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5-24

S

UPER

S

ERVER 7045B-T User's Manual

SATA Ports

There are no jumpers to con-

fi gure the onboard SATA con-

nectors.  See the table on the 

right for pin defi nitions.

SATA Connector Pin Defi nitions 

(SATA0 - SATA5)

Pin #             Defi nition     

1

Ground

2

TXP

3

TXN

4

Ground

5

RXN

6

RXP

7

Ground

IDE Connectors

There are no jumpers to confi g-

ure the onboard IDE#1 and #2 

connectors.  See the table on 

the right for pin defi nitions.

IDE Drive Connectors

Pin Defi nitions (J5, J6)

Pin#     Defi nition                  Pin #      Defi nition

1

Reset IDE

2

Ground

3

Host Data 7

4

Host Data 8

5

Host Data 6

6

Host Data 9

7

Host Data 5

8

Host Data 10

9

Host Data 4

10

Host Data 11

11

Host Data 3

12

Host Data 12

13

Host Data 2

14

Host Data 13

15

Host Data 1

16

Host Data 14

17

Host Data 0

18

Host Data 15

19

Ground

20

Key

21

DRQ3

22

Ground

23

I/O Write

24

Ground

25

I/O Read

26

Ground

27

IOCHRDY

28

BALE

29

DACK3

30

Ground

31

IRQ14

32

IOCS16

33

Addr1

34

Ground

35

Addr0

36

Addr2

37

Chip Select 0

38

Chip Select 1

39

Activity

40

Ground

Summary of Contents for 7045B-T

Page 1: ...SUPERSERVER 7045B T USER S MANUAL 1 0a SUPER...

Page 2: ...LIABLE FOR DIRECT INDIRECT SPECIAL INCIDENTAL SPECULATIVE OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES ARISING FROM THE USE OR INABILITY TO USE THIS PRODUCT OR DOCUMENTATION EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAM...

Page 3: ...tion The rst chapter provides a checklist of the main components included with the server system and describes the main features of the X7DBE serverboard and the SC743TQ 650 chassis which comprise the...

Page 4: ...r when adding or removing processors or main memory and when recon guring the serverboard Chapter 6 Advanced Chassis Setup Refer to Chapter 6 for detailed information on the SC743TQ 650 server chassis...

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

Page 6: ...g the System into a Rack 2 4 2 5 Checking the Serverboard Setup 2 8 2 6 Checking the Drive Bay Setup 2 9 Chapter 3 System Interface 3 1 Overview 3 1 3 2 Control Panel Buttons 3 1 Power 3 1 Reset 3 1 3...

Page 7: ...ector De nitions 5 12 ATX Power Connector 5 12 Auxiliary Power Connector 5 12 Processor Power Connector 5 12 NMI Button 5 12 Power LED 5 12 HDD LED 5 13 NIC1 LED 5 13 NIC2 LED 5 13 Overheat Fan Fail L...

Page 8: ...Parallel Port Connector 5 22 Floppy Connector 5 23 IDE Connectors 5 24 SATA Ports 5 24 Chapter 6 Advanced Chassis Setup 6 1 Static Sensitive Devices 6 1 6 2 Front Control Panel 6 3 6 3 System Fans 6 4...

Page 9: ...Table of Contents ix 7 7 Exit 7 21 Appendices Appendix A BIOS POST Messages A 1 Appendix B BIOS POST Codes B 1 Appendix C Software Installation C 1 Appendix D System Speci cations D 1...

Page 10: ...Notes x SUPERSERVER 7045B T User s Manual...

Page 11: ...e components have been included with the SuperServer 7045B T as listed below Four 4 8 cm hot swap chassis fans FAN 0072 Two 2 8 cm hot swap rear exhaust fans FAN 0081 One 1 air shroud CSE PT0123 One 1...

Page 12: ...odules of the same size and speed to be installed in pairs Serial ATA A SATA controller is integrated into the South Bridge of the 5000P chipset to pro vide a six port Serial ATA subsystem which is RA...

Page 13: ...server chassis System Power The SC743TQ 650 features a single 650W power supply The system must be shut down and the AC power cord removed before replacing or performing any service on the power supp...

