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Ursa Server Motherboard User's Manual UM_Ursa_v1.8_021924 Table of Contents Preface������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������ i Safety Instructions������������������������������������������������������������������������������ ii About This Manual����������������������������������������������������������������������������� iii 1.1 Components������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 1 Chapter 1. Product Features�������������������������������������������������������������� 1 1.2 Specifications����������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 2 1.3 Feature��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 3 2.1 Central Processing Unit Setup ���������������������������������������������������������� 4 2.1.1 Processor Installation������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������ 4 Chapter 2. Hardware Setup���������������������������������������������������������������� 4 2.1.2 Heatsink���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 5 2.2 System Memory Setup���������������������������������������������������������������������� 6 2.2.1 DIMM Installation������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 6 2.2.2 DIMM Location����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 7 2.2.3 DIMM Slot Installation Order������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 8 2.3 PCIe Slot ������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������ 9 2.3.1 CPU and PCIe slot Connection���������������������������������������������������������������������������� 9 Chapter 3. Motherboard Settings����������������������������������������������������� 10 3.1 Motherboard Block Diagram����������������������������������������������������������� 10 3.2 Motherboard Layout����������������������������������������������������������������������� 11 3.3 Content List������������������������������������������������������������������������������������ 12 3.4 Connetor and Jumper��������������������������������������������������������������������� 13 3.4.1 Connector����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 13 3.4.2 Jumper���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 24 Chapter 4. BIOS Configuration Settings������������������������������������������� 25 4.1 Navigation Keys������������������������������������������������������������������������������ 25 4.2 BIOS Menu�������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 26 4.3 Main����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 27 4.3.1 Main�������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 27 4.4 Advanced��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 28 4.4.1 iSCSI Configuration��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������28 4.4.2 Trusted Computing��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������28 Content 4.4.3 Serial Port Console Redirection������������������������������������������������������������������������29 4.4.4 PCI Subsystem Settings������������������������������������������������������������������������������������29 4.4.5 Network Stack Configuration����������������������������������������������������������������������������29 4.4.6 Memory RAS Configuration Setup��������������������������������������������������������������������29 4.4.7 CSM Configuration���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������30 4.4.8 IOAT Configuration���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������30 4.4.9 Intel VT for Directed I/O�������������������������������������������������������������������������������������30 4.4.10 USB Configuration��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������30 4.5 Platform����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 31 4.5.1 PCH Configuration���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������31 4.5.2 MIscellaneous Configuration����������������������������������������������������������������������������31 4.5.3 Server ME Configuration������������������������������������������������������������������������������������31 4.6 Socket Configuration���������������������������������������������������������������������� 32 4.6.1 Processor Configuration������������������������������������������������������������������������������������32 4.6.2 Common RefCode Configuration����������������������������������������������������������������������32 4.6.3 UPI Configuration�����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������33 4.6.4 Common RefCode Configuration����������������������������������������������������������������������33 4.6.5 Memory Configuration���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������33 4.6.6 Memory Map������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������ 33 4.6.7 Memory RAS Configuration�������������������������������������������������������������������������������33 4.7 BMC����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 34 4.7.1 FB-2 Timer���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 34 4.7.2 FB-2 Timer Policy�����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������34 4.7.3 BMC Network Configuration������������������������������������������������������������������������������34 4.8 Security������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������ 35 4.8.1 Security��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 35 4.8.2 Secure