Copyright
©
2016
congatec
AG
ICSLm13.indd
92/95
Feature
Options
Description
Battery Support
Auto (Batt. Manager)
Battery-Only On I2C Bus
Battery-Only On SMBus
‘Battery-Only On I2C Bus’ - Battery-only systems using I2C bus.
‘Battery-Only On SMBus’ - Battery-only systems using SMBus.
‘Auto’ - Real battery system manager systems using I2C or SMBus.
System Off Mode
G3/Mech Off
S5/Soft Off
Set system state after shutdown if a battery system is present.
UEFI Fast Boot
Disabled
Enabled
Enable to boot with a minimum set of devices.
Note:
This feature has no effect for BBS / legacy boot options.
SATA Support
Last Boot HDD Only
All SATA Devices
Select SATA support.
USB Support
Disabled
Full Init
Partial Init
‘Disabled’ - The USB devices will not be available before operating system boot.
‘Full Init’ - All USB devices will be available during POST and after operating system boot.
‘Partial Init’ - Specific USB ports/devices will not be available before operating system boot.
Network Stack Driver Support
Disabled
Enabled
Disable to skip the UEFI network stack driver installation.
Redirection Support
Disabled
Enabled
Disable to deactivate the Redirection function.
UEFI Screenshot Capability
Disabled
Enabled
Enable this feature to take a screenshots from the current screen by pressing LCtrl+LAlt+F12.
The image will be saved as PNG on the first writable FAT32 partition found.
Note
The term ‘AC power loss’ stands for the state when the module looses the standby voltage on the 5V_SB pins. On congatec modules, the
standby voltage is continuously monitored after the system is turned off. If the standby voltage is not detected within 30 seconds, this is
considered an AC power loss condition. If the standby voltage remains stable for 30 seconds, it is assumed that the system was switched off
properly.
Inexpensive ATX power supplies often have problems with short AC power sags. When using these ATX power supplies it is possible that
the system turns off but does not switch back on, even when the PS_ON# signal is asserted correctly by the module. In this case, the internal
circuitry of the ATX power supply has become confused. Usually, another AC power off/on cycle is necessary to recover from this situation.