Page 14: ...ts PS 2 mouse and keyboard ports and two gigabit Ethernet ports Cooling System The SC743TQ 650 chassis has an innovative cooling design that includes four 8 cm hot plug system cooling fans located in...

Page 15: ...s 2 USB Ports 5 S I O BIOS Kybd Mouse Floppy COM Ports 2 CPU2 5000P MCH Slot 6 PCI Exp x8 SEPC Slot 5 PCI Express x8 LPC 82563 Parallel Port ES 1000 FBD DIMM Bank2 FBD DIMM Bank3 FBD DIMM Bank4 FBD CH...

Page 16: ...pe Address SuperMicro Computer B V Het Sterrenbeeld 28 5215 ML s Hertogenbosch The Netherlands Tel 31 0 73 6400390 Fax 31 0 73 6416525 Email sales supermicro nl General Information support supermicro...

Page 17: ...o Section 2 5 2 2 Unpacking the System You should inspect the box the system was shipped in and note if it was damaged in any way If the server itself shows damage you should le a damage claim with th...

Page 18: ...should be attached to the rack In multiple rack installations the racks should be coupled together Always make sure the rack is stable before extending a component from the rack You should extend only...

Page 19: ...mised Mechanical Loading Equipment should be mounted into a rack so that a hazardous condition does not arise due to uneven mechanical loading Circuit Overloading Consideration should be given to the...

Page 20: ...me with the rack unit you are using Identifying the Sections of the Rack Rails The optional rackmount kit CSE PT26 or CSE PT26B black includes two rack rail assemblies Each of these assemblies consist...

Page 21: ...hassis rail sections you just removed along the side of the chassis making sure the screw holes line up Note that these two rails are left right speci c Screw the rail securely to the side of the chas...

Page 22: ...ed rack rail sliding rail guide assemblies at the desired location in the rack keeping the sliding rail guide facing the inside of the rack Screw the assembly securely to the rack using the brackets p...

Page 23: ...hese rst keeping in mind that they are left right speci c marked with L and R Then line up the rear of the chassis rails with the front of the rack rails Slide the chassis rails into the rack rails ke...

Page 24: ...ver 2 Check the CPUs processors You may have one or two processors already installed into the serverboard Each processor should have its own heatsink attached See Chapter 5 for instructions on process...

Page 25: ...ll need to remove the top left chassis cover The SATA disk drives can be installed and removed from the front of the chassis without removing any chassis covers 2 Installing components into the 5 25 d...

Page 26: ...was carefully designed to promote suf cient air ow through the chassis Also note that all power and data cables have been routed in such a way that they do not block the air ow generated by the fans K...

Page 27: ...the activity and health of speci c components 3 2 Control Panel Buttons There are two push buttons located on the front of the chassis These are in order from left to right a power on off button and a...

Page 28: ...50 this LED indi cates SATA CD ROM drive activity when ashing NIC1 Indicates network activity on LAN1 when ashing NIC2 Indicates network activity on LAN2 when ashing Overheat Fan Fail When this LED as...

Page 29: ...it is recommended that you replace the power supply soon after the primary fan fails 3 4 SATA Drive Carrier LEDs Each Serial ATA drive carrier has two LEDs Green When illuminated the green LED on the...

Page 30: ...3 4 SUPERSERVER 7045B T User s Manual Notes...

Page 31: ...d memory modules and the CD ROM and oppy drives When disconnecting power you should rst power down the system with the operating system and then unplug the power cords of all the power supply units in...

Page 32: ...toned shirt sleeves which can come into contact with electrical circuits or be pulled into a cooling fan Remove any jewelry or metal objects from your body which are excellent metal conductors that ca...

Page 33: ...se Touch a grounded metal object before removing the board from the antistatic bag Do not let components or PCBs come into contact with your clothing which may retain a charge even if you are wearing...

Page 34: ...that the chassis cover is in place when the 7045B T is operating to assure proper cooling Out of warranty damage to the 7045B T system can occur if this practice is not strictly followed Figure 4 1 In...

Page 35: ...t the size and weight of the serverboard can cause it to bend if handled improperly which may result in damage To prevent the serverboard from bending keep one hand under the center of the board to su...

Page 36: ...rocessor or when receiving a serverboard with one pre installed make sure that the CPU plastic cap is in place and none of the CPU pins are bent otherwise contact the retailer immediately 3 Check the...