Boot�������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 36 4.9 Boot������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������ 37 4.9.1 Boot��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 37 4.10 Save and Exit�������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 38 4.10.1 Save and Exit���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 38 4.11 Update Requirement��������������������������������������������������������������������� 39 4.11.1 Utility����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 39 4.11.2 Update under EFI Shell�������������������������������������������������������������������������������������39 4.11.3 Update under Linux �����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������39 Content 4.11.4 Update under Windows �����������������������������������������������������������������������������������39 Chapter 5. BMC Configuration Settings������������������������������������������� 40 5.1 Login���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 40 5.2 Web GUI ���������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 41 5.2.1 User Information and Quick Button ������������������������������������������������������������������41 5.2.2 BMC Watchdog�������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 42 5.2.3 System LED Indicator�����������������������������������������������������������������������������������������42 5.2.4 LAN��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 43 5.2.5 System Event Log (SEL)�������������������������������������������������������������������������������������43 5.2.6 Serial Interface��������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 44 5.2.7 RMCP(IPMI v1.5)/RMCP + (IPMI v2.0) and Payload Support�������������������������45 5.2.8 Remote KVM������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 46 5.2.9 BMC Booting������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������������� 48 Chapter 6. Technical Support����������������������������������������������������������� 49 Content Document Release History Release Date September 2018 Version 1 Update Content User's Manual release to public. October 2018 1.2 1. Update MB Layout November 2018 1.4 1. BIOS update 2. BMC update 3. Specifications December 2018 1.5 1. Update new cover June 2019 1.6 PCIe slot update July 2019 1.7 Specifications update February 2024 1.8 Update contents of chapter 4 (remove section of IIO0, IIO1) Content Copyright © 2018 AIC, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This document contains proprietary information about AIC products and is not to be disclosed or used except in accordance with applicable agreements. Preface Copyright No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photo-static, recording or otherwise, without the prior written consent of the manufacturer. Trademarks All products and trade names used in this document are trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective holders. Changes The material in this document is for information purposes only and is subject to change without notice. Warning 1. A shielded-type power cord is required in order to meet FCC emission limits and also to prevent interference to the nearby radio and television reception. It is essential that only the supplied power cord be used. 2. Use only shielded cables to connect I/O devices to this equipment. 3. You are cautioned that changes or modifications not expressly approved by the party responsible for compliance could void your authority to operate the equipment. Disclaimer AIC shall not be liable for technical or editorial errors or omissions contained herein. The information provided is provided "as is" without warranty of any kind. To the extent permitted by law, neither AIC or its affiliates, subcontractors or suppliers will be liable for incidental, special or consequential damages including downtime cost; lost profits; damages relating to the procurement of substitute products or services; or damages for loss of data, or software restoration. The information in this document is subject to change without notice. Instruction Symbols Special attention should be given to the instruction symbols below. NOTE CAUTION This symbol indicates that there is an explanatory or supplementary instruction. This symbol denotes possible hardware impairment. Upmost precaution must be taken to prevent serious hardware damage. This symbol serves as a warning alert for potential body WARNING injury. The user may suffer possible injury from disregard or lack of attention. i Safety Instructions When installing, operating, or performing maintenance on this equipment, the following safety precautions should always be taken into account in order to reduce the risk of fire, electric shock, and personal injury. Carefully read the safety instructions below before using this product. • Observe all of the warning and instruction signs distinctively marked on the product. • Before performing system installations, please consult the User’s Manual provided with this product. • Do not place this product on an uneven or weak surface (unstable cart, stand, table, ect.) that might induce the product to fall and sustain serious damage. • Install only the equipment or device identified in the User’s Manual. Deploying other equipment or device with this motherboard could invoke improper connection of circuitry that leads to fire or personal injury. • This product should only be operated with the type