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5-4

AS1011M-UR User's Manual

5-3  Mounting the Motherboard into a Chassis

All motherboards and motherboards have standard mounting holes to fi t  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 shield

The H8SMU motherboard requires a chassis that can support extended ATX boards 

of 7" x 13" in size.  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.

Installing the Heatsink

The use of active type heatsinks (except for 1U systems) are recommended.  Con-

nect the heatsink fan to the appropriate fan header on the motherboard.  To install 

the heatsink, please follow the installation instructions included with your heatsink 

package (not included).     

Summary of Contents for AS-1011M-UR

Page 1: ... SUPER AS1011M UR USER S MANUAL 1 0c ...

Page 2: ...SUPERMICRO 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 RECOVERING 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 sha...

Page 3: ...ain features of the H8SMU motherboard and the SC815TQ R450U chassis which make up the AS1011M UR Chapter 2 Server Installation This chapter describes the steps necessary to install the AS1011M UR 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 section...

Page 4: ...ced Chassis Setup Refer to Chapter 6 for detailed information on the 1U SC815TQ R450U rackmount server chassis You should follow the procedures given in this chapter when in stalling removing or reconfiguring peripheral drives and when replacing the system power supply unit and cooling fans Chapter 7 BIOS The BIOS chapter includes an introduction to BIOS and provides detailed informa tion on runni...

Page 5: ...v Preface Notes ...

Page 6: ...aring for Setup 2 1 Choosing a Setup Location 2 2 Rack Precautions 2 2 Server Precautions 2 2 Rack Mounting Considerations 2 3 2 4 Installing the System into a Rack 2 4 2 5 Checking the Motherboard Setup 2 8 2 6 Checking the Drive Bay Setup 2 10 Chapter 3 System Interface 3 1 Overview 3 1 3 2 Control Panel Buttons 3 1 UID 3 1 Reset 3 1 Power 3 1 3 3 Control Panel LEDs 3 2 Universal Information LED...

Page 7: ...ng the Control Panel 5 6 5 5 I O Ports 5 7 5 6 Installing Memory 5 7 5 7 Adding PCI Cards 5 9 5 8 Motherboard Details 5 10 H8SMU Layout 5 10 H8SMU Quick Reference 5 11 5 9 Connector Definitions 5 12 ATX Power Connector 5 12 Processor Power Connector 5 12 Power LED 5 12 HDD LED 5 12 NIC1 LED 5 13 NIC2 LED 5 13 Universal Information LED 5 13 Power Fail LED 5 14 Reset Button 5 14 Power Button 5 14 Un...

Page 8: ...ID LED 5 22 5 12 Floppy IDE and SATA Drive Connections 5 23 Floppy Connector 5 23 IDE Connector 5 24 SATA Ports 5 24 5 13 Enabling SATA RAID 5 25 5 14 Installing Drivers 5 28 Chapter 6 Advanced Chassis Setup 6 1 Static Sensitive Devices 6 1 6 2 Control Panel 6 2 6 3 System Fans 6 3 System Fan Failure 6 3 Replacing System Fans 6 3 6 4 Drive Bay Installation Removal 6 4 Removing the Front Bezel 6 4 ...

Page 9: ... 1 Introduction 7 1 7 2 Main Menu 7 2 7 3 Advanced Settings Menu 7 2 7 4 Boot Menu 7 16 7 5 Security 7 16 7 6 Exit Menu 7 17 Appendices Appendix A BIOS Error Beep Codes Appendix B BIOS POST Checkpoint Codes Appendix D System Specifications ...

Page 10: ...x Notes AS1011M UR User s Manual ...

Page 11: ...h your 1011M UR as listed below One 1 passive CPU heatsink SNK P0026 One 1 slim DVD ROM drive DVM PNSC 824 B One 1 slim floppy drive FPD PNSC S B optional Three 3 sets of 4 cm counter rotating fans FAN 0086L One 1 air shroud MCP 310 00033 01 Riser Cards see Section 5 6 for details One 1 RSC R1UU E8R for PCI E x8 card One 1 CSE R1UU UE8 for PCI E card One 1 CSE R1UU 2E8 for two PCI E cards optional...

