorts between two pins to change the function of the J imp r connector Pin 1 is identified with a square solder pad onthe printed circuit E i i 3 2 1 board See the diagram at right for Setting B an example of jumping pins 1 and 2 Refer to the motherboard layout page for jumper locations Note 1 On two pin jumpers Closed means the jumper is on and Open means the jumper is off the pins CMOS Clear JBT1 is used to clear CMOS and will also clear any passwords Instead 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 for at least four seconds 3 Remove the screwdriver or shorting device 4 Reconnect the power cord s and power on the system Notes Do not use the PW_ON connector to clear CMOS The onboard battery does not need to be removed when clearing CMOS however you must short JBT1 for at least four seconds ve JBT1 contact pads 5 18 Chapter 5 Advanced Motherboard Setup Onboard Speaker Enable Disable The JD1 header allows you to use either an external sp
3. 6 3 System Fans Two 4 cm fans provide the cooling for the 1010S T Each fan unit is actually made up of two fans joined back to back which rotate in opposite directions This counter rotating action generates exceptional airflow and works to dampen vibration levels These fans can adjust their speed according to the heat level sensed in the system which results in more efficient and quieter fan operation Fan speed is controlled by a setting in BIOS see Chapter 7 Each fan in a set has its own separate tachometer An air shroud is also included with the system to optimize airflow Note It is very important that the chassis top cover is properly installed for the airflow to circulate properly through the chassis and cool the components System Fan Failure If a fan fails the remaining fans will ramp up to full speed and the overheat fan fail LED on the control panel will blink on and off Replace any failed fan at your earliest convenience with the same type and model the system can continue to run with a failed fan Remove the top chassis cover refer to page 6 7 while the system is still running to determine which fan unit has failed then power down the system to replace it Removing the power cord s is also recommended as a safety precaution Replacing System Cooling Fans 1 Removing a fan With the system powered down first unplug the failed fan cable from the mother board Grasp the failed fan unit and lift it out of the cha
4. A fan speed control setting in BIOS allows fan speed to be determined by system temperature the recommended setting is 3 pin Server 1 5 AS1010S T User s Manual 1 4 Contacting Super Micro Headquarters Address Tel Fax Email Web Site Europe Address Tel Fax Email Asia Pacific Address Tel Fax Web Site Super Micro Computer Inc 980 Rock Ave San Jose CA 95131 U S A 1 408 503 8000 1 408 503 8008 marketing supermicro com General Information support supermicro com Technical Support www supermicro com Super Micro Computer B V Het Sterrenbeeld 28 5215 ML s Hertogenbosch The Netherlands 31 0 73 6400390 31 0 73 6416525 sales supermicro nl General Information support supermicro nl Technical Support rma supermicro nl Customer Support Super Micro Taiwan 4F No 232 1 Liancheng Rd Chung Ho 235 Taipei Taiwan R O C 886 2 8226 3990 886 2 8226 3991 www supermicro com tw Technical Support Email Tel support supermicro com tw 886 2 8228 1366 ext 132 or 139 1 6 Chapter 2 Server Installation Chapter 2 Server Installation 2 1 Overview This chapter provides a quick setup checklist to get your 1010S T up and run ning Following the steps in the order given should enable you to have the system operational within a minimal amount of time This quick setup assumes that your 1010S T system has come to you with the process
5. Button Mode setting in BIOS To turn off the power when set to suspend mode depress the button for at least 4 seconds Refer to the table on the right for pin definitions USBO 1 Universal Serial Bus Ports Two Universal Serial Bus ports USB2 0 are located beside the keyboard mouse ports on the UO backpanel See the table on the right for pin definitions Serial ATA Activity LEDs Connect an LED to the JS9 header to provide indication of Serial ATA drive activity See the table on the right for pin definitions Reset Button Pin Definitions JF1 Pin Definition 3 Reset Ground Power Button Pin Definitions JF1 Pin Definition 1 PW_ON 2 Ground Universal Serial Bus Ports Pin Definitions USB0 1 USBO USB1 Pin Definition Pin Definition Ground Ground Serial ATA Activity LEDs Pin Definitions JS9 Pin Definition Pin Definition 1 SATAO LED NC SATA1 LED NC SATA2 LED NC SATA3 LED NC Ground USB2 3 Headers Two additional USB2 0 headers USB2 3 are included on the mother board near the COM2 header These may be connected to provide front side USB access USB cables not included are needed for the connec tions See the table on the right for pin definitions Serial Ports The COM1 serial port is located be tween the USB ports and the VGA port COM2 is a header located near the SATAO port see motherboard layout for location See the tabl
6. HiSpeed 480 Mbps FullSpeed 12 Mbps BIOS EHCI Hand Off Enable or Disable a workaround for OS s without EHCI hand off support gt System Health Monitor CPU Overheat Temperature Use the and keys to set the CPU temperature threshold to between 65 and 90 C When this threshold is exceeded the overheat LED on the chas sis will light up and an alarm will sound The LED and alarm will turn off once the CPU temperature has dropped to 5 degrees below the threshold set The default setting is 78 C The other items in the submenu are all systems monitor displays for the follow ing information System Temperature CPU1 Vcore 5 Vin 12Vin 12V Vcc DRAM VTT 1 2V for Hyper Transport 5V standby 2 5V standby and battery voltage gt System Fan Monitor Fan Speed Control Modes This feature allows the user to determine how the system will control the speed of the onboard fans If the option is set to 3 pin fan the fan speed is controlled based upon the CPU die temperature When the CPU die temperature is higher the fan speed will be higher as well If the option is set to 4 pin the fan speed will be controlled by the Thermal Management Settings pre configured by the user with this setting Select 3 pin if your chassis came with 3 pin fan headers Select 4 pin if your chassis came with 4 pin fan headers Select Workstation if your system is used as a Workstation Select Server if your system is used as a Serve
7. To remove the failed power unit remove the two screws on the back of the power supply which secure it to the chassis You can then lift the unit straight out of the chassis The power cord should have already been removed 3 Installing a new power supply Replace the failed unit with another unit of the same wattage It is highly recom mended to replace it with the exact same power supply Carefully insert the new unit into position in the chassis and secure it with the two screws at the rear of the unit Before reconnecting the power cord make sure the power switch on the power supply is in the off position Then reconnect the power cord replace the chassis top cover and push the unit back into the rack Finish by turning the power switch on the power supply on and then depress the power button on the front of the system 6 7 AS1010S T User s Manual Notes 6 8 Chapter 7 BIOS Chapter 7 BIOS 7 1 Introduction This chapter describes the AMIBIOS Setup utility for the H amp 8SSL i The AMI 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 our web site for any changes to BIOS that may not be reflected in this manual Starting the Setup Utility To enter the BIOS Setup Utility hit the lt
8. Delete gt key while the system is booting up In most cases the lt Delete gt key is used to invoke the BIOS setup screen There are a few cases when other keys are used such as lt F1 gt lt F2 gt etc Each main BIOS menu option is described in this manual The Main BIOS screen has two main frames The left frame displays all the options that can be configured Grayed out options cannot be configured The right frame displays the key legend Above the key legend is an area reserved for a text mes sage When an option is selected in the left frame it is highlighted in white Often a text message will accompany it Note that BIOS has default text messages built in We retain the option to include omit or change any of these text messages Set tings printed in Bold are the default values A P indicates a submenu Highlighting such an item and pressing the lt Enter gt key will open the list of settings within that submenu The BIOS setup utility uses a key based navigation system called hot keys Most of these hot keys lt F1 gt lt F10 gt lt Enter gt lt ESC gt lt Arrow gt keys etc can be used at any time during the setup navigation process 7 1 AS1010S T User s Manual 7 2 Main Menu When you first enter AMI BIOS Setup Utility you will see the Main setup screen You can always return to the Main setup screen by selecting the Main tab on the top of the screen The Main Setup screen provides you
9. GB sec 184 pin DIMMs 144 bit 200 400 MT s GLAN 2 33 MHz PCI Slots 2 33 MHz Bus W i ServerWorks HT 1000 133 MHz Bus UDMA 100 LPC Li ek Floppy Disk Drive gt NS87427 Serial Ports Super UO lt gt 1 4 SATA Ports 4 PS 2 Kybd Mouse PCI X 133 MHz Slot Chapter 1 Introduction 1 3 Server Chassis Features The 1010S T is a mini 1U rackmount server platform configuration The following is a general outline of the main features of the SC811FT 260 chassis System Power When configured as a 1010S T the SC811FT 260 chassis includes a single 260W power supply Control Panel The SC811FT 260 s control panel provides important system monitoring and control information LEDs indicate power on network activity hard disk drive activity and overheat fan fail conditions The control panel also includes a main power button and a system reset button Rear I O Panel The SC811FT 260 is a 1U rackmount chassis Its I O panel provides one expan sion card slot one COM port two USB ports PS 2 mouse and keyboard ports a graphics port and two Gb Ethernet ports See Chapter 6 for details Cooling System The SC811FT 260 chassis has an innovative cooling design that features two 4 cm heavy duty counter rotating fans
10. RAID support to enable the hot swap capability of the Serial ATA drives The backplane has the following jumpers you need to be aware of JP18 Alarm Reset high temperature alarm JP25 Hard drive threshold temperature when exceeded alarm will sound Settings Open 45 C Pins 1 2 50 C Pins 2 3 55 C CD ROM and Floppy Drive Installation The top cover of the chassis must be opened to gain full access to both drives The CD ROM drive must have a slim profile to fit into the 1010S T You must power down the system before installing or removing a CD ROM or floppy drive First 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 To install either type of drive start by disconnecting the drives power and data cables then remove the two screws from either side of the bracket the secures the drives to the chassis With these screws removed you can then lift out the entire assembly drives and bracket Both the CD ROM and the floppy drives are each secured to this bracket with four screws two on either side Remove these screws to take out the drive then install a new drive into the same space Secure it to the bracket with th
11. must also connect the PW2 18 COM e es power connector to your power supply COM 7 SN 9S DROW 20 Res NC 8 PWR_OK 21 5V 9 5VSB 22 5V 10 12V 23 V 11 12V 24 COM 12 3 3V Required Connection Secondary Power Secondary Power Connector Connector Pin Definitions PW2 In addition to the primary ATX power Definition connector above the 4 pin power Ground connector at PW2 must also be con nected to your power supply See the table on the right for pin definitions Required Connection NMI Button NMI Button Pin Definitions JF1 The non maskable interrupt button aaa acta Ol header is located on pins 19 and 20 Pin Definition f 19 Control of JF1 Refer to the table on the right 30 Ground for pin definitions Power LED POW ED Pin Definitions JF1 The Power LED connection is located Pin Definition on pins 15 and 16 of JF1 Refer to the 15 Vec table on the right for pin definitions 16 Control 5 12 Chapter 5 Advanced Motherboard Setup HDD LED The HDD IDE Hard Disk Drive LED Paben ie connection is located on pins 13 and 14 of JF1 Attach the IDE hard drive LED cable to display disk activity Refer to the table on the right for pin Pin Definition 13 Vcc 14 HD Active definitions NIC1 LED The NIC1 Network Interface Control pin Definitions DET ler LED connection is located on pins a 11 and 12 of JF1 Attach the N