of power source indicated on the marked label. If you are questionable about which type of power supply is used in your area, consult your dealer or local Power Company. • Disconnect the power supply module before removing power from the system. • Unplug this product from the wall outlet before cleaning. Use a damp cloth for cleaning. Do not use liquid cleaners or aerosol cleaners. • Do not use this product near a water source, including faucet and lavatory. • Never spill liquids of any kind on this product. • Never shove objects of any kind into this product’s open slots, as they may touch dangerous voltage points or short out parts and could result in fire or electric shock. • Do not block or cover slots and openings in this unit, as they were made for ventilation and prevent this unit from overheating. Do not place this product in a built-in installation unless proper ventilation is available. • Do not disassemble this product. This product should only be taken apart by trained personnel. Opening or removing covers and circuit boards may expose you to electric shock or other risks. Incorrect reassembly can also cause electric shock when the unit is subsequently used. • Risk of explosion is possible if battery is replaced with an incompatible type. Dispose of used batteries accordingly. • This product is equipped with a three-wire grounding type plug, a plug with a third (grounding) pin. As a safety feature, this plug is intended to fit only into a grounding type power outlet. If you are unable to insert the plug into the outlet, contact your electrician to replace the outlet. Do not remove the grounding type plug or use a 3-Prong To 2-Prong Adapter to circumvent the safety feature; doing so may result in electric shock and/or damage to this product. ii About This Manual Thank you for selecting and purchasing the Ursa Serverboard. This user's manual is provided for professional technicians to perform easy hardware setup, basic system configurations, and quick software startup. This document pellucidly presents a brief overview of the product design, device installation, and firmware settings for the Ursa motherboard. For the latest version of this user's manual, please refer to the AIC website: https://www.aicipc.com/en/productdetail/51076. Chapter 1 Product Features This chapter delivers the overall layout of the product, including the fundamental components on the motherboard, design specifications, and noteworthy features. Ursa is an ideal server grade motherboard that is specifically designed to accommodate diverse enterprises for managing heavy workloads, databases, nearline applications, and cloud deployments. This product supports two Intel® Xeon™ Scalable processors. Chapter 2 Hardware Setup This chapter displays an easy installation guide for assembling the CPU(Central Processing Unit) and memory module. Utmost caution for proceeding to set up the hardware is highly advised. The components on the motherboard are highly fragile and vulnerable to exterior influence. Do not attempt to endanger the device by placing the device in a potentially unstable or hazardous surroundings, including positioning the device on an uneven grounds or humid environments. Chapter 3 Motherboard Settings This chapter elaborates the overall layout of the server motherboard, including multifarious connectors and jumpers. These descriptions assist users to configure different settings and functions of the motherboard, as well as to confirm the location of each connector and jumper. Chapter 4 BIOS Configuration Settings This chapter introduces the key features of BIOS, including the descriptions and option keys for diverse functions. These details provide users to effortlessly navigate and configure the input/output devices. Chapter 5 BMC Configuration Settings This chapter illustrates the diverse functions of IPMI BMC, including the details on logging into the web page and assorted definitions. These descriptions are helpful in configuring various functions through Web GUI without entering the BIOS setup. For more information of BMC configurations, please refer to IPMI BMC (Aspeed AST2500) User's Manual for a more detailed description. Chapter 6 Technical Support For more information or suggestion, please contact the nearest AIC corporation representative in your district or visit the AIC website: http://www.aicipc.com/en. It is our greatest honor to provide the best service for our customers. iii Chapter 1. Product Features Ursa User Manual Chapter 1. Product Features This section describes the hardware specifications and features of the Ursa motherboard. The fundamental components of the Ursa severboard are provided below. 1.1 Components Ursa Serverboard 4 x 12V AUX Power Output LGA3647 Socket P0 for Intel® Xeon® Processor Skylake-SP (CPU1) 12 x DDR4 DIMM Slots 6 Channels (for CPU1) 12V Single Power-in Interface Support CRPS OCP Mezzanine v2.0 (A+B) 4 x PCIe Supports PCIe Gen3 x16 Gen3 x16 slots SAS Mezzanine 3 x Slimline 2 x SATA 6G Supports PCIe Gen3 x8 (each supports Connectors 4 x SATA 6G) LGA3647 Socket P0 for Intel® Xeon® Processor Skylake-SP (CPU0) 2 x USB 3.0 2 x 10G SFP+ 12 x DDR4 DIMM Slots 6 Channels (for CPU0) VGA Port 1 x RJ45 dedicated for BMC management Dimensions mm : 470 x 431 inches : 18.5 x 16.97 Product specifications and features are subject to change without prior notice. 