Page 37: ...or vertically and do not rub the CPU against any surface or any of the contacts which may damage the CPU and or contacts 7 With the CPU in the socket inspect the four corners of the CPU to make sure t...

Page 38: ...rews i e the 1 and the 2 screws until just snug Do not fully tighten the screws or you may damage the CPU 4 Add the two remaining screws then nish the installation by fully tightening all four screws...

Page 39: ...locations If you are con guring the system keep the air ow in mind when routing the cables The following data cables with their serverboard connector locations noted should be connected See the serve...

Page 40: ...sides of each header All JF1 wires have been bundled into single keyed ribbon cable to simplify their connection The red wire in the ribbon cable plugs into pin 1 of JF1 Connect the other end of the c...

Page 41: ...possible damage Also note that the memory is interleaved to improve performance see step 1 DIMM Installation See Figure 5 5 1 Insert the desired number of DIMMs into the memory slots starting with DIM...

Page 42: ...ions some operating systems may not show more than 4 GB of memory Note Notches should align with their receptive points on the slot Notch Notch Release Tab Release Tab Optimized DIMM Population Config...

Page 43: ...ur thumbs evenly on both sides of the card Finish by securing the card to the chassis with the same screw you removed from the PCI slot shield Follow this procedure when adding a card to other slots N...

Page 44: ...ridge Slot 7 LP IPMI Slot 6 x8 PCI Express Slot 4 x4 PCI Express Slot 3 133 MHz PCI X Slot 2 133 MHz PCI X Slot 1 100 MHz PCI X ZCR COM2 PXH BIOS SATA0 SATA1 SATA2 SATA4 SATA3 SATA5 South Bridge J17 P...

Page 45: ...nagement I2C Power Header J18 System Management Bus Header J22 Floppy Disk Drive Connector JAR Alarm Reset JD1 Power LED pins1 3 Speaker Header pins 4 7 JF1 Front Control Panel Connector JK1 Keylock H...

Page 46: ...the Auxiliary 4 pin connector at JPW2 must also be con nected to your power supply See the table on the right for pin de nitions NMI Button Pin De nitions JF1 Pin De nition 19 Control 20 Ground Proce...

Page 47: ...le on the right for pin de nitions NIC2 LED The NIC2 Network Interface Control ler LED connection is located on pins 9 and 10 of JF1 Attach the NIC2 LED cable to display network activity Refer to the...

Page 48: ...4 seconds Refer to the table on the right for pin de nitions Universal Serial Bus USB0 1 Two Universal Serial Bus ports are located beside the PS 2 keyboard mouse ports USB0 is the bottom connector a...

Page 49: ...for location See the table on the right for pin de nitions Note Pin 10 is included on the header but not on the port NC indicates no connection Serial Port Pin De nitions COM1 COM2 Pin De nition Pin D...

Page 50: ...3 Ground 4 VCC 5 Clock 6 NC Speaker Connector Pin De nitions JD1 Pin Function De nition 4 Speaker data red wire 5 Key No connection 6 Key 7 Speaker data Extra Universal Serial Bus Headers Three additi...

Page 51: ...OR card and cable to use this feature SMB The System Management Bus header for the PCI bus designated J17 is located near the battery Connect the appropriate cable here to utilize SMB on your system S...

Page 52: ...SGPIO provides a bus between the SATA controller and the SATA drive backplane to provide SATA enclosure management functions Connect the appropriate cables from the back plane to the SGPIO1 and SGPIO...

Page 53: ...CMOS and will also clear any passwords Instead of pins this jumper consists of contact pads to prevent accidentally clearing the contents of CMOS To clear CMOS 1 First power down the system and unplu...

Page 54: ...disable the Watch Dog Timer Watch Dog Jumper Settings JWD Jumper Setting De nition Pins 1 2 Reset Pins 2 3 NMI Open Disabled 3rd Power Supply Fail Detect Enable Disable The system can notify you in t...

Page 55: ...de the VGA port have two LEDs On each Gigabit LAN port the yellow right LED indicates activity while the left LED may be green orange or off to indicate the speed of the connection See the table on th...