12. ona SATA RAID array you must first complete the step below Building a Driver Diskette You must first build a driver diskette from the Super Micro CD ROM that was includ ed with the system You will have to create this disk on a computer that is already running and with the OS installed Note that this driver only works with Windows 2003 After building the driver diskette insert the driver floppy into the floppy drive in your system must be an IDE floppy and not a USB floppy and insert the OS Installation CD into your CD ROM or DVD drive Boot up the system and press the lt F6 gt key You will then be able to create a partition on the disk where the OS will be installed After the OS is installed the system will automatically roboot You can now skip ahead to section entitled Enabling SATA RAID in the BIOS Installing the Operating System If the operating system has not yet been installed you should install it now With the Windows OS installation CD in the CD ROM drive restart the system When you see the prompt hit the lt F6 gt key to enter Windows setup Follow the prompts as they appear to install the OS Once installed proceed to the next step to enable RAID and set up your RAID drives 5 24 Chapter 5 Advanced Motherboard Setup Enabling SATA RAID in the BIOS Before setting up your RAID drives you must change some settings in BIOS Boot up the system and hit the lt Del gt key to enter the BIOS Setup Utlility Aft
13. rack to allow for sufficient airflow and ease in servicing This product is for installation only in a Restricted Access Location dedicated equipment rooms service closets etc This product is not suitable for use with visual display work place devices according to 2 of the the German Ordinance for Work with Visual Display Units AN Warnings and Precautions AN 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 a 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 simul taneously 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 power supply units and hot plug Serial ATA drives to cool before touching them Always keep the rack s fro
14. to support the use of one full height half length 133 100MHz 64 bit PCI X expansion card Motherboard Model H8SSL i ATX form factor Dimensions 8 x 12 in 203 x 305 mm C 1 AS1010S T User s Manual Chassis Model SC811FT 260 Form Factor 1U rackmount Dimensions WxHxD 16 8 x 1 7 x 22 6 in 426 x 43 x 574 mm Weight Gross Bare Bone 23 Ibs 10 5 kg System Cooling Two 2 4 cm counter rotating fans System Input Requirements AC Input Voltage 100 240V AC auto range Rated Input Current 5A max Rated Input Frequency 50 to 60 Hz Power Supply Rated Output Power 260W Model SP262 1S Part PWS 0055 Rated Output Voltages 3 3V 15A 5V 25A 12V 18A 12V 1A 5Vsb 2A BTU Rating 1400 BTUs hr for rated output power of 260W Operating Environment Operating Temperature 10 to 35 C 50 to 95 F Non operating Temperature 40 to 70 C 40 to 158 F Operating Relative Humidity 8 to 90 non condensing Non operating Relative Humidity 5 to 95 non condensing Regulatory Compliance Electromagnetic Emissions FCC Class A EN 55022 Class A EN 61000 3 2 3 3 CISPR 22 Class A 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 C 2 Appendix C System Specifications Safety EN 60950 IEC 60950 Compliant UL Listed USA CUL Listed Canada TUV Certified Germany CE Markin
15. unused 5 9 AS1010S T User s Manual 5 8 Motherboard Details Figure 5 5 H8SSL i Motherboard Layout not drawn to scale JPA 1 FW FANS Pw2 I lusBo 1 CPU1 DIMM 2B CPU1 DIMM 1B de CPU1 DIMM 2A S CPU1 DIMM 1A lt o FAN1 gt CPU LAN LANZ 1U IPMI z JPL _ JPXISMB1 JJPCISMB1 FAN2 PCI 6 133 MHz PCI X JP2 JP11 FAN3 PCI 5 33 MHz PCI soul Ap Speaker PCI 4 33 MHz PCI JPXA1 Rage XL Si HT 1000 EE H BIOS Se JET ZS Js9 v P a gt DP1 cpp2 DP3 DP4 JWOR Battery d SATA3 SATA2 SATA1 SATA0 COM2 uUsB2 3 5 JWOL anal JI JWD Notes Jumpers not indicated are for test purposes only 5 10 Jumpers JBT1 JD1 JP2 JPG1 JPL JPCISMB1 JPXISMB1 JPXA1 JWD Connectors 1U IPMI COM1 COM2 FAN1 5 Floppy IDE 1 J1 J5 JD1 JF1 JL1 JOH1 JP1 JP11 JS9 JWOL JWOR LAN1 2 PW1 PW2 SATAO 1 2 3 USBO 1 USB2 3 VGA Onboard LEDs DP1 DP4 Chapter 5 Advanced Motherboard Setup H8S
16. 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 floppy drive When disconnecting power you should first power down the system with the operating system first 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 static electrical discharge as protection from electrical shock Instead use rubber mats that have been specifically designed as electrical insulators The power supply power cords must include a grounding plug and must be plugged into grounded electrical outlets 4 1 AS1010S T User s Manual Motherboard Battery CAUTION There is a danger of explosion if the onboard battery is instal
17. CC errors immediately even with background scrubbing on Options are Enabled and Disabled DRAM BG Scrub Corrects memory errors so later reads are correct Options are Dis abled and various times in nanoseconds and microseconds L2 Cache BG Scrub Allows L2 cache RAM to be corrected when idle Options are Disabled and various times in nanoseconds and microseconds Data Cache BG Scrub Allows L1 cache RAM to be corrected when idle Options are Disabled and various times in nanoseconds and microseconds 7 8 Chapter 7 BIOS gt HT1000 SouthBridge Configuration HIDE XIOAPIC PCI Functions The options are Yes and No gt S ATA Configuration HT 1000 S ATA Use this setting to Enable or Disable the on chip SATA controller Port to Boot From Use this setting to select which port to boot from Options are Port Port1 Port2 and Port3 S ATA Mode Use this select either IDE or MMIO as the SATA mode Banner Display This setting is used to Enable or Disable the banner display INT13 Support This setting is used to Enable or Disable the INT13 function gt ACPI Configuration gt Advanced ACPI Configuration ACPI Version Features Select which version of ACPI you wish to use Options are ACPI v 1 0 ACPI v 2 0 and ACPI v 3 0 ACPI APIC Support Select Enabled to allow the ACPI APIC Table Pointer to be included in the RSDT pointer list The options are Enabled and Disabled ACPI OEMB Table This set
18. Drive Bay Setup Next you should check to make sure the peripheral drives and the Serial ATA drives and Serial ATA backplane have been properly installed and all essential connec tions have been made 1 Accessing the drive bays All drives can be accessed from the front of the server For servicing the CD ROM and floppy drives you will need to remove the top chassis cover The Serial ATA disk drives can be installed and removed from the front of the chassis without removing the top chassis cover 2 Installing a CD ROM and floppy disk drives Refer to Chapter 6 if you need to reinstall a CD ROM and or floppy disk drive to the system 3 Check the Serial ATA disk drives Depending upon your system s configuration your system may have one or two Serial ATA drives already installed If you need to install Serial ATA drives please refer to the appropriate section in Chapter 6 4 Check the airflow Airflow is provided by two 4 cm counter rotating fans The system component layout was carefully designed to promote sufficient airflow through the small 1U rackmount space Also 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 protec tion from electrical noise and power surges It
19. IC1 LED cable to display network activity Refer to the table on the right for pin definitions Pin Definition di Vcc 12 NIC1 Active NIC2 LED The NIC2 Network Interface Control E ee in Definitions JF1 ler LED connection is located on pins ES 9 and 10 of JF1 Attach the NIC LED cable to display network activity Refer to the table on the right for pin Pin Definition 9 Vcc 10 NIC2 Active definitions Overheat Fan Fail LED OH Fan Fail LED Connect an LED to the OH connection KE on pins 7 and 8 of JF1 to provide ad E eee vanced warning of chassis overheat 4 yeg ing Refer to the table on the right for 8 Control pin definitions Power Fail LED Power Fail LED Pin Definitions JF1 The Power Fail LED connection is lo cated on pins 5 and 6 of JF1 See the Pin Definition 5 Vcc table on the right for pin definitions 6 Control Note This feature is only available when using redundant power supplies 5 13 AS1010S T User s Manual Reset Button The Reset Button connection is lo cated on pins 3 and 4 of JF1 Attach it to the hardware reset switch on the computer case Refer to the table on the right for pin definitions Power Button The Power Button connection is located on pins 1 and 2 of JF1 Mo mentarily contacting both pins will power on off the system This button can also be configured to function as a suspend button see the Power
20. KB 3 1 44 MB 3 and 2 88 MB 37 gt IDE Configuration Onboard PCI IDE Controller The following options are available to set the IDE controller status Disabled will disable the controller Primary will enable the primary IDE controller There is no Secondary option since only one IDE slot is provided on the board Primary IDE Master Slave Highlight one of the two items above and press lt Enter gt to access the submenu for that item Type Select the type of device connected to the system The options are Not In stalled Auto CDROM and ARMD LBA Large Mode LBA Logical Block Addressing is a method of addressing data on a disk drive In the LBA mode the maximum drive capacity is 137 GB For drive capacities of over 137 GB your system must be equipped with 48 bit LBA mode addressing If not contact your manufacturer or install an ATA 133 IDE controller card that supports 48 bit LBA mode The options are Disabled and Auto Block Multi Sector Transfer Block mode boosts IDE drive performance by increasing the amount of data transferred Only 512 bytes of data can be transferred per interrupt if block mode is not used Block mode allows transfers of up to 64 KB per interrupt Select Disabled to allow the data to be transferred from and to the device one sector at a time Select Auto to allows the data transfer from and to the device occur multiple sectors at a time if the device supports it The options are Auto
21. LANI E 5 16 LAN 1 2 Ethernet POTIS sc ssisiesuscsecctianerectsasesentidnecenneteacneccesdneseateuneeeses 5 17 Chassis INtruSIOM ssns een eee AAA eE EAEEREN ENE inne 5 17 IPM HOA SE sisne a a R a 5 17 Power Supply Fail Alarm Header 5 17 vii AS1010S T User s Manual Power Supply Fail Alarm Reset Header 5 17 0 10 RI Dinner lu e EE 5 18 Explanation Of Jumpers AA 5 18 EM enee rr ee ce cere oer 5 18 Onboard Speaker Enable Disable 5 19 PCI X Slot Speed sessa iota sn adarna 5 19 VGA Enable Disable kmrsiere e ene 5 19 LAN Enable Disable sissien areara nani 5 19 Watch Dog EnableiDsable enaa 5 20 Power Force On Enable Disable ccscsceceeeeceeeeeceeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeenees 5 20 SMBus Enableitsable AAA 5 20 9 11 Onboard Indicators sssini NAAND DAS 5 21 LANMEANZ LEDS rin A EG R 5 21 SATA Activity TR EE 5 21 5 12 Floppy IDE and SATA Drive Connections cccceccceececececececeeeeeeeeeeeeeeees 5 22 Rlslele lge e TEE 5 22 IDE Connect geck etket Ee ENNEN ENEE ELSE Sa EEEa EE E AEN 5 23 SATA CONMGCIOIS egegtuegretegruetegeeeugeggee eege SEENEN 5 23 5 13 Enabling Zelle eege 5 24 Chapter 6 Advanced Chassis Setup 6 1 Static Sensitive DEVICES EEN 6 1 6 2 Control Paneline an aaraa AE AAEE ERE AEREE 6 2 G A System FANS pabeigs d aaa E ESANAREN 6 3 System Fam FalUrE EE 6 3 Replacing System Fans ccccececeeeeeeeeeceeeeeeeeeeeeeeeaeaeaeaeaeaeeeeeeeeeeeneeeeees 6 3 6 4 Drive Bay JInstallaton bemova
22. Manual B 2 Bootblock Recovery Codes The bootblock recovery checkpoint codes are listed in order of execution Checkpoint Code Description EOh The onboard floppy controller if available is initialized Next beginning the base 512 KB memory test Eth Initializing the interrupt vector table next E2h Initializing the DMA and Interrupt controllers next E6h Enabling the floppy drive controller and Timer IRQs Enabling internal cache mem ory Edh Initializing the floppy drive Eeh Looking for a floppy diskette in drive A Reading the first sector of the diskette Efh A read error occurred while reading the floppy drive in drive A FOh Next searching for the AMIBOOT ROM file in the root directory Eih The AMIBOOT ROM file is not in the root directory F2h Next reading and analyzing the floppy diskette FAT to find the clusters occupied by the AMIBOOT RONM file F3h Next reading the AMIBOOT ROM file cluster by cluster F4h The AMIBOOT ROM file is not the correct size ES Next disabling internal cache memory FBh Next detecting the type of flash ROM FCh Next erasing the flash ROM FDh Next programming the flash ROM FFh Flash ROM programming was successful Next restarting the system BIOS B 2 Appendix B BIOS POST Checkpoint Codes B 3 Uncompressed Initialization Codes The following runtime checkpoint codes are listed in order of execution These codes are uncompressed i
