Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E Technical Product Specification D59801-001 Revision 1.0 April 2006 Enterprise Platforms and Services Division Revision History Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS Revision History Date April 2006 Revision Number 0.5 Modifications Release subject to change. May 2006 1.0 Update bios. Disclaimers Information in this document is provided in connection with Intel® products. No license, express, implied, by estoppel, or otherwise, to any intellectual property rights is granted by this document. Except as provided in Intel's Terms and Conditions of Sale for such products, Intel assumes no liability whatsoever, and Intel disclaims any express or implied warranty, relating to sale and/or use of Intel products including liability or warranties relating to fitness for a particular purpose, merchantability, or infringement of any patent, copyright or other intellectual property right. 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Copyright © Intel Corporation 2006. ii Revision 1.0 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS Table of Contents Table of Contents 1. 2. Introduction .......................................................................................................................... 1 1.1 Section Outline ........................................................................................................ 1 1.2 Server Board Use Disclaimer .................................................................................. 1 Server Board Overview ........................................................................................................ 2 2.1 3. Functional Architecture ....................................................................................................... 6 3.1 Processor Sub-System ............................................................................................ 7 3.1.1 Processor Voltage Regulator Down (VRD).............................................................. 8 3.1.2 Reset Configuration Logic ....................................................................................... 8 3.1.3 Processor Support ................................................................................................... 8 3.2 Intel® E7230 Chipset................................................................................................ 9 3.2.1 Intel® E7230 Chipset MCH: Memory Control Hub .................................................. 9 3.2.2 I/O Controller Hub.................................................................................................. 12 3.3 Memory Sub-System ............................................................................................. 14 3.3.1 Memory Configuration ........................................................................................... 14 3.3.2 Memory DIMM Support.......................................................................................... 16 3.4 I/O Sub-System ..................................................................................................... 16 3.4.1 PCI Subsystem ...................................................................................................... 16 3.4.2 Interrupt Routing .................................................................................................... 18 3.5 PCI Error Handling................................................................................................. 19 3.5.1 Video Support ........................................................................................................ 22 3.5.2 Network Interface Controller (NIC) ........................................................................ 22 3.5.3 Super I/O Chip ....................................................................................................... 23 3.5.4 BIOS Flash ............................................................................................................ 24 3.5.5 System Health Support.......................................................................................... 25 3.6 4. Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E Feature Set............................................ 2 Replacing the Back-Up Battery.............................................................................. 25 System BIOS ....................................................................................................................... 26 4.1 BIOS Setup Utility .................................................................................................. 26 4.1.1 Localization............................................................................................................ 26 4.1.2 Configuration Reset ............................................................................................... 26 4.1.3 Keyboard Commands ............................................................................................ 26 4.1.4 Entering BIOS Setup ............................................................................................. 27 Revision 1.0 iii Table of Contents 4.1.5 4.2 4.2.2 O/S Present Flash Utility........................................................................................ 38 4.4 DMI/SMBIOS Support............................................................................................ 38 DMI/SMBIOS Write Tool ........................................................................................ 38 Operating System Boot, Sleep, and Wake ............................................................ 38 4.4.1 Boot Device Selection............................................................................................ 38 4.4.2 Operating System Support .................................................................................... 38 4.4.3 Front Control Panel Support .................................................................................. 40 4.4.4 Sleep and Wake Support....................................................................................... 40 Server Management ........................................................................................................... 41 5.1 Console Redirection .............................................................................................. 41 5.1.1 Serial Configuration Settings ................................................................................. 41 5.1.2 Keystroke Mappings .............................................................................................. 41 5.1.3 Limitations.............................................................................................................. 42 5.2 Intel® Active Management Technology (AMT) ....................................................... 42 5.3 Wired For Management (WFM) ............................................................................. 44 5.3.1 PXE BIOS Support ................................................................................................ 44 5.4 System Management BIOS (SMBIOS) .................................................................. 44 5.5 Security.................................................................................................................. 44 5.5.1 Operating Model .................................................................................................... 44 5.5.2 Password Protection.............................................................................................. 45 5.5.3 Password Clear Jumper ........................................................................................ 45 Error Reporting and Handling ........................................................................................... 46 6.1 Error Handling and Logging................................................................................... 46 6.1.1 Error Sources and Types....................................................................................... 46 6.1.2 Error Logging via SMI Handler .............................................................................. 47 6.1.3 SMBIOS Type 15 ................................................................................................... 47 6.1.4 Logging Format Conventions................................................................................. 47 6.2 iv Flash Memory Update Utility.................................................................................. 37 BIOS Update.......................................................................................................... 37 4.3.1 6. Operation ...............................................................................................................36 4.2.1 4.3 5. Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS Error Messages and Error Codes .......................................................................... 49 6.2.1 Diagnostic LEDs .................................................................................................... 49 6.2.2 POST Code Checkpoints....................................................................................... 50 6.2.3 POST Error Messages and Handling .................................................................... 53 6.2.4 POST Error Beep Codes ....................................................................................... 54 Revision 1.0 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS 6.2.5 7. 7.1 Power Connectors ................................................................................................. 55 7.2 I2C Header ............................................................................................................. 55 7.3 Front Panel Connector........................................................................................... 56 7.4 I/O Connectors....................................................................................................... 56 7.4.1 VGA Connector...................................................................................................... 56 7.4.2 NIC Connectors ..................................................................................................... 57 7.4.3 SATA Connectors .................................................................................................. 57 7.4.4 Serial Port Connectors........................................................................................... 57 7.4.5 USB Connector...................................................................................................... 58 7.5 Fan Headers .......................................................................................................... 59 7.6 Miscellaneous Headers and Connectors ............................................................... 59 7.6.1 Chassis Intrusion Header ...................................................................................... 59 7.6.2 Back Panel I/O Connectors ................................................................................... 59 7.6.3 POST Code LEDs.................................................................................................. 60 7.7.1 Jumper Blocks ....................................................................................................... 60 Clear CMOS and System Maintenance Mode Jumpers ........................................ 60 Absolute Maximum Ratings .............................................................................................. 61 8.1 9. POST Error Pause Option ..................................................................................... 54 Connectors and Jumper Blocks ....................................................................................... 55 7.7 8. Table of Contents Mean Time Between Failures (MTBF) Test Results .............................................. 61 Design and Environmental Specifications....................................................................... 62 9.1 Power Budget ........................................................................................................ 62 9.2 Product Regulatory Compliance ............................................................................ 62 9.2.1 Product Safety Compliance ................................................................................... 62 9.2.2 Product EMC Compliance – Class A Compliance ................................................. 63 9.2.3 Certifications / Registrations / Declarations ........................................................... 63 9.2.4 Product Regulatory Compliance Markings ............................................................ 64 9.3 Electromagnetic Compatibility Notices .................................................................. 64 9.3.1 Industry Canada (ICES-003) ................................................................................. 64 9.3.2 Europe (CE Declaration of Conformity) ................................................................. 65 9.3.3 Australia / New Zealand......................................................................................... 65 9.4 Restriction of Hazardous Substances (RoHS)....................................................... 65 9.5 Calculated Mean Time Between Failures (MTBF) ................................................. 65 9.6 Mechanical Specifications ..................................................................................... 65 10. Hardware Monitoring ......................................................................................................... 67 Revision 1.0 v Table of Contents 10.1 10.1.1 10.2 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS Monitored Components..........................................................................................67 Fan Speed Control................................................................................................. 67 Chassis Intrusion ................................................................................................... 68 Glossary..................................................................................................................................... 69 References................................................................................................................................. 72 vi Revision 1.0 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS List of Figures List of Figures Figure 1. Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E Layout.......................................................... 4 Figure 2. Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E Block Diagram ............................................. 6 Figure 3. Memory Bank Label Definition..................................................................................... 15 Figure 4. Interrupt Routing Diagram ........................................................................................... 20 Figure 5. Intel® ICH7R Interrupt Routing Diagram ..................................................................... 21 Figure 6. Location of Diagnostic LEDs on Server Board ............................................................ 50 Figure 7. Back Panel I/O Connections (not to scale) .................................................................. 59 Figure 8. Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E Mechanical Drawing .................................. 66 Figure 9. Fan Speed Control Block Diagram .............................................................................. 67 Revision 1.0 vii List of Tables Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS List of Tables Table 1. Server Board Layout Reference ..................................................................................... 5 Table 2. Processor Support Matrix ............................................................................................... 9 Table 3. Supported DDR2 Modules ............................................................................................ 11 Table 4. Segment B Configuration.............................................................................................. 11 Table 5. Segment B Arbitration Connections.............................................................................. 11 Table 6. Memory Bank Labels and DIMM Population Order....................................................... 15 Table 7. Characteristics of Dual/Single Channel Configuration with or without Dynamic Mode . 16 Table 8. PCI Bus Segment Characteristics................................................................................. 17 Table 9. Segment A Configuration IDs ....................................................................................... 17 Table 10. Segment A Arbitration Connections............................................................................ 17 Table 11. PCI Interrupt Routing/Sharing..................................................................................... 18 Table 12. Interrupt Definitions..................................................................................................... 19 Table 13. Video Modes ............................................................................................................... 22 Table 14. Intel® 82573E (NIC 1 and NIC 2) ............................................................................... 23 Table 15. Serial A Header Pin-out .............................................................................................. 24 Table 16. Serial B Header Pin-out .............................................................................................. 24 Table 17. BIOS Setup Keyboard Command Bar Options ........................................................... 