Page 56: ...s The connector with twisted wires always connects to drive A and the connector that does not have twisted wires always connects to drive B Parallel Port Connector The parallel printer port is located...

Page 57: ...n De nition 1 Ground 2 FDHDIN 3 Ground 4 Reserved 5 Key 6 FDEDIN 7 Ground 8 Index 9 Ground 10 Motor Enable 11 Ground 12 Drive Select B 13 Ground 14 Drive Select B 15 Ground 16 Motor Enable 17 Ground 1...

Page 58: ...or pin de nitions IDE Drive Connectors Pin De nitions J5 J6 Pin De nition Pin De nition 1 Reset IDE 2 Ground 3 Host Data 7 4 Host Data 8 5 Host Data 6 6 Host Data 9 7 Host Data 5 8 Host Data 10 9 Host...

Page 59: ...rtant to handle them very carefully The following measures are generally suf cient to protect your equipment from static discharge Precautions Use a grounded wrist strap designed to prevent static dis...

Page 60: ...6 2 SUPERSERVER 7045B T User s Manual Six SATA Drive Bays behind locking bezel Figure 6 1 Chassis Front View System Reset Main Power System LEDs Floppy Drive 5 25 Drive Bays 2 USB Ports...

Page 61: ...sis The LEDs on the control panel inform you of system status see Figure 6 2 for details See Chapter 5 for details on JF1 Figure 6 2 Front Control Panel LEDs Power NIC1 HDD Power Fail Overheat Fan Fai...

Page 62: ...oving the cover 2 Removing a hot plug fan housing Depress the locking tab on a chassis cooling fan and pull the unit straight out by the handle see Figure 6 3 The fan wiring for these fans has been de...

Page 63: ...Chapter 6 Advanced Chassis Setup 6 5 Figure 6 4 Removing the Air Shroud Figure 6 3 Removing a Chassis Fan...

Page 64: ...f you need to add a new drive insert the drive into the carrier with the printed circuit board side facing down so that the mounting holes align with those in the carrier Secure the drive to the carri...

Page 65: ...TA Drive in a Carrier Important Use extreme caution when working around the SATA backplane Do not touch the backplane with any metal objects and make sure no ribbon cables touch the backplane or obstr...

Page 66: ...hen slide the CD ROM into the bay and secure it to the chassis with the drive carrier screws you rst removed Attach the power and data cables to the drive Replace the top left chassis cover before res...

Page 67: ...one power supply unit in the 7045B T the server must be powered down before removing and or replacing the power supply for whatever reason Replacing the Power Supply 1 Removing the power supply First...

Page 68: ...6 10 SUPERSERVER 7045B T User s Manual Notes...

Page 69: ...ff a backup battery provides power to the BIOS ash chip enabling it to retain system parameters Each time the computer is powered on the computer is con gured with the values stored in the BIOS ROM by...

Page 70: ...ressing Delete immediately after turning the system on or 2 When the message shown below appears brie y at the bottom of the screen during the POST Power On Self Test press the Delete key to activate...

Page 71: ...ate Using the arrow keys highlight the month day and year elds and enter the correct data Press the Enter key to save the data BIOS Date This eld displays the date when this version of BIOS was built...

Page 72: ...ub menu are Type Selects the type of IDE hard drive The options are Auto which allows the BIOS to automatically determine the hard drive s capacity number of heads etc a number from 1 39 to select a p...

Page 73: ...ulti Sector Transfer This item allows the user to specify the number of sectors per block to be used in multi sector transfer The options are Disabled 4 Sectors 8 Sectors and 16 Sectors LBA Mode Contr...

Page 74: ...s supported by the Windows 2000 OS or a later version When the SATA Controller Mode is set to Enhanced the following items will display Serial ATA SATA RAID Enable Select Enable to enable Serial ATA R...

Page 75: ...em 7 4 Advanced Setup Choose Advanced from the Phoenix BIOS Setup Utility main menu with the arrow keys You should see the following display The items with a triangle beside them have sub menus that c...

Page 76: ...Instant Off the system will power off immediately as soon as the user hits the power button If set to 4 sec the system will power off when the user presses the power button for 4 seconds or longer Th...

Page 77: ...gh to allow data to be cached into the buffer and written into the system memory at the same time Select Write Protect to prevent data from being written into the base memory area of Block 0 512K Sele...