1 Ursa User Manual Chapter 1. Product Features 1.2 Specifications System Processor Support Intel® Xeon® Scalable Processors (Skylake and next gen. CPU) CPU TDP 205W UPI Speeds 10.4 GT/s, 9.6 GT/s Socket Type Socket P0 (LGA-3647 Socket) System Memory • DDR4 2666/2400 (1DPC/2DPC) MHz (feature supports up to DDR4 2933MHz by next gen. process upgrade) • Total 24 memory slots ; 6 channel per CPU (2DPC) • Up to 3TB 3DS ECC RDIMM/LRDIMM • Intel® Optane™ DC Persistent Memory (Apache Pass) support Expansion Slots • 4 x PCIe Gen3 x16; 2 from CPU0 + 2 from CPU1 • 2 x OCP Mezzanine support: 1 PCIe Gen3 x16 (V2.0) 1 PCIe Gen3 x8 (V1.2) BIOS Type System BIOS BIOS Features IPMI Aspeed AST2500 Advanced PCIe Graphics & Remote Management Processor • Baseboard Management Controller • Intelligent Platform Interface 2.0 (IPMI 2.0) • iKVM, Media Redirection, IPMI over LAN, Serial over LAN • SMASH Support • HTML5 Network Controller • Intel® PCH(C622) Integrated 10GbE LAN Controller support 2 x 10GbE SFP+ • Networking options provided via OCP Mezzanine extension • Broadcom BCM54612 (GbE) for BMC dedicated management port Graphics Aspeed AST2500 Advanced PCIe Graphics & Remote Management Processor • PCIe VGA/2D Controller • 1920x1200@60Hz 32bpp SATA 14 x SATA 6.0 Gb/s ports, including: • 12 x SATA 6.0 Gb/s (by 3 x mini-SAS HD) + 2 x SATA 6.0 Gb/s (by 2 x SATA 7 pins) LAN • 2 x 10G SFP+ • 1 x GbE RJ45 dedicated to BMC management USB • 2 x USB 3.0 Type A connectors • 1 x USB internal pin-header to support 2 x USB 3.0/2.0 • 1 x USB internal vertical Type A connector to support USB 3.0/2.0 VGA 1 x external DB-9 COM port Serial Port 1 x internal serial header Others 1 x TPM connector On-board Devices AMI UEFI BIOS • ACPI • PXE • AC loss recovery • IPMI KCS interface • SMBIOS • Serial console redirection Input/Output • BIOS Recovery Mode On-board Devices SATA Intel® Lewisburg PCH on-chip solution • 14 x SATA 6.0 Gb/s (12 ports by 3 x Slimline connectors; 2 ports by SATA 7-pin connectors) 2 Ursa User Manual Chapter 1. Product Features 1.3 Feature The Ursa server board offers the latest Xeon® Scalable Processors technology solutions with compelling performance and provides premium power efficiency, which is optimized for efficient performance platforms (storage, security and communications infrastructure). By implementing Intel® Xeon® Scalable Processors, fully integrated microarchitecture support four PCIE Gen3 x16 slots, plus two OCP Mezzanine extension connectors (one is with x16 lanes, the other one is x8). Ursa server board provide dual 10GbE SFP+ networking interface, providing six channels per CPU with total twenty-four DIMM slots deployment which can support up to DDR4 2400/2666MHz (feature support up to DDR4 2933 MHz by next gen. process upgrade). Featured with ground breaking technologies including Intel® Next Generation Microarchitecture and Instruction Set (AVX-512, VMD, QAT - optional by PCH SKU), Speed Shift Technology, UPI link speeds up to 10.4GT/s, the Ursa server board enables next generation server solutions with an incredible leap in performance. • Supports Intel® Xeon® Scalable Processors (Platinum, Gold, Silver, Bronze) for highest server performance and improved power efficiency • Supports 24 DDR4 DIMM slots for maximum memory performance • Supports four PCI Express Gen3 x16 slots (2 from CPU0+ 2 from CPU1) • Supports one OCP Mezzanine V2.0 up to PCI Express Gen3 x16 extension; one OCP Mezzanine V1.2 up to PCI Express Gen3 x8 extension • Onboard dual ports 10GbE SFP+ supported by Intel® Lewisburg PCH • Supports up to 14 SATA 6Gb/s ports • Supports two CRPS PSU direct connection for power input • Onboard Baseboard Management Controller for system management and IPMI control 3 Chapter 2. Hardware Setup Chapter 2. Hardware Setup Ursa User Manual This section describes a simple instruction guide for installing the hardware components on the serverboard system. Turn off and unplug all system and peripheral devices before proceeding. 2.1 Central Processing Unit Setup The serverboard supports dual Xeon scalable processors and Socket P0 (LGA-3647). 2.1.1 Processor Installation To ensure a safe and easy setup, you need to prepare before installation: a T20 Torx screwdriver ESD wrist strap/mat and conductive foam pad CAUTION The pins of the processor socket are vulnerable and easily susceptible to damage if fingers or any foreign objects are pressed against them. Please keep the socket protective cover on when the processor is not installed. CAUTION When unpacking a processor, hold the processor only by its edges to avoid touching the contacts. Procedure: Installation Step 1 Push the two locking tabs that secure the processor. Step 2 Carefully remove the processor from the socket. Removal Step 1 Align the gold corner on the processor with the socket. Step 2 Insert the processor into the socket. Make sure the processor is firmly locked into the socket. CAUTION The processor can only be placed in one direction. Handle the processor with care during installation to avoid damage to the processor. 4 Ursa User Manual Chapter 2. Hardware Setup 2.1.2 Heatsink To ensure a safe and easy setup, you need to prepare before installation: 2 heatsinks that support the motherboard. Procedure: Installation Step 1 Position the heatsink on top of the CPU. Step 2 Secure the screws on the heatsink. Removal Step 1 Dislodge the screws x 4 on the heatsink. Step 2 Remove the heatsink by lifting it upward. CAUTION Failure to tighten the heatsink screws in the specified order may cause damage to the processor socket assembly. Heat sink screws should be tighted to 12 in-lbs torque according to the indicated order on the top of the heatsink label. 