26 Table 18. BIOS Setup, Main Menu Options ................................................................................ 28 Table 19. BIOS Setup, Additional System Information Sub-menu Selections ............................ 28 Table 20. BIOS Setup, Advanced Menu Options........................................................................ 29 Table 21. BIOS Setup, Advanced Menu, Boot Configuration Sub-menu Selections .................. 29 Table 22. BIOS Setup, Advanced Menu, Peripheral Configuration Sub-menu........................... 30 Table 23. BIOS Setup, Advanced Menu, Drive Configuration Menu Options ............................. 30 Table 24. BIOS Setup, Advanced Menu, Event Log Configuration Sub-menu Selections ......... 31 Table 25. BIOS Setup, Advanced Menu, Video Configuration Sub-menu Selections ................ 31 Table 26. BIOS Setup, Advanced Menu, Hardware Monitoring Sub-menu Selections............... 32 Table 27. BIOS Setup, Advanced Menu, Chipset Configuration Sub-menu Selections ............. 32 Table 28. BIOS Setup, Advanced Menu, Chipset Configuration, Memory Configuration Submenu Selections................................................................................................................... 33 Table 29. BIOS Setup, Advanced Menu, Chipset Configuration, PCI Express* Configuration Sub-menu Selections ........................................................................................................... 33 Table 30. BIOS Setup, Advanced Menu, Management Configuration Sub-menu Selections..... 33 viii Revision 1.0 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS List of Tables Table 31. BIOS Setup, Advanced Menu, USB Mass Storage Device Configuration Sub-menu Selections............................................................................................................................. 34 Table 32. BIOS Setup, Security Menu Options........................................................................... 34 Table 33. BIOS Setup, Power Menu Selections ......................................................................... 34 Table 34. BIOS Setup, Boot Menu Selections ............................................................................ 35 Table 35. BIOS Setup, Exit Menu Selections ............................................................................. 35 Table 36. BIOS Setup Page Layout............................................................................................ 36 Table 37. Console Redirection Escape Sequences for Headless Operation.............................. 42 Table 38. Function List................................................................................................................ 44 Table 39. Security Features Operating Model ............................................................................ 45 Table 40. Event List .................................................................................................................... 46 Table 41. Logging Format Conventions...................................................................................... 48 Table 42. Event Type Definition Table........................................................................................ 48 Table 43. POST Progress Code LED Example .......................................................................... 50 Table 44. POST Code Checkpoints............................................................................................ 50 Table 45. POST Error Messages and Handling.......................................................................... 54 Table 46. POST Error Beep Codes ............................................................................................ 54 Table 47. Power Connector Pin-out (J3K1) ................................................................................ 55 Table 48. HSBP Header Pin-out (J1C1) ..................................................................................... 55 Table 49. Front Panel 14-pin Header Pin-out (J4k2) .................................................................. 56 Table 50. VGA Connector Pin-out (J3A1)................................................................................... 56 Table 51. NIC1-Intel® 82573E (10/100/1000) Connector Pin-out (JA5A1) ................................ 57 Table 52. NIC2- Intel® 82541PI (10/100/1000) Connector Pin-out (JA4A1) .............................. 57 Table 53. SATA Connector Pin-out (J5C1, J5C2) ...................................................................... 57 Table 54. External DB9 Serial A Port Pin-out (J3A1).................................................................. 58 Table 55. Internal 9-pin Serial B Port Pin-out (J1C2).................................................................. 58 Table 56. USB Connectors Pin-out (JA5A1)............................................................................... 58 Table 57. Optional USB Connection Header Pin-out (J9F2) ...................................................... 58 Table 58. Four-pin Fan Headers Pin-out (J3K2, J4K1).............................................................. 59 Table 59. Intrusion Cable Connector (J3B2) Pin-out ................................................................. 59 Table 60. System Maintenance Mode (J1A3)............................................................................. 60 Table 61. Clear CMOS Jumper Options (J3B2).......................................................................... 60 Table 62. Absolute Maximum Ratings ........................................................................................ 61 Table 63. The Board Power Budget............................................................................................ 62 Table 64. Product Certification Markings .................................................................................... 64 Revision 1.0 ix List of Tables Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS Table 65. MTBF Data..................................................................................................................65 Table 66. Monitored Components............................................................................................... 67 x Revision 1.0 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS 1. Introduction Introduction This Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E Technical Product Specification (TPS) provides a high-level technical description for the Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E. It details the architecture and feature set for all functional sub-systems that make up the server board. 1.1 Section Outline This document is divided into the following chapters: 1.2 Section 1 – Introduction Section 2 – Server Board Overview Section 3 – Functional Architecture Section 4 – System BIOS Section 5 – Platform Management Architecture Section 6 – Error Reporting and Handling Section 7 – Connectors and Jumper Blocks Section 8 – Absolute Maximum Ratings Section 9 – Design and Environmental Specifications Section 10 – Hardware Monitoring Appendix A – Integration and Usage Tips Glossary Reference Documents Server Board Use Disclaimer Intel® server boards contain a number of high-density VLSI* and power delivery components that need adequate airflow to cool. Intel’s own chassis are designed and tested to meet the intended thermal requirements of these components when the fully integrated system is used together. It is the responsibility of the system integrator that chooses not to use Intel developed server building blocks to consult vendor datasheets and operating parameters to determine the amount of airflow required for their specific application and environmental conditions. Intel Corporation cannot be held responsible if components fail or the server board does not operate correctly when used outside any of its published operating or non-operating limits. Revision 1.0 1 Server Board Overview 2. Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS Server Board Overview The Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E is a monolithic printed circuit board with features that support the UP server high-density (1U) market. 2.1 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E Feature Set The Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E supports the following feature set: 2 Processor and Front Side Bus (FSB) support - Supports Pentium® 4 processor Extreme Edition, Pentium® processor Extreme Edition, Pentium® D, Pentium® 4 and Celeron® D processors in the Intel® 775-pin PLGA package - Supports Intel® Dual Core Architecture - Supports Hyper-Threading Technology - Supports Intel® Extended Memory System 64 Technology (Intel® EM64T) Intel® E7230 Chipset components - Intel® E7230 MCH Memory Controller Hub - Intel® ICH7R I/O Controller - 12-deep In-order Queue Memory System - Four DIMM sockets supporting 533/667MHz DDR2 DIMMs - Data bandwidth per channel of 4.2GB/s or 8.4GB/s in dual channel when using DDR2 667MHz - Support for up to two DDR2 channels for a total of four DIMMs (two DIMMs / channel) providing up to 8 MB max memory capacity. - Support for 512-MB, 1-GB and 2-GB DDR2 DIMMs I/O Subsystem Board I/O Subsystem (Two independent PCI buses): - Segment A: One embedded Intel® Gigabit Ethernet Controller 10/100/1000 82541PI (Supports PCI Specification, Rev 2.3) - Segment B: One x1 PCI Express* resource implemented as an embedded Intel® 10/100/1000 82573E Gigabit Ethernet Controller Serial ATA host controller Two independent SATA ports support data transfer rates up to 1.5 Gb/s (150MB/s) per port Universal Serial Bus 2.0 (USB) Two external USB ports with an additional internal header providing two optional USB ports for front panel support. - Supports wake-up from sleeping states S1-S4 (S3 not supported) - Supports Legacy Keyboard/Mouse connections when using PS2-USB dongle LPC (Low Pin Count) bus segment with one embedded device Revision 1.0 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS Server Board Overview - Super I/O controller chips providing all PC-compatible I/O (floppy, serial, keyboard, mouse, two serial com port ) and integrated hardware monitoring - LC Super I/O = SMsC* LP47M182NR Standard Intel® 14-pin SSI front panel 2x9 power connectors Fan Support - Two general purpose 4-pin fans Intel® Light-guided Diagnostic LEDs to display POST code indicators during boot Revision 1.0 3 Server Board Overview Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS The following figure shows the board layout of the Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E. Each connector and major component is identified by letter and is identified in Table 1. Figure 1. Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E Layout 4 Revision 1.0 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS Server Board Overview Table 1. Server Board Layout Reference A Ref Post LEDs Description Ref Q Description NIC1 SPI Flash B BIOS recovery jumper R Intel® 82541PI LAN Controller C BIOS Flash(FWH) S NIC2 SPI EEPROM D ATI* ES1000 video controller T Intel® AMT firmware update jumper E Chassis intrusion header U Intel® 82573E LAN Controller F Battery V USB 3 and 4 header G I2C Connector W Clear CMOS jumper H Serial B header X SATA port 2 I SMSC* LPC47M182 SIO Y SATA port 1 J Memory Slot DIMM 1A Z Intel® 82802 ICH7R K Memory Slot DIMM 2A AA Intel® E7230 MCH L Memory Slot DIMM 1B BB 775-Land (LGA) CPU Socket M Memory Slot DIMM 2B CC System Fan 1 (4-pin) N 2 x 9 Power connector DD System Fan 2 (4-pin) O NIC1 RJ-45 and USB 1 and 2 connector EE 2 x 7 Front Panel header P NIC2 RJ-45 connector FF Hardware Management Controller Revision 1.0 5 Functional Architecture 3. Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS Functional Architecture This section provides a high-level description of the functionality associated with the architectural blocks that make up the Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E. Figure 2. Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E Block Diagram 6 Revision 1.0 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS 3.1 Functional Architecture Processor Sub-System The Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E supports the following: Pentium® 4 processor Extreme Edition in the 775-land package Pentium® processor Extreme Edition in the 775-land package Pentium® D processors in the 775-land package Pentium® 4 processors in the 775-land package Celeron® D processors in the 775-land package The 775-land package is a follow-on to Pentium® 4 and Celeron® processors in the 478-pin package with enhancements to the Intel NetBurst® micro-architecture, including but not limited to the following: Dual Core Architecture Hyper-Threading Technology Intel® EM64T Pentium® 4 processor Extreme Edition Pentium® processor Extreme Edition Pentium® D processor Pentium® 4 processor Celeron® D processor The processors built on 90-nm and 65-nm process technology in the 775-land package utilize Flip-Chip Land Grid Array (FC-LGA4) package technology, and plug into a 775-land LGA socket, referred to as the Intel® LGA775 socket. The processors are as follows: Pentium® 4 processor Extreme Edition, Pentium® processor Extreme Edition Pentium® D processor Pentium® 4 Processor Celeron® D Processor The above processors in the 775-land package, like their predecessors in the 478-pin package, are based on the same Pentium® 4 micro-architecture. They maintain compatibility with 32-bit software written for the IA-32 instruction set, while supporting 64-bit native mode operation when coupled with supported 64-bit operating systems and applications. The Celeron® processor does not come in a dual-core configuration, or support HyperThreading Technology or Intel® EM64T. Revision 1.0 7 Functional Architecture 3.1.1 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS Processor Voltage Regulator Down (VRD) The Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E has a VRD (Voltage Regulator Down) to support one processor. It is compliant with the VRM 10.1 DC-DC Converter Design Guide Line and provides a maximum of 120A, which is capable of supporting the requirements for the following processors: Pentium® 4 processor Extreme Edition Pentium® processor Extreme Edition Pentium® D Processor Pentium® 4 Processor Celeron® D Processor The board hardware monitors the processor VTTEN (Output enable for VTT) pin before turning on the VRD. If the VTTEN pin of the processors is not identical, the Power On Logic will not turn on the VRD. 3.1.2 Reset Configuration Logic The BIOS determines the processor stepping, cache size, etc., through the CPUID instruction. The requirement is: Processor run at a fixed speed, but BIOS can program it to operate at a lower or higher speed. The processor information is read at every system power-on. Note: The processor speed is the processor power-on reset default value. No manual processor speed setting options exist either in the form of a BIOS setup option or jumpers. 3.1.3 Processor Support The Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E supports one processor in the Intel® LGA775 package. The support circuitry on the server board consists of the following: 8 Intel® LGA775 processor socket supporting: - Pentium® D Processor with 800MHz system bus - Pentium® 4 Processor with 800MHz system bus - Pentium® 4 processor Extreme Edition with 1066 MHz system bus Processor host bus AGTL+ support circuitry Revision 1.0 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS Functional Architecture Table 2. Processor Support Matrix Processor Family Package Type Frequency Cache Size Front Side Bus Pentium® 4 processor Extreme Edition Intel® LGA775 3.73GHz 2MB L2 1066MHz Pentium® D processor Intel® LGA775 2.8 – 3.6GHz 2 x 1MB or 2x 2MB L2 800MHz Pentium® 4 processor Intel® LGA775 3.2 – 3.8 GHz 1MB or 2MB L2 800MHz Celeron® D processor Intel® LGA775 2.26 – 3.2 GHz 256K L2 533MHz Note: For a complete list of all supported processors, please visit the Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E support site located at the following URL: http://support.intel.com/support/motherboards/server/ In addition to the circuitry described above, the processor subsystem contains the following: 3.2 Reset configuration logic Server management registers and sensors Intel® E7230 Chipset The Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E is designed around the Intel® E7230 Chipset. The chipset provides an integrated I/O bridge and memory controller, and a flexible I/O subsystem core (PCI Express*). 