Intel® Server System M50FCP1UR System Integration and Service Guide
97
Appendix C.
System Status LED Operating States and Definition
The server board includes a bi-color System Status LED. The system status LED on the server board is tied
directly to the system status LED on the front panel (if present). This LED indicates the current health of the
server system. Possible LED states include solid green, blinking green, solid amber, and blinking amber.
When the server system is powered down (transitions to the DC-off state or S5), the BMC is still on standby
power and retains the sensor and front panel status LED state established before the power-down event.
When AC power is first applied to the system, the status LED turns solid amber, and then immediately
changes to blinking green to indicate that the BMC is booting. If the BMC boot process completes with no
errors, the status LED changes to solid green.
Table 7. System Status LED State Definitions
LED State
System State
BIOS Status Description
Off
No AC Power to system
•
System power is not present.
•
System is in EuP Lot6 off mode.
Solid green
System is operating
normally.
•
System is in S5 soft-off state.
•
System is running (in S0 State) and its status is healthy. The system is not
exhibiting any errors. Source power is present, BMC has booted, and
manageability functionality is operational.
•
After a BMC reset, and with the chassis ID solid on, the BMC is booting Linux*.
Control has been passed from BMC uBoot to BMC Linux*. It is in this state for
roughly 10–20 seconds.
Blinking
green
System is operating in a
degraded state
although still
functioning, or system is
operating in a
redundant state but
with an impending
failure warning.
•
Redundancy loss such as power-supply or fan. Applies only if the associated
platform subsystem has redundancy capabilities.
•
Fan warning or failure when the number of fully operational fans is less than the
minimum number needed to cool the system.
•
Non-critical threshold crossed temperature (including HSBP temp), voltage, input
power to power supply, output current for main power rail from power supply and
Processor Thermal Control (Therm Ctrl) sensors.
•
Power supply predictive failure occurred while redundant power supply
configuration was present.
•
Unable to use all installed memory (more than 1 DIMM installed).
•
Correctable Errors over a threshold and migrating to a spare DIMM (memory
sparing). This situation indicates that the system no longer has spared DIMMs (a
redundancy lost condition). Corresponding DIMM LED lit.
•
In mirrored configuration, when memory mirroring takes place and system loses
memory redundancy.
•
Battery failure.
•
BMC executing in uBoot. (Indicated by Chassis ID blinking at 3 Hz while Status
blinking at 1 Hz). System in degraded state (no manageability). BMC uBoot is
running but has not transferred control to BMC Linux*. Server is in this state 6–8
seconds after BMC reset while it pulls the Linux* image into flash.
•
BMC Watchdog has reset the BMC.
•
Power Unit sensor offset for configuration error is asserted.
•
SSD Hot Swap Controller is off-line or degraded.
System is initializing
after source power is
applied
•
PFR in the process of updating/authenticating/recovering when source power is
connected, system firmware being updated.
•
System not ready to take power button event/signal.
Blinking
green and
amber
alternatively
Summary of Contents for M50FCP1UR
Page 2: ...2 This page intentionally left blank...
Page 118: ...Intel Server System M50FCP1UR System Integration and Service Guide 118 1 2 3 4 5 6 1 2 3...
Page 119: ...Intel Server System M50FCP1UR System Integration and Service Guide 119 1 2 3 4 5...
Page 120: ...Intel Server System M50FCP1UR System Integration and Service Guide 120 7 8 9 10 11 12 4 5 6...
Page 121: ...Intel Server System M50FCP1UR System Integration and Service Guide 121 6 7 8 9 10...
Page 130: ...Intel Server System M50FCP1UR System Integration and Service Guide 130 1 2 3 4 5 ESD 6 1 2 3...
Page 131: ...Intel Server System M50FCP1UR System Integration and Service Guide 131 1 2 3 4 5...