Page 12: ...U has one PCI Express x16 slot and one PCI Express x8 slot Standard size expansion cards with their appropriate riser cards may be used with the server See Section 5 6 for details Serial ATA An on chip SATA controller is integrated into the H8SMU to provide a four port 3 Gb sec Serial ATA subsystem which is RAID 0 1 5 0 1 and JBOD supported The SATA drives are hot swappable units Onboard Controlle...

Page 13: ...re 1 1 nVidia MCP55 Chipset System Block Diagram Note This is a general block diagram Please see Chapter 5 for details nVidia MCP55Pro 128 bit data 16 bit ECC DDR2 800 667 533 PCI E x16 Slot SATA Ports 4 IDE 1 USB Ports 4 S I O BIOS Floppy Kybd Mouse Serial Ports 2 AMD AM2 Socket Processor LPC DIMM 1A DIMM 2A DIMM 1B DIMM 2B SIMSO IPMI 2 0 PCI E x8 Slot ATI ES1000 16 x 16 HT link 1 GHz GLAN Ports ...

Page 14: ...monitoring and control information LEDs indicate power on network activity hard disk drive activ ity UID and system overheat conditions Also present are a main power button a system reset button and a UID button I O Backplane The SC815TQ R450U is a 1U rackmount chassis Its I O backplane provides three standard size PCI slots one COM port the other is internal one VGA port two USB ports PS 2 mouse ...

Page 15: ...uper Micro Computer B V Het Sterrenbeeld 28 5215 ML s Hertogenbosch The Netherlands Tel 31 0 73 6400390 Fax 31 0 73 6416525 Email sales supermicro nl General Information support supermicro nl Technical Support rma supermicro nl Customer Support Asia Pacific Address Super Micro Computer Inc 4F No 232 1 Liancheng Rd Chung Ho 235 Taipei County Taiwan R O C Tel 886 2 8226 3990 Fax 886 2 8226 3991 Web ...

Page 16: ...1 6 AS1011M UR User s Manual Notes ...

Page 17: ...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 1011M UR 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 Be ...

Page 18: ... 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 placem...

Page 19: ...romised 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 considerat...

Page 20: ...h the rack unit you are using Identifying the Sections of the Rack Rails You should have received two rack rail assemblies in the rack mounting kit Each assembly consists of two sections an inner fixed chassis rail that secures directly to the server chassis and an outer fixed rack rail that secures directly to the rack itself see Figure 2 1 Two pairs of short brackets to be used on the front side...

Page 21: ... bracket to the front side of the outer rail with two screws and the long bracket to the rear side of the outer rail with three screws Repeat these steps for the left outer rail Locking Tabs 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 l...

Page 22: ...ck 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 Finish by inserting and tightening the thumbscrews that hold ...

Page 23: ...ermine how far follow the server will extend out the front of the rack Larger chassis should be positioned to balance the weight between front and back If a bezel is included on your server remove it Then attach the two front brackets to each side of the chassis then the two rear brackets positioned with just enough space to accommodate the width of the telco rack Finish by sliding the chassis int...

Page 24: ... completely depress the locking tabs in the chassis rails push the right side tab down and the left side tab up to continue to pull the system out past the locked position 2 Check the CPU processor You may have a processor already installed in the motherboard The processor needs its own heatsink See Chapter 5 for instructions on processor and heatsink installation 3 Check the system memory Your se...

Page 25: ...Chapter 2 Server Installation 2 9 Figure 2 5 Accessing the Inside of the System ...

Page 26: ...system 3 Check the SAS SATA disk drives Depending upon your system s configuration your system may have one or more drives already installed If you need to install SAS SATA drives please refer to Chapter 6 4 Check the airflow Airflow is provided by three sets of 4 cm fans each set of fans consists of two fans that are mounted back to back The system component layout was care fully designed to dire...