23. Palette Snooping Select Enabled to inform the PCI devices that an ISA graphics device is installed in the system in order for the graphics card to function properly The options are Enabled and Disabled PCI IDE BusMaster Set this value to allow or prevent the use of PCI IDE busmastering Select Enabled to allow AMI BIOS to use PCI busmaster for reading and writing to IDE drives The options are Disabled and Enabled Offboard PCI ISA IDE Card This option allows the user to assign a PCI slot number to an Off board PCI ISA IDE card in order for it to function properly The options are Auto PCI Slot1 PCI Slot2 PCI Slot3 PCI Slot4 PCI Slot5 and PCI Slot6 1 5 AS1010S T User s Manual IRQ3 IRQ4 IRQ5 IRQ7 IRQ9 IRQ10 IRQ11 IRQ14 IRQ15 This feature specifies the availability of an IRQ to be used by a PCI PnP device Select Reserved for the IRQ to be used by a Legacy ISA device The options are Available and Reserved DMA Channel0 Channel1 Channel3 Channel5 Channel6 Channel7 Select Available to indicate that a specific DMA channel is available to be used by a PCI PnP device Select Reserved if the DMA channel specified is reserved for a Legacy ISA device The options are Available and Reserved Reserved Memory Size This feature specifies the size of memory block to be reserved for Legacy ISA devices The options are Disabled 16K 32K and 64K gt Super IO Configuration Onboard Floppy Controller Use this setting t
24. Passing control to the adaptor ROM at E000h next B 6 Checkpoint A9h Aah Abh BOh Bih 00h Appendix B BIOS POST Checkpoint Codes Code Description Returned from adaptor ROM at E000h control Performing any initialization required after the E000 option ROM had control next Initialization after E000 option ROM control has completed Displaying the system configuration next Uncompressing the DMI data and executing DMI POST initialization next Copying any code to specific areas The system configuration is displayed Code copying to specific areas is done Passing control to INT 19h boot loader next B 7 AS1010S T User s Manual Notes B 8 Appendix C System Specifications Appendix C System Specifications Processors Single AMD Opteron Series 100 processor in a 939 pin socket Note Please refer to our web site for a complete listing of supported processors Chipset ServerWorks HT 1000 chipset BIOS 4 Mb AMI BIOS Flash ROM Memory Capacity Four 184 pin DIMM sockets supporting up to 4 GB of unbuffered ECC DDR400 333 low profile SDRAM Note See the memory section in Chapter 5 for details Serial ATA Controller ServerWorks on chip controller SATA IDE Drive Bays Two 2 hot swap drive bays for 3 5 hard drives hot swap for SATA only Peripheral Drive Bays One 1 floppy drive One 1 slim CD ROM drive Expansion Slots provided with included riser card One 1 riser card
25. RING SUCH HARDWARE SOFTWARE OR DATA Any disputes arising between manufacturer and customer shall be governed by the laws of Santa Clara County in the State of California USA The State of California County of Santa Clara shall be the exclusive venue for the resolution of any such disputes Super Micro s total liability for all claims will not exceed the price paid for the hardware product FCC Statement This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class A digital device pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC Rules These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference when the equipment is operated in a commercial environment This equipment generates uses and can radiate radio frequency energy and if not installed and used in accordance with the manufacturer s instruction manual may cause harmful interference with radio communications Operation of this equipment in a residential area is likely to cause harmful interference in which case you will be required to correct the interference at your own expense Manual Revision 1 0b Release Date June 1 2007 Unless you request and receive written permission from the manufacturer you may not copy any part of this document Information in this document is subject to change without notice Other products and companies referred to herein are trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective companies or mark holders Copyrigh
26. SL i Quick Reference Description Default Setting CMOS Clear See Section 5 10 Onboard Speaker En Disable Pins 6 7 Enabled Power Force On Open Normal VGA Enable Disable Pins 1 2 Enabled LAN Enable Disable Pins 1 2 Enabled SMBus Enable Disable Pins 1 2 Enabled SMBus Enable Disable Pins 1 2 Enabled PCI X Slot Frequency Select Open Auto Watch Dog Pins 1 2 Reset wa Saas See Description IPMI 2 0 Socket COM Serial Port Header Fan Headers Floppy Disk Drive Connector IDE Connector Keyboard Mouse Ports IPMI Header Power LED Speaker Header Front Panel Connector Chassis Intrusion Header Overheat Warning Header Power Supply Fail Signal Header Power Supply Fail Alarm Reset Header Serial ATA LED Activity Header Wake On LAN Header Wake On Ring Header Gigabit Ethernet RJ45 Ports Primary 24 pin ATX Power Connector Secondary 4 pin Power Connector Serial ATA Connectors USB Universal Serial Bus Ports 0 1 USB2 3 Headers Video Monitor Port Description Serial ATA Activity LEDs 5 11 AS1010S T User s Manual 5 9 Connector Definitions Primary ATX Power ATX Power 24 pin Connector Connector Pin Definitions PW1 Pin Definition Pin Definition The primary power connector on the H8SSL i meets the SSI Superset SEET EES ATX 24 pin specification Refer to the ee S Se table on the right for the pin definitions a See S GN of the main ATX power connector GR 4 Ty 17 COM 5 COM Note You
27. SUPER AS10108 T Surerd gt Ce Cc CO C Super SZ Sy E J C SS 200 HQS e O STRME USER S MANUAL 1 0b The information in this User s Manual has been carefully reviewed and is believed to be accurate The vendor assumes no responsibility for any inaccuracies that may be contained in this document makes no commitment to update or to keep current the information in this manual or to notify any person or organization of the updates Please Note For the most up to date version of this manual please see our web site at www supermicro com SUPER MICRO COMPUTER reserves the right to make changes to the product described in this manual at any time and without notice This product including software if any and documenta tion may not in whole or in part be copied photocopied reproduced translated or reduced to any medium or machine without prior written consent IN NO EVENT WILL SUPER MICRO COMPUTER BE LIABLE FOR DIRECT INDIRECT SPECIAL INCIDENTAL SPECULATIVE OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES ARISING FROM THE USE OR INABILITY TO USE THIS PRODUCT OR DOCUMENTATION EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES IN PARTICULAR SUPER MICRO COMPUTER SHALL NOT HAVE LIABILITY FOR ANY HARDWARE SOFTWARE OR DATA STORED OR USED WITH THE PRODUCT INCLUDING THE COSTS OF REPAIRING REPLACING INTEGRATING INSTALLING OR RECOVE
28. Watch Dog function Jumper Settings JWD Watch Dog is a system monitor that Jumper Setting Definition can reboot the system when a software Pins 1 2 Reset application hangs Pins 1 2 will cause Pins 2 3 NMI WD to reset the system if an applica i Open Disabled tion has frozen Pins 2 3 will generate a non maskable interrupt signal for the Note When enabled the user needs to application that is frozen See the table write their own application software in or on the right for jumper settings Watch der to disable the Watch Dog Timer Dog must also be enabled in BIOS Power Force On Power Force On JP2 allows you to enable or disable the Jumper Settings JP2 Power Force On function If enabled Jumper Setting Definition system power will always stay on If disabled the default setting the user needs to depress the power button to power up the system Closed Force On Open Disabled SMBus Enable Disable SMBus Enable Disable Jumper Settings Jumpers JPCISMB1 and JPXISMB1 allow you to enable or disable the Sys tem Management Bus See the table on the right for jumper settings Jumper Setting Definition Pins 1 2 Enabled Pins 2 3 Disabled 5 20 Chapter 5 Advanced Motherboard Setup 5 11 Onboard Indicators LAN1 LAN2 LEDs The Ethernet ports located beside the VGA port have two LEDs On each Gb LAN port one LED indicates activ ity
29. aes 1 5 1 4 Contacting Super MICTO siviscecccisunecccnnuncchecnsuvececseenesecs SERSA 1 5 Chapter 2 Server Installation 21 e e 2 1 2 2 Unpacking the Systemi i ncssiciiiiveninieiamnen inordinate 2 1 2 3 Preparing for Setup 2 1 2 4 Installing the System into aRack cece ee ee ee eee ee tet eeeeeeeeeeeeeseeeeeeeeneaea 2 4 2 5 Checking the Motherboard Getunp 2 8 2 6 Checking the Drive Bay Setup cece ee ee cece ee eee te tet te ee eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeenaea 2 10 Chapter 3 System Interface 2 1 OVEPVIOW A E E 3 1 3 2 Control Panel ButtOms ssugedeEENedgEAE ANESEC eege EN 3 1 RESCUE E 3 1 POW ET 3 1 3 3 Control Panel MEDS eiestuepedeer gege eege deed ee geEEEN REESEN SEN 3 2 Eerbheagtzaprka meest eg ENEE 3 2 IV Uer 3 2 NICI EE 3 3 HDD WEE 3 3 Ste 3 3 3 4 Serial ATA Drive Carrier LED ANEN 3 3 Chapter 4 System Safety 4 1 Electrical Safety Precautions s rssesssiiicrsriusssnssnnssiiysi niteat inedia 4 1 4 2 General Safety PDrecautons rene 4 2 4 3 ESD ee Te EE 4 3 4 4 Operating Precautions sssrin istense 4 4 vi Table of Contents Chapter 5 Advanced Motherboard Setup 5 1 5 2 5 3 5 4 5 6 5 7 5 8 Handling the Motherboard eee ee cece cece eee ee eect cence a aa 5 1 Mounting the Motherboard into a Chassis 0 eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeneeeeeaee 5 2 Processor and Heatsink Installation 0c0cecececeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeneeeneneeaes 5 2 Connecting Cableg osuedruuaggteiuassgiZeeu
30. al 2 4 Installing the System into a Rack This section provides information on installing the 1010S T into a rack unit If the system 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 as sembly procedure will differ slightly The following is a guideline for installing the unit into a rack with the rack rails provided with the system 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 1010S T Each of these assemblies consist of two sections an inner fixed chassis rail that secures to the unit A and an outer fixed rack rail B that secures to the rail brackets A sliding rail guide sandwiched 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 Figure 2 1 Identifying the Sections of the Rack Rails Outer rail to be installed in the rack Pull out the inner rail to be attached on t
31. and Disabled 7 3 AS1010S T User s Manual PIO Mode PIO Programmable I O mode programs timing cycles between the IDE drive and the programmable IDE controller As the PIO mode increases the cycle time decreases The options are Auto 0 1 2 3 and 4 Select Auto to allow AMI BIOS to auto detect the PIO mode Use this value if the IDE disk drive support cannot be determined Select 0 to allow AMI BIOS to use PIO mode 0 It has a data transfer rate of 3 3 MBs Select 1 to allow AMI BIOS to use PIO mode 1 It has a data transfer rate of 5 2 MBs Select 2 to allow AMI BIOS to use PIO mode 2 It has a data transfer rate of 8 3 MBs Select 3 to allow AMI BIOS to use PIO mode 3 It has a data transfer rate of 11 1 MBs Select 4 to allow AMI BIOS to use PIO mode 4 It has a data transfer rate of 16 6 MBs This setting generally works with all hard disk drives manufactured after 1999 For other disk drives such as IDE CD ROM drives check the specifications of the drive DMA Mode Select the DMA mode of the drive Options are SWDMAO SWDMA1 SWD MA2 MWDMAO MWDMA1 MWDMA2 UDMAO UDMA1 and UDMA2 S M A R T Self Monitoring Analysis and Reporting Technology SMART can help predict impending drive failures Select Auto to allow BIOS to auto detect hard disk drive support Select Disabled to prevent AMI BIOS from using the S M A R T Select Enabled to allow AMI BIOS to use the S M A R T to sup port hard drive disk The options are D
32. ct 0 38 Chip Select 1 Activity 40 Ground SATA Drive Connectors Pin Definitions SATA0 SATA3 Pin Definition 1 Ground TXP TXN Ground RXN RXP zl o Om W nN Ground AS1010S T User s Manual 5 13 Enabling SATA RAID Now that the hardware is set up you must now install the operating system and the SATA RAID drivers if you wish to use RAID with your SATA drives The installation procedure differs depending on whether you wish to have the operating system installed on a RAID array or on a separate non RAID IDE drive See the instructions below for details Serial ATA SATA Serial ATA SATA is a physical storage interface that employs a single cable with a minimum of four wires to create a point to point connection between devices This connection is a serial link that supports a SATA transfer rate from 150 MBps The serial cables used in SATA are thinner than the traditional cables used in Parallel ATA PATA and can extend up to one meter in length compared to only 40 cm for PATA cables Overall SATA provides better functionality than PATA Installing the OS SATA Driver Before installing the OS operating system and SATA RAID driver you must decide if you wish to have the operating system installed as part of a bootable RAID array or installed to a separate non RAID IDE hard drive If on a separate IDE drive skip ahead to section entitled Enabling SATA RAID in the BIOS If you wish to have the OS