3.2.1 Intel® E7230 Chipset MCH: Memory Control Hub The MCH accepts access requests from the host (processor) bus and directs those accesses to memory or to one of the PCI buses. The MCH monitors the host bus, examining addresses for each request. Accesses may be directed to the following: A memory request queue for subsequent forwarding to the memory sub-system An outbound request queue for subsequent forwarding to one of the PCI buses The MCH also accepts inbound requests from the Intel® ICH7R. The MCH is responsible for generating the appropriate controls to control data transfer to and from memory. Revision 1.0 9 Functional Architecture Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS The MCH is a 1210-ball FC-BGA device and uses the proven components of the following previous generations: Pentium® 4 processor Extreme Edition Pentium® processor Extreme Edition Pentium® D Processor Pentium® 4 Processor bus interface unit Hub interface unit DDR2 memory interface unit The MCH also increases the main memory interface bandwidth and maximum memory configuration with a 72-bit wide memory interface. The MCH integrates the following main functions: An integrated high performance main memory subsystem A DMI which provides an interface to the Intel® ICH7R Other features provided by the MCH include the following: 3.2.1.1 Full support of ECC on the processor bus Full support of Intel® x4 Single Device Data Correction on the memory interface with x4 DIMMs Twelve deep in-order queue, two deep defer queue Full support of un-buffered DDR2 ECC DIMMs Support for 1 GB and 2 GB DDR2 memory modules Memory scrubbing MCH Memory Sub-System Overview The MCH supports a 72-bit wide memory sub-system that can support a maximum of 8 GB of DDR2 memory using 2 GB DIMMs. This configuration needs external registers for buffering the memory address and control signals. The four chip selects are registered inside the MCH and need no external registers for chip selects. The memory interface runs at 533/667MT/s. The memory interface supports a 72-bit wide memory array. It uses seventeen address lines (BA [2:0] and MA [13:0]) and supports 512-MB, 1-GB, and 2-GB DRAM densities. The DDR DIMM interface supports memory scrubbing, singlebit error correction, and multiple-bit error detection and Intel® x4 Single Device Data Correction with x4 DIMMs. The DDR2 interface supports up to 8 GB of main memory and supports single- and doubledensity DIMMs. The DDR2 can be any industry-standard DDR2. The following table shows the DDR2 DIMM technology supported. 10 Revision 1.0 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS Functional Architecture Table 3. Supported DDR2 Modules DIMM Capacity 512 MB DIMM Organization 64M x 72 DDR2-533/667 Un-buffered SDRAM Module Matrix SDRAM SDRAM # SDRAM # Address bits Density Organization Devices/rows/Banks rows/Banks/column 256Mbit 32M x 8 18 / 2 / 4 13 / 2 / 10 512 MB 64M x 72 512Mbit 64M x 8 9/1/4 14 / 2 / 10 1 GB 128M x 72 512Mbit 64M x 8 18 / 2 / 4 14 / 2 / 10 1 GB 128M x 72 1Gbit 128M x 8 9/1/8 14 / 4 / 10 2 GB 256M x 72 2GB 128M x 8 18 / 2 / 8 14 / 8 / 10 3.2.1.2 PCI Express* 3.2.1.2.1 x1 PCI Express* Subsystem The Intel® ICH7R supports two x 1 PCI Express* buses. Only one is used to support the Intel® 82573-Gigabit Ethernet Controller. One 32-bit PCI bus segment is directed through the Intel® ICH7R Interface A. This PCI Segment B has an embedded device, the Intel® 82541PI LAN (NIC2). Each device under the PCI hub bridge has its IDSEL signal connected to one bit of AD [31:16], which acts as a chip select on the PCI bus segment in configuration cycles. This determines a unique PCI device ID value for use in configuration cycles. The following table shows the bit to which each IDSEL signal is attached for P32-B devices and the corresponding device description: Table 4. Segment B Configuration IDSEL Value Device 21 Intel® 82541PI LAN (NIC2) PCI Segment B supports one PCI master. All PCI masters must arbitrate for PCI access using resources supplied by the Intel® ICH7R. The host bridge PCI interface arbitration lines REQx* and GNTx* are internal to the Intel® ICH7R. The following table defines the arbitration connections: Table 5. Segment B Arbitration Connections Server board Signals PCIX REQ_N5/GNT_N5 Revision 1.0 Device Intel® 82541PI LAN (NIC2) 11 Functional Architecture 3.2.2 3.2.2.1 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS I/O Controller Hub Intel® ICH7R: I/O Controller Hub 7R The Intel® ICH7R controller has several components. It provides the interface for a 32-bit/33-MHz PCI bus. The Intel® ICH7R can be both a master and a target on that PCI bus and includes a USB 2.0 controller and an IDE controller. The ICH7R controller is also responsible for much of the power management functions, with ACPI control registers built in. It also provides a number of GPIO pins and has the LPC bus to support low-speed Legacy I/O. The MCH and Intel® ICH7R chips provide the pathway between the processor and the I/O systems. The MCH is responsible for accepting access requests from the host (processor) bus, and directing all I/O accesses to one of the PCI buses or Legacy I/O locations. If the cycle is directed to one of the PCI Express* segments, the MCH communicates with the PCI Express* devices (add-in card, on board devices) through the PCI Express* interface. If the cycle is directed to the Intel® ICH7R, the cycle is output on the MCH’s DMI bus. All I/O for the board, including PCI and PC-compatible I/O, is directed through the MCH and then through the Intel® ICH7R provided PCI buses. The Intel® ICH7R is a multi-function device, housed in a 609-pin mBGA device. It provides the following: A DMI bus A PCI 32-bit/33-MHz interface An IDE interface An integrated Serial ATA Host controller A USB controller A PCI Express* x4 interface A power management controller Each function within the Intel® ICH7R has its own set of configuration registers. Once configured, each appears to the system as a distinct hardware controller sharing the same PCI bus interface. The primary role of the ICH7R controller is providing the gateway to all PC-compatible I/O devices and features. The board uses the following the Intel® ICH7R features: 12 PCI 32-bit/33MHz interface for Intel® 82541PI Gigabit Ethernet Controller PCI 32-bit/33MHz interface to dedicated ATI* ES1000 video subsystem LPC bus interface x1 PCI Express* interface for Intel® 82573E Gigabit Ethernet Controller DMI (Direct Media Interface) Integrated dual-port Serial ATA Host controller Universal Serial Bus (USB) 2.0 interface PC-compatible timer/counter and DMA controllers APIC and 82C59 interrupt controller Power management System RTC Revision 1.0 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS Functional Architecture Supports the SmBUS 2.0 Specification General-purpose I/O (GPIO) The following are the descriptions of how each supported feature is used for the Intel® ICH7R on the board. 3.2.2.1.1 SATA Controller The Intel® ICH7R contains four SATA ports. The data transfer rates are up to 150Mbyte/s per port. 3.2.2.2 Compatibility Modules (DMA Controller, Timer/Counters, Interrupt Controller) The Intel® ICH7R provides the functionality of two-cascaded 82C59 with 15 interrupts handling. It supports a processor system bus interrupt. 3.2.2.2.1 Advanced Programmable Interrupt Controller (APIC) Interrupt generation and notification to the processor is done by the APICs in the Intel® ICH7R using messages on the front side bus. 3.2.2.2.2 Universal Serial Bus (USB) Controller The Intel® ICH7R contains one EHCI USB 2.0 controller and four USB ports. The USB controller moves data between main memory and up to four USB connectors. All ports function identically and with the same bandwidth. The Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E implements four ports on the board. Two external USB ports are provided on the back of the server board. The Universal Serial Bus Specification, Revision 1.1, defines the external connectors. The third/fourth USB port is optional and can be accessed by cabling from an internal 9-pin connector located on the server board to an external USB port located either in front of or the rear of a given chassis. 3.2.2.2.3 Enhanced Power Management One of the embedded functions of the Intel® ICH7R is a power management controller. This is used to implement ACPI-compliant power management features. The server board supports sleep states S0, S1, S4, and S5. Revision 1.0 13 Functional Architecture 3.3 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS Memory Sub-System The server board supports up to four DIMM sockets for a maximum memory capacity of 8 GB. The DIMM organization is x72, which includes eight ECC check bits. The memory interface runs at 533/667MTs. The memory controller supports the following: Memory scrubbing Single-bit error correction Multiple-bit error detection Intel® x4 Single Device Data Correction support with x4 DIMMs Memory can be implemented with either single-sided (one row) or double-sided (two row) DIMMs 3.3.1 Memory Configuration The memory interface between the MCH and the DIMMs is a 64-bit (non-ECC) or 72-bit (ECC) wide interface. There are two banks of DIMMs, labeled Bank 1 and Bank 2. Bank 1 contains DIMM socket locations DIMM_1A and DIMM_2A. Bank 2 contains DIMM socket locations DIMM_1B and DIMM_2B. The sockets associated with each bank or channel are located next to each other and the DIMM socket identifiers are marked on the server board silkscreen, near the DIMM socket. Bank 1 is associated with Memory Channel A while Bank 2 is associated with Memory Channel B. When only two DIMM modules are being used, the population order must be DIMM_1A, DIMM_1B to ensure dual channel operating mode. In order to operate in dual channel dynamic paging mode, the following conditions must be met: Two identical DIMMs are installed, one each in DIMM_1A and DIMM_1B Four identical DIMMs are installed (one in each socket location) Note: Installing only three DIMMs is not supported. Do not use DIMMs that are not matched (same type and speed). Use of identical memory parts is always the preferred method. DIMM and memory configurations must adhere to the following: 14 DDR2 533/667, un-buffered, DDR2 DIMM modules DIMM organization: x72 ECC or x 64 Non-ECC Pin count: 240 DIMM capacity: 256 MB, 512 MB, 1 GB and 2 GB DIMMs Serial PD: JEDEC Rev 2.0 Voltage options: 1.8 V Interface: SSTL2 Revision 1.0 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS Functional Architecture Table 6. Memory Bank Labels and DIMM Population Order Location J2D1 DIMM Label (DIMM_1A) A Channel 1 Population Order J1D3 (DIMM_2A) A 3 J1D2 (DIMM_1B) B 2 J1D1 (DIMM_2B) B 4 Figure 3. Memory Bank Label Definition Revision 1.0 15 Functional Architecture Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS Table 7. Characteristics of Dual/Single Channel Configuration with or without Dynamic Mode Throughput Level Highest Lowest 3.3.2 Configuration Dual channel with dynamic paging mode Characteristics All DIMMs matched Dual channel without dynamic paging mode DIMMs matched from Channel A to Channel B DIMMs not matched within channels Single channel with dynamic paging mode Single DIMM or DIMMs matched with a channel Single channel without dynamic paging mode DIMMs not matched Memory DIMM Support The board supports un-buffered (not registered) DDR2 533/667 ECC or Non-ECC DIMMs operating at 533/667MT/s. Only DIMMs tested and qualified by Intel or a designated memory test vendor are supported on this board. A list of qualified DIMMs is available at http://support.intel.com/support/motherboards/server/. Note all DIMMs are supported by design, but only fully qualified DIMMs will be supported on the board. The minimum supported DIMM size is 256 MB. Therefore, the minimum main memory configuration is 1 x 256 MB or 256 MB. The largest size DIMM supported is 2 GB and as such, the maximum main memory configuration is 8 GB implemented by 4 x 2-GB DIMMs. 3.4 3.4.1 Only un-buffered DDR2 533/667 compliant, ECC x8 and non-ECC x8 or x16 memory DIMMs are supported. ECC single-bit errors (SBE) will be corrected; multiple-bit error (MBE) will only be detected. Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E supports Intel® x4 Single Device Data Correction with x4 DIMMs. The maximum memory capacity is 8 GB via four 2 GB DIMM modules. The minimum memory capacity is 256 MB via a single 256 MB DIMM module. I/O Sub-System PCI Subsystem The primary I/O buses for the Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E are two independent PCI bus segments providing PCI, PCI Express*. The PCI buses comply with the PCI Local Bus Specification, Rev 2.3. PCI Segments A and B are directed through the Intel® ICH7R. The following table lists the characteristics of the two PCI bus segments. 16 Revision 1.0 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS Functional Architecture Table 8. PCI Bus Segment Characteristics PCI Bus Segment A B Voltage 3.3V 3.3V 3.4.1.1 Width 32 bits 1 lane Speed Type PCI I/O Card Slots 33MHz PCI 32 NIC 1 1.5GHz x1 PCI Express* NIC 2 P32-A: 32-bit, 33-MHz PCI Subsystem The Intel® ICH7R provides a Legacy 32-bit PCI subsystem and acts as the central resource on this PCI interface. P32-A supports the following embedded devices and connectors: One Intel® 82541PI Network Controller All 32-bit/33-MHz PCI I/O for the board is directed through the Intel® ICH7R. The 32-bit/33-MHz PCI segment created by the Intel® ICH7R is known as PCI Segment A. Segment A supports the following embedded device: One 10/100/1000-T Network Interface Controller: Intel® 82541PI Gigabit Ethernet Controller. 3.4.1.1.1 Device IDs (IDSEL) Each device under the PCI hub bridge has its IDSEL signal connected to one bit of AD (31:16), which acts as a chip select on the PCI bus segment in configuration cycles. This determines a unique PCI device ID value for use in configuration cycles. The following table shows the bit to which each IDSEL signal is attached for Segment A devices and the corresponding device description. Table 9. Segment A Configuration IDs IDSEL Value 21 3.4.1.1.2 Device Intel® 82541PI LAN (NIC2) Segment A Arbitration PCI Segment A supports two PCI devices: the Intel® ICH7R and one PCI bus masters (NIC). All PCI masters must arbitrate for PCI access, using resources supplied by the Intel® ICH7R. The host bridge PCI interface (ICH7R) arbitration lines REQx* and GNTx* are a special case in that they are internal to the host bridge. The following table defines the arbitration connections. Table 10. Segment A Arbitration Connections Server Board Signals PCI REQ_N5/GNT_N5 Revision 1.0 Device Intel® 82541PI LAN (NIC2) 17 Functional Architecture 3.4.1.2 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS PCI Interface for ATI Video subsystem The graphics subsystem is connected to the Intel® ICH7R via a 32/33MHz PCI bus. 3.4.2 Interrupt Routing The board interrupt architecture accommodates both PC-compatible PIC mode and APIC mode interrupts through use of the integrated I/O APICs in the ICH7R. 3.4.2.1 Legacy Interrupt Routing For PC-compatible mode, the ICH7R provides two 82C59-compatible interrupt controllers. The two controllers are cascaded with interrupt levels 8-15 entering on level 2 of the primary interrupt controller (standard PC configuration). A single interrupt signal is presented to the processors, to which only one processor will respond for servicing. The Intel® ICH7R contains configuration registers that define which interrupt source logically maps to I/O APIC INTx pins. The ICH7R handles both PCI and IRQ interrupts. The Intel® ICH7R translates these to the APIC bus. The numbers in the following table indicate the Intel® ICH7R PCI interrupt input pin to which the associated device interrupt (INTA, INTB, INTC, INTD, INTE, INTF, INTG, INTH for PCI bus and PXIRQ0, PXIRQ1, PXIRQ2, PXIRQ3 for PCI-X bus) is connected. The Intel® ICH7R I/O APIC exists on the I/O APIC bus with the processors. Table 11. PCI Interrupt Routing/Sharing Intel® 82541PI Interrupt INT A PIRQB ATIES 1000 PIRQC 3.4.2.2 INT B INT C INT D APIC Interrupt Routing For APIC mode, the server board interrupt architecture incorporates three Intel® I/O APIC devices to manage and broadcast interrupts to local APICs in each processor. The Intel® I/O APICs monitor each interrupt on each PCI device; including PCI slots in addition to the ISA compatibility interrupts IRQ (0-15). When an interrupt occurs, a message corresponding to the interrupt is sent across a three-wire serial interface to the local APICs. The APIC bus minimizes interrupt latency time for compatibility interrupt sources. The I/O APICs can also supply greater than 16 interrupt levels to the processor(s). This APIC bus consists of an APIC clock and two bidirectional data lines. 3.4.2.3 Legacy Interrupt Sources The following table recommends the logical interrupt mapping of interrupt sources on the board. The actual interrupt map is defined using configuration registers in the ICH7R. 18 Revision 1.0 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS Functional Architecture Table 12. Interrupt Definitions ISA Interrupt INTR Processor interrupt. Description NMI NMI to processor. IRQ0 System timer IRQ1 Keyboard interrupt. IRQ2 Slave PIC IRQ3 Serial port 1 interrupt from Super I/O* device, user-configurable. IRQ4 Serial port 1 interrupt from Super I/O* device, user-configurable. IRQ5 IRQ6 Floppy disk. IRQ7 Generic IRQ8_L Active low RTC interrupt. IRQ9 SCI* IRQ10 Generic IRQ11 Generic IRQ12 Mouse interrupt. IRQ13 Floaty processor. IRQ14 Compatibility IDE interrupt from primary channel IDE devices 0 and 1. IRQ15 Secondary IDE Cable SMI* System Management Interrupt. General purpose indicator sourced by the Intel® ICH7R to the processors. 3.4.2.4 Serialized IRQ Support The Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E supports a serialized interrupt delivery mechanism. Serialized Interrupt Requests (SERIRQ) consists of a start frame, a minimum of 17 IRQ / data channels, and a stop frame. Any slave device in the quiet mode may initiate the start frame. While in the continuous mode, the start frame is initiated by the host controller. 