Page 27: ...ontrol Panel Buttons There are three push buttons located on the front of the chassis a reset button a UID button and a power on off button UID Depressing the UID unit identifier button illuminates an LED on both the front and rear of the chassis for easy system location in large stack configura tions The LED will remain on until the button is pushed a second time Another UID button on the rear of...

Page 28: ...dicates an overheat condi tion 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...

Page 29: ...is operating 3 4 Drive Carrier LEDs SATA Drives Each Serial ATA drive carrier has two LEDs Green When illuminated the green LED on the front of the SATA drive car rier indicates drive activity A connection to the SATA backplane enables this LED to blink on and off when that particular drive is being accessed Red The red LED indicates two states When blinking it indicates the drive is rebuilding Wh...

Page 30: ...e activity A connection to the backplane enables this LED to blink on and off when that particular drive is being accessed Red The SES2 compliant backplane activates the red LED to indicate a drive failure If one of the SAS drives fail you should be notified by your system management software Please refer to Chapter 6 for instructions on replacing failed SAS drives ...

Page 31: ...you should first power down the system with the operating system and then unplug the power cords from all the power supply modules 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 ...

Page 32: ...m 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 Motherboard Battery CAUTION There is a danger of explosion if the onboard battery is installed upside down which will reverse its polarities see Figure 4 1 This battery must be replaced only with the same or an equivalent...

Page 33: ... use Touch a grounded metal object before removing any board from its antistatic bag Do not let components or PCBs come into contact with your clothing which may retain a charge even if you are wearing a wrist strap Handle a board by its edges only do not touch its components peripheral chips memory modules or contacts When handling chips or modules avoid touching their pins Put the motherboard an...

Page 34: ...the chassis cover is in place when the 1011M UR is operating to ensure proper cooling Out of warranty damage to the 1011M UR system can occur if this practice is not strictly followed Figure 4 1 Installing the Onboard Battery LITHIUM BATTERY BATTERY HOLDER BATTERY HOLDER LITHIUM BATTERY OR ...

Page 35: ...at the size and weight of the motherboard can cause 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 Use a grounded wrist strap designed to prevent static discharge Tou...

Page 36: ... that the backplate sticks to the underside of the board See Figure 2 1 Exercise extreme caution when handling and installing the proces sor Always connect the power cord last and always remove it be fore adding removing or changing any hardware components Installing the Processor 1 Lift the lever on CPU socket until it points straight up 2 Use your thumb and your index fin ger to hold the CPU Loc...

Page 37: ... been included in the retail box Once installed it is 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 two of the screws provided See Figure 2 1 Note BKT 0018L is included fo...

Page 38: ...gn 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 screwdrive...

Page 39: ...y 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 Control Panel cable JF1 see next page SATA cable SATA0 2 Connectin...

Page 40: ...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 NMI x key Vcc UID Bu...

Page 41: ...ssible damage 1 Insert each memory module vertically into its slot paying attention to the notch along the bottom of the module to prevent inserting the module incorrectly see Figure 2 2 Populate both slots 1A and 1B first 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 512 MB 1 GB and 2 GB ...

Page 42: ... supports single or dual channel DDR2 800 667 533 unbuffered ECC non ECC SDRAM Both interleaved and non interleaved memory are supported so you may populate any number of DIMM slots see charts on following page Populating two 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 See charts on follo...

Page 43: ...st below 2 PCI card installation Before installing a PCI add on card make sure you install it into the correct riser card Begin by releasing the locking tab on the I O backplane that corresponds to the slot you wish to populate Insert the expansion card into the correct riser card pushing down with your thumbs evenly on both sides of the card PCI Slot Card Configurations Riser Card Expansion card ...

Page 44: ... purposes only H8SMU CPU nVidia MCP55Pro LAN2 LAN1 VGA COM1 USB0 1 KB Mse BIOS SW1 UIOP ATI ES1000 SXB2 PCI E x8 SXB1 PCI E x16 DIMM 2B DIMM 1B DIMM 2A DIMM 1A IDE USB2 3 SATA0 SATA1 SATA2 SATA3 SIMSO COM2 FLOPPY LED1 JPW1 JPW2 Battery Speaker SGPIO JI2 C1 JI2 C2 JPG1 JWOR JWD JL1 JD1 JCF1 JWF1 FAN5 FAN4 FAN3 FAN2 FAN1 JF1 JPI2 C JWOL JBT1 DP1 ...