33. d PS 2 Mouse Ports The ATX PS 2 keyboard and the PS 2 mouse ports are located beside the USB ports See the table on the right for pin definitions Wake On Ring The Wake On Ring header is desig nated JWOR This function allows 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 Wake On LAN The Wake On LAN header is desig nated JWOL See the table on the right for pin definitions You must have a LAN card with a Wake On LAN connector and cable to use the Wake On LAN feature 5 16 PWR LED Connector Pin Definitions JD1 Pin Definition 1 Vcc 2 Control 3 Control Speaker Connector Pin Definitions JD1 Pin Definition 4 Red wire Speaker data 5 No connection 6 Buzzer signal 7 Speaker data PS 2 Keyboard and Mouse Port Pin Definitions J1 Pin Definition Pin Definition Data 4 VCC NC 5 Clock Ground 6 NC Wake On Ring Pin Definitions JWOR Pin Definition 1 Ground Black 2 Wake up Wake On LAN Pin Definitions JWOL Pin Definition 1 5V Standby 2 Ground Wake up LAN1 2 Ethernet Ports Two Gigabit Ethernet ports desig nated LAN1 and LAN2 are located beside the VGA port These ports accept RJ45 type cables Chassis Intrusion A Cha
34. daptor ROM at C800 Initialization before the C800 adaptor ROM gains control has completed The adap tor ROM check is next The adaptor ROM had control and has now returned control to BIOS POST Perform ing any required processing after the option ROM returned control Any initialization required after the option ROM test has completed Configuring the timer data area and printer base address next Set the timer and printer base addresses Setting the RS 232 base address next Returned after setting the RS 232 base address Performing any required initializa tion before the Coprocessor test next Required initialization before the Coprocessor test is over Initializing the Coproces sor next Coprocessor initialized Performing any required initialization after the Coproces sor test next Initialization after the Coprocessor testis complete Checking the extended keyboard keyboard ID and Num Lock key next Issuing the keyboard ID command next Displaying any soft errors next The soft error display has completed Setting the keyboard typematic rate next The keyboard typematic rate is set Programming the memory wait states next Memory wait state programming is over Clearing the screen and enabling parity and the NMI next NMl and parity enabled Performing any initialization required before passing control to the adaptor ROM at E000 next Initialization before passing control to the adaptor ROM at E000h completed
35. e four screws Then place the assembly back into place and secure it to the chassis with the two screws previously removed Finish by reconnecting the drves power and data cables Drives mount on rails and should click into place to be correctly and fully installed in their bays e Ared mark on a wire typically designates the location of pin 1 6 6 Chapter 6 Advanced Chassis Setup 6 5 Power Supply The 1010S T has a single 260 watt power supply This power supply has the capability of operating at 100 240 input volts Depress the main power button on the front of the chassis and then unplug the AC power cord to completely remove power from the system before removing the power supply Power Supply Failure If the power supply unit fails the system will shut down and you will need to re place the power supply unit Replacement units can be ordered directly from the manufacturer PWS 0055 Replacing the Power Supply 1 Accessing the inside of the system To replace a power supply you must first remove the top chassis cover To do so first 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 push it away from you You can then lift the top cover from the chassis to gain full access to the inside of the server 2 Removing the power supply First unplug the power cord from the system
36. e on the right for pin definitions Fan Headers The H8SSL i has five 3 pin fan head ers Fan speed is controlled via Ther mal Management with a BIOS setting refer to Chapter 4 See the table on the right for pin definitions Overheat LED JOH1 Connect an LED to the JOH1 header to provide warning of chassis over heating See the table on the right for pin definitions Chapter 5 Advanced Motherboard Setup USB2 Extra Universal Serial Bus Headers Pin Definitions USB2 3 USB3 4 Pin Definition Pin Definition 1 5V 1 5V 2 PO 2 PO 3 PO 3 PO 4 Ground 4 Ground 5 5 No connection Serial Port Pin Definitions COM1 COM2 Pin Definition Pin Definition DCD 6 DSR 2 RXD 7 RTS 3 TXD 8 CTS 4 DTR 9 RI 5 Ground 10 NC Note Pin 10 is included on the header but not on the port NC indicates no connection Fan Header Pin Definitions FAN1 5 Pin Definition 1 Ground 2 12V 3 Tachometer Overheat LED Pin Definitions Pin 1 JOH1 Definition 5V OH Active AS1010S T User s Manual Power LED Speaker On JD1 pins 1 2 and 3 are for the power LED and pins 4 through 7 are for the speaker See the tables on the right for pin definitions Note The speaker connector pins are for use with an external speaker If you wish to use the onboard speaker you should close pins 6 and 7 with a jumper ATX PS 2 Keyboard an
37. eaker or the internal onboard speaker To use the internal onboard speaker close pins 6 and 7 with a jumper To use an external speaker connect the speaker wires to pins 4 through 7 of JD1 See the table on the right for settings and the table associated with the Power LED Speaker connection previous section for pin definitions Onboard Speaker Enable Disable Pin Definitions JD1 Pins Definition 6 7 Jump for onboard speaker 4 7 Attach external speaker wires PCI X Slot Speed PCI X Slot Speed Jumper Settings JPXA1 Jumper Setting Definition Jumpers JPXA1 can be used to change the speed of PCI X slot 6 See the Open Auto table on the right for jumper settings Pins 1 2 PCI X 66 MHz Pins 2 3 PCI 66 MHz VGA Enable Disable VGA Enable Disable JPG1 allows you to enable or disable Jumper Settings JPG1 the VGA port The default position is Jumper Setting Definition on pins 1 and 2 to enable VGA See Pins 1 2 Enabled the table on the right for jumper set Pins 2 3 Disabled tings LAN Enable Disable JLAN1 2 Enable Disable Change the setting of jumper JPL to enable or disable the LAN1 and LAN2 Gb Ethernet ports See the table on the right for jumper settings The default setting is enabled Jumper Settings JPL Jumper Setting Definition Pins 1 2 Enabled Pins 2 3 Disabled AS1010S T User s Manual Watch Dog Enable Disable P Watch Dog JWD controls the
38. ectrical 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 4 2 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 A 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 t
39. ed If a step is unnecessary skip ahead to the step that follows Tools Required The only tool you will need to install components and perform maintainance is a Philips screwdriver 6 1 Static Sensitive Devices Electric Static Discharge ESD can damage electronic components To prevent 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 discharge Precautions Use a grounded wrist strap designed to prevent static discharge Touch a grounded metal object before removing any board from its antistatic bag Handle a board by its edges only do not touch its components peripheral chips memory modules or gold contacts When handling chips or modules avoid touching their pins Put the motherboard add on cards 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 Unpacking The motherboard is shipped in antistatic packaging to avoid static damage When unpacking the board make sure the person handling it is static protected 6 1 AS1010S T User s Manual Figure 6 1 Chassis Front View 000 O Surer S
40. ed in the Available Keys window navigate through the available disks shown in the Disks window and select those you wish to add to your array When selected a disk will be highlighted in green Create Array After selecting the disks for your array you are ready to select the type of array to create Array types may be limited by the number of disks selected and the RAID levels supported by your system After selecting the array type you will be prompted to choose the caching mode read write read only or none After this selection you have the array set up Press the lt C gt key to confirm the configuration of your array and reboot the system Note a RAID controller program RAIDCore may be downloaded from the Broad com web site On their home page www broadcom com click on Downloads amp Sup port gt RAID Driver Downloads then under Operating Systems click on Windows 5 25 AS1010S T User s Manual Figure 5 6 HT1000 RAID Utility Screen HT1000 Array Configuration Build RC 216 2006043 2 i ing pry 99 rom wnere 15 te pd _ frr ys SNE RAIDI 4966B Ready 0 00 4966B InArray 1 01 4960B InArray Main Menu Delete Array s Hide Un Hide Array s ad View Array Details Rescan ALL Channels Available Keys lt 1 lt 4 lt 4 Choose lt Esc gt Back Controllers Found 1 CEnter gt Select Menu Item On the next page you will see the Windows Media Kit Download this and instal
41. ed into the ServerWorks HT 1000 chipset The Serial ATA drives in the 1010S T are hot swappable PCI Expansion Slots The H8SSL i has one 64 bit 133 MHz 3 3V PCI X slot and two 32 bit 33 MHz 5V PCI slots When incorporated into the 1010S T server system a riser card CSE RR1U X is included for use with the PCI X slot to support one standard full height full length expansion card in the 133 MHz PCI X slot Ethernet Ports A Broadcom BCM5704 Ethernet controller is incorporated into the H8SSL i to sup port two Gigabit LAN ports 1 2 Chapter 1 Introduction ATI Graphics Controller An ATI video controller based on the Rage XL 8 MB graphics chip is integrated onboard the H8SSL i Onboard Controllers Ports An onboard IDE controller supports one floppy drive and up to two Ultra ATA 100 hard drives or ATAPI devices Onboard I O backpanel ports include one serial COM port two USB ports a VGA monitor port PS 2 mouse and keyboard ports and two GLAN RJ45 ports Other Features Other onboard features that promote system health include voltage monitors a chassis intrusion header auto switching voltage regulators chassis and CPU overheat sensors virus protection and BIOS rescue 1 3 AS1010S T User s Manual Figure 1 1 ServerWorks HT 1000 Chipset System Block Diagram Note This is a general block diagram Please see Chapter 5 for details AMD Opteron Processor 8x HT 1 6
42. eeps for the corresponding error All errors listed with the exception of Beep Code 8 are fatal errors A 1 AMIBIOS Error Beep Codes Beep Code Error Message Description 1 beep Refresh Circuits have been reset Ready to power up 5 short 1 long Memory error No memory detected in system 1 long 8 short Display memory read write error Video adapter missing or with faulty memory A 1 AS1010S T User s Manual Notes A 2 Appendix B BIOS POST Checkpoint Codes Appendix B BIOS POST Checkpoint Codes When AMIBIOS performs the Power On Self Test it writes checkpoint codes to I O port 0080h Ifthe computer cannot complete the boot process diagnostic equipment can be attached to the computer to read I O port 0080h B 1 Uncompressed Initialization Codes The uncompressed initialization checkpoint codes are listed in order of execution Checkpoint Code Description DOh The NMI is disabled Power on delay is starting Next the initialization code check sum will be verified Dih Initializing the DMA controller performing the keyboard controller BAT test starting memory refresh and entering 4 GB flat mode next D3h Starting memory sizing next D4h Returning to real mode Executing any OEM patches and setting the Stack next Dh Passing control to the uncompressed code in shadow RAM at E000 0000h The initialization code is copied to segment 0 and control will be transferred to segment 0 AS1010S T User s
43. em yourself To Remove Use your thumbs to gently push each re lease tab outward to release the DIMM from the slot Notch p Note Notch should align with the receptive point on the slot Release Tab Release Tab Note the notch in the slot and on the bottom of the DIMM These prevent the DIMM from being installed incorrectly Top View of DDR Slot JL U Release Tab Release Tab 5 8 Chapter 5 Advanced Motherboard Setup 5 7 Adding PCI Cards 1 PCI slots The H8SSL i has three PCI expansion slots One of these slots the 133 MHz PCI X slot 6 may be populated with the use of the CSE RR1U X riser card which is included with the system You may install either a 133 or a 100 MHz PCI X card into the riser card 2 PCI card installation Before installing a PCI add on card make sure it is supported by the riser card see step 1 above Begin by pulling the locking tab downward to unlock the bracket that covers the slot then remove the bracket Insert the PCI card into the riser card pushing down with your thumbs evenly on both sides of the card When the card is correctly installed finish by pushing the locking tab upward to secure the card in the system Note the PCI slot shield helps promote proper airlow in the chassis and shield the inside of the system from EMI electromagnetic interference For these reasons make sure there is a shield covering the slot if