5 Chapter 2. Hardware Setup Ursa User Manual 2.2 System Memory Setup This server board supports 12 DIMM memory slots with 6 channel per CPU. 2.2.1 DIMM Installation Step 1 Unlock the dimm socket by pressing the retaining clips outward. Step 2 Insert the memory module into the slot. Make sure that the Dimm notch is accurately positioned. DIMM notch Step 3 Close the retaining clips to complete installation. 6 Ursa User Manual Chapter 2. Hardware Setup 2.2.2 DIMM Location To ensure satisfactory performance, you need to: Verify the DIMM type: DDR4 RDIMM/LRDIMM/NVDIMM-N with EEC(Error Correction Code). Verify if all of the DIMMs installed are of the same DIMM type to avoid memory failure and loss of performance speed. DIMM C0 DIMM C1 DIMM B0 DIMM B1 DIMM A0 DIMM A1 CPU2 DIMM D1 DIMM D0 DIMM E1 DIMM E0 DIMM F1 DIMM F0 DIMM C0 DIMM C1 DIMM B0 DIMM B1 DIMM A0 DIMM A1 CPU1 DIMM D1 DIMM D0 DIMM E1 DIMM E0 DIMM F1 DIMM F0 7 Chapter 2. Hardware Setup Ursa User Manual 2.2.3 DIMM Slot Installation Order Populate the DIMM slots according to the suggested order below to ensure a stable system performance. 8 Ursa User Manual Chapter 2. Hardware Setup 2.3 PCIe Slot 2.3.1 CPU and PCIe slot Connection To ensure satisfactory performance, you need to: Verify the CPU and matching PCIE slot location as marked below. Verify if the PCIe card is inserted appropriately. CPU2 PCIe x16 PCIe x16 OCP 2.0 connector B OCP 2.0 connector A PCIe x16 PCIe x16 SAS Mezzanine connector 9 CPU1 Chapter 3. Motherboard Settings Ursa User Manual Chapter 3. Motherboard Settings This section provides illustrations that display the internal jumpers, connectors, and system LED indicators on the Lepus motherboard. The motherboard layout and essential connectors are listed below for your reference. 3.1 Motherboard Block Diagram 10 Ursa User Manual Chapter 3. Motherboard Settings 3.2 Motherboard Layout 24 25 26 23 29 22 21 19 30 CPU2 20 28 13 31 32 12 11 10 33 14 9 35 18 8 17 36 27 16 6 7 CPU1 15 5 4 47 2 1 51 42 48 38 40 44 50 37 41 49 3 34 46 45 43 11 39 Ursa User Manual Chapter 3. Motherboard Settings 3.3 Content List Connector/Jumper/Header Location Connector/Jumper/Header Location SATA/SATADOM Connector (sSATA 5) Processor 1 DIMM Slots for Processor 1 Fan Connector 6 Fan Connector 5 CPU1 J14, J13, J16, J15, J18, J17 J103 J102 DIMM Slots for Processor 1 J23, J24, J21, J22, J19, J20 1 VGA Connector J2003 27 2 Internal Serial Header J2043 28 3 Management Port J2002 29 4 5 Rear Dual USB Port PCI-E X16 Gen3 Slot4 J2000 J57 30 31 6 BIOS CMOS Clear Jumper J46 32 7 10G NIC Ports J86 33 Fan Connector 4 8 NIC OCP 2.0 Connector A J25 34 Fan Connector 7 (for 1U system) 9 Manufacture Mode Jumper J90 35 DIMM Slots for Processor 0 J96 36 Fan Connector 3 J100 Password Clear Jumper J39 37 Processor 0 CPU0 12 PCI-E X16 Gen3 Slot2 13 PCI-E X16 Gen3 Slot1 J59 J58 38 Fan Connector 2 39 Fan Connector 1 J75 40 J56 41 Internal VROC Connector J70 42 GPU Power Connector J67 J48 43 TPM Connector J60 J50 44 Micro-SD Card Socket J88 J84 45 Front Panel USB Connector J71 10 NMI Jumper 11 14 NIC OCP 2.0 Connector B 15 PCI-E X16 Gen3 Slot3 16 17 18 19 Slimline Connector Port 2 (sSATA 0-3) Slimline Connector Port 0 (SATA 0-3) Slimline Connector Port 1 (SATA 4-7) Power Supply Connector DIMM Slots for Processor 0 J52 J101 J2007 J2, J1, J4, J3, J6, J5 J99 J98 J11, J12, J9, J10, J7, J8 J2004 20 Rear 2HDD Backplane Power Connector J54 46 Internal USB Port J55 21 GPU Power Connectors 1 J65 47 System Battery BH1 22 GPU Power Connectors 2 J66 48 Front Left-ear Connector J31 23 Power Supply Connector J85 49 SATA/SATADOM Connector (sSATA 4) J74 24 GPU Power Connectors 3 J64 50 SAS Mezzanine-card Connector J26 25 Backplane Power Connector J95 51 ME Firmware Recovery Mode Jumper J41 26 Rear HDD Backplane I²C Connector J34 12 Ursa User Manual Chapter 3. Motherboard Settings 3.4 Connetor and Jumper 3.4.1 Connector 23 19 CPU2 CPU1 5 19 Power Supply Connectors: J84 23 Power Supply Connectors: J85 Pin Pin Description Pin Description A1 Ground B1 Ground A2 Ground B2 A3 Ground Pin Description A1 Ground B1 Ground Ground A2 Ground B2 Ground B3 Ground A3 Ground B3 Ground A4 Ground B4 Ground A4 Ground B4 Ground A5 Ground B5 Ground A5 Ground B5 Ground A6 Ground B6 Ground A6 Ground B6 Ground A7 Ground B7 Ground A7 Ground B7 Ground A8 Ground B8 Ground A8 Ground B8 Ground A9 Ground B9 Ground A9 Ground B9 Ground A10 +12V B10 +12V A10 +12V B10 +12V A11 +12V B11 +12V A11 +12V B11 +12V A12 +12V B12 +12V A12 +12V B12 +12V A13 +12V B13 +12V A13 +12V B13 +12V A14 +12V B14 +12V A14 +12V B14 +12V A15 +12V B15 +12V A15 +12V B15 +12V A16 +12V B16 +12V A16 +12V B16 +12V A17 +12V B17 +12V A17 +12V B17 +12V A18 +12V B18 +12V A18 +12V B18 +12V A19 I²C PSU SDA B19 PS1 ADD0 A19 I²C PSU SDA B19 PS2 ADD0 A20 I²C PSU SCL B20 PS1 ADD1 A20 I2C PSU SCL B20 PS2 ADD1 A21 PS1 ON12V N B21 +12 Standby A21 PS2 ON12V N B21 +12 Standby A22 PS1 ALERT N B22 PS CR BUS R A22 PS2 ALERT N B22 PS CR BUS R A23 PS1 VSENSE DN B23 PS LOAD SHARE A23 PS2 VSENSE DN B23 PS LOAD SHARE A24 PS1 VSENSE DP B24 PS1 Present N A24 PS2 VSENSE DP B24 PS2 Present N A25 PS1 DCOK B25 PS1 ACOK A25 PS2 DCOK B25 PS2 ACOK 13 Description Ursa User Manual Chapter 3. Motherboard Settings 24 25 26 21 22 20 CPU2 CPU1 5 42 24 21 22 42 GPU Power Connectors (J64, J65, J66, J67) Pin Description Pin Description 1 