Page 45: ...aders 1 5 Floppy Floppy Disk Drive Connector IDE IDE Hard Drive Connector JD1 Power LED pins1 3 Speaker Header pins 4 7 JF1 Front Control Panel Connector JL1 Chassis Intrusion Header JPI2 C System Management I2 C Power Header JPW1 Primary 20 Pin ATX Power Connector JPW2 Processor Power Connector 8 pin JWF1 Compact Flash Card Power Connector JWOL Wake on LAN Header JWOR Wake on Ring Header LAN1 2 G...

Page 46: ...r Connector Pin Definitions JPW2 Pins Definition 1 through 4 Ground 5 through 8 12V Power LED The Power LED connection is located on pins 15 and 16 of JF1 Refer to the table on the right for pin definitions Power LED Pin Definitions JF1 Pin Definition 15 Vcc 16 Control ATX Power 20 pin Connector Pin Definitions JPW1 Pin Definition Pin Definition 11 GND8 1 GND1 12 5V1 2 GND2 13 5V2 3 GND3 14 3 3V1 ...

Page 47: ...finitions JF1 Pin Definition 9 Vcc 10 NIC2 Active Universal Information LED Connect an LED to pins 7 and 8 of JF1 to provide advanced warning of chassis overheating a fan failure or a power supply failure These pins also work with the front UID indicator which will activate as either a solid or flashing blue LED depending on whether the LED was activated via IPMI or the UID button Refer to the tab...

Page 48: ...d 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 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 Universal Serial Bus Ports USB0 1 Two Universal Serial Bus ports USB2 0 are ...

Page 49: ...are located beside the VGA port These Ethernet ports accept RJ45 type cables Note NC indicates no connection Serial Port Pin Definitions COM1 COM2 Pin Definition Pin Definition 1 DCD 6 DSR 2 RXD 7 RTS 3 TXD 8 CTS 4 DTR 9 RI 5 Ground 10 NC Fan Header Pin Definitions FAN1 5 Pin Definition 1 Ground Black 2 12V Red 3 Tachometer USB Headers Two additional USB2 0 headers USB2 3 are included on the moth ...

Page 50: ...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 Speaker Connector Pin Definitions JD1 Pin Definition 4 Red wire 5V 5 No connection 6 Buzzer signal 7 Speaker data PWR LED Connector Pin Definitions JD1 Pin Definition 1 Vcc 2 Control 3 Control Power Supply I2 C Header ...

Page 51: ... a Wake On LAN connector and cable to use the Wake On LAN feature Note Wake On LAN from S3 S4 S5 are supported by LAN1 LAN2 sup ports Wake On LAN from S1 only 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 ...

Page 52: ...efinitions JWF1 Pin Definition 1 5V 2 Ground 3 Signal SGPIO SGPIO1 Serial General Purpose Input Output provides a bus between the SATA controller and the SATA drive backplane to provide SATA enclosure management functions Connect the appropriate cables from the backplane to the SGPIO1 header to utilize SATA management functions on your system SGPIO Header Pin Definitions SGPIO1 Pin Definition Pin ...

Page 53: ...he 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...

Page 54: ... or disable the VGA port The default position is on pins 1 and 2 to enable VGA See the table on the right for jumper set tings VGA Enable Disable Jumper Settings JPG1 Jumper Setting Definition Pins 1 2 Enabled Pins 2 3 Disabled Onboard Speaker Enable Disable The JD1 header allows you to use either an external speaker or the in ternal onboard speaker To use the internal onboard speaker close pins 6...

Page 55: ...ve I2 C to PCI X PCI E Enable Disable The JI2 C1 2 pair of jumpers allows you to connect the System Management Bus to the PCI X PCI E expansion slots available on the H8SMU only with a spcial riser card The default setting is closed on for both jumpers to enable the connection Both con nectors must be set the same JI2 C1 is for data and JI2 C2 is for the clock See the table on right for jumper set...