3.5 PCI Error Handling The PCI bus defines two error pins, PERR# and SERR#, for reporting PCI parity errors and system errors, respectively. In the case of PERR#, the PCI bus master has the option to retry the offending transaction, or to report it using SERR#. All other PCI-related errors are reported by SERR#. SERR# is routed to NMI if enabled by BIOS. Revision 1.0 19 Functional Architecture Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS ICH7R IOAPIC 0 DMI INTERFACE IRQ0 IRQ1 IRQ2 IRQ3 IRQ4 IRQ5 IRQ6 IRQ7 IRQ8 IRQ9 IRQ10 IRQ11 IRQ12 IRQ13 IRQ14 IRQ15 IRQ16 IRQ17 IRQ18 IRQ19 IRQ20 IRQ21 IRQ22 IRQ23 ICH7R ICH7R 8259PIC INTR MCH CPU Figure 4. Interrupt Routing Diagram 20 Revision 1.0 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS Functional Architecture Super I/O Timer Keyboard Cascade Serial Port2/ISA ISA Floppy/ISA ISA SCI/ISA ISA ISA SERIRQ ICH7R Interrupt Routing PCI Interface RTC SERIRQ Serialized IRQ Interface Serial Port1/ISA Mouse/ISA Coprocessor Error P IDE/ISA Not Used N/A PIRQA# Intel® 82541PI PIRQB# ATI ES1000 PIRQC# N/A PIRQD# N/A PIRQE# N/A PIRQF# N/A PIRQG# N/A PIRQH# Figure 5. Intel® ICH7R Interrupt Routing Diagram Revision 1.0 21 Functional Architecture 3.5.1 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS Video Support The Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E includes an integrated stand-alone ATI* ES1000 graphics engine that supports standard SVGA drivers with analog display capabilities. The graphics subsystem has 16 MB of dedicated memory to support the onboard video controller. The server board provides a standard 15-pin VGA connector at the rear of the system. 3.5.1.1 Video Modes Table 13. Video Modes 2D Mode Refresh Rate (Hz) 2D Video Mode Support 16 bpp 24 bpp Supported Supported 32 bpp Supported 640x480 60, 72, 75, 90, 100 8 bpp Supported 800x600 60, 70, 75, 90, 100 Supported Supported Supported Supported 1024x768 60, 72, 75, 90, 100 Supported Supported Supported Supported 1280x1024 43, 60 Supported Supported Supported Supported 1280x1024 70, 72 Supported Supported Supported 1600x1200 60, 66 Supported Supported Supported Supported 1600x1200 76, 85 Supported Supported Supported 3D Mode Refresh Rate (Hz) 640x480 60,72,75,90,100 8 bpp Supported 800x600 60,70,75,90,100 Supported – 3D Video Mode Support with Z Buffer Enabled 16 bpp 24 bpp 32 bpp Supported Supported Supported Supported Supported Supported Supported Supported 1024x768 60,72,75,90,100 Supported Supported 1280x1024 43,60,70,72 Supported Supported 1600x1200 60,66,76,85 Supported 3D Mode Refresh Rate (Hz) – – – – – – 3D Video Mode Support with Z Buffer Disabled 16 bpp 24 bpp 32 bpp Supported Supported Supported 640x480 60,72,75,90,100 8 bpp Supported 800x600 60,70,75,90,100 Supported Supported Supported Supported 1024x768 60,72,75,90,100 Supported Supported Supported Supported 1280x1024 43,60,70,72 Supported Supported Supported 1600x1200 60,66,76,85 Supported Supported 3.5.2 Network Interface Controller (NIC) – – – The Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E supports two 10/100/1000 Base-T network interfaces. 22 NIC1 is an Intel® 82573E Gigabit Ethernet Controller resourced with a x1 PCI Express* interface from the Intel® ICH7R (PCI Segment B). NIC2 is an Intel® 82541PI Gigabit Ethernet Controller resourced with a 32bit/33MHz PCI Segment from the Intel® ICH7R (PCI Segment A). Revision 1.0 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS Functional Architecture Both the Intel® 82573E and Intel® 82541PI Gigabit Ethernet Controllers are single, compact components with an integrated gigabit Ethernet Media Access Control (MAC) and physical layer (PHY) function. The Intel® 82573E and Intel® 82541PI Gigabit Ethernet Controller allow for a gigabit Ethernet implementation in a very small area that is footprint compatible with current generation 10/100 Mbps Fast Ethernet designs. The Intel® 82541PI Gigabit Ethernet Controller and Intel® 82573E integrate fourth and fifth generation (respectively) gigabit MAC design with fully integrated physical layer circuitry to provide a standard IEEE 802.3 Ethernet interface for 1000BASE-T, 100BASE-TX, and 10BASE-T applications (802.3, 802.3u, and 802.3ab). The controller is capable of transmitting and receiving data at rates of 1000 Mbps, 100 Mbps, or 10 Mbps. In addition to managing MAC and PHY layer functions, the controller provides a 32-bit wide direct Peripheral Component Interconnect (PCI) 2.3 compliant interface capable of operating at 33 or 66 MHz. 3.5.2.1 NIC Connector and Status LEDs The NICs drive two LEDs located on each network interface connector. Table 14. Intel® 82573E (NIC 1 and NIC 2) LED Left Right 3.5.3 Color Off LED State Condition LAN link is not established. Green On LAN link is established. Blinking LAN activity is occurring. N/A Off 10 Mbit/sec data rate is selected. Green On 100 Mbit/sec data rate is selected. Yellow On 1000 Mbit/sec data rate is selected. Super I/O Chip The SMsC* LP47M182NR SIO devices contain all of the necessary circuitry to control the serial/parallel ports, floppy disk, PS/2-compatible keyboard, mouse and hardware monitor controller. The server board implements the following features: GPIOs Two serial port Local hardware monitoring Wake up control System health support 3.5.3.1 Serial Ports The board provides a serial port implemented as an external 9-pin serial port; an internal 9-pin serial port is also provided. The following sections provide details on the use of the serial port. Revision 1.0 23 Functional Architecture 3.5.3.1.1 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS Serial Port A Serial A is a standard DB9 interface located at the rear I/O panel of the server board, above the video connector. Serial A is designated by a Serial_A on the silkscreen. The reference designator is J3A1. Serial B is a 9-pin header interface located near the DIMMs. Serial B is designated by a Serial_B on the silkscreen. The reference designator is J1C2. Table 15. Serial A Header Pin-out Pin Signal Name 1 DCD 2 RX 3 TX 4 DTR 5 GND 6 DSR 7 RTS 8 CTS 9 RI Serial Port A Header Pin-out Table 16. Serial B Header Pin-out Pin 3.5.3.2 Signal Name 1 DCD 2 DSR 3 RX 4 RTS 5 TX 6 CTS 7 DTR 8 RI 9 GND Serial Port B Header Pin-out Keyboard and Mouse Support USB ports can be used to support keyboard and mouse. 3.5.3.3 Wake-up Control The Super I/O contains functionality that allows various events to control the power-on and power-off the system. 3.5.4 BIOS Flash The board incorporates an 8-MB firmware Hub flash memory component. This flash device is connected through the LPC bus from the ICH7R controller. 24 Revision 1.0 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS 3.5.5 The I Functional Architecture System Health Support 2 3.6 C interface to the Heceta* sensors (fan monitor and control [FMC]) support: One PWM-based fan control Software or local temperature feedback control Chassis intrusion detection Replacing the Back-Up Battery The lithium battery on the server board powers the RTC for up to ten years in the absence of power. When the battery starts to weaken, it loses voltage, and the server settings stored in CMOS RAM in the RTC (for example, the date and time) may be wrong. Contact your customer service representative or dealer for a list of approved devices. WARNING Danger of explosion if battery is incorrectly replaced. Replace only with the same or equivalent type recommended by the equipment manufacturer. Discard used batteries according to manufacturer’s instructions. ADVARSEL! Lithiumbatteri - Eksplosionsfare ved fejlagtig håndtering. Udskiftning må kun ske med batteri af samme fabrikat og type. Levér det brugte batteri tilbage til leverandøren. ADVARSEL Lithiumbatteri - Eksplosjonsfare. Ved utskifting benyttes kun batteri som anbefalt av apparatfabrikanten. Brukt batteri returneres apparatleverandøren. VARNING Explosionsfara vid felaktigt batteribyte. Använd samma batterityp eller en ekvivalent typ som rekommenderas av apparattillverkaren. Kassera använt batteri enligt fabrikantens instruktion. VAROITUS Paristo voi räjähtää, jos se on virheellisesti asennettu. Vaihda paristo ainoastaan laitevalmistajan suosittelemaan tyyppiin. Hävitä käytetty paristo valmistajan ohjeiden mukaisesti. Revision 1.0 25 System BIOS Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS 4. System BIOS 4.1 BIOS Setup Utility The BIOS Setup Utility is provided to perform system configuration changes and to display current settings and environment information. The BIOS Setup Utility stores configuration settings in system non-volatile storage. Changes affected by BIOS Setup will not take effect until the system is rebooted. The BIOS Setup Utility can be accessed when prompted during POST by using the F2 key. 4.1.1 Localization The BIOS Setup program and help messages currently support up to six languages. However, depending upon space requirements, the following applies with regard to language support. 4.1.2 Flex BIOS handles languages based upon OEM requirements. This is a stretch goal. The default language is US English. This is the only language that is guaranteed to be properly translated and functional. Configuration Reset There are different mechanisms for resetting the system configuration to default values. When a reset system configuration request is detected, the BIOS will load the default system configuration values during the next POST. A reset system configuration request can be generated by moving the Clear CMOS jumper. 4.1.3 Keyboard Commands The bottom right portion of the Setup screen provides a list of commands that are used to navigate through the Setup utility. These commands are displayed at all times. Each Setup menu page contains a number of features. Except those used for informative purposes, each feature is associated with a value field. This field contains user-selectable parameters. Depending on the security option chosen and in effect by the password, a menu feature’s value may or may not be changeable. If a value is non-changeable, the feature’s value field is inaccessible. It displays as “grayed out.” The Keyboard Command Bar supports the following keys. Table 17. BIOS Setup Keyboard Command Bar Options Key Enter 26 Option Execute Command Description The Enter key is used to activate sub-menus when the selected feature is a sub-menu, or to display a pick list if a selected option has a value field, or to select a sub-field for multi-valued features like time and date. If a pick list is displayed, the Enter key will undo the pick list, and allow another selection in the parent menu. Revision 1.0 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS Option System BIOS Key ESC Exit Description The ESC key provides a mechanism for backing out of any field. This key will undo the pressing of the Enter key. When the ESC key is pressed while editing any field or selecting features of a menu, the parent menu is re-entered. When the ESC key is pressed, any sub-menu, the parent menu is re-entered. When the ESC key is pressed, any major menu, the exit confirmation window is displayed and the user is asked whether changes can be discarded. If No is selected and the Enter key is pressed, or if the ESC key is pressed, the user is returned to where they were before ESC was pressed without affecting any existing any settings. If Yes is selected and the Enter key is pressed, setup is exited and the BIOS continues with POST. ↑ Select Item The up arrow is used to select the previous value in a pick list, or the previous options in a menu item's option list. The selected item must then be activated by pressing the Enter key. ↓ Select Item The down arrow is used to select the next value in a menu item’s option list, or a value field’s pick list. The selected item must then be activated by pressing the Enter key. ↔ Select Menu The left and right arrow keys are used to move between the major menu pages. The keys have no affect if a sub-menu or pick list is displayed. Tab Select Field The Tab key is used to move between fields. For example, Tab can be used to move from hours to minutes in the time item in the main menu. - Change Value The minus key on the keypad is used to change the value of the current item to the previous value. This key scrolls through the values in the associated pick list without displaying the full list. + Change Value The plus key on the keypad is used to change the value of the current menu item to the next value. This key scrolls through the values in the associated pick list without displaying the full list. On 106-key Japanese keyboards, the plus key has a different scan code than the plus key on the other keyboard, but will have the same effect. F9 Setup Defaults Pressing F9 causes the following to appear: Load Setup Defaults? [OK] [Cancel] If OK is selected and the Enter key is pressed, all setup fields are set to their default values. If Cancel is selected and the Enter key is pressed, or if the ESC key is pressed, the user is returned to where they were before F9 was pressed without affecting any existing field values. F10 Save Changes and Exit Pressing F10 causes the following message to appear: Save configuration changes and exit setup? [OK] [Cancel] If OK is selected and the Enter key is pressed, all changes are saved and setup is exited. If Cancel is selected and the Enter key is pressed, or the ESC key is pressed, the user is returned to where they were before F10 was pressed without affecting any existing values. 4.1.4 Entering BIOS Setup The BIOS Setup Utility can be accessed by pressing the [F2] hotkey during POST. Revision 1.0 27 System BIOS Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS 4.1.4.1 Main Menu The first screen displayed when entering the BIOS Setup Utility is the Main Menu selection. This screen displays the major menu selections available. The following tables describe the available options on the top-level and lower-level menus. Default values are in bold text. Table 18. BIOS Setup, Main Menu Options Feature BIOS Version N/A Options N/A Help Text Description BIOS ID string (excluding the build time and date) Processor Type N/A N/A Hyper Threading Technology Enable Disable N/A Select disable if your operating system does not support Hyper Threading Processor speed N/A N/A Calculates processor speed System Bus speed N/A N/A Displays the system bus speed System Memory speed N/A N/A Displays the system memory speed L2 Cache RAM N/A N/A Total Memory N/A N/A Detects amount of physical memory Memory Mode N/A N/A Displays the memory mode Memory Channel 1A N/A N/A Displays the memory detected Memory Channel 2A N/A N/A Memory Channel 1B N/A N/A Memory Channel 2B N/A N/A Additional System Information N/A N/A Selects submenu with additional system information details System Date DAY MM/DD/YYYY Use [TAB] or [SHIFT-TAB] to select a field. Use [+] or [-] to configure system date. Configures the system date. Default is [Tue 01/01/2002]. Day of the week is automatically calculated System Time HH:MM:SS Use [TAB] or [SHIFT-TAB] to select a field. Use [+] or [-] to configure system time. Configures the system time on a 24-hour clock. Default is 00:00:00 4.1.4.1.1 Additional System Information Sub-menu Table 19. BIOS Setup, Additional System Information Sub-menu Selections Feature System Information Manufacturer 28 Options Help Text Description Informational display. N/A N/A Revision 1.0 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS Feature Product Name N/A Options N/A Version N/A N/A Serial Number N/A N/A Manufacturer N/A N/A Product Name N/A N/A Version N/A N/A Serial Number N/A N/A System BIOS Help Text Description Server Board Information Chassis Information Manufacturer N/A N/A Version N/A N/A Serial Number N/A N/A Asset Tag N/A N/A 4.1.4.2 Advanced Menu Table 20. BIOS Setup, Advanced Menu Options Feature Boot configuration Options N/A Help Text Configure boot devices Description Selects submenu Peripheral configuration N/A Configure peripheral devices Selects submenu Drive configuration N/A Configure primary master slave and secondary master and slave Selects submenu Event log configuration N/A View the events in the event log or clear current events Selects submenu Video configuration N/A Configure video Selects submenu Hardware monitoring N/A Configure hardware monitoring Selects submenu Chipset configuration N/A Configure chipset Selects submenu Management configuration N/A Configure management Selects submenu USB configuration N/A Configure USB support. Selects submenu 4.1.4.2.1 Boot Configuration Sub-menu Table 21. BIOS Setup, Advanced Menu, Boot Configuration Sub-menu Selections Feature CPU Fan Control Options Disable Enable Help Text Enable or Disable CPU fan control System Fan Control Disable Enable N/A Revision 1.0 Description 29 System BIOS Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS Feature Lowest Fan speed Options Slow Off Help Text These options define the lower limit of chassis fan speed operation. Slow: At low system temperatures, the fans will continue to run at a slow speed. Off: At low system temperatures, the fans will turn off. Max CPUID Value Limit Disable Enable This should be enabled in order to boot legacy operating systems that cannot support CPUs with extended CPUID functions Display Setup Prompt Off On Displays “Press F2 to Enter Setup” message during POST 4.1.4.2.2 Description Peripheral Configuration Sub-menu Table 22. BIOS Setup, Advanced Menu, Peripheral Configuration Sub-menu Feature Serial Port A Options Disable Enable Help Text Enable or Disable the On board Serial port Serial Port B Disable Enable Enable or Disable the On board Serial port PCI Express* Onboard LAN Disable Enable Enable or Disable the PCI Express* On-board LAN Device (NIC1 Intel 82573E) PCI On-board LAN Disable Enable Enable or Disable the PCI On-board LAN Device (NIC2 Intel 82541PI) 4.1.4.2.3 Description Drive Configuration Sub-menu Table 23. BIOS Setup, Advanced Menu, Drive Configuration Menu Options Feature Use Automatic Mode Options Disable Enable Use Serial ATA as Enable Disable Enable or Disable the onboard Serial ATA ports ATA/IDE Mode Legacy Configure SATA for either Enhanced (native) or Legacy mode Controls state of integrated S-ATA and P-ATA controller. Enhanced Help Text Description Configure SATA as IDE RAID AHCI Configure SATA into the appropriate type In Enhance mode this item will display. S.M.A.R.T. Enable Disable S.M.A.R.T. stands for SelfMonitoring, Analysis, and Reporting Technology The Auto setting should work in most cases. SATA Port 0 N/A N/A Displays the SATA HDD detected 30 Revision 1.0 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS Feature SATA Port 1 Options Hard Disk Pre-Delay (Sec) 4.1.4.2.4 System BIOS Help Text N/A N/A 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 Indicates the amount of time in seconds that the firmware will wait to detect hard disk drives Description Displays the SATA HDD detected Event Log Configuration Sub-menu Table 24. BIOS Setup, Advanced Menu, Event Log Configuration Sub-menu Selections Feature View Event Log Options Help Text Views the events Description Clears the events When Disable is selected, the event log will be cleared during the next system reset Clear Event Log Disable Enable Event Logging Disable Enable Enables/Disables the event log ECC Event Logging Disable Enable Enables/Disables ECC Events recorded in the event log 4.1.4.2.5 Video Configuration Sub-menu Table 25. BIOS Setup, Advanced Menu, Video Configuration Sub-menu Selections Feature Console Redirection Serial Port Revision 1.0 Options Disable Enable Help Text Enable/Disable Console Redirection via Serial Port (COM1). Video resolution set to 640x480. Serial Port baud rate set to 57600 Description 31 System BIOS 4.1.4.2.6 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS Hardware Monitoring Table 26. BIOS Setup, Advanced Menu, Hardware Monitoring Sub-menu Selections Feature Hardware Monitoring Options Help Text N/A N/A Display H/W Settings N/A N/A Processor Fan Speed 2280 System Fan1 Speed 0000 System Fan2 Speed 0000 Processor Temp 64 C Internal Temp 34 C V12.0 12.000 V V5.0 5.084 V V3.3 3.250 V V1.5 1.516 V Vccp 1.324 V 4.1.4.2.7 Description Selects submenu, determined by the real system. Chipset Configuration Sub-menu Selections Table 27. BIOS Setup, Advanced Menu, Chipset Configuration Sub-menu Selections Feature Memory Configuration Options Help Text N/A N/A PCI Express* Configuration N/A N/A PCI Latency timer 32 64 96 128 160 192 224 248 Description Selects submenu with memory configuration details Selects submenu with PCI Express* configuration details 4.1.4.2.7.1 Memory Configuration Sub-menu This sub-menu provides information about the DIMMs detected by the BIOS. The DIMM number is printed on the server board next to each device. 