Ground 5 +12V 2 Ground 6 +12V 3 Ground 7 +12V 4 Ground 8 +12V 25 Backplane Power Connector (J95) Pin Description Pin Description 1 Ground 9 +12V 2 Ground 10 +12V 3 Ground 11 +12V 4 Ground 12 +12V 5 Ground 13 +12V 6 Ground 14 +12V 7 Ground 15 RST_I2C_HDDBP_N 8 I2C_HDDBP_SDA 16 I2C_HDDBP_SCL 20 Rear 2HDD Backplane Power Connector (J54) Pin Description Pin Description 1 +12V 3 Ground 2 +5V 4 Ground 26 Rear HDD Backplane I²C Connector (J34) Pin Description 1 I²C_GPU_SCL 2 I²C_GPU_SDA 3 Ground 4 NC 14 Ursa User Manual Chapter 3. Motherboard Settings CPU2 CPU1 5 45 45 Front Panel USB Connector (J71) Pin Description Pin Description 1 2 19 PSV_USB3_FRONT2 18 PCH_USB3_RX_P5_ ESD_DN PCH_USB3_RX_P5_ ESD_DP Ground 3 4 5 +5V_USB3_FRONT1 PCH_USB3_RX_P4_ ESD_DN PCH_USB3_RX_P4_ ESD_DP Ground 17 16 7 PCH_USB3_TX_P4_ ESD_DN PCH_USB3_TX_P4_ ESD_DP Ground 8 9 10 PCH_USB2_ P4_L_DN PCH_USB2_ P4_L_DP NC 13 12 11 6 15 15 14 PCH_USB3_TX_P5_ ESD_DN PCH_USB3_TX_P5_ ESD_DP Ground PCH_USB2_ P5_L_DN PCH_USB2_ P5_L_DP Ursa User Manual Chapter 3. Motherboard Settings CPU2 CPU1 5 43 43 TPM Connector (J60) Pin Description Pin Description 1 LPC_TPM_Module_AD<0> 2 TPM_Vendor_ID1 3 TPM_PRSNT_N 4 LPC_AD_1 5 LPC_FRAME_TPM_Module_N 6 LPC_SERIRQ 7 Ground 8 +3V3 9 Clock_33M_PCH_LPC_TPM5% 10 RST_LPC_TPM_Module_N 11 Ground 12 LPC_TPM_Module_AD<2> 13 +3V3_STBY 14 Ground 15 Ground 16 LPC_TPM_Module_AD<3> 17 CLK_32K_SUSCLK_TPM_R 18 TPM_PACCESS 19 TPM_VENDOR_ID0 20 TPM_LPCPD_R_N 16 Ursa User Manual Chapter 3. Motherboard Settings 26 CPU2 18 17 16 CPU1 5 45 17 Slimline Connector 0 (J48) Pin Description Pin Description A1 Ground B1 Ground A2 PCH_SATA_RX_P0_C_DP B2 PCH_SATA_TX_P0_C_DP A3 PCH_SATA_RX_P0_C_DN B3 PCH_SATA_TX_P0_C_DN A4 Ground B4 Ground A5 PCH_SATA_RX_P1_C_DP B5 PCH_SATA_TX_P1_C_DP A6 PCH_SATA_RX_P1_C_DN B6 PCH_SATA_TX_P1_C_DN A7 Ground B7 Ground A8 SGPIO_SATA_DATA0 B8 SGPIO_SATA_CLOCK A9 TP_SATA0_RSVD_A9 B9 SGPIO_SATA_LOAD A10 Ground B10 Ground A11 TP_SATA0_RSVD_A11 B11 TP_SATA0_RSVD_B11 A12 TP_SATA0_RSVD_A12 B12 NC A13 Ground B13 Ground A14 PCH_SATA_RX_P2_C_DP B14 PCH_SATA_TX_P2_C_DP A15 PCH_SATA_RX_P2_C_DN B15 PCH_SATA_TX_P2_C_DN A16 Ground B16 Ground A17 PCH_SATA_RX_P3_C_DP B17 PCH_SATA_TX_P3_C_DP A18 PCH_SATA_RX_P3_C_DN B18 PCH_SATA_TX_P3_C_DN A19 Ground B19 Ground 17 Ursa User Manual Chapter 3. Motherboard Settings 18 Slimline Connector 1 (J50) Pin Description Pin Description A1 Ground B1 Ground A2 PCH_SATA_RX_P4_C_DP B2 PCH_SATA_TX_P4_C_DP A3 PCH_SATA_RX_P4_C_DN B3 PCH_SATA_TX_P4_C_DN A4 Ground B4 Ground A5 PCH_SATA_RX_P5_C_DP B5 PCH_SATA_TX_P5_C_DP A6 PCH_SATA_RX_P5_C_DN B6 PCH_SATA_TX_P5_C_DN A7 Ground B7 Ground A8 SGPIO_SATA_DATA1 B8 SGPIO_SATA_CLOCK A9 TP_SATA1_RSVD_A9 B9 SGPIO_SATA_LOAD A10 Ground B10 Ground A11 TP_SATA1_RSVD_A11 B11 TP_SATA1_RSVD_B11 A12 TP_SATA1_RSVD_A12 B12 NC A13 Ground B13 Ground A14 PCH_SATA_RX_P6_C_DP B14 PCH_SATA_TX_P6_C_DP A15 PCH_SATA_RX_P6_C_DN B15 PCH_SATA_TX_P6_C_DN A16 Ground B16 Ground A17 PCH_SATA_RX_P7_C_DP B17 PCH_SATA_TX_P7_C_DP A18 PCH_SATA_RX_P7_C_DN B18 PCH_SATA_TX_P7_C_DN A19 Ground B19 Ground 16 Slimline Connector 2 (J70) Pin Description Pin Description A1 Ground B1 Ground A2 PCH_SATA_RX_S0_C_DP B2 PCH_SATA_TX_S0_C_DP A3 PCH_SATA_RX_S0_C_DN B3 PCH_SATA_TX_S0_C_DN A4 Ground B4 Ground A5 PCH_SATA_RX_S1_C_DP B5 PCH_SATA_TX_S1_C_DP A6 PCH_SATA_RX_S1_C_DN B6 PCH_SATA_TX_S1_C_DN A7 Ground B7 Ground A8 SGPIO_SSATA_DATA0 B8 SGPIO_SSATA_CLOCK A9 TP_SSATA_RSVD_A9 B9 SGPIO_SSATA_LOAD A10 Ground B10 Ground A11 TP_SSATA_RSVD_A11 B11 TP_SSATA_RSVD_B11 A12 TP_SSATA_RSVD_A12 B12 NC A13 Ground B13 Ground A14 PCH_SATA_RX_S2_C_DP B14 PCH_SATA_TX_S2_C_DP A15 PCH_SATA_RX_S2_C_DN B15 PCH_SATA_TX_S2_C_DN A16 Ground B16 Ground A17 PCH_SATA_RX_S3_C_DP B17 PCH_SATA_TX_S3_C_DP A18 PCH_SATA_RX_S3_C_DN B18 PCH_SATA_TX_S3_C_DN A19 Ground B19 Ground 18 Ursa User Manual Chapter 3. Motherboard Settings 26 CPU2 27 CPU1 5 49 45 27 SATA/SATADOM Connectors(sSATA 5) (J52) Pin Description Pin Description 1 Ground 5 PCH_SATA_RX_S5_C_DN 2 PCH_SATA_TX_S5_C_DP 6 PCH_SATA_RX_S5_C_DP 3 PCH_SATA_TX_S5_C_DN 7 +5V_SATADOM_2 4 Ground 8 +5V 9 Ground 49 SATA/SATADOM Connectors(sSATA 4) (J74) Pin Description 1 2 3 4 Ground PCH_SATA_TX_S4_C_DP PCH_SATA_TX_S4_C_DN Ground Pin Description 5 6 7 8 9 PCH_SATA_RX_S4_C_DN PCH_SATA_RX_S4_C_DP +5V_SATADOM_1 +5V Ground 19 Ursa User Manual Chapter 3. Motherboard Settings 26 30 CPU2 31 33 34 36 27 CPU1 38 5 39 45 39 Fan Connectors 1 (J98) Pin Description Pin Description 1 Ground 4 BMC_FAN_PWM_1_R 2 PU_FAN_ID_1 5 PU_FAN_INSTALL_1_N 3 BMC_FAIL_1_R 6 +12V 38 Fan Connectors 2 (J99) Pin Description Pin Description 1 Ground 4 BMC_FAN_PWM_2_R 2 PU_FAN_ID_2 5 PU_FAN_INSTALL_2_N 3 BMC_FAIL_2_R 6 +12V 36 Fan Connectors 3 (J100) Pin Description Pin Description 1 Ground 4 BMC_FAN_PWM_3_R 2 PU_FAN_ID_3 5 PU_FAN_INSTALL_3_N 3 BMC_FAIL_3_R 6 +12V 33 Fan Connectors 4 (J101) Pin Description Pin Description 1 Ground 4 BMC_FAN_PWM_4_R 2 PU_FAN_ID_4 5 PU_FAN_INSTALL_4_N 3 BMC_FAIL_4_R 6 +12V 20 Ursa User Manual Chapter 3. Motherboard Settings 31 Fan Connectors 5 (J102) Pin Description Pin Description 1 Ground 4 BMC_FAN_PWM_5_R 2 PU_FAN_ID_5 5 PU_FAN_INSTALL_5_N 3 BMC_FAIL_5_R 6 +12V 30 Fan Connectors 6 (J103) Pin Description Pin Description 1 Ground 4 BMC_FAN_PWM_6_R 2 PU_FAN_ID_6 5 PU_FAN_INSTALL_6_N 3 BMC_FAIL_6_R 6 +12V 34 Fan Connectors 7 (J2007) Pin Description Pin Description 1 Ground 4 BMC_FAN_PWM_7_R 2 PU_FAN_ID_7 5 PU_FAN_INSTALL_7_N 3 BMC_FAIL_7_R 6 +12V 21 Ursa User Manual Chapter 