Page 56: ...LAN LED Connection Speed Indicator LED Color Definition Off 10 100 MHz Amber 1 GHz Onboard Power LED DP1 DP1 is an Onboard Power LED When this LED is lit it means power is pres ent on the serverboard In suspend mode this LED will blink on and off Be sure to turn off the system and unplug the power cord s before removing or installing components UID LED LE1 The LE1 LED will illuminate when the UID ...

Page 57: ...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 your disk drive for details on actual jumper locations and settings for the hard disk drive Floppy Drive Connector Pin Definitions Floppy Pin Definition Pin Definitio...

Page 58: ...st Data 12 13 Host Data 2 14 Host Data 13 15 Host Data 1 16 Host Data 14 17 Host Data 0 18 Host Data 15 19 Ground 20 Key 21 DRQ3 22 Ground 23 I O Write 24 Ground 25 I O Read 26 Ground 27 IOCHRDY 28 BALE 29 DACK3 30 Ground 31 IRQ14 32 IOCS16 33 Addr1 34 Ground 35 Addr0 36 Addr2 37 Chip Select 0 38 Chip Select 1 39 Activity 40 Ground SATA Ports There are no jumpers to con figure the SATA ports which...

Page 59: ...ure below and install the driver during the OS installation Building a Driver Diskette You must first build a driver diskette from the CD ROM that was included with the system You will have to create this disk on a computer that is already running and with the OS installed Insert the CD into your CD ROM drive and start the system A display as shown in Figure 5 7 will appear Click on the icon label...

Page 60: ...verify your choice if you want to continue with your choices select Yes Note that selecting Yes will clear all previous data from the drives you selected to be a part of the array You are then given the choice of making the RAID array bootable by pressing the the B key After you have finshed press the Ctrl and X keys simultaneously Figure 5 6 shows a list of arrays that have been set up with the u...

Page 61: ...Chapter 5 Advanced Motherboard Setup 5 27 Figure 5 5 SATA RAID Utility Main Screen Figure 5 6 SATA RAID Utility Array List ...

Page 62: ...er 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 i...

Page 63: ...event damage to any printed circuit boards PCBs it is important to handle them very carefully The following measures are generally sufficient to protect your equipment from ESD damage Precautions Use a grounded wrist strap designed to prevent static discharge Touch a grounded metal object before removing any board from its antistatic bag Handle a board by its edges only do not touch its components...

Page 64: ... the appropriate header on the Control Panel PCB printed circuit board Make sure the red wire plugs into pin 1 on both connectors Pull all excess cabling out of the airflow path The control panel LEDs inform you of system status See Chapter 3 System Interface for details on the LEDs and the control panel buttons Details on JF1 can be found in Chapter 5 Advanced Motherboard Setup Control Panel Syst...

Page 65: ...ve the top chassis cover while the system is still running to determine which of the two fans has failed Then power down the system be fore replacing a fan Removing the power cords is also recommended as a safety precaution Replacing System Fans 1 Removing a fan After turning off the power to the system first remove the chassis cover and unplug the fan cable from the motherboard Unscrew the failed...

Page 66: ... it to gain access to the drive bays To remove the bezel first unlock the front of the chassis then press the release knob see Figure 6 3 Carefully re move the bezel with both hands A filter located within the bezel can be removed for replacement cleaning It is recommended that you keep a maintenance log of filter cleaning replacement since its condition will affect the airflow throughout the whol...

Page 67: ... instructions DVD ROM Floppy Disk Drives For installing removing a DVD ROM or floppy disk drive you will need to gain access to the inside of the 1011M UR by removing the top cover of the chassis Proceed to the DVD ROM and Floppy Drive Installation section later in this chapter for instructions Note Only slim DVD ROM and floppy drives will fit into the 1011M UR Figure 6 3 Removing the Front Bezel ...