44. ention module was designed to provide compatibility with clip and cam type heatsinks from third parties Figure 5 1 Removing the Air Shroud 5 4 Chapter 5 Advanced Motherboard Setup 5 4 Connecting Cables Now that the processors are installed the next step is to connect the cables to the motherboard These include the data ribbon cables for the peripherals 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 blocking 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 reroute them as they were originally after reconnecting them make sure the red wires connect to the pin 1 locations If you are configuring the system keep the airflow in mind when routing the cables The following data cables with their motherboard connector locations noted should be connected See the motherboard layout diagram in this chapter for connector locations CD ROM cable IDE 1 Floppy Drive cable Floppy SATA cable SATAO SATA1 SG Control Panel cable JF1 see next page Connecting Power Cables The H8SSL i has a 24 pin primary power supply connector PW1 for connection to the ATX power supply Connect the appropriate connector from the power supply to the ATX Power connector to supply
45. er 2 Options are Disabled and Enabled gt Advanced Chipset Control NorthBridge Configuration gt Memory Configuration Memclock Mode This setting determines how the memory clock is set Auto has the memory clock set by the code and Limit allows the user to set a standard value MCT Timing Mode Sets the timing mode for memory Options are Auto and Manual User Configuration Mode Options are Auto and Manual Bank Interleaving This setting is used to determine whether bank interleaving is to be employed The options are Auto and Disabled Burst Length Use this setting to set the memory burst length 64 bit Dq must use 4 beats Options are 8 beats 4 beats and 2 beats Enable Clock to All DIMMs This setting allows the user to enable unused clocks to DIMMs even if DIMM slots are empty Options are Enabled and Disabled 7 AS1010S T User s Manual Hardware Memory Hole When Enabled allows software memory remapping around the memory hole only supported by rev EO processors and above Options are Enabled and Disabled gt ECC Configuration DRAM ECC Enable DRAM ECC allows hardware to report and correct memory errors automati cally Options are Enabled and Disabled MCA DRAM ECC Logging When Enabled MCA DRAM ECC logging and reporting is enabled Options are Enabled and Disabled ECC Chip Kill Allows the user to Enable or Disable ECC Chip Kill DRAM Scrub Redirect Allows system to correct DRAM E
46. er the Setup Utility loads 1 Use the arrow keys to move to the Advanced menu Scroll down with the arrow keys to SATA Configuration and press lt Enter gt When the submenu opens use the arrow keys to select HT 1000 SATA and enable this setting if not already enabled Then in the same submenu scroll down to the SATA Mode setting and select the RAID option 2 Hit the lt Esc gt key until you return to the main Setup menu then scroll over to the Exit menu Select Save Changes and Exit and hit lt Enter gt then hit lt Enter gt again to verify 3 After exiting the BIOS Setup Utility the system will reboot When the system is rebooting press the lt Ctrl gt and lt R gt keys simultaneously This will activate the HT 1000 RAID Utility program Using the HT 1000 RAID Utility The HT 1000 RAID Utility program is where you can define the drives you want to include in the RAID array and the mode and type of RAID The utility is comprised of three main windows as shown in Figure 5 6 The Disks window on the right will list all available drives The procedure below outlines the steps necessary to create a RAID array as seen in the Main Menu window of the RAID utility In each step note the Available Keys window in the bottom right of the screen These are the keys used to perform the various functions in each step Initialize Disks s The first step is to initialize drives as part of the RAID array Using the keys not
47. essage telling the user to hit the DEL key to enter the setup utility The options are Enabled and Disabled PXE Option ROM Use this setting to either Enable or Disable the PXE ROM The options are Enabled and Disabled Interrupt 19 Capture Enable to allow ROMs to trap Interrupt 19 The options are Enabled and Dis abled gt Boot Device Priority This feature allows the user to prioritize the sequence for the Boot Device with the devices installed in the system The default settings with generic names are 1st Boot Device Removeable drive e g floppy drive 2nd Boot Device CD DVD 3rd Boot Device Hard drive 4th Boot Device LAN gt Hard Disk Drives This feature allows the user to prioritize the Boot sequence from available hard drives 1st Drive 2nd Drive 3rd Drive 4th Drive 5th Drive Specify the boot sequence for the available hard drives on the system gt Removable Drives This feature allows the user to specify the Boot sequence from available remov able drives 1st Drive Specifies the boot sequence for the 1st Removable Drive 7 13 AS1010S T User s Manual gt CD DVD Drives This feature allows the user to specify the boot sequence from available CDROM drives 1st Drive Specifies the boot sequence for the 1st Hard Drive Onboard SCSI Host RAID Use this setting to Enable or Disable the onboard SCSI Host RAID Onboard NIC PXE Option ROM Use this setting to Enable o
48. eyboard controller interface test completed Writing the command byte and initializing the circular buffer next 83h The command byte was written and global data initialization has completed Check ing for a locked key next 84h Locked key checking is over Checking for a memory size mismatch with CMOS RAM data next 85h The memory size check is done Displaying a soft error and checking for a password or bypassing WINBIOS Setup next B 5 AS1010S T User s Manual Checkpoint 86h 87h Code Description The password was checked Performing any required programming before WIN BIOS Setup next The programming before WINBIOS Setup has completed Uncompressing the WINBIOS Setup code and executing the AMIBIOS Setup or WINBIOS Setup utility next Returned from WINBIOS Setup and cleared the screen Performing any necessary programming after WINBIOS Setup next The programming after WINBIOS Setup has completed Displaying the power on screen message next Programming the WINBIOS Setup options next The WINBIOS Setup options are programmed Resetting the hard disk controller next The hard disk controller has been reset Configuring the floppy drive controller next The floppy drive controller has been configured Configuring the hard disk drive controller next Initializing the bus option ROMs from C800 next See the last page of this chapter for additional information Initializing before passing control to the a
49. g Europe California Best Management Practices Regulations for Perchlorate Materials This Perchlorate warning applies only to products containing CR Manganese Dioxide Lithium coin cells Perchlorate Material special handling may apply See www ditsc ca gov hazardouswaste perchlorate C 3 AS1010S T User s Manual Notes CA
50. he chassis 2 4 Chapter 2 Server Installation Installing the Chassis Rails Position the fixed chassis rail sections you just removed along the side of the chassis making sure the five 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 installing 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 1010S T 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 assembly to the other side of the rack making sure that both are at the exact same height and with the rail guides facing inward 2 5 AS1010S T Use
51. he socket Do not drop the CPU on the socket move the CPU horizontally or vertically or rub the CPU against the socket or against any pins of the socket which may damage the CPU and or the socket 4 With the CPU inserted into the socket inspect the four corners of the CPU to make sure that it is properly installed and flush with the socket 5 Gently press the CPU socket lever down until it locks in the plastic tab Installing the Heatsink A heatsink should be installed to the processor You will have to remove the air shroud to install See Figure 5 1 You may be using the manufacturer s optional heatsinks part number SNK P0012 or those from a third party To install the heatsinks please follow the installation instructions included with your heatsink package 5 3 AS1010S T User s Manual Installing the Heatsink Retention Modules One heatsink retention module BKT 0005 and two screws are included in the retail box Once installed these are used to help attach the heatsink to the CPU To install position the module so that the CPU backplate standoffs insert through the holes on the heatsink retention module and the four feet on the module contact the motherboard Secure the retention module to the backplate with the two screws provided Note BKT 0005 is included for use with third party heatsinks only When installing proprietary heatsinks SNK P0012 only BKT 0004 CPU backplate is needed The BKT 0005 ret
52. is recommended that you use an uninterruptible power supply UPS 2 10 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 Serial ATA 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 but tons on the chassis control panel This chapter explains the meanings of all LED indicators and the appropriate response you may need to take 3 2 Control Panel Buttons There are two push button buttons located on the front of the chassis These are in order from left to right a reset button and a power on off button RESET e a V x i S d i A S R g RESET The reset switch reboots the system POWER This is the main power switch 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 1 AS1010S T User s Manual 3 3 Control Panel LEDs The control panel located on the front of the 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 ac tion you may need to take D Overheat Fan Fail When this LED flashes it indicates a fan failure When o
53. isabled Enabled and Auto 32 Bit Data Transfer Select Enabled to activate the function of 32 Bit data transfer Select Dis abled to deactivate the function The options are Enabled and Disabled Hard Disk Write Protect Select Enabled to enable the function of Hard Disk Write Protect to prevent data from being written to HDD The options are Enabled or Disabled IDE Detect Time Out Sec This feature allows the user to set the time out value for detecting ATA ATA PI devices installed in the system The options are 0 sec 5 10 15 20 25 30 and 35 7 4 Chapter 7 BIOS ATA PI 80Pin Cable Detection This setting allows AMI BIOS to auto detect the 80 Pin ATA PI cable The op tions are Host amp Device Host and Device gt PCI PnP Clear NVRAM Select Yes to clear NVRAM during boot up The options are Yes and No Plug amp Play OS Select Yes to allow the OS to configure Plug amp Play devices This is not required for system boot if your system has an OS that supports Plug amp Play Select No to allow AMIBIOS to configure all devices in the system PCI Latency Timer This option sets the latency of all PCI devices on the PCI bus Select a value to set the PCI latency in PCI clock cycles Options are 32 64 96 128 160 192 224 and 248 Allocate IRQ to PCI VGA Set this value to allow or restrict the system from giving the VGA adapter card an interrupt address The options are Yes and No
54. it to bend if handled improperly which may result in damage To prevent the moth erboard 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 e Use a grounded wrist strap designed to prevent static discharge e Touch a grounded metal object before removing any board from its antistatic bag e Handle a board by its edges only do not touch its components peripheral chips memory modules or gold contacts e When handling chips or modules avoid touching their pins e Put the motherboard add on cards and peripherals back into their antistatic 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 protected 5 1 AS1010S T User s Manual 5 2 Mounting the Motherboard into a Chassis All serverboards and motherboards have standard mounting holes to fit different types of chassis Make sure that the locations 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 that the metal standoffs click in or are screwed in tightly 1 Check the compatibility of the motherboard ports and the I O shie
55. l to your system for RAID management Installing Other Software Drivers The Super Micro CD that came packaged with your motherboard has additional drivers After inserting this CD into your CD ROM drive the display shown in Fig ure 5 7 should appear If this display does not appear click on the My Computer icon and then on the icon representing your CD ROM drive Finally double click on the S Setup icon Click the icons showing a hand writing on paper to view the readme files for each item Click the tabs to the right of these in order from top to bottom to install each item one at a time After installing each item you must reboot the system before moving on to the next item on the list You should install everything here except for the SUPER Doctor utility which is optional The bottom icon with a CD on it allows you to view the entire contents of the CD 5 26 Chapter 5 Advanced Motherboard Setup Figure 5 7 Driver Installation Display Screen S H8SSL Server Board Drivers amp Tools Win2000 Drivers amp Tools ServerWorks HT 1000 chipset A H8SSL 5 27 AS1010S T User s Manual Notes 5 28 Chapter 6 Advanced Chassis Setup Chapter 6 Advanced Chassis Setup This chapter covers the steps required to install components and perform mainte nance on the SC811FT 260 chassis For component installation follow the steps in the order given to eliminate the most common problems encounter