32 Revision 1.0 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS System BIOS Table 28. BIOS Setup, Advanced Menu, Chipset Configuration, Memory Configuration Sub-menu Selections Feature Memory correction Options Non-ECC ECC Help Text Allow the user to turn error reporting on or off if the system and all the memory installed supports ECC (Error Correction Code) Memory frequency N/A N/A SDRAM tCL N/A N/A SDRAM tRCD N/A N/A SDRAM tRP N/A N/A SDRAM tRASmin N/A N/A DDR2 voltage N/A N/A Total memory N/A N/A Memory mode N/A N/A DIMM 1A N/A N/A DIMM 2A N/A N/A DIMM 1B N/A N/A DIMM 2B N/A N/A Description Informational display 4.1.4.2.7.2 PCI Configuration Sub-menu This sub-menu provides control over PCI devices and their option ROMs. If the BIOS is reporting POST error 146, use this menu to disable option ROMs that are not required to boot the system. Table 29. BIOS Setup, Advanced Menu, Chipset Configuration, PCI Express* Configuration Submenu Selections Feature PEG Negotiated Width Options N/A Compliance Test Pattern Disable Enable 4.1.4.2.8 Help Text Description N/A N/A Management Configuration Sub-menu Table 30. BIOS Setup, Advanced Menu, Management Configuration Sub-menu Selections Feature Enter Intel@ AMT BX Setup Revision 1.0 Options Disable Enable Help Text Allows Intel® AMT to be force enabled or disabled. Also controls ability to individually set AMTBX, SOL, IDER capabilities. Description 33 System BIOS Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS 4.1.4.2.9 USB Mass Storage Device Configuration Sub-menu Table 31. BIOS Setup, Advanced Menu, USB Mass Storage Device Configuration Sub-menu Selections Feature USB 2.0 4.1.4.3 Options Help Text N/A Enable Disable Description Enable/Disable all USB ports Security Menu Table 32. BIOS Setup, Security Menu Options Feature Supervisor password N/A Options Help Text Install / Not install Description Informational display User password N/A Install / Not install Informational display Set supervisor password N/A Set supervisor password Set password to null to clear Set user password N/A Set user password This node is grayed out until Admin password is installed. Set password to null to clear. Chassis intrusion Disable Enable N/A Chassis intrusion enable will log chassis intrusion to the event log Disable N/A Enables/Disables the CPU execute disable bit. XD technology Enable 4.1.4.4 Power Menu Table 33. BIOS Setup, Power Menu Selections Feature After Power Failure Options Stay off Last State Power On Help Text Determines the mode of operation if a power loss occurs. Stays Off: System will remain off once power is restored. Last State: Restores system to the same state it was before power failed. Power On: System will power on once power is restored. Wake on LAN from S5 Stay Off Power On Determines the action taken when the system power is off and a PCI Power management wake-up event occurs. 34 Description Revision 1.0 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS 4.1.4.5 System BIOS Boot Menu Table 34. BIOS Setup, Boot Menu Selections Feature Boot menu type Boot device priority Options Normal Advance Varies Hard drive order Help Text Description N/A N/A Select the boot drive order Varies N/A Select the boot order of available hard drive devices CD/DVD-ROM drive order Varies N/A Select the boot order of available CD/DVD devices Removable drive order Varies N/A Select the boot order of removable devices Boot to optical devices Disable Enables or disables boot to optical devices Boot to network Enable Disable Enable Disable USB boot Enable Disable Boot to removable devices Enables or disables boot to removable devices Enables or disables boot to network Enables or disables USB boot Enable Zip emulation type 4.1.4.6 Sets the emulation type for zip drives Floppy Hard Disk Exit menu Table 35. BIOS Setup, Exit Menu Selections Feature Exit saving changes Options N/A Help Text Exit system setup after saving the changes. F10 key can be used for this operation. Exit discarding changes N/A Exit system setup without saving any changes. ESC key can be used for this operation. Load optimal defaults N/A Load Setup default values for all the setup questions. F9 key can be used for this operation. Load custom defaults N/A Load custom defaults. Save custom defaults N/A Save custom defaults. Discard changes N/A Discard changes done so far to any of the setup questions. Revision 1.0 35 System BIOS Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS The BIOS Setup Utility is a text-based utility that allows the user to configure the system and view current settings and environment information for the platform devices. The Setup Utility controls the platform's built-in devices. The BIOS Setup interface consists of a number of pages or screens. Each page contains information or links to other pages. The first page in Setup displays a list of general categories as links. These links lead to pages containing a specific category’s configuration. The following sections describe the look and behavior for platform Setup. 4.1.5 Operation BIOS Setup has the following features: Localization: BIOS Setup uses the Unicode standard and is capable of displaying Setup forms in all languages currently included in the Unicode standard. The Intel® Server Board BIOS will only be available in English. BIOS Setup is functional via console redirection over various terminal emulation standards. This may limit some functionality for compatibility, e.g., usage of colors or some keys or key sequences or support of pointing devices. 4.1.5.1 Setup Page Layout The setup page layout is sectioned into functional areas. Each occupies a specific area of the screen and has dedicated functionality. The following table lists and describes each functional area. Table 36. BIOS Setup Page Layout Functional Area Title Bar Description The title bar is located at the top of the screen and displays the title of the form (page) the user is currently viewing. It may also display navigational information. Setup Item List The Setup Item List is a set of controllable and informational items. Each item in the list occupies the left and center columns in the middle of the screen. The left column, the "Setup Item", is the subject of the item. The middle column, the "Option", contains an informational value or choices of the subject. A Setup Item may also be a hyperlink that is used to navigate formsets (pages). When it is a hyperlink, a Setup Item only occupies the “Setup Item” column. Item Specific Help Area The Item Specific Help area is located on the right side of the screen and contains help text for the highlighted Setup Item. Help information includes the meaning and usage of the item, allowable values, effects of the options, etc. Keyboard Command Bar The Keyboard Command Bar is located at the bottom right of the screen and continuously displays help for keyboard special keys and navigation keys. The keyboard command bar is context-sensitive—it displays keys relevant to current page and mode. Status Bar The Status Bar occupies the bottom line of the screen. This line would display the BIOS ID. 36 Revision 1.0 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS 4.1.5.2 System BIOS Entering BIOS Setup BIOS Setup is started by pressing <F2> during boot time when the OEM or Intel logo is displayed. When Quiet Boot is disabled, there will be a message “press <F2> to enter setup” displayed on the diagnostics screen. 4.1.5.3 Menu Selection Bar The Menu Selection Bar is located at the top of the screen. It displays the major menu selections available to the user. 4.2 Flash Memory Update Utility 4.2.1 BIOS Update 4.2.1.1 DOS Flash Utility The BIOS can be upgraded from a HDD, diskette or CD-ROM using the Intel® iFlash Utility. This utility supports the following functions: • Updates the BIOS from a file or file set • Verifies that the upgrade BIOS matches the target system to prevent accidentally installing an incompatible BIOS • RPM support (this includes VBIOS update, etc.). RPM support is a stretch goal. 4.2.1.2 iFlash Update Version Checking When Flash BIOS Updates and Flash Language Updates are performed, a certain amount of identification information will be checked before allowing the process to proceed. This checking prevents a BIOS from being flashed into the wrong system, possibly causing boot failure. This checking also prevents an incoherent language file from being flashed into a functional machine. 4.2.1.3 Standard Flash BIOS Updates Whenever a Flash BIOS Update is performed, the Board Identifier, the Board Revision and the OEM Identifier must match. 4.2.1.4 Flash Language Updates Whenever Flash Language Updates are performed, the Board Identifier, Board Revision, OEM Identifier and Build Identifier must match. 4.2.1.5 RPM (Replaceable Program Modules) Updates Whenever RPM operations are performed, the Board Identifier and Board Revision must match. This currently only applies to video OPROM code. RPM support is a stretch goal. Revision 1.0 37 System BIOS 4.2.2 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS O/S Present Flash Utility The BIOS can be upgraded from a HDD, diskette or CD-ROM using the Intel® Express BIOS Update utility. This utility supports the following functions: Updates the BIOS from a file or file set Verifies that the upgrade BIOS matches the target system to prevent accidentally installing an incompatible BIOS Works under Microsoft Windows 2000* and Microsoft Windows XP* 4.3 DMI/SMBIOS Support 4.3.1 DMI/SMBIOS Write Tool A DMI/SMBIOS write utility allows OEMs to write their specific data into SMBIOS structures type 1 and 3 (chassis info – asset tag field only). 4.4 4.4.1 Operating System Boot, Sleep, and Wake Boot Device Selection The Boot Device Selection phase is responsible for controlling the boot of the system. The boot option variables are set by an operating system during operating system installation or manually added by the user through the Boot Maintenance Manager of Setup. The Boot Maintenance Manager provides the capability to make permanent changes to the boot order. It is also possible to change the first boot option for a single boot. 4.4.1.1 Server Management Boot Device Control The IPMI 2.0 specification includes provisions for server management devices to set certain boot parameters by setting boot flags. Among the boot flags (parameter #5 in the IPMI specification) the BIOS will check data 1-3 for forced boot options. The BIOS supports forced booting from the following: PXE HDD (USB, SATA and PATA) USB FDD USB key CD-ROM drive On each boot, the BIOS invokes the Get System Boot Options command to determine what changes to boot options have been set. The BIOS takes the appropriate action and clears these settings. 4.4.2 Operating System Support 4.4.2.1 Microsoft Windows* Compatibility Intel Corporation and Microsoft Corporation co-author design guides for system designers who will use Intel® processors and Microsoft* operating systems. The Hardware Design Guide for Microsoft Windows 2000 Server, Version 3.0 is intended for systems that are designed to work 38 Revision 1.0 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS System BIOS with Windows Server* class operating systems. The specification further classifies the systems and includes sets of requirements based on the intended usage for that system. For example, a server system that is used in small home / office environments has different requirements than one used for enterprise applications. This product supports the Hardware Design Guide for Microsoft Windows 2000 Server, Version 3.0 enterprise requirements. 4.4.2.2 Advanced Configuration and Power Interface (ACPI) The primary role of the ACPI BIOS is to supply the ACPI tables. POST creates the ACPI tables and locates them in extended memory (above 1 MB). The location of these tables is conveyed to the ACPI-aware operating system through a series of tables located throughout memory. The format and location of these tables is documented in the publicly available ACPI specifications (Advanced Configuration and Power Interface Specification, Revision 1.0b and Advanced Configuration and Power Interface Specification, Revision 2.0). The BIOS supports both ACPI 2.0 and 1.0b tables. To prevent conflicts with a non-ACPI-aware operating system, the memory used for the ACPI tables is marked as “reserved” in INT 15h, function E820h. As described in the ACPI specifications, an ACPI-aware operating system generates an SMI to request that the system be switched into ACPI mode. The BIOS responds by setting up all system (chipset) specific configurations required to support ACPI, issues the appropriate command to enable ACPI mode, and sets the SCI_EN bit as defined by the ACPI specification. The system automatically returns to legacy mode on hard reset or power-on reset. There are three runtime components to ACPI: ACPI Tables: These tables describe the interfaces to the hardware. ACPI tables can make use of ACPI Machine Language (AML), the interpretation of which is performed by the operating system. The operating system contains and uses an AML interpreter that executes procedures encoded in AML and is stored in the ACPI tables. AML is a compact, tokenized, abstract machine language. The tables contain information about power management capabilities of the system, APICs, and bus structure. The tables also describe control methods that the operating system uses to change PCI interrupt routing, control legacy devices in the Super I/O, find out the cause of a wake event, and handle PCI hot plug, if applicable. ACPI Registers: This is the constrained part of the hardware interface, described (at least in location) by the ACPI tables. ACPI BIOS: This is the code that boots the machine and implements interfaces for sleep, wake, and some restart operations. The ACPI Description Tables are also provided by the ACPI BIOS. The ACPI specification requires the system to support at least one sleep state. The BIOS supports S0, S1, S4, and S5 states. S1 is considered a sleep state. Revision 1.0 39 System BIOS Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS This platform can wake up from S1 state using USB devices in addition to the sources described below. The wake-up sources are enabled by the ACPI operating systems with cooperation from the drivers; the BIOS has no direct control over the wakeup sources when an ACPI operating system is loaded. The role of the BIOS is limited to describing the wakeup sources to the operating system and controlling secondary control / status bits via the Differentiated System Description Table (DSDT). The S5 state is equivalent to operating system shutdown. No system context is saved when going into S5. The OEM Table ID field of ACPI Tables are initialized with the Platform Identification string. 4.4.3 Front Control Panel Support The platform supports a power button and a reset button on the control panel. 4.4.3.1 Power Button The BIOS supports a front control panel power button. Pressing the power button initiates a request, which is forwarded to the ACPI power state machines in the chipset. 4.4.3.2 Reset Button The platform supports a front control panel reset button. Pressing the reset button initiates a request to the chipset. 