3. Motherboard Settings 26 CPU2 27 41 5 CPU1 2 45 41 Internal VROC Connector (J2004) Pin Description 1 Ground 2 PU_VROC_CONN_PIN2 3 Ground 4 FM_PCH_SATA_RAID_KEY_R 2 Internal Serial Header (J2043) Pin Description Pin Description 1 COM1_RES_DCD 2 COM1_RES_RX_N 3 COM1_RES_TX_N 4 COM1_RES_DTR 5 Ground 6 COM1_RES_DSR 7 COM1_RES_RTS 8 COM1_RES_CTS 9 COM1_RES_RI 10 Ground 22 Ursa User Manual Chapter 3. Motherboard Settings 26 CPU2 27 CPU1 5 48 45 48 Front Left-ear Connector (J31) Pin Description Pin Description 1 3 5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 21 23 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22 24 LED_PWR_AMB_CPLD2SSIFP_R_N LED_PWR_GRN_CPLD2SSIFP_R_N +3V_FP DC_LED_HDD_ACT_CPLD2SSIFP_R_N BTN_PWRON_SSIFP2CPLD_N Ground BTN_RST_SSIFP2CPLD_N Ground BTN_UID_SSIFP2CPLD_N +5V_Standby_FP DC_BTN_NMI_SSIFP2CPLD_N 23 +3V_Standby_FP +5V_Standby_FP LED_UID_CPLD2SSIFP_R_N LED_HLTH_GRN_CPLD2SSIFP_R LED_HLTH_RED_CPLD2SSIFP_R +3V_Standby_FP LED_NIC0_LINK_ACT_R_N I2C_G6_PSU_CTRL_SDA I2C_G6_PSU_CTRL_SCL DC_Intruder_HDR +3V_Standby_FP LED_NIC1_LINK_ACT_R_N Ursa User Manual Chapter 3. Motherboard Settings 3.4.2 Jumper 26 CPU2 27 CPU1 4 5 11 45 51 ME Firmware Recovery Mode Jumper Setting (J41) Function: ME Recovery 9 Manufacturing Mode Jumper Setting (J90) Function: Manufacturing Mode 10 Non-maskable Interrupt Switch Jumper Setting (J96) Function: Non-maskable interrupt switch 11 Password Clear Jumper Setting (J39) Function: Password clear 6 BIOS CMOS Clear Jumper Setting (J46) Function: BIOS CMOS Clear Jumper Function 24 Chapter 4. BIOS Configuration Settings Ursa User Manual Chapter 4. BIOS Configuration Settings 4.1 Navigation Keys The navigation keys are listed below. Function Key , , , Enter +,- Description Select item. Select and enter sub-screen. Modify selected option. F1 General help. F2 Previous Value. F3 Optimized defaults. F4 Save & Exit. F5, F6 Change values. F7 Discard Change and Exit. F9 Load Optimal Default for all values. F10 Save changes and exit. F12 Print Screen. Esc Exit the current menu screen. 25 Ursa User Manual Chapter 4. BIOS Configuration Settings 4.2 BIOS Menu Press and to select the options of the menu bar. Press Enter to access the option screen. Menu Description Main Displays system information such as CPU bus speed, system memory speed, total installed memory, current EFI language, and system date & time. Advanced Allows configuration of advanced system settings such as ACPI features, boot, and chipset configuration. Platform Configuration Allows configuration of platform settings such as PCH, miscellaneous, and server ME configuration. Socket Configuration Allows configuration of socket settings such as processor, Common RefCode, UPI, and memory configuration. BMC Allows configuration of socket settings such as BMC network configuration. Security Sets passwords and security functions. Boot Sets boot options such as Quick Boot or USB Boot. Save and Exit Allows user to save or discard BIOS changes, and load optimal or custom default settings. NOTE The following manual provides the details of the BIOS menu. Please notice that the BIOS menu are continually changing due to the BIOS update. 26 Ursa User Manual Chapter 4. BIOS Configuration Settings 4.3 Main 4.3.1 Main Main Option Key: Option Key Description System time Configures current time. System date Configures current date. 27 Ursa User Manual Chapter 4. BIOS Configuration Settings 4.4 Advanced Advanced Option Key: 4.4.1 iSCSI Configuration iSCSI Configuration Add an Attempt Delete Attempts Change Attempt Order 4.4.2 Trusted Computing Trusted Computing Security Device Support Enable Disable TPM State Enable Disable Pending Operation Enable Disable 28 Ursa User Manual Chapter 4. BIOS Configuration Settings 4.4.3 Serial Port Console Redirection Serial Port Console Redirection Console Redirection Enable Terminal Type VT100 VT100+ VT-UTF8 ANSI Bits per second 9600 19200 57600 115200 Data Bits 7 Parity None Stop Bits 1 2 Flow Control None Hardware RTS/CTS EMS Enable Disable Disable 8 Even Odd Mark Space 4.4.4 PCI Subsystem Settings PCI Subsystem Settings SR-IOV Support Enable Disable 4.4.5 Network Stack Configuration Network Stack Configuration Network Stack Enable Disable Ipv4 PXE Support Enable Disable Ipv4 HTTP Support Enable Disable Ipv6 PXE Support Enable Disable Ipv6 HTTP Support Enable Disable PXE boot wait time 0 Media detect count 0~50 1 2 3 4 5 4.4.6 Memory RAS Configuration Setup Memory RAS Configuration Setup RAS Mode Disable Mirror Lockstep Mode Lockstep x4 DIMMs Auto Disable Enable Memory Rank Sparing Enable Spare Error/Memory Correctable Threshold 1-32767 Leaky bucket low bit 1-63 Leaky bucket high bit 1-63 DRAM Maintenance Auto Patrol Scrub Enable Patrol Scrub Interval 1-24 Demand Scrub Enable Disable Device Tagging Enable Disable Memory Power Management Enable Disable Disable Manual Disable Disable 29 Ursa User Manual Chapter 4. BIOS Configuration Settings 4.4.7 CSM Configuration CSM Configuration CSM Support Enable Disable Boot option filter UEFI and Legacy Network UEFI Legacy Storage UEFI Legacy Video UEFI Legacy Legacy Only UEFI Only 4.4.8 IOAT Configuration IOAT Configuration Enable IOAT Enable Disable No Snoop Enable Disable Disable TPH Enable Disable Relaxed Ordering Enable Disable 4.4.9 Intel VT for Directed I/O Intel VT for Directed I/O (VT-d) Intel VT for Directed I/O (VT-d) Enable Disable Interrupt Remapping Enable Disable Pass Through DMA Enable Disable ATS