56. l nenene 6 4 SATA Drive Installation seen desieete tege ege Geer eene Ta ANERE 6 4 CD ROM and Floppy Drive Installation 0ceeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeteeeeeeeeeeeee 6 6 6 5 ower SUPDIY sssini E N SEESE 6 7 Power Supply Faire aere eege Sege EE 6 7 Replacing the Power Supply c eceeeseeeeeceeeeeaeeeaeaeeeaeaeeaeeeeeaeeeeeeeees 6 7 Chapter 7 BIOS n Wl dree le de 7 1 7 2 Maim Mentt syeicccsncsesccxswscnecteventectswoesd eege dee NDN 7 2 7 3 Advanced Settings Men EEN 7 2 Z Boot Menu ssiri oaa eaan NEE TE E RARER 7 12 L e DE 7 14 Table of Contents Appendices Appendix A BIOS Error Beep Codes Appendix B BIOS POST Checkpoint Codes Appendix C System Specifications AS1010S T User s Manual Notes Chapter 1 Introduction Chapter 1 Introduction 1 1 Overview The AS1010S T is a single processor mini 1U rackmount server comprised of two main subsystems the SC811FT 260 chassis and the H8SSL i motherboard The H8SSL i supports a single AMD Opteron 100 series processor in a 939 pin socket and up to 4 GB of unbuffered DDR400 333 SDRAM memory Please refer to our web site for information on operating systems that have been certified for use with the 1010S T and for regular updates on supported processor speeds In addition to the motherboard and chassis various hardware components may have been included with the 1010S T as listed below One 1 slim floppy drive FPD PNSC 02 01 O
57. ld The H8SSL i motherboard requires a chassis that can support extended ATX boards of 8 x 12 in size such as the SC811FT 260 Make sure that the I O ports on the motherboard align with their respective holes in the I O shield at the rear of the chassis 2 Mounting the motherboard onto the mainboard tray in the chassis Carefully mount the motherboard onto the mainboard tray by aligning the mother board mounting holes with the raised metal standoffs in the tray Insert screws into all the mounting holes in the motherboard that line up with the standoffs Then use a screwdriver to secure the motherboard to the mainboard tray tighten until just snug if too tight you might strip the threads Metal screws provide an electrical contact to the motherboard ground to provide a continuous ground for the system 5 3 Processor and Heatsink Installation sor Always connect the power cord last and always remove it be Exercise extreme caution when handling and installing the proces fore adding removing or changing any hardware components Installing the Processor 1 Lift the lever on the CPU socket until it points straight up 5 2 Chapter 5 Advanced Motherboard Setup 2 Use your thumb and your index fin ger to hold the CPU Locate pin 1 on the CPU socket and pin 1 on the CPU Both are marked with a triangle Triangles 3 Align pin 1 of the CPU with pin 1 of the socket Once aligned carefully place the CPU into t
58. led upside down which will reverse its polarites see Figure 4 1 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 Mainboard replaceable soldered in fuses Self resetting PTC Positive Tempera ture Coefficient fuses on the mainboard must be replaced by trained service technicians only The new fuse must be the same or equivalent as the one replaced Contact technical support for details and support 4 2 General Safety Precautions A Follow these rules to ensure general safety Keep the area around the 1010S T clean and free of clutter The 1010S T weighs approximately 23 Ibs 10 5 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 el
59. n FOOOOh shadow RAM Checkpoint Code Description 03h 05h The NMI is disabled Next checking for a soft reset or a power on condition The BIOS stack has been built Next disabling cache memory 07h 08h Next initializing the CPU and the CPU data area O6h Uncompressing the POST code next The CMOS checksum calculation is done next OAh The CMOS checksum calculation is done Initializing the CMOS status register for date and time next OBh The CMOS status register is initialized Next performing any required initialization before the keyboard BAT command is issued OCh The keyboard controller input buffer is free Next issuing the BAT command to the keyboard controller OEh The keyboard controller BAT command result has been verified Next performing any necessary initialization after the keyboard controller BAT command test OFh The initialization after the keyboard controller BAT command test is done The key board command byte is written next 10h The keyboard controller command byte is written Next issuing the Pin 23 and 24 blocking and unblocking command 11h Next checking if lt End or lt Ins gt keys were pressed during power on Initializing CMOS RAM if the Initialize CMOS RAM in every boot AMIBIOS POST option was set in AMIBCP or the lt End gt key was pressed Next disabling DMA controllers 1 and 2 and interrupt controllers 1 and 2 The video display has been disabled Port B has bee
60. n continuously it indicates an overheat condition which may be caused by cables obstructing the airflow in the system or the ambient room temperature being too warm Check the routing of the cables and make sure all fans are present and operating normally You should also check to make sure that the chassis covers are installed Finally verify that the heatsinks are installed properly see Chapter 5 This LED will remain flashing or on as long as the indicated condition exists ZS ke NIC2 Indicates network activity on JLAN2 when flashing ZS ke NIC1 Indicates network activity on JLAN1 when flashing R ke HDD Channel activity for all HDDs This light indicates CD ROM and SATA drive activity when flashing 3 2 Chapter 3 System Interface e Da lt ke 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 Serial ATA Drive Carrier LED Each Serial ATA drive carrier has a green LED When illuminated this green LED on the front of the Serial ATA drive carrier indicates drive activity 3 3 AS1010S T User s Manual Notes 3 4 Chapter 4 System Safety 4 1 Chapter 4 System Safety Electrical Safety Precautions A Basic electrical safety precautions should be followed to protect yourself from harm and the 1010S T from damage Be aware of the locations of the power on off switch on the chassis as
61. n initialized Next initializing the chipset The 8254 timer test will begin next Next programming the flash ROM The memory refresh line is toggling Checking the 15 second on off time next Passing control to the video ROM to perform any required configuration before the video ROM test All necessary processing before passing control to the video ROM is done Look ing for the video ROM next and passing control to it The video ROM has returned control to BIOS POST Performing any required pro cessing after the video ROM had control Reading the 8042 input port and disabling the MEGAKEY Green PC feature next Making the BIOS code segment writable and performing any necessary configura tion before initializing the interrupt vectors The configuration required before interrupt vector initialization has completed In terrupt vector initialization is about to begin B 3 AS1010S T User s Manual Checkpoint 25h 27h 28h 2Ah 2Eh 2Fh 30h 31h 32h 34h 37h 38h 39h 3Ah 3Bh 40h 42h 43h 44h 45h 46h 47h 48h 49h 4Bh Code Description Interrupt vector initialization is done Clearing the password if the POST DIAG switch is on Any initialization before setting video mode will be done next Initialization before setting the video mode is complete Configuring the mono chrome mode and color mode settings next Bus initialization system static output devices will be done ne
62. nd at 0 0 next Data initialized Checking for memory wraparound at 0 0 and finding the total sys tem memory size next The memory wraparound test is done Memory size calculation has been done Writing patterns to test memory next The memory pattern has been written to extended memory Writing patterns to the base 640 KB memory next Patterns written in base memory Determining the amount of memory below 1 MB next The amount of memory below 1 MB has been found and verified The amount of memory above 1 MB has been found and verified Checking for a soft reset and clearing the memory below 1 MB for the soft reset next If this is a power on situation going to checkpoint 4Eh next B 4 Appendix B BIOS POST Checkpoint Codes Checkpoint Code Description 4Ch The memory below 1 MB has been cleared via a soft reset Clearing the memory above 1 MB next 4Dh The memory above 1 MB has been cleared via a soft reset Saving the memory size next Going to checkpoint 52h next 4Eh The memory test started but not as the result of a soft reset Displaying the first 64 KB memory size next 4Fh The memory size display has started The display is updated during the memory test Performing the sequential and random memory test next memory size for relocation and shadowing next 50h The memory below 1 MB has been tested and initialized Adjusting the displayed 51h The memory size display was adjusted for relocation and shad
63. ne 1 slim CD ROM drive CDM TEAC 24 B Two 2 hot swap SATA drive carriers CSE PT10 B Two 2 SATA cables CBL 0044 One 1 SATA LED cable CBL 0056 e One 1 air shroud CSE PT0113 a Two 2 4 cm counter rotating fans FAN 0087 One 1 SATA backplane CSE SATA 810 One 1 CPU backplate BKT 0004 One 1 heatsink retention module with two 2 screws BKT 0005 e One 1 PCI X slot riser card CSE RR1U X e Rackmount hardware with screws CSE PT8 Two 2 rack rail assemblies Six 6 brackets for mounting the rack rails in a rack telco rack One 1 CD containing drivers and utilities 1 1 AS1010S T User s Manual 1 2 Motherboard Features At the heart of the 1010S T lies the H8SSL i a single processor motherboard designed to provide maximum performance Below are the main features of the H8SSL i See Figure 1 1 for a block diagram of the ServerWorks HT 1000 chipset Processors The H8SSL i has an 939 pin ZIF socket that supports a single AMD Opteron Series 100 processor Please refer to the support section of our web site for a complete listing of supported processors Memory The H8SSL i has four 4 184 pin DIMM sockets that can support up to 4 GB of unbuffered ECC DDR400 333 SDRAM Memory can operate in either single or dual channel mode Low profile memory modules are required for use in the 1U form factor of the 1010S T Serial ATA A Serial ATA controller is incorporat
64. nit 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 CPU processor You may have a processor already installed to the system board The processor should have a heatsink attached See Chapter 5 for instructions on processor and heatsink installation 3 Check the system memory Your 1010S T server system may have come with system memory already installed Make sure all DIMMs are fully seated in their slots For details on adding system memory refer to Chapter 5 4 Installing add on cards If desired you can install an add on card to the system See Chapter 5 for details on installing a PCI add on card 5 Check all cable connections and airflow Make sure all power and data cables are properly connected and not blocking the airflow See Chapter 5 for details on cable connections Also check the air seals for damage The air seals are located under the blower fan and beneath the frame cross section that separates the drive bay area from the motherboard area of the chassis 2 8 Chapter 2 Server Installation Figure 2 5 Accessing the Inside of the System 2 9 AS1010S T User s Manual 2 6 Checking the
65. nt door and all panels and components on the servers closed when not servicing to maintain proper cooling 2 2 Chapter 2 Server Installation Rack Mounting Considerations Ambient Operating Temperature If installed in a closed or multi unit rack assembly the ambient operating tempera ture of the rack environment may be greater than the ambient temperature of the room Therefore consideration should be given to installing the equipment in an environment compatible with the manufacturer s maximum rated ambient tempera ture Tmra Reduced Airflow Equipment should be mounted into a rack so that the amount of airflow required for safe operation is not compromised Mechanical Loading Equipment should be mounted into a rack so that a hazardous condition does not arise due to uneven mechanical loading Circuit Overloading Consideration should be given to the connection of the equipment to the power supply circuitry and the effect that any possible overloading of circuits might have on overcurrent protection and power supply wiring Appropriate consideration of equipment nameplate ratings should be used when addressing this concern Reliable Ground A reliable ground must be maintained at all times To ensure this the rack itself should be grounded Particular attention should be given to power supply connec tions other than the direct connections to the branch circuit i e the use of power strips etc AS1010S T User s Manu