4.4.4 Sleep and Wake Support 4.4.4.1 System Sleep States The platform supports the following ACPI system sleep states: 4.4.4.2 ACPI S0 (working) state ACPI S1 (sleep) state ACPI S4 (hibernate) state ACPI S5 (soft-off) state Wake Events / SCI Sources The server board supports the following wake-up sources in the ACPI environment. The operating system controls enabling and disabling these wake sources: Devices that are connected to all USB ports, such as USB mice and keyboards can wake the system up from S1 sleep state. PCI devices, such as onboard NIC devices, can wake the system from the S4/S5 state. As required by ACPI specification, the power button can wake the system from S1 state 40 Revision 1.0 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E 5. Server Management Server Management The BIOS supports many standards-based server management features and several proprietary features. 5.1 Console Redirection The BIOS supports redirection of both video and keyboard via a serial link (COM port). When console redirection is enabled, the local (host server) keyboard input and POST video output are passed both to the local keyboard and video connections, and to the remote console through the serial link. Keyboard inputs from both sources are considered valid and video is displayed to both outputs. As an option, the system can be operated without a host keyboard or monitor attached to the system and run entirely via the remote console, including BIOS Setup. 5.1.1 Serial Configuration Settings Both EMP and console redirection require N, 8, 1 mode (no parity, 8-bit data, 1 stop bit). The BIOS does not require that the splash logo be turned off for console redirection to function. The BIOS supports multiple consoles, some of which are in graphics mode and some in text mode. The graphics consoles can display the logo and the text consoles can receive the redirected text. Console redirection ends at the beginning of the legacy operating system boot (INT 19h). The operating system is responsible for continuing the redirection from that point. 5.1.2 Keystroke Mappings During console redirection, the remote terminal sends keystrokes to the local server. The remote terminal may be a dumb terminal with a direct connection running a communication program. The keystroke mappings follow VT-UTF8 format with the following extensions. 5.1.2.1 Setup Alias Keys The <Del> and <Ctrl>-function key combinations are synonyms for the <F2> or “Setup” key. They are implemented and documented, but are not to be prompted for in screen messages. These hot keys are defined for console redirection support, and are not to be implemented for locally attached keyboards. 5.1.2.2 Standalone <Esc> Key for Headless Operation The Microsoft Headless Design Guidelines describes a specific implementation for the <Esc> key as a single standalone keystroke: <Esc> followed by a two-second pause must be interpreted as a single escape. <Esc> followed within two seconds by one or more characters that do not form a sequence described in this specification must be interpreted as <Esc> plus the character or characters, not as an escape sequence. Revision 1.0 41 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS The escape sequence in the following table is an input sequence. This means it is sent to the BIOS from the remote terminal. Table 37. Console Redirection Escape Sequences for Headless Operation Escape Sequence <Esc>R<Esc>r<Esc>R This will implement but will default to “disabled”. 5.1.3 5.2 Description Remote Console Reset Limitations BIOS Console redirection terminates after an EFI-aware operating system calls EFI Exit Boot Services. The operating system is responsible for continuing console redirection after that. BIOS console redirection is a text console. Graphical data, such as a logo, are not redirected. Intel® Active Management Technology (AMT) Intel Active Management Technology architecture is based on market demand for a platform management solution that provides remote management capabilities independent of system power states. The Intel® AMT architecture is centered around the Intel® ICH7R IO controller and Intel® 82573E Gigabit LAN components. The ICH7R provides an interface to a new SPI flash device for potential cost savings. Because Intel® AMT depends on the availability of the Intel® 82573E PCI manageability functions, the Intel® AMT does not operate with third-party LANs. The main objectives of Intel AMT are: 42 Deployable – Intel® AMT uses existing protocols and services available in today’s IT networks to minimize cost. Intel® AMT is constrained to the use of DHCP, DNS, SOAP/XML/HTTP, and TLS; which are available on most IT networks today. Highly Available – The ability to provide remote management in the event of operating system or hardware failure. Intel® AMT provides baseline services whenever there is (at the minimum) auxiliary power available to the platform. Currently, system auxiliary power is maintained by the main power supply when the system is plugged into the wall. This will significantly reduce IT expenses for system repair. OS-Independent Agent – Baseline platform management capabilities that simplify system management running different operating system types and versions. Intel® AMT provides common remote management and persistent storage features that run independently of the operating system. Secure and Tamper Resistant - Intel® AMT provides access control, data security, and protection against attacks by using standard security protocols (e.g., TLS) and application-level security mechanisms. Intel® AMT also provides tamper resistance to prevent the end-user from removing or disabling remote management service. Revision 1.0 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E Server Management Intel® 82573E is a multi-functional device with an embedded microcontroller for manageability purposes. Manageability functions of the Intel® 82573E PCI are as follows: IDE-R – for remote boot and SW installation Serial Port – for Keyboard and text redirection KCS – for configuration of the manageability content The Intel® 82573E controller is a PCI Express* GBit Ethernet endpoint device, the first GbE controller to support Intel® AMT as the next-generation client manageability architecture. Intel® 82573E provides three PCI functions for management purposes: serial port, IDE, and KCS. When the Intel® AMT is disabled, the Intel® 82573E controller disables these three PCI functions. When these management functions are disabled, the functions do not response to PCI configuration cycles (effectively becoming invisible to software). When Intel® AMT is enabled, the Intel® 82573E controller enables the PCI functions, which appear to software as standard PCI devices. Serial Port Function: The Serial Port function supports redirection of keyboard and POST messages to a terminal window on a remote console. The keyboard and text redirection enables the control of the client machine through the network without the need to be physically near that machine. Text and keyboard redirection allows the remote machine to monitor POST progress of the client machine and allows the remote machine to control and configure the client by entering BIOS Setup. The Intel® 82573E controller redirects data from the serial port to the management console via the LAN; hence, providing Serial Over LAN (SOL) capability. IDE Function: The IDE function provides IDE-R, an IDE redirection interface that provides client connection to management console ATA/ATAPI devices. When booting from IDE-R, the IDE-R interface will send the client’s ATA/ATAPI command to the management console. The management console responds back to the client. A remote machine can setup diagnostic software or an operating system installation image and direct the client to boot from IDE-R. The IDE-R interface is the same as the IDE interface and is compliant with ATA/ATAPI-6 specifications. IDE-R does not conflict with the usage of PXE boot. The system can support both interfaces and can continue to boot from PXE as with any other boot devices. However, during a management boot session, the Intel® AMT solution will use IDE-R when remote boot is required. The devices attached to the IDE-R channel are only visible to software during a management boot session. During a normal boot session, the IDE-R channel appears as no device present. KCS Function: The KCS (Keyboard Controller Style) function provides a physical interface used to convey messages between the host software and the AMT device. The KCS function defines a set of memory-mapped IO (MMIO) registers. These MMIO registers follow the usage model used in the Intel® 8742 Universal Peripheral Interface microcontroller. The term ‘Keyboard Controller Style’ reflects the fact that the Intel® 8742 interface is used as the system keyboard controller interface in PC architecture computer systems. The AMT BIOS Extension (AMTx) is provided by Intel and is included in the system BIOS at build time. The AMTx Module communicates with the Intel® 82573E firmware via the KCS interface. The AMTx Module collects system hardware configuration via ACPI and the SMBIOS tables, and sends hardware information to the remote management system via the KCS interface. Revision 1.0 43 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS Table 38. Function List Function Intel® 82573E Lan Vendor ID 0x8086 Device ID 0x108B/0x108C (V/E) IDE 0x8086 0x108D Serial Port 0x8086 0x108F KCS 0x8086 0x108E 5.3 Wired For Management (WFM) Wired for Management is an industry-wide initiative to increase overall manageability and reduce total cost of ownership. WFM allows a server to be managed over a network. The system BIOS supports the System Management BIOS Reference Specification, Version 2.4 to help higher-level instrumentation software meet the Wired For Management Baseline Specification, Revision 2.0 requirements. 5.3.1 PXE BIOS Support The BIOS supports the EFI PXE implementation as specified in Chapter 15 of the Extensible Firmware Interface Reference Specification, Version 1.1. To utilize this, the user must load the EFI Simple Network Protocol driver. The UNDI driver is specific to the network controller and must be included with the network card. The Simple Network Protocol driver can be obtained from http://developer.intel.com/technology/framework. The BIOS supports legacy PXE option ROMs in legacy mode and includes the necessary PXE ROMs in the BIOS image for the onboard controllers. The legacy PXE ROM is required to boot a non-EFI operating system over the network. 5.4 System Management BIOS (SMBIOS) The BIOS provides support for the System Management BIOS Reference Specification, Version 2.4 to create a standardized interface for manageable attributes that are expected to be supported by DMI-enabled computer systems. The BIOS provides this interface via data structures through which the system attributes are reported. Using SMBIOS, a system administrator can obtain the types, capabilities, operational status, installation date and other information about the server components. 5.5 Security The BIOS provides several security features. This section describes the security features and operating model. 5.5.1 Operating Model The following table summarizes the operation of security features supported by the BIOS. Table 39. Security Features Operating Model 44 Revision 1.0 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E Mode Password on boot Entry Method / Event Power On / Reset 5.5.2 Password Protection Server Management Entry Criteria Behavior User password set and password on boot enabled in BIOS Setup. Secure boot disabled in BIOS Setup. System halts for user password before scanning option ROMs. The system is not in secure mode. No mouse or keyboard input is accepted except the password. Exit Criteria User password. Administrator password. After Exit Front control panel buttons are reenabled. The server boots normally. Boot sequence is determined by setup options. The BIOS uses passwords to prevent unauthorized tampering with the server setup. Both user and administrator passwords are supported by the BIOS. An Administrator password must be entered in order to set the user password. The maximum length of a password can be seven characters. The password cannot have characters other than alphanumeric (a-z, A-Z, 0-9). It is not case sensitive. Once set, a password can be cleared by changing it to a null string. Entering the user password will allow the user to modify the time, date, and user password. Other setup fields can be modified only if the administrator password is entered. If only one password is set, this password is required to enter BIOS Setup. The administrator has control over all fields in BIOS Setup, including the ability to clear the user password. If the user or administrator enters an incorrect password three times in a row during the boot sequence, the system is placed into a halt state. A system reset is required to exit out of the halt state. This feature makes it difficult to break the password by guessing at it. 5.5.3 Password Clear Jumper If the user and/or administrator password is lost or forgotten, both passwords may be cleared by moving the password clear jumper into the clear position. The BIOS determines if the password clear jumper is in the clear position during BIOS POST and clears any passwords if required. The password clear jumper must be restored to its original position before a new password can be set. Revision 1.0 45 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS 6. Error Reporting and Handling Error Reporting and Handling This chapter defines the following error handling features: 6.1 Error Handling and Logging Error Messages and Beep Codes Error Handling and Logging This section defines how errors are handled by the system BIOS. In addition, error-logging techniques are described and beep codes for errors are defined. 6.1.1 Error Sources and Types One of the major requirements of server management is to correctly and consistently handle system errors. System errors that can be enabled and disabled individually or as a group can be categorized as follows: PCI bus Memory single- and multi-bit errors Errors detected during POST, logged as POST errors The error list that would be logged is as follows: Table 40. Event List Event Name Processor thermal trip of last boot Description Processor thermal trip happened on last boot. When Error Is Caught Memory channel A Multi-bit ECC error Multi-bit ECC error happened on DIMM channel A. POST / Runtime Memory channel A Single-bit ECC error Single-bit ECC error happened on DIMM channel A. POST / Runtime Memory channel B Multi-bit ECC error Multi-bit ECC error happened on DIMM channel B. POST / Runtime Memory channel B Single-bit ECC error Single-bit ECC error happened on DIMM channel B. POST / Runtime CMOS battery failure CMOS battery failure or CMOS clear jumper is set to clear CMOS. POST CMOS checksum error CMOS data crushed POST CMOS time not set CMOS time is not set POST POST Keyboard not found PS/2 KB is not found during POST POST Memory size decrease Memory size is decreased compared with last boot POST Chassis intrusion detected Chassis is open POST Bad SPD tolerance Some fields of the DIMM SPD may not be supported, but could be tolerated by the Memory Reference Code. POST 46 Revision 1.0 Error Reporting and Handling Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS PCI PERR error PERR error happens on PCI bus POST / Runtime PCI SERR error SERR error happens on PCI bus POST / Runtime 6.1.2 Error Logging via SMI Handler The SMI handler is used to handle and log system level events. The SMI handler pre-processes all system errors, even those that are normally considered to generate an NMI. The SMI handler logs the event to NVRAM. For example, the BIOS programs the hardware to generate a SMI on a single-bit memory error and logs the error in the NVRAM in terms of a SMBIOS Type 15. After the BIOS finishes logging the error it will assert the NMI if needed. 6.1.2.1 PCI Bus Error The PCI bus defines two error pins, PERR# and SERR#. These are used for reporting PCI parity errors and system errors, respectively. In the case of PERR#, the PCI bus master has the option to retry the offending transaction, or to report it using SERR#. All other PCI-related errors are reported by SERR#. All PCI-to-PCI bridges are configured so that they generate SERR# on the primary interface whenever there is SERR# on the secondary side. 6.1.2.2 PCI Express* Errors Fatal and critical PCI Express* errors are logged as PCI system errors and are promoted to an NMI. All non-critical PCI Express errors are logged as PCI parity errors. 6.1.2.3 Memory Errors The hardware is programmed to generate an SMI on correctable data errors in the memory array. The SMI handler records the error to the NVRAM. The uncorrectable errors may have corrupted the contents of SMRAM. The SMI handler will log the error to the NVRAM if the SMRAM contents are still valid. 6.1.3 SMBIOS Type 15 Errors are logged to the NVRAM in terms of the SMBIOS Type 15 (System Event Log). Please refer to the SMBIOS Specification, version 2.4 for more detail information. The format of the records is also defined in the following section. 6.1.4 Logging Format Conventions The BIOS logs an error into the NVRAM area with the following record format, which is also defined in the SMBIOS Specification, version 2.3.4. Revision 1.0 47 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS Error Reporting and Handling Table 41. Logging Format Conventions 00h Offset Name EventType Length Byte Description Specifies the “Type” of event noted in an event-log entry as defined in table. 01h Length Byte Specifies the byte length of the event record, including the record’s Type and Length fields. 