Page 78: ...mory The options are Enabled and Disabled PCI Con guration Access the submenu to make changes to the following settings for PCI devices Onboard GLAN1 Onboard GLAN2 Gigabit LAN OPROM Con gure Enabling...

Page 79: ...of a new software you might want to change this setting and try again A different OS requires a different Bus Master clock rate Large Disk Access Mode This setting determines how large hard drives ar...

Page 80: ...s the user to decide which bus to send debug information to The options are Disabled PCI and LPC Clock Spectrum Feature If Enabled the BIOS will monitor the level of Electromagnetic Interference cause...

Page 81: ...ture reaches the overheat threshold C1 Enhanced Mode Available when supported by the CPU Set to Enabled to enable Enhanced Halt State to lower CPU voltage frequency to prevent overheat The options are...

Page 82: ...Auto BIOS or OS controlled Base I O Address This setting allows you to select the base I O address for serial port A The options are 3F8 2F8 3E8 and 2E8 Interrupt This setting allows you to select th...

Page 83: ...rt The options are IRQ5 and IRQ7 Mode This feature allows you to specify the parallel port mode The options are Output only Bi Directional EPP and ECP DMA Channel This item allows you to specify the D...

Page 84: ...log capacity It is not a setting View DMI Event Log Highlight this item and press Enter to view the contents of the event log Event Logging This setting allows you to Enable or Disable event logging...

Page 85: ...onsole Type This item allows you to choose from the available options to select the console type for console redirection The options are VT100 VT100 8bit PC ANSI 7bit PC ANSI VT100 and VT UTF8 Flow Co...

Page 86: ...m controls the speeds of the onboard fans The CPU temperature and the fan speed are correlative When the CPU on die temperature increases the fan speed will also increase and vise versa If the option...

Page 87: ...ord has been entered for the system Clear means such a password has not been used and Set means a supervisor password has been entered for the system User Password Is This displays whether a user pass...

Page 88: ...ng allows you to require a password to be entered when the system boots up The options are Enabled password required and Disabled password not required 7 6 Boot Choose Boot from the Phoenix BIOS Setup...

Page 89: ...above to specify the priority of boot order of a device or to move items from the category of Excluded from Boot Order to the category of Boot Priority Order and vise versa See details on how to chan...

Page 90: ...lity without saving any changes you may have made Load Setup Defaults Highlight this item and hit Enter to load the default settings for all items in the BIOS Setup These are the safest settings to us...

Page 91: ...Keyboard controller failed test May require replacing keyboard controller Keyboard locked Unlock key switch Unlock the system to proceed Monitor type does not match CMOS Run SETUP Monitor type not co...

Page 92: ...evious POST did not complete successfully POST loads default values and offers to run Setup If the failure was caused by incorrect values and they are not corrected the next boot will likely fail On s...

Page 93: ...ServerBIOS2 test error Cannot generate software NMI Non Maskable Interrupt Fail Safe Timer NMI Failed ServerBIOS2 test error Fail Safe Timer takes too long device Address Con ict Address con ict for s...

Page 94: ...ly tested One or more I2O Block Storage Devices were excluded from the Setup Boot Menu There was not enough room in the IPL table to display all installed I2O block storage devices Operating system no...

Page 95: ...p Optional message displayed during POST Can be turned off in Setup PS 2 Mouse PS 2 mouse identi ed Run the I2O Con guration Utility One or more unclaimed block storage devices have the Con guration R...

Page 96: ...A 6 SUPERSERVER 7045B T User s Manual Notes...

Page 97: ...te the error in the top left corner of the screen The following is a list of codes that may be written to port 80h Appendix B BIOS POST Codes POST Code Description 02h Verify Real Mode 03h Disable Non...

Page 98: ...h Shadow system BIOS ROM 3Ah Auto size cache 3Ch Advanced con guration of chipset registers 3Dh Load alternate registers with CMOS values 41h Initialize extended memory for RomPilot 42h Initialize int...

Page 99: ...t 80h Disable onboard Super I O ports and IRQs 81h Late POST device initialization 82h Detect and install external RS232 ports 83h Con gure non MCD IDE controllers 84h Detect and install external para...