66. nu and press lt Enter gt Discard Changes Select this option and press lt Enter gt to discard all the changes and return to AMI BIOS Utility Program Load Optimal Defaults To set this feature select Load Optimal Defaults from the Exit menu and press lt Enter gt Then Select OK to allow BIOS to automatically load the Optimal Defaults as the BIOS Settings The Optimal settings are designed for maximum system performance but may not work best for all computer applications Load Fail Safe Defaults To set this feature select Load Fail Safe Defaults from the Exit menu and press lt Enter gt The Fail Safe settings are designed for maximum system stability but not maximum performance 7 15 AS1010S T User s Manual Notes 7 16 Appendix A BIOS Error Beep Codes Appendix A BIOS Error Beep Codes During the POST Power On Self Test routines which are performed each time the system is powered on errors may occur Non fatal errors are those which in most cases allow the system to continue the boot up process The error messages normally appear on the screen Fatal errors are those which will not allow the system to continue the boot up pro cedure If a fatal error occurs you should consult with your system manufacturer for possible repairs These fatal errors are usually communicated through a series of audible beeps The numbers on the fatal error list on the following page correspond to the number of b
67. o Enable or Disable the onboard floppy controller Serial Port1 Address This option specifies the base I O port address and Interrupt Request address of serial port 1 Select Disabled to prevent the serial port from accessing any system resources When this option is set to Disabled the serial port physically becomes unavailable Select 3F8 IRQ4 to allow the serial port to use 3F8 as its I O port address and IRQ 4 for the interrupt address The options are Disabled 3F8 IRQ4 3E8 IRQ4 and 2E8 IRQ3 Serial Port2 Address This option specifies the base I O port address and Interrupt Request address of serial port 2 Select Disabled to prevent the serial port from accessing any system resources When this option is set to Disabled the serial port physically becomes unavailable Select 2F8 IRQ3 to allow the serial port to use 2F8 as its I O port address and IRQ 3 for the interrupt address The options are Disabled 2F8 IRQ3 3E8 IRQ4 and 2E8 IRQ3 Serial Port 2 Mode Tells BIOS which mode to select for serial port 2 The options are Normal Sharp IR SIR and Consumer 7 6 Chapter 7 BIOS Restore on AC Power Loss This setting allows you to choose how the system will react when power returns after an unexpected loss of power The options are Power Off and Last State Watch Dog Timer This setting is used to enable or disabled the Watch Dog Timer function It must be used in conjunction with the Watch Dog jumper see Chapt
68. or and memory preinstalled If your system is not already fully integrated with a motherboard processor system memory etc please turn to the chapter or section noted in each step for details on installing specific components 2 2 Unpacking the System You should inspect the box the 1010S T 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 1010S T It should be situated in a clean dust free area that is well ventilated 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 1010S T 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 minimal amount of time Please read this section in its entirety before you begin the installation procedure outlined in the sections that follow 2 1 AS1010S T User s Manual 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
69. ouching 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 4 3 AS1010S T User s Manual 4 4 Operating Precautions A Care must be taken to assure that the chassis cover is in place when the 1010S T is operating to assure proper cooling Out of warranty damage to the 1010S T system can occur if this practice is not strictly followed Figure 4 1 Installing the Onboard Battery LITHIUM BATTERY LITHIUM BATTERY OR BATTERY HOLDER BATTERY HOLDER 4 4 Chapter 5 Advanced Motherboard Setup Chapter 5 Advanced Motherboard Setup This chapter covers the steps required to install processors and heatsinks to the H8SSL i motherboard connect the data and power cables and install add on cards All motherboard jumpers and connections are described and a layout and quick reference chart are 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 Motherboard Static electrical discharge can damage electronic components To prevent dam age to printed circuit boards it is important to handle them very carefully see Chapter 4 Also note that the size and weight of the motherboard can cause
70. owing 52h The memory above 1 MB has been tested and initialized Saving the memory size information next 53h The memory size information and the CPU registers are saved Entering real mode next 54h Shutdown was successful The CPU is in real mode Disabling the Gate A20 line parity and the NMI next 57h The A20 address line parity and the NMI are disabled Adjusting the memory size depending on relocation and shadowing next 58h The memory size was adjusted for relocation and shadowing Clearing the Hit lt DEL gt message next 59h The Hit lt DEL gt message is cleared The lt WAIT gt message is displayed Starting the DMA and interrupt controller test next 60h The DMA page register test passed Performing the DMA Controller 1 base register test next 62h The DMA controller 1 base register test passed Performing the DMA controller 2 base register test next 65h The DMA controller 2 base register test passed Programming DMA controllers 1 and 2 next 66h Completed programming DMA controllers 1 and 2 Initializing the 8259 interrupt controller next 67h Completed 8259 interrupt controller initialization 7Fh 80h The keyboard test has started Clearing the output buffer and checking for stuck keys Issuing the keyboard reset command next Extended NMI source enabling is in progress 81h A keyboard reset error or stuck key was found Issuing the keyboard controller interface test command next 82h The k
71. power to the motherboard See the Con nector Definitions section in this chapter for power connector pin definitions In addition your power supply must be connected to the Secondary ATX Power connection at PW2 9 5 AS1010S T User s Manual Connecting the Control Panel JF1 contains header pins for various front control panel connectors See Figure 5 2 for the pin locations of the various front control panel buttons and LED indica tors and refer to section 5 9 for details Note that even and odd numbered pins are on opposite sides of each header All JF1 wires have been bundled into single keyed ribbon cable to simplify their connection The red wire in the ribbon cable plugs into pin 1 of JF1 Connect the other end of the cable 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 descrip tions of JF1 Figure 5 2 Front Control Panel Header Pins JF1 20 19 x key Power LED Ground ele Reset Button Ground ele Power Button 2 1 Chapter 5 Advanced Motherboard Setup 5 5 UO Ports The I O ports are color coded in conformance with the PC 99 specification See Figure 5 3 below for the colors and locations of the various I O ports Figure 5 3 Rear Panel I O Ports Mouse Green O o oof AOA USB 0 1 Ports 5 0 0 0 0 5 F PE OCH
72. r Select Disable to disable the fan speed control function to allow 7 11 AS1010S T User s Manual the onboard fans to continuously run at full speed 12V The options are 1 Disable Full Speed 2 3 pin Server and 3 3 pin Workstation FAN1 Speed through FANS Speed The speeds of the onboard fans in rpm are displayed here 7 4 Boot Menu gt Boot Settings Configuration Quick Boot If Enabled this option will skip certain tests during POST to reduce the time needed for the system to boot up The options are Enabled and Disabled Quiet Boot If Disabled normal POST messages will be displayed on boot up If Enabled this display the OEM logo instead of POST messages Add On ROM Display Mode This setting controls the display of add on ROM read only memory messages Select Force BIOS to allow the computer system to force a third party BIOS to display during system boot Select Keep Current to allow the computer system to display the BIOS information during system boot Boot up Num Lock Set this to On to allow the Number Lock setting to be modified during boot up The options are On and Off PS 2 Mouse Support This setting is to specify PS 2 mouse support The options are Auto Enabled and Disabled Wait for F1 If Error Enable to activate the Wait for F1 if Error function The options are Enabled and Disabled 7 12 Chapter 7 BIOS Hit DEL Message Display Enable to display the m
73. r Disable the onboard NIC PXE option ROM 7 5 Security Menu AMI BIOS provides a Supervisor and a User password If you use both passwords the Supervisor password must be set first Change Supervisor Password Select this option and press lt Enter gt to access the sub menu and then type in the password Change User Password Select this option and press lt Enter gt to access the sub menu and then type in the password Boot Sector Virus Protection This option is near the bottom of the Security Setup screen Select Disabled to deactivate the Boot Sector Virus Protection Select Enabled to enable boot sector protection When Enabled AMI BIOS displays a warning when any program or virus issues a Disk Format command or attempts to write to the boot sector of the hard disk drive The options are Enabled and Disabled 7 14 Chapter 7 BIOS 7 6 Exit Menu Select the Exit tab from AMI BIOS Setup Utility screen to enter the Exit BIOS Setup screen Save Changes and Exit When you have completed the system configuration changes select this option to leave BIOS Setup and reboot the computer so the new system configuration parameters can take effect Select Save Changes and Exit from the Exit menu and press lt Enter gt Discard Changes and Exit Select this option to quit BIOS Setup without making any permanent changes to the system configuration and reboot the computer Select Discard Changes and Exit from the Exit me
74. r s Manual 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 chas sis 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 Figure 2 3 Installing the Server into a Rack pone oe net ty pe N Chapter 2 Server Installation Installing the Server into a Telco Rack If you are installing the 1010S T 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 accomodate the width of the telco rack Figure 2 4 Installing the Server into a Telco Rack AS1010S T User s Manual 2 5 Checking the Motherboard Setup After you install the 1010S T 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 system Figure 2 5 First grasp the two handles on either side and pull the u
75. ssis 2 Installing a new fan Replace the failed fan with an identical 4 cm 12 volt fan p n FAN 0087 At the bottom of each fan unit there are four small rubber pieces that help position the fan into place in the chassis Remove these from the failed fan and attach them to the new fan new fans do not include this piece Then place the new fan in the housing with the fan wiring toward the motherboard Reconnect the fan wiring to the same fan header you removed it from Power up the system and check that the fan is working properly and that the LED on the control panel has turned off Finish by replacing the chassis cover 6 3 AS1010S T User s Manual 6 4 Drive Bay Installation Removal Accessing the Drive Bays Serial ATA Drives Because of their hotswap capability you do not need to access the inside of the chassis or power down the system to install or replace Serial ATA drives Proceed to the next step for instructions CD ROM Floppy Disk Drives For installing removing a CD ROM or floppy disk drive you will need to gain access to the inside of the 1010S T by removing the top cover of the chassis Proceed to the CD ROM and Floppy Drive Installation section later in this chapter for instructions Note Only a slim CD ROM drive will fit into the 1010S T Serial ATA Drive Installation 1 Mounting a Serial ATA drive in a drive carrier The Serial ATA drives are mounted in drive carriers to simplify their installation and remo