02h Year Byte Indicates the time when error is logged. 03h Month Byte 04h Day Byte 05h Hour Byte 06h Minute Byte 07h Second Byte 08h EventData1 DWORD EFI_STATUS_CODE_TYPE 0Ch EventData2 DWORD EFI_STATUS_CODE_VALUE Table 42. Event Type Definition Table Value Description Used by this platform (Y/N) 00h Reserved N 01h Single-bit ECC memory error Y 02h Multi-bit ECC memory error Y 03h Parity memory error N 04h Bus time-out N 05h I/O Channel Check N 06h Software NMI N 07h POST Memory Resize N 08h POST Error Y 09h PCI Parity Error Y 0Ah PCI System Error Y 0Bh CPU Failure N 0Ch EISA FailSafe Timer time-out N 0Dh Correctable memory log disabled N 0Eh Logging disabled for a specific Event Type – too many errors of the same type received in a short amount of time N 0Fh Reserved N 10h System Limit Exceeded (e.g. voltage or temperature threshold exceeded) Y 11h Asynchronous hardware timer expired and issued a system reset N 12h System configuration information N 13h Hard-disk information N 14h System reconfigured N 15h Uncorrectable CPU-complex error N 16h Log Area Reset/Cleared Y 17h System boot. If implemented, this log entry is guaranteed to be the first one written on any system boot. N 48 Revision 1.0 Error Reporting and Handling Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS 18h-7Fh Unused, available for assignment by SMBIOS Specification Version 2.3.4. N 80h-FEh Available for system- and OEM-specific assignments Y FFh End-of-log. When an application searches through the event-log records, the end of the log is identified when a log record with this type is found. Y For more information about the EFI_STATUS_CODE_TYPE and EFI_STATUS_CODE_VALUE definitions, refer to “Intel Platform Innovation Framework for EFI Status Codes Specification”, version 0.92. The errors are also displayed on the BIOS Setup screen under Server Management / View EventLog menu in the following format: EventName (times) Time of Occurrence EventName is the same as that shown in the Table 58. It is followed by the number of occurrences of the same event. The ‘Time of Occurrence’ is the last time the event occurred. 6.2 Error Messages and Error Codes The system BIOS displays error messages on the video screen. Before video initialization, beep codes inform the user of errors. POST error codes are logged in the event log. The BIOS displays POST error codes on the video monitor. 6.2.1 Diagnostic LEDs During the system boot process, the BIOS executes several platform configuration processes, each of which is assigned a specific hex POST code number. As each configuration routine is started, the BIOS will display the POST code on the POST code diagnostic LEDs found on the back edge of the server board. To assist in troubleshooting a system hang during the POST process, the diagnostic LEDs can be used to identify the last POST process to be executed. Each POST code is represented by a combination of colors from the four LEDs. The LEDs are capable of displaying three colors: green, red, and amber. The POST codes are divided into an upper nibble and a lower nibble. Each bit in the upper nibble is represented by a red LED and each bit in the lower nibble is represented by a green LED. If both bits are set in the upper and lower nibbles then both red and green LEDs are lit, resulting in an amber color. If both bits are clear, then the LED is off. In the below example, the BIOS sends a value of ACh to the diagnostic LED decoder. The LEDs are decoded as follows: Red bits = 1010b = Ah Green bits = 1100b = Ch Since the red bits correspond to the upper nibble and the green bits correspond to the lower nibble, the two are concatenated to be ACh. Revision 1.0 49 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS Error Reporting and Handling Table 43. POST Progress Code LED Example 8h LEDs ACh 1 Result Amber 4h Red Green 1 2h Red 0 Green 1h Red 1 Green 1 Green 0 Red Red 0 Off MSB USB Port Green 0 LSB Diagnostic LEDs USB Port Back edge of baseboard MSB LSB Figure 6. Location of Diagnostic LEDs on Server Board 6.2.2 POST Code Checkpoints Table 44. POST Code Checkpoints Diagnostic LED Decoder G=Green, R=Red, A=Amber MSB LSB Host Processor Description Checkpoint 0x10h OFF OFF OFF R Power-on initialization of the host processor (bootstrap processor) 0x11h OFF OFF OFF A Host processor cache initialization (including AP) 0x12h OFF OFF G R Starting application processor initialization 0x13h OFF OFF G A SMM initialization OFF OFF R G Initializing a chipset component 0x22h OFF OFF A OFF 0x23h OFF OFF A G 0x24h OFF G R OFF Programming timing parameters in the memory controller 0x25h OFF G R G Configuring memory parameters in the memory controller 0x26h OFF G A OFF Optimizing memory controller settings 0x27h OFF G A G Initializing memory, such as ECC init 0x28h G OFF R OFF OFF R OFF R Chipset 0x21h Memory Reading configuration data from memory (SPD on DIMM) Detecting presence of memory Testing memory PCI Bus 0x50h 50 Enumerating PCI busses Revision 1.0 Error Reporting and Handling Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS 0x51h Diagnostic LED Decoder G=Green, R=Red, A=Amber MSB LSB OFF R OFF A Allocating resources to PCI busses 0x52h OFF R G R Hot Plug PCI controller initialization 0x53h OFF R G A Reserved for PCI bus 0x54h OFF A OFF R Reserved for PCI bus 0x55h OFF A OFF A Reserved for PCI bus 0x56h OFF A G R Reserved for PCI bus 0x57h OFF A G A Reserved for PCI bus 0x58h G R OFF R Resetting USB bus 0x59h G R OFF A Reserved for USB devices Checkpoint Description USB ATA / ATAPI / SATA 0x5Ah G R G R Begin PATA / SATA bus initialization 0x5Bh G R G A Reserved for ATA 0x5Ch G A OFF R Resetting SMBUS 0x5Dh G A OFF A Reserved for SMBUS 0x70h OFF R R R Resetting the video controller (VGA) 0x71h OFF R R A Disabling the video controller (VGA) 0x72h OFF R A R Enabling the video controller (VGA) SMBUS Local Console Remote Console 0x78h G R R R Resetting the console controller 0x79h G R R A Disabling the console controller 0x7Ah G R A R Enabling the console controller Keyboard (PS2 or USB) 0x90h R OFF OFF R Resetting the keyboard 0x91h R OFF OFF A Disabling the keyboard 0x92h R OFF G R Resetting the keyboard 0x93h R OFF G A Enabling the keyboard 0x94h R G OFF R Clearing keyboard input buffer 0x95h R G OFF A Instructing keyboard controller to run Self Test (PS2 only) Mouse (PS2 or USB) 0x98h A OFF OFF R Resetting the mouse 0x99h A OFF OFF A Detecting the mouse 0x9Ah A OFF G R Detecting the presence of mouse 0x9Bh A OFF G A Enabling the mouse 0xB0h R OFF R R Resetting fixed media device 0xB1h R OFF R A Disabling fixed media device R OFF A R Detecting presence of a fixed media device (IDE hard drive detection, etc.) R OFF A A Enabling / configuring a fixed media device Fixed Media 0xB2h 0xB3h Removable Media Revision 1.0 51 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS Checkpoint 0xB8h 0xB9h 0xBAh 0xBCh Diagnostic LED Decoder G=Green, R=Red, A=Amber MSB LSB A OFF R R Error Reporting and Handling Description Resetting removable media device A OFF R A Disabling removable media device A OFF A R Detecting presence of a removable media device (IDE CDROM detection, etc.) A G R R Enabling / configuring a removable media device Boot Device Selection 0xD0 R R OFF R Trying boot device selection 0xD1 R R OFF A Trying boot device selection 0xD2 R R G R Trying boot device selection 0xD3 R R G A Trying boot device selection 0xD4 R A OFF R Trying boot device selection 0xD5 R A OFF A Trying boot device selection 0xD6 R A G R Trying boot device selection 0xD7 R A G A Trying boot device selection 0xD8 A R OFF R Trying boot device selection 0xD9 A R OFF A Trying boot device selection 0XDA A R G R Trying boot device selection 0xDB A R G A Trying boot device selection 0xDC A A OFF R Trying boot device selection 0xDE A A G R Trying boot device selection 0xDF A A G A Trying boot device selection Started dispatching an PEIM Pre-EFI Initialization (PEI) Core 0xE0h R R R OFF 0xE1h R R R G 0xE2h R R A OFF 0xE3h R R A G Completed dispatching an PEIM Initial memory found, configured, and installed correctly Reserved for initialization module use (PEIM) Driver eXecution Environment (DXE) Core 0xE4h R A R OFF Entered EFI driver execution phase (DXE) 0xE5h R A R G Reserved for DXE core use 0xE6h R A A OFF Started connecting drivers 0xEBh A R A G Started dispatching a driver 0xECh R A A OFF Completed dispatching a driver DXE Drivers 0xE7h R A A G 0xE8h A R R OFF 0xE9h A R R G 0xEAh A R A OFF 0xEEh A A A OFF 0xEFh A A A G Waiting for user input Checking password Entering BIOS setup Flash Update Calling Int 19. One beep unless silent boot is enabled. Reserved for DXE Drivers use Runtime Phase / EFI Operating System Boot 52 0xF4h R A R R Entering Sleep state 0xF5h R A R A Exiting Sleep state Revision 1.0 Error Reporting and Handling Checkpoint 0xF8h 0xF9h 0xFAh Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS Diagnostic LED Decoder G=Green, R=Red, A=Amber MSB LSB Description A R R R Operating system has requested EFI to close boot services (ExitBootServices ( ) has been called) A R R A Operating system has switched to virtual address mode (SetVirtualAddressMap ( ) has been called) A R A R Operating system has requested the system to reset (ResetSystem () has been called) Pre-EFI Initialization Module (PEIM) / Recovery 0x30h OFF OFF R R Crisis recovery has been initiated because of a user request 0x31h OFF OFF R A Crisis recovery has been initiated by software (corrupt flash) 0x34h OFF G R R Loading crisis recovery capsule 0x35h OFF G R A Handing off control to the crisis recovery capsule 0x3Fh G G A A Unable to complete crisis recovery. 6.2.3 POST Error Messages and Handling Whenever possible, the BIOS will output the current boot progress codes on the video screen. Progress codes are 32-bit quantities plus optional data. The 32-bit numbers include class, subclass, and operation information. The class and subclass fields point to the type of hardware that is being initialized. The operation field represents the specific initialization activity. Based on the data bit availability to display progress codes, a progress code can be customized to fit the data width. The higher the data bit, the higher the granularity of information that can be sent on the progress port. The progress codes may be reported by the system BIOS or option ROMs. The Response column in the following table is divided into two types: • Pause: The message is displayed in the Error Manager screen, an error may be logged to the NVRAM, and user input is required to continue. The user can take immediate corrective action or choose to continue booting. Halt: The message is displayed in the Error Manager screen, an error is logged to the NVRAM, and the system cannot boot unless the error is resolved. The user needs to replace the faulty part and restart the system. Revision 1.0 53 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS Error Reporting and Handling Table 45. POST Error Messages and Handling Error Code 6.2.4 Error Message CMOS date / time not set Response Pause Y Log Error Configuration cleared by jumper Pause Y Configuration default loaded Pause N Password check failed Halt N PCI resource conflict Pause N Insufficient memory to shadow PCI ROM Pause N Processor thermal trip error on last boot Pause Y POST Error Beep Codes The following table lists the POST error beep codes. Prior to system video initialization, the BIOS uses these beep codes to inform users of error conditions. The beep code is followed by a user visible code on the POST Progress LEDs. Table 46. POST Error Beep Codes Beeps 3 6.2.5 Error Message Memory error POST Progress Code Description System halted because a fatal error related to the memory was detected. POST Error Pause Option In the event of POST error(s) that are listed as "Pause", the BIOS will enter the error manager and wait for the user to press an appropriate key before booting the operating system or entering BIOS Setup. The user can override this option by setting "POST Error Pause" to "disabled" in the BIOS Setup main menu page. If the "POST Error Pause" option is set to "disabled", the system will boot the operating system without user intervention. The default value is set to "enabled". 54 Revision 1.0 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS 7. Connectors and Jumper Blocks Connectors and Jumper Blocks 7.1 Power Connectors The power supply connection is supplied to the system through the 18-pin connector. The following table defines the pin-outs of the connector. Table 47. Power Connector Pin-out (J3K1) Pin Signal +3.3VDC 18 AWG Color Orange Pin 10 Signal +3.3VDC 18 AWG Color Orange 3.3V RS Orange (24AWG) 11 -12VDC Blue 2 COM Black 12 COM Black 3* COM Black 13 PSON# Green COM RS Black (24AWG) 14 +5VDC Red +5VDC Red 15 +12V1 Yellow 5V RS Red (24AWG) 16 COM Black 1* 4* 5 5 VSB Purple 17 COM Black 6 COM Black 18 +12V3 Yellow 7 COM Black 8 +12V1 Yellow 9 +12V2 Yellow I2C Header 7.2 Table 48. HSBP Header Pin-out (J1C1) Pin Signal Name Description 1 SMB_DATA_5V_BP Data Line 2 GND GROUND 3 SMB_CLK_5V_BP Clock Line 4 GND GROUND Revision 1.0 55 Connectors and Jumper Blocks 7.3 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS Front Panel Connector A standard SSI 34-pin header is provided to support a system front panel. The header contains reset, NMI, power control buttons, and LED indicators. The following table details the pin-out of this header. Table 49. Front Panel 14-pin Header Pin-out (J4k2) Signal Name Power LED Anode Pin 1 Signal Name NIC1 Activity LED Anode Pin 2 Power LED Cathode 3 NIC1 Activity LED Cathode 4 HDD Activity LED Anode 5 NIC2 Activity LED Anode 6 HDD Activity LED Cathode 7 NIC2 Activity LED Cathode 8 Power Switch 9 Reset Switch 10 Power Switch(GND) 11 Reset Switch(GND) 12 Key 13 NC 14 Note: NC (No Connect) 7.4 I/O Connectors 7.4.1 VGA Connector The following table details the pin-out of the VGA connector. This connector is combined with the COM1 connector. Table 50. VGA Connector Pin-out (J3A1) RED Signal Name Pin B1 Signal Name Fused VCC (+5V) Pin B9 GREEN B2 GND B10 BLUE B3 NC B11 NC B4 DDCDAT B12 GND B5 HSY B13 GND B6 VSY B14 GND B7 DDCCLK B15 GND B8 Note: NC (No Connect) 56 Revision 1.0 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS 7.4.2 Connectors and Jumper Blocks NIC Connectors The Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E supports two NIC RJ-45 connectors. The following tables detail the pin-out of the connector. Table 51. NIC1-Intel® 82573E (10/100/1000) Connector Pin-out (JA5A1) Signal Name P2V5_NIC1 9 Pin Signal Name NIC1_MDI3_DP 16 Pin NIC1_MDI0_DP 10 NIC1_MDI3_DN 17 NIC1_MDI0_DN 11 GND 18 NIC1_MDI1_DP 12 NIC1_LINK_1_N 19 NIC1_MDI1_DN 13 P3V3_AUX 20 NIC1_MDI2_DP 14 NIC1_LINK_0_N 21 NIC1_MDI2_DN 15 NIC1_LINK_2_N 22 Table 52. NIC2- Intel® 82541PI (10/100/1000) Connector Pin-out (JA4A1) 7.4.3 Signal Name P1V8_NIC_RC 1 Pin Signal Name NIC2_MDI3_DN 9 Pin NIC2_MDI2_DN 2 NIC2_MDI0_DN 10 NIC2_MDI2_DP 3 NIC2_MDI0_DP 11 NIC2_MDI1_DP 4 P1V8_NIC_RC 12 NIC2_MDI1_DN 5 NIC2_LINK1000_N 13 P1V8_NIC_RC 6 NIC2_LINK100_N 14 P1V8_NIC_RC 7 NIC2_ACT_LED_N 15 NIC2_MDI3_DP 8 NIC2_LINK_UP_N 16 SATA Connectors The Intel® ICH7R integrates a SATA controller with four SATA ports. The pin-out for these four connectors is listed below. Table 53. SATA Connector Pin-out (J5C1, J5C2) Pin 1 7.4.4 Signal Name GND 2 SATA0_TX_P 3 SATA0_TX_N 4 GND 5 SATA0_RX_N 6 SATA0_RX_P 7 GND Serial Port Connectors One serial port is provided on the Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E. A standard, external DB9 serial connector is located on the back edge of the server board to supply a Serial A interface. This connector is combined with the VGA connector (J3A1). An internal 9-pin header supplies a Serial B interface. Revision 1.0 57 Connectors and Jumper Blocks Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS Table 54. External DB9 Serial A Port Pin-out (J3A1) Signal Name DCD Pin T1 Signal Name DSR Pin T6 RXD T2 RTS T7 TXD T3 CTS T8 DTR T4 RI T9 GND T5 Table 55. Internal 9-pin Serial B Port Pin-out (J1C2) 7.4.5 Signal Name DCD 1 Pin Signal Name CTS 6 Pin DSR 2 DTR 7 RX 3 RI 8 RTS 4 GND 9 TX 5 USB Connector The following table provides the pin-out for the dual external USB connectors. This connector is combined with an RJ-45 (connected to NIC1 signals). Table 56. USB Connectors Pin-out (JA5A1) Pin Signal Name U1 P5V_USB_BP_MJ U2 USB_BACK5_R_DN U3 USB_BACK5_R_DP U4 GND U5 P5V_USB_BP_MJ U6 USB_BACK4_R_DN U7 USB_BACK4_R_DP U8 GND A header on the server board provides an option to support two additional USB ports. The pinout of the header is detailed in the following table. Table 57. Optional USB Connection Header Pin-out (J9F2) NC Signal Name Pin 1 Key Pin 2 GND 3 GND 4 USB_FRONT1_INDUCTOR_DP 5 USB_FRONT2_INDUCTOR_DP 6 USB_FRONT1_INDUCTOR_DN 7 USB_FRONT2_INDUCTOR_DN 8 USB_FNT_PWR (Fused VCC, +5V /w over current monitor of both port 1) 9 USB_FNT_PWR (Fused VCC, +5V /w over current monitor of both port 1) 10 58 Signal Name Revision 1.0 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS 7.5 Connectors and Jumper Blocks Fan Headers There are two general-purpose (system) fan headers (J3K2, J4K1). These fan headers have the same pin-out and are detailed below. Table 58. Four-pin Fan Headers Pin-out (J3K2, J4K1) Pin 1 Signal Name Ground Type Power 2 Fan Power Power Fan Power +12VDC 3 Fan Tach Out FAN_TACH signal is connected to the Heceta* to monitor the fan speed. 