Page 68: ...a drive into the carrier with the printed circuit board side facing down so that the mounting holes align with those in the carrier Secure the drive to the carrier with six screws as shown in Figure 6 4 Figure 6 4 Mounting a SAS SATA Drive in a Carrier Important Regardless of how many SAS SATA drives are in stalled all drive carriers must remain in the drive bays to maintain proper airflow Use cau...

Page 69: ...eaning they can be removed and installed without powering down the system To remove a carrier 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 5 Note Your operating system must have RAID support to enable the hot plug ca pability of the SAS SATA drives Figure 6 5 Removing a SAS SATA Drive from the Se...

Page 70: ...ide of the server With the chassis cover removed unplug the power and data cables from the drive you want to remove Then locate the locking tab at the rear of the drive It will be on the left side of the drive when viewed from the front of the chassis Pull the tab away from the drive and push the drive unit out the front of the chassis Add a new drive by following this procedure in reverse order Y...

Page 71: ...t powering down the system Removing Replacing the Power Supply You do not need to shut down the system to replace a power supply module The redundant feature will keep the system up and running while you replace the failed hot swap module Replace with the same model which can be ordered directly from Supermicro see Contact Information in the Preface 1 Removing the power supply First unplug the pow...

Page 72: ...6 10 AS1011M UR User s Manual Figure 6 6 Removing Replacing the Power Supply ...

Page 73: ...1 F2 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 messag...

Page 74: ...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 Boot Features 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 no...

Page 75: ...Change this setting if using a Linux operating system The available options are Other and Linux ACPI Mode Use this setting to determine whether ACPI mode will be used The options are Yes and No ACPI Version Features Use this setting the determine which ACPI version to use Options are ACPI v1 0 ACPI v2 0 and ACPI v3 0 ACPI APIC Support Select Enabled to allow the ACPI APIC Table Pointer to be inclu...

Page 76: ... It must be used in conjunction with the Watch Dog jumper see Chapter 2 for details MPS Revision This setting allows the user to select the MPS revision level to 1 1 or 1 4 Smbios Configuration This setting is used to Enable or Disable the SMBIOS SMI support The options are Enabled and Disabled CPU Configuration GART Error Reporting This setting is used for testing only MTRR Mapping This determine...

Page 77: ...roller Onboard IDE Controller There is a single floppy controller on the motherboard which may be Enabled or Disabled with this setting Serial ATA Devices This setting is used to determine if SATA drives will be used and how many Op tions are Disabled Device 0 and Device 0 1 nVidia RAID Function This setting is used to Enable or Disable the nVidia ROM Primary IDE Master Slave Highlight one of the ...

Page 78: ... 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 d...

Page 79: ...mmable 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 ...

Page 80: ...e 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...

Page 81: ...e to allow or restrict the system from giving the VGA adapter card an interrupt address The options are Yes and No 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 busmasterin...

Page 82: ...pt 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 s...

Page 83: ...ions are Auto and Manual Bank Interleaving Select Auto to automatically enable interleaving memory scheme when this function is supported by the processor The options are Auto and Disabled Enable Clock to All DIMMs Use this setting to enable unused clocks to all DIMMs even if some DIMM slots are unpopulated Options are Enabled and Disabled Mem Clk Tristate C3 ALTVID Use this setting to Enable or D...

Page 84: ...e 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 Power Down Control Allows DIMMs to enter power down mode by deasserting the clock enable signal when DIMMs are not in use Options are A...

Page 85: ...ontroller 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 Auto disabled Legacy support if no USB devices are connected The options are Disabled Enabled and Auto USB 2 0 Controller Mode Select the controller mode for your USB ports Options are HiSpeed and FullSpeed HiSpeed 480 Mbps FullSpeed 12 Mbps BI...

Page 86: ...mote Access Configuration Remote Access Allows you to Enable or Disable remote access If enabled the settings below will appear Serial Port Number Selects the serial port to use for console redirection Options are COM1 and COM2 Serial Port Mode Selects the serial port settings to use Options are 115200 8 n 1 57600 8 n 1 38400 8 n 1 19200 8 n 1 and 09600 8 n 1 Flow Control Selects the flow control ...