Page 100: ...e QuietBoot optional B6h Check password optional B7h Initialize ACPI BIOS B9h Prepare Boot BAh Initialize SMBIOS BBh Initialize PnP Option ROMs BCh Clear parity checkers BDh Display MultiBoot menu BEh...

Page 101: ...ory size EEh Shadow Boot Block EFh System memory test F0h Initialize interrupt vectors F1h Initialize Run Time Clock F2h Initialize video F3h Initialize System Management Manager F4h Output one beep F...

Page 102: ...B 6 SUPERSERVER 7045B T User s Manual Notes...

Page 103: ...ESB2 SATA RAID Utility can only support Windows XP 2000 2003 Operating Systems Serial ATA SATA Serial ATA SATA is a physical storage interface that uses a single cable with a minimum of four wires to...

Page 104: ...he change the HDD partition size without any data Con guring BIOS settings for SATA RAID Functions Native Mode 1 Press the Del key during system bootup to enter the BIOS Setup Utility Note If it is th...

Page 105: ...rs after Power On Self Test b When you see the above screen press the Ctrl and the I keys simultane ously to have the main menu of the SATA RAID Utility appear Note All graphics and screen shots shown...

Page 106: ...and press Space to select it A triangle appears to con rm the selection of the drive 6 Use the Up Arrow Down Arrow keys to select the stripe size ranged from 4 KB to 128 KB for the RAID 0 array and hi...

Page 107: ...t the previous menu 3 When RAID Level item is highlighted press the Up Arrow Down Arrow keys to select RAID 1 Mirror and hit Enter 4 When the Capacity item is highlighted enter your RAID volume capaci...

Page 108: ...own Arrow keys to select the stripe size from 4 KB to 128 KB for your RAID 10 and hit Enter The default setting is 6 4KB Note For a server please use a lower stripe size and for a multimedia system us...

Page 109: ...drive and press Space to select it A triangle appears to con rm the selection of the drive 6 Use the Up Arrow Down Arrow keys to select the stripe size ranged from 4 KB to 128 KB for the RAID 5 array...

Page 110: ...drives when deleting a RAID set 1 From the main menu select item2 Delete RAID Volume and press Enter 2 Use the Up Arrow Down Arrow keys to select the RAID set you want to delete and press Del A Warnin...

Page 111: ...ID set drive A Warning message displays 4 Press Y to reset the drive or type N to go back to the main menu Exiting the Intel Matrix Storage Manager Utility 1 From the main menu select item4 Exit and p...

Page 112: ...m the list indicated in the XP 2000 2003 Setup Screen and press the Enter key 6 Press the Enter key to continue the installation process If you need to specify any additional devices to be installed d...

Page 113: ...lation Display Screen Note Click the icons showing a hand writing on paper to view the readme les for each item Click the computer icons to the right of these items to install each item from top to th...

Page 114: ...nt The Supero Doctor III program included on the CDROM that came with your motherboard allows you to monitor the environment and operations of your system Supero Doctor III displays crucial system inf...

Page 115: ...e downloaded from our Web Site at ftp ftp supermicro com utility Supero_Doctor_III You can also download SDIII User s Guide at http www supermicro com PRODUCT Manuals SDIII UserGuide pdf For Linux we...

Page 116: ...C 14 SUPERSERVER 7045B T User s Manual Notes...

Page 117: ...lash ROM Memory Capacity Eight 240 pin DIMM sockets supporting up to 32 GB of DDR2 533 FBD or DDR2 667 FBD SDRAM Note Dual channel memory requires memory to be installed two modules at a time See the...

Page 118: ...ling fans Two 2 8 cm rear exhaust fans One 1 air shroud for tower 4U chassis System Input Requirements AC Input Voltage 100 240V AC auto range Rated Input Current 100 11A 240V 5A Rated Input Frequency...

Page 119: ...A EN 55022 Class A EN 61000 3 2 3 3 CISPR 22 Class A Electromagnetic Immunity EN 55024 CISPR 24 EN 61000 4 2 EN 61000 4 3 EN 61000 4 4 EN 61000 4 5 EN 61000 4 6 EN 61000 4 8 EN 61000 4 11 Safety EN 60...

Page 120: ...D 4 SUPERSERVER 7045B T User s Manual Notes...

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