4 PWM Control Pulse Width Modulation – Fan speed Control signal 7.6 7.6.1 Description GROUND is the power supply ground Miscellaneous Headers and Connectors Chassis Intrusion Header A 1x2 pin header (J3B2) is used in the chassis to support a chassis intrusion switch. The pin-out definition for this header is found in the following table. Table 59. Intrusion Cable Connector (J3B2) Pin-out Pin 7.6.2 1 Signal Name FP_INTRUDER_HDR_P1(Power) 2 FP_INTRUDER_HDR_N Back Panel I/O Connectors Figure 7. Back Panel I/O Connections (not to scale) Revision 1.0 59 Connectors and Jumper Blocks Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS 7.6.3 POST Code LEDs Four POST code LEDs display POST code progression activities using hexadecimal format, read from the least significant bit to the most significant bit. 7.7 Jumper Blocks This section describes configuration jumper options on the Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E. 7.7.1 Clear CMOS and System Maintenance Mode Jumpers Both the CMOS Clear and the system maintenance mode jumpers consist of 3-pin headers (CMOS Clear = J3B1, Config Mode = J1A3) located just beside the Front panel and SATA 1 connectors. The Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E provides two 3-pin jumper blocks that are used to perform clearing of NVRAM and system maintenance mode options. The factory defaults are set to Normal mode for each function. The following tables describe each jumper option. Table 60. System Maintenance Mode (J1A3) Name Normal Pin – Pin 1-2 Function Normal operation Description Allows normal system operation with correct BIOS settings. System will POST normally. Config (Maintenance) 2-3 Machine Config Mode Maintenance mode overrides incorrect BIOS settings which would otherwise prohibit normal POST with safe settings for specific hardware configuration. Recovery boot Off BIOS Recovery Mode Used to recover from a corrupted BIOS. Table 61. Clear CMOS Jumper Options (J3B2) Name Normal CMOS Clear 60 Pin – Pin 1-2 2-3 Function Normal operation Clears CMOS (NVRAM) Description Jumper in normal position allows system to successfully POST and boot to operating system environment. BIOS settings are maintained intact. Jumper in CLEAR position initiates clear of NVRAM following POST. System message confirms CMOS clear operation successful. This setting enforces default BIOS settings, which can be changed by entering setup via F2, then exiting setup via F10 and saving changes. Revision 1.0 Absolute Maximum Ratings 8. Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS Absolute Maximum Ratings Operating the board at conditions beyond those shown in the following table may cause permanent damage to the system. The table is provided for stress testing purposes only. Exposure to absolute maximum rating conditions for extended periods may affect system reliability. Table 62. Absolute Maximum Ratings Operating Temperature 5 °C to 50 °C 1 Storage Temperature -55 °C to +150 °C Voltage on any signal with respect to ground -0.3 V to Vdd + 0.3V 2 3.3 V Supply Voltage with Respect to ground -0.3 V to 3.63 V 5 V Supply Voltage with Respect to ground -0.3 V to 5.5 V Notes: 8.1 1. Chassis design must provide proper airflow to avoid exceeding the processor maximum case temperature. 2. VDD means supply voltage for the device Mean Time Between Failures (MTBF) Test Results This section provides results of MTBF testing conducted by an Intel testing facility. MTBF is a standard measure for the reliability and performance of the board under extreme working conditions. For the Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E, MTBF was measured at 40 degrees Centigrade. Revision 1.0 61 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS 9. Design and Environmental Specifications Design and Environmental Specifications 9.1 Power Budget The following table shows the power consumed on each supply line for the Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E that is configured with one processor (130W max). This configuration includes four 1-GB DDR2 DIMMs stacked burst at 90% max. The numbers provided in the table should be used for reference purposes only. Different hardware configurations will produce different numbers. The numbers in the table reflect a common usage model operating at higher than average stress levels. Table 63. The Board Power Budget Watts Functional Unit Utilization Server Board Input Totals Power Supply Rail Voltages AMPS Power 3.3V 5.V 12.V 260W 2.9 13.9 2.8 12V VRM 12.2 -12v Units 5VSB 0.05 1.54 Amps Server Board Discrete Totals 50% 45W 2.9 0.5 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.04 Amps Server Board Converters Efficiency 40W 0.00 13.4 0.00 12.2 0.00 1.5 Amps Server Board Config Totals 175.8W 0.00 0.00 2.8 0.00 0.05 0.00 Amps System Components 29W 0.00 2.8 3.6 0.00 0.00 0.00 Amps System Totals 291W 2.9 15.2 4.7 12.2 0.05 1.54 Amps 300W 14A 18A Max 12V+ 12V VRM 0.5A 2A 1Amin 1Amin 2Amin 0Amin 1Amin 3.3V / 5V Combined Power Power Supply Requirements – 1U 350W peak 3.3V/5V Combined Power 9.2 100W 2Amin Product Regulatory Compliance 9.2.1 Product Safety Compliance ® The Intel Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E complies with the following safety requirements: 62 UL60950 – CSA 60950(USA / Canada) EN60950 (Europe) IEC60950 (International) CB Certificate and Report, IEC60950 (report to include all country national deviations) Revision 1.0 Design and Environmental Specifications 9.2.2 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS CE - Low Voltage Directive 73/23/EEE (Europe) Product EMC Compliance – Class A Compliance Note: Legally the product is required to comply with Class A emission requirements as it is intended for a commercial type market place. Intel targets 10db margin to Class A Limits The Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E has been tested and verified to comply with the following electromagnetic compatibility (EMC) regulations when installed in a compatible Intel® host system. For information on compatible host system(s), refer to Intel’s Server Builder Web site or contact your local Intel representative. 9.2.3 FCC /ICES-003 - Emissions (USA/Canada) Verification CISPR 22 – Emissions (International) EN55022 - Emissions (Europe) CE – EMC Directive 89/336/EEC (Europe) AS/NZS 3548 Emissions (Australia / New Zealand) Certifications / Registrations / Declarations UL Certification (US/Canada) CB Certification (International) CE Declaration of Conformity (CENELEC Europe) FCC/ICES-003 Class A Attestation (USA/Canada) C-Tick Declaration of Conformity (Australia) MED Declaration of Conformity (New Zealand) Revision 1.0 63 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS 9.2.4 Design and Environmental Specifications Product Regulatory Compliance Markings This product is marked with the following Product Certification Markings: Table 64. Product Certification Markings Regulatory Compliance Region UL Mark USA/Canada Marking E139761 CE Mark Europe Canada EMC Mark Canada C-Tick Mark Australia Country of Origin Exporting Requirements Model Designation Regulatory Identification PB Free Marking Environmental Requirements 9.3 9.3.1 CANADA ICES-003 CLASS A MADE IN xxxxx (provided by label not silkscreen) Board PB Number will be used for the Model number Electromagnetic Compatibility Notices Industry Canada (ICES-003) Cet appareil numérique respecte les limites bruits radioélectriques applicables aux appareils numériques de Classe A prescrites dans la norme sur le matériel brouilleur: “Apparelis Numériques”, NMB-003 édictee par le Ministre Canadian des Communications. This digital apparatus does not exceed the Class A limits for radio noise emissions from digital apparatus set out in the interference-causing equipment standard entitled: Digital Apparatus, ICES-003 of the Canadian Department of Communications. 64 Revision 1.0 Design and Environmental Specifications 9.3.2 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS Europe (CE Declaration of Conformity) This product has been tested in accordance too, and complies with the Low Voltage Directive (73/23/EEC) and EMC Directive (89/336/EEC). The product has been marked with the CE Mark to illustrate its compliance. 9.3.3 Australia / New Zealand This product has been tested and complies with AS/NZS 3548. The product has been marked with the C-Tick mark to illustrate compliance. 9.4 Restriction of Hazardous Substances (RoHS) Intel has a system in place to restrict the use of banned substances in accordance with the European Directive 2002/95/EC. Compliance is based on declaration that materials banned in the RoHS Directive are either (1) below all applicable substance threshold limits or (2) an approved/pending RoHS exemption applies. Note: RoHS implementing details are not fully defined and may change. Threshold limits and banned substances are noted below. 9.5 Quantity limit of 0.1% by mass (1000 PPM) for: o Lead o Mercury o Hexavalent Chromium o Polybrominated Biphenyls Dipheny Ethers (PBDE) Quantity limit of 0.01% by mass (100 PPM) for: o Cadmium Calculated Mean Time Between Failures (MTBF) The MTBF (Mean Time Between Failures) for the Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E as configured from the factory is shown in the table below. Table 65. MTBF Data Product Code Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E 9.6 Operating Temperature 40 degrees C Mechanical Specifications The following figure shows a mechanical drawing of the Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1E. Revision 1.0 65 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS Design and Environmental Specifications Figure 8. Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E Mechanical Drawing 66 Revision 1.0 Hardware Monitoring Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS 10. Hardware Monitoring 10.1 Monitored Components The Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E has an integrated Heceta chip that is responsible for hardware monitoring. The Heceta chip provides basic server hardware monitoring which alerts a system administrator if a hardware problem occurs on the board. The SMsC* LP47M182NR has implemented some fan speed control/monitor pins. Below is a table of monitored headers and sensors on the board. Table 66. Monitored Components Voltage Fan Speed Item VCCP (PIN #23) Heceta* P12V (PIN #21) Monitors +12Vin for system +12V supply Heceta* 2.5V (PIN #22) Monitors 1.5V Core power Heceta* P5V (PIN #20) Monitors +5V Heceta* PWM1 (PIN #24) N/A Heceta* PWM2 (PIN #10) Controls system fan 1 (J3K2) Heceta* PWM3 (PIN #13) Controls system fan 2 (J4K1) Heceta* TACH1 (PIN #11) N/A Heceta* TACH2 (PIN #12) Monitors system fan 1 (J3K2) Heceta* TACH3 (PIN #9) Temperature H_THEMP_DA/C 10.1.1 Description Monitors processor voltage Monitors system fan 2 (J4K1) Heceta* Monitors processor temperature Heceta* Fan Speed Control Figure 9. Fan Speed Control Block Diagram Revision 1.0 67 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS 10.2 Hardware Monitoring Chassis Intrusion The Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E supports a chassis security feature that detects if the chassis cover is removed. This security feature uses a mechanical switch on the chassis that attaches to the chassis intrusion connector. When the chassis cover is removed, the mechanical switch is in the open position. 68 Revision 1.0 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS Reference Documents Glossary This appendix contains important terms used in the preceding chapters. For ease of use, numeric entries are listed first (e.g., “82460GX”) with alpha entries following (e.g., “AGP 4x”). Acronyms are then entered in their respective place, with non-acronyms following. Term ACPI Advanced Configuration and Power Interface Definition ANSI American National Standards Institute AP Application Processor ASIC Application Specific Integrated Circuit ASR Asynchronous Reset BGA Ball-grid Array BIOS Basic input/output system Byte 8-bit quantity. CMOS In terms of this specification, this describes the PC-AT compatible region of battery-backed 128 bytes of memory, which normally resides on the server board. DCD Data Carrier Detect DMA Direct Memory Access DMTF Distributed management Task Force ECC Error Correcting Code EMC Electromagnetic Compatibility EPS External Product Specification ESCD Extended System Configuration Data FDC Floppy Disk Controller FIFO First-In, First-Out FRU Field replaceable unit GB 1024 MB. GPIO General purpose I/O GUID Globally Unique ID Hz Hertz (1 cycle/second) HDG Hardware Design Guide I2C Inter-integrated circuit bus IA Intel® architecture ICMB Intelligent Chassis Management Bus IERR Internal error IMB Inter Module Bus IP Internet Protocol IRQ Interrupt Request ITP In-target probe KB 1024 bytes KCS Keyboard Controller Style LAN Local area network LBA Logical Block Address LCD Liquid crystal display LPC Low pin count Revision 1.0 69 Term LSB Least Significant Bit Definition MB 1024 KB MBE Multi-Bit Error Ms milliseconds MSB Most Significant Bit MTBF Mean Time Between Failures Mux multiplexor NIC Network Interface Card NMI Non-maskable Interrupt OEM Original equipment manufacturer Ohm Unit of electrical resistance PBGA Pin Ball Grid Array PERR Parity Error PIO Programmable I/O PMB Private Management Bus PMC Platform Management Controller PME Power Management Event PnP Plug and Play POST Power-on Self Test PWM Pulse-Width Modulator RAIDIOS RAID I/O Steering RAM Random Access Memory RI Ring Indicate RISC Reduced instruction set computing RMCP Remote Management Control Protocol ROM Read Only Memory RTC Real Time Clock SBE Single-Bit Error SCI System Configuration Interrupt SDR Sensor Data Record SDRAM Synchronous Dynamic RAM SEL System event log SERIRQ Serialized Interrupt Requests SERR System Error SM Server Management SMI Server management interrupt. SMI is the highest priority nonmaskable interrupt SMM System Management Mode SMS System Management Software SNMP Simple Network Management Protocol SPD Serial Presence Detect SSI Server Standards Infrastructure TPS Technical Product Specification UART Universal asynchronous receiver and transmitter 70 Revision 1.0 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS Term USB Universal Serial Bus VGA Video Graphic Adapter VID Voltage Identification VRM Voltage Regulator Module Word 16-bit quantity ZCR Zero Channel RAID Revision 1.0 Reference Documents Definition 71 References 72 Advanced Configuration and Power Interface Specification, Revision 1.0b, February 1999, http://www.acpi.info/ Advanced Configuration and Power Interface Specification, Revision 2.0, July 2000, http://www.acpi.info/ Advanced Configuration and Power Interface Specification, Revision 3.0, , http://www.acpi.info/ BIOS Boot Specification Version 1.01. Compaq Computer Corporation, Phoenix Technologie Ltd., Intel Corporation. 1996, http://www.phoenix.com/resources/specsbbs101.pdf El Torito CD-ROM Boot Specification, Version 1.0, http://www.phoenix.com/resources/specs-cdrom.pdf Extensible Firmware Interface Reference Specification, Version 1.1, http://www.intel.com/technology/efi/index.htm Tiano EFI Shell EPS, Revision 0.10. Intel Corporation, 2002 EFI 1.1 Shell Commands Specification, v0.3, Available from: EFI1.1ShellCommands.pdf, EFI sample implementation, revision 1.10.14.62, http://developer.intel.com/technology/efi/main_sample.htm IA-32e BIOS Writer's Guide, Revision 0.5, Intel Corporation Platform Management FRU Information Storage Definition v1.0, http://developer.intel.com/design/servers/ipmi Hardware Design Guide for Microsoft Windows 2000 Server, Version 3.0, http://www.microsoft.com/whdc/system/platform/pcdesign/desguide/serverdg.mspx#ESB Application Note AP-485: Intel Processor Identification and the CPUID Function, http://www.intel.com/design/xeon/applnots/241618.htm Intelligent Platform Management Bus Specification, Version 1.0, http://developer.intel.com/design/servers/ipmi/spec.htm Intelligent Platform Management Interface Specification, Version 1.5, http://developer.intel.com/design/servers/ipmi/spec.htm Intelligent Platform Management Interface Specification, Version 2.0, http://developer.intel.com/design/servers/ipmi/spec.htm Multiprocessor Specification, Revision 1.4, May 1997 Microsoft Headless Design Guidelines, http://www.microsoft.com/HWDEV/PLATFORM/server/headless/default.asp PCI Local Bus Specification, Revision 3.0, http://www.pcisig.org/ PCI Local Bus Specification, Revision 2.2, http://www.pcisig.org/ Revision 1.0 Intel® Entry Server Board SE7230CA1-E TPS Reference Documents PCI BIOS Specification, Revision 2.1, http://www.pcisig.org/ PCI to PCI Bridge Specification, Revision 1.1, http://www.pcisig.org/ PCI Express Base Specification, Revision 1.0a, http://www.pcisig.org/ PCI Hot-Plug Specification, Revision 1.1, http://www.pcisig.org/ PCI IRQ Routing Table Specification, Revision 1.0, Microsoft Corporation Plug and Play BIOS Specification, Revision 1.0a (relevant portions only), http://www.microsoft.com/whdc/system/pnppwr/pnp/default.mspx Sahalee Baseboard Management Controller Core External Product Specification for Silverwood Systems, Intel Corporation System Management BIOS Reference Specification, Version 2.4, http://www.dmtf.org/standards/smbios ACPI Static Resource Affinity Table, Version 1.2, http://www.microsoft.com/whdc/hwdev/platform/proc/SRAT.mspx SYSID BIOS Support Interface Requirement Specification, Version 1.2 Intel® Platform Innovation Framework for EFI Firmware Volume Specification, Revision 0.9, Intel Corporation, 2004, ftp://download.intel.com/technology/framework/docs/Fv.pdf Universal Host Controller Interface Design Guide, http://developer.intel.com/design/USB/UHCI11D.htm Universal Serial Bus Revision 1.1 Specification, http://www.usb.org/developers/docs Universal Serial Bus Revision 2.0 Specification, http://www.usb.org/developers/docs Wired For Management Baseline Specification, Revision 2.0, http://www.intel.com/labs/manage/wfm/wfmspecs.htm DMTF Systems Standard Groups Definition Revision 1.0 73