Page 87: ...o between 65o and 90o 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 72o C Fan Speed Control Modes This feature allows the user to determine how the system will control the speed of the onboard fans Select Worksta...

Page 88: ...e user to specify the boot sequence from the available hard disk drives Removable Drives This feature allows the user to specify the Boot sequence from the available re movable drives 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 Enter to access the sub...

Page 89: ...rogram Load Optimal Defaults To set this feature select Load Optimal Defaults from the Exit menu and press Enter 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 fr...

Page 90: ...7 18 AS1011M UR User s Manual Notes ...

Page 91: ...l 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 beeps for the corresponding error All errors listed with the exception of Beep Code 8 are fatal errors POST codes may be read on the debug LEDs located beside the LAN port on the motherboard backplane See the description of the Debug LEDs LED1 an...

Page 92: ...A 2 AS1011M UR User s Manual Notes ...

Page 93: ...itialization code check sum will be verified D1h 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 D5h Passing control to the uncompressed code in shadow RAM at E000 0000h The initialization code is copied...

Page 94: ...d while reading the floppy drive in drive A F0h Next searching for the AMIBOOT ROM file in the root directory F1h 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 ROM file F3h Next reading the AMIBOOT ROM file cluster by cluster F4h The AMIBOOT ROM file is not the correct size F5h Next disabling in...

Page 95: ... during power on Initializing CMOS RAM if the Initialize CMOS RAM in every boot AMIBIOS POST option was set in AMIBCP or the End key was pressed 12h Next disabling DMA controllers 1 and 2 and interrupt controllers 1 and 2 13h The video display has been disabled Port B has been initialized Next initializing the chipset 14h The 8254 timer test will begin next 19h Next programming the flash ROM 1Ah T...

Page 96: ...general devices next if present See the last page of this chapter for additional information 39h Displaying bus initialization error messages See the last page of this chapter for additional information 3Ah The new cursor position has been read and saved Displaying the Hit DEL mes sage next 3Bh The Hit DEL message is displayed The protected mode memory test is about to start 40h Preparing the desc...

Page 97: ...e was adjusted for relocation and shadowing Clearing the Hit DEL message next 59h The Hit DEL message is cleared The WAIT 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 ...

Page 98: ... control and has now returned control to BIOS POST Perform ing any required processing after the option ROM returned control 99h Any initialization required after the option ROM test has completed Configuring the timer data area and printer base address next 9Ah Set the timer and printer base addresses Setting the RS 232 base address next 9Bh Returned after setting the RS 232 base address Performi...

Page 99: ...option ROM had control next Aah Initialization after E000 option ROM control has completed Displaying the system configuration next Abh Uncompressing the DMI data and executing DMI POST initialization next B0h The system configuration is displayed B1h Copying any code to specific areas 00h Code copying to specific areas is done Passing control to INT 19h boot loader next ...

Page 100: ...B 8 AS1011M UR User s Manual Notes ...

Page 101: ...ting up to 8 GB of DDR2 800 667 533 unbuffered ECC non ECC SDRAM See the memory section in Chapter 5 for details SATA Controller On chip MCP55 controller for Serial ATA SAS SATA Drive Bays Four 4 hot swap drive bays to house four 4 SAS or SATA drives Peripheral Drive Bays One 1 slim DVD ROM drive Expansion Slots provided with included riser cards Right side one PCI E x8 card Left side one UIO card...

Page 102: ...b 3A BTU Rating 2194 BTUs hr for rated output power of 450W Operating Environment Operating Temperature 10º to 35º C 50º to 95º F Non operating Temperature 40º to 70º C 40º to 158º 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 ...

Page 103: ...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 dtsc ca gov hazardouswaste perchlorate ...

Page 104: ... be reasonably expected to result in significant injury or loss of life or catastrophic property damage Accordingly Supermicro dis claims any and all liability and should buyer use or sell such products for use in such ultra hazardous applications it does so entirely at its own risk Furthermore buyer agrees to fully indemnify defend and hold Supermicro harmless for and against any and all claims d...

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