76. ssis Intrusion header is located at JL1 Attach the appropriate cable to inform you of a chassis intrusion IPM Header The Intelligent Platform Management Interface IPMI header is located at J5 Connect the appropriate cable here to utilize IPMB on your system See the table on the right for pin definitions Power Supply Fail Alarm Header Connect a cable from your power supply to JP1 to provide you with warning of a power supply failure The warning signal is passed through the PWR_LED pin to indicate a power failure See the table on the right for pin definitions Power Supply Fail Alarm Reset Header Connect JP11 to the alarm reset but ton on your chassis if available or to a microswitch to allow you to turn off the alarm that sounds when a power supply module fails See the table on the right for pin definitions 5 17 Chapter 5 Advanced Motherboard Setup Chassis Intrusion Pin Definitions JL1 Pin Definition 1 Intrusion Input 2 Ground IPMI Pin Definitions J5 Pin Definition 1 Data Ground Clock Power Supply Fail Alarm Header Pin Definitions JP1 Pin Definition P S 1 Fail Signal P S 2 Fail Signal 2 s NC Reset from MB Note This feature is only available when using redundant power supplies Alarm Reset Header Pin Definitions JP11 Pin Definition 1 Ground Reset Signal AS1010S T User s Manual
77. t 2007 All rights reserved Printed in the United States of America 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 AS1010S T server Installa tion and maintainance should be performed by experienced technicians only The AS1010S T is a high end server based on the SC811FT 260 1U rackmount chassis and the H8SSL i a single processor motherboard that supports AMD Op teron processors and up to 4 GB of unbuffered ECC DDR400 333 SDRAM 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 H8SSL i motherboard and the SC811FT 260 chassis which comprise the 1010S T Chapter 2 Server Installation This chapter describes the steps necessary to install the 1010S T 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 AS1010S T User s Manual Chapter 4 System Safety You sho
78. ting when enabled will include an OEMB table pointer to pointer lists Options are Enabled and Disabled 7 9 AS1010S T User s Manual Headless Mode Select Enabled to activate the Headless Operation Mode through ACPI The options are Enabled and Disabled gt Event Log Configuration View Event Log Highlight this item and press lt Enter gt to view the contents of the event log Mark All Events as Read Highlight this item and press lt Enter gt to mark the DMI events as read Clear Event Log This setting will clear all event logs when set to OK The options are OK and Cancel Event Log Statistics Highlight this item and press lt Enter gt to view details on the count of total unread events gt MPS Configuration MPS Revision This setting allows the user to select the MPS revision level The options are 1 1 and 1 4 gt Remote Access Configuration Remote Access Use this setting to Enable or Disable remote access If Enabled is selected you can select a Remote Access type gt USB Configuration This screen will display the module version and all USB enabled devices 7 10 Chapter 7 BIOS Legacy USB Support Select Enabled to enable the support for USB Legacy Disable Legacy support if there are no USB devices installed in the system The options are Enabled and Disabled USB 2 0 Controller Mode Select the controller mode for your USB ports Options are HiSpeed and FullSpeed
79. uegedee scene devaeeelashenvedesanvpiedaas base aaa i 5 5 Connecting Data Cables ANNE 5 5 Connecting Power Cables ENEE 5 5 Connecting the Control Panel 5 6 eg in 5 7 IAstaling Meter ees 5 7 Adding PC ere E 5 9 Motherboard Details srcisccssuavcsscesneesecesvennacssnve decsoudinereieaseassaieatansidnarenbeeioeest 5 10 HBSS esl Layout Ee 5 10 H8SSL i Quick Reference cccccececece cece ce cececececeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeees 5 11 Connector DETNIMIONS seettugenegEuEESSRdEEENEREN EEENEe E Eege E EEN EEN eEeEN 5 11 Primary ATX Power Connector ecececececececeeeceeeeeeeceeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeess 5 12 Secondary Power Connector cece ee ceeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeseeeeeeea 5 12 el IR 5 12 Power ED WEE 5 12 FIDE EL a eia e RE r r E EER 5 13 lead Weg TR WE 5 13 Overheat Fan Fakt sadist csi een ee ae 5 13 Power Fail LED cscs sicscsiccosssensstnvausceatevexsetqctets Edge Ce 5 13 Reset BUOM assssssssscsvesusessayanidessueanessandsaneitianacentianacsanimnanceedpneptecetenseeece 5 14 Power Button gege Ee 5 14 Universal Serial Bus USB 5 14 Serial ATA Activity LEDS ccccccccceceeeceeeecneceeeeeeeeeceeaeeeeeeeeseesnsieaeeeeees 5 14 WSB 2 3 E 5 15 Serial POMS viyaccs sande deunazaccnanaee e aa vues bin aE NEEESE RE AREER 5 15 Fan HOA EMS E 5 15 el RE 5 15 Power LED SpGaker 000 geeEkkRRSSEEKRNESNEEERREREENESENEEESC EES AEESEEEN EE AE 5 16 ATX PS 2 Keyboard and Mouse Porte 5 16 Wake OPRIM EE 5 16 Ee E
80. uld thoroughly familiarize yourself with this chapter for a general overview of safety precautions that should be followed when installing and servicing the 1010S T Chapter 5 Advanced Motherboard Setup Chapter 5 provides detailed information on the H8SSL i motherboard including the locations and functions of connections 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 SC811FT 260 server chassis You should follow the procedures given in this chapter when installing removing or reconfiguring SATA or peripheral drives and when replacing the system power supply and cooling fan Chapter 7 BIOS The BIOS chapter includes an introduction to BIOS and provides detailed informa tion on running the CMOS Setup Utility Appendix A BIOS Error Beep Codes Appendix B BIOS POST Checkpoint Codes Appendix C System Specifications Preface Notes AS1010S T User s Manual Table of Contents Preface About iis apres Ee EE iii Manual Organization iii Chapter 1 Introduction WaT OVERVIEW vivssecelivssedtceranceediiousthecvaneeenncueneesauauredeeuepeycesseenedandaeuvenestunedtaddeneseenthus 1 1 1 2 Motherboard Features siriene eaire iene nents 1 2 1 3 Server Chassis Features ccccccccceccececee eect eee e eee e ee ee eee teeeeteeeeeteeeeeneeeeeeene
81. urend H Gsgse oO f CEE r OF Sa SS Sow SS 000 D oss Co 8 Figure 6 2 Chassis Rear View Lie IS se scoc i ge Se D I DOOOOTIE SS We o CG k O 000 Mouse Q OS oS IT Keyboard USB COM VGA Ethernet Port Ports Port Port Ports 6 2 Control Panel The control panel located on the front of the chassis must be connected to the JF1 connector on the motherboard to provide you with system control buttons and status indicators These wires have been bundled together in a ribbon cable to simplify the connection Connect the cable from JF1 on the motherboard to the Control Panel PCB printed circuit board Make sure the red wire plugs into pin 1 op both connectors Pull all excess cabling out of the airflow path The LEDs inform you of system status See Chapter 3 for details on the LEDs and the control panel buttons Details on JF1 can be found in Chapter 5 6 2 Chapter 6 Advanced Chassis Setup
82. val from the chassis These carriers also help promote proper airflow for the Serial ATA drive bays For this reason even empty carriers without Serial ATA drives installed must remain in the chassis To add a new Serial ATA 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 Drive in a Carrier Chapter 6 Advanced Chassis Setup 2 Installing removing hot swap Serial ATA drives Two Serial ATA drive bays are located in the front of the chassis making them easily accessible for installation and removal These drives are hot swappable meaning they can be installed and removed without powering down the system To remove first push the release button located beside the drive LEDs then swing the colored handle fully out and use it to pull the unit straight out see Figure 6 4 Figure 6 4 Removing Installing Serial ATA Drives installed both drive carriers must remain in the drive bays to fi Important Regardless of how many Serial ATA drives are maintain proper airflow 6 5 AS1010S T User s Manual Serial ATA Backplane The Serial ATA drives plug into a backplane that provides power drive ID and bus termination A RAID controller can be used with the backplane to provide data security The operating system you use must have
83. while the other LED may be green amber or off to indicate the speed of the connection See the table on the right for the functions indicated by with the connection speed LED LAN LED Connection Speed Indicator LED Color Definition off 10 MHz Green 100 MHz Amber 1 GHz SATA Activity LEDs SATA Activity LEDs DP1 DP3 When illuminated the DP1 DP2 ren System Status DP3 and DP4 LEDs indicate activity on SATA channels SATA3 SATA2 SATA1 and SATAO respectively On SATA channel active Off SATA channel inactive 5 21 AS1010S T User s Manual 5 12 Floppy IDE and SATA Drive Connections Use the following information to connect the floppy and hard disk drive cables e The floppy disk drive cable has seven twisted wires e Ared mark on a wire typically designates the location of pin 1 e 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 e The 80 wire ATA100 66 IDE hard disk drive cable that came with your system has two connectors to support two drives This special cable should be used to take advantage of the speed this new technology offers The blue connector connects to the onboard IDE connector interface and the other connector s to your hard drive s Consult the documentation that came with
84. with a system overview which includes the version built date and ID of the AMIBIOS the type speed and number of the processors in the system and the amount of memory installed in the system System Time System Date You can edit this field to change the system time and date Highlight System Time or System Date using the lt Arrow gt keys Enter new values through the keyboard Press the lt Tab gt key or the lt Arrow gt keys to move between fields The date must be entered in DAY MM DD YYYY format The time is entered in HH MM SS format Please note that time is in a 24 hour format For example 5 30 A M appears as 05 30 00 and 5 30 P M as 17 30 00 7 3 Advanced Settings Menu gt CPU Configuration Sub Menu GART Error Reporting This setting is used for testing only MTRR Mapping This determines the method used for programming CPU MTRRs when 4 GB or more memory is present The options are Continuous which makes the PCI hole non cacheable and Discrete which places the PCI hole below the 4 GB boundary gt Floppy Configuration Floppy A Move the cursor to these fields via up and down lt arrow gt keys to select the floppy type The options are Disabled 360 KB 5 1 4 1 2 MB 5 1 4 720 KB 372 1 44 MB 3 and 2 88 MB 37 7 2 Chapter 7 BIOS Floppy B Move the cursor to these fields via up and down lt arrow gt keys to select the floppy type The options are Disabled 360 KB 5 1 4 1 2 MB 5 1 4 720
85. xt if present See the last page for additional information Completed post video ROM test processing If the EGA VGA controller is not found performing the display memory read write test next The EGA VGA controller was not found The display memory read write test is about to begin The display memory read write test passed Look for retrace checking next The display memory read write test or retrace checking failed Performing the alter nate display memory read write test next The alternate display memory read write test passed Looking for alternate display retrace checking next Video display checking is over Setting the display mode next The display mode is set Displaying the power on message next Initializing the bus input IPL general devices next if present See the last page of this chapter for additional information Displaying bus initialization error messages See the last page of this chapter for additional information The new cursor position has been read and saved Displaying the Hit lt DEL gt mes sage next The Hit lt DEL gt message is displayed The protected mode memory test is about to start Preparing the descriptor tables next The descriptor tables are prepared Entering protected mode for the memory test next Entered protected mode Enabling interrupts for diagnostics mode next Interrupts enabled if the diagnostics switch is on Initializing data to check memory wraparou
86. your disk drive for details on actual jumper locations and settings for the hard disk drive Floppy Connector Floppy Drive Connector Pin Definitions Flo The floppy connector is located ea beside the IDE 1 connector Bean Detiniton See the table on the right for pin definitions GND FDHDIN GND Reserved Key FDEDIN GND Index GND Motor Enable GND Drive Select B GND Drive Select A GND Motor Enable GND DIR GND STEP GND Write Data GND Write Gate GND Track 00 GND Write Protect GND Read Data GND Side 1 Select GND Diskette 5 22 IDE Connector There are no jumpers to con figure the onboard IDE connec tor See the table on the right for pin definitions SATA Connectors There are no jumpers to con figure the SATA connectors which are designated SATAO SATA1 SATA2 and SATA3 See the table on the right for pin definitions Chapter 5 Advanced Motherboard Setup Pin 5 23 IDE Drive Connector Pin Definitions IDE 1 Definition Pin Definition Reset IDE 2 Ground Host Data 7 4 Host Data 8 Host Data 6 6 Host Data 9 Host Data 5 8 Host Data 10 Host Data 4 10 Host Data 11 Host Data 3 12 Host Data 12 Host Data 2 14 Host Data 13 Host Data 1 16 Host Data 14 Host Data 0 18 Host Data 15 Ground 20 Key DRQ3 22 Ground UO Write 24 Ground I O Read 26 Ground IOCHRDY 28 BALE DACK3 30 Ground IRQ14 32 IOCS16 Addr1 34 Ground Add 36 Addr2 Chip Sele

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