Enable Disable Coherency Support (Non-Isoch) Enable Disable Coherency Support (Isoch) Enable Disable 4.4.10 USB Configuration USB Configuration USB Mass Storage Driver Enable Support Disable 30 Ursa User Manual Chapter 4. BIOS Configuration Settings 4.5 Platform Platform Option Key: 4.5.1 PCH Configuration PCH Configuration Restore AC Power Loss Power Off Power On Last State 4.5.2 MIscellaneous Configuration Miscellaneous Configuration Active Video Auto RTC Wake system from S4/S5 Enable On board device PCIE Device Disable 4.5.3 Server ME Configuration Server ME Configuration General ME Configuration Configures Server ME Technology Parameters. Oper. Firmware Version Version of operational firmware selected to run. Current State ME firmware Current State, bits [3:0] in MEFS1. Error Code ME firmware Error Code, bits [15:12] in MEFS1. Recovery Cause Server ME firmware recovery cause, bits [10:8] in MEFS2. 31 Ursa User Manual Chapter 4. BIOS Configuration Settings 4.6 Socket Configuration Socket Configuration Option Key: 4.6.1 Processor Configuration Processor Configuration Hyper-Threading Enable Disable Enable Intel(R) TXT Enable Disable VMX Enable Disable Enable SMX Enable Disable Extended APIC Enable Disable Force x2APIC IDs Enable Disable AES-NI Enable Disable 4.6.2 Common RefCode Configuration Common RefCode Configuration NUMA Enable Disable 32 Ursa User Manual Chapter 4. BIOS Configuration Settings 4.6.3 UPI Configuration UPI Configuration UPI Status Read only. Link Speed Mode UPI General Configuration Link Frequency Select Slow Fast 9.6GB/s 10.4GB/s Auto Use Per Link Setting Link L0p Enable Enable Disable Auto Link L1 Enable Enable Disable Auto 4.6.4 Common RefCode Configuration Common RefCode Configuration MMCFG 1G 1.5G 1.75G 2G 2.25G 3G MMCFG Size 64M 128M 256M 512M 1G 2G MMIO High Base 56T 40T MMIO High Granularity 1G Size Numa 24T 4G 16T 16G 4T 3T 64G Enable 2T 256G 1T 1024G Disable 4.6.5 Memory Configuration Memory Configuration Memory Frequency Auto 1866 2133 2400 Enable ADR Enable Disable Erase-Arm NVDIMMs Enable Disable 2666 4.6.6 Memory Map Memory Map Channel Interleaving Auto 1-way Interleave 2-way Interleave 3-way Interleave 4.6.7 Memory RAS Configuration Memory Configuration Static Virtual Lockstep Mode Enable Disable Mirror Mode Disable Memory Rank Sparing Enable Disable Correctable Error Threshold 0x7FFF 0 SDDC Plus One Enable Disable SDDC Enable Disable ADDDC Sparing Enable Disable Patrol Scrub Enable Disable Patrol Scrub Interval 0-24 Mirror Mode 1LM 33 Mirror Mode 2LM Ursa User Manual Chapter 4. BIOS Configuration Settings 4.7 BMC BMC Option Key: 4.7.1 FB-2 Timer FB-2 Timer Enable Disable 4.7.2 FB-2 Timer Policy FB-2 Timer Do Nothing Reset Power Down Power Cycle 4.7.3 BMC Network Configuration BMC Network Configuration Configuration Address source Unspecified IPV6 Support Enable Static Dynamic -BmcDhcp Disable 34 Dynamic -BMCNonDhcp Ursa User Manual Chapter 4. BIOS Configuration Settings 4.8 Security Security Option Key: 4.8.1 Security Security Administrator Password Set administrator password in the Create New Password window. After you key in the password, the Confirm New Password window will pop out to ask for confirmation. User Password Set user password in the Create New Password window. After you key in the password, the Confirm New Password window will pop out to ask for confirmation. 35 Ursa User Manual Chapter 4. BIOS Configuration Settings 4.8.2 Secure Boot Secure Boot Attempt Secure Boot Enable Disable Secure Boot Mode Standard Custom Provision Factory Default keys Install Factory Default Keys Enroll Efi Image Save All Secure Boot Variables Key Management Platform Key (PK) Key Exchange Keys Authorized Signatures Forbidden Signatures Authorized TimeStamps 36 Ursa User Manual Chapter 4. BIOS Configuration Settings 4.9 Boot Boot Option Key: 4.9.1 Boot Boot Bootup NumLock State On Off Quiet Boot Enable Disable New Boot Option Policy Default Place First 37 Place Last Ursa User Manual Chapter 4. BIOS Configuration Settings 4.10 Save and Exit Save and Exit Option Key: 4.10.1 Save and Exit Save and Exit Save Options Saves changes done so far to any of the setup options. Save Changes and Exit Exits the system setup after saving the changes. Discard Changes and Exit Exits the system setup without saving any changes. Save Changes and Reset Resets the system after saving the changes. Discard Changes and Reset Resets system setup without saving any changes. Save Changes Saves the changes. Discard Changes Discards the changes. Restore Defaults Restores or loads default values for all the setup options. Save as User Defaults Saves the changes done so far as User Defaults. Restore User Defaults Restores the User Defaults to all the setup options. Boot Override Forces Boot device this time. UEFI: Built-in EFI Shell Attempts to Launch EFI Shell application (Shell.efi) from one of the available filesystem devices. 38 Ursa User Manual Chapter 4. BIOS Configuration Settings 4.11 Update Requirement 4.11.1 Utility Flash BIOS image under EFI Shell: AFUEFIX64.EFI Flash BIOS image under Linux: AFULNX_64 Flash BIOS image under Windows: AFUWINGUI.EXE 4.11.2 Update under EFI Shell AMI Flash Utility: 1. Copy AfuEfix64.efi and RomFileName.BIN to USB key. 2. Boot to USB key. 3. Enter AfuEfix64 <RomFileName.BIN> /P. 4. Restart the system after finishing BIOS part flashing. If you also want to reflash ME part, follow the steps below. 5. Boot to USB key. 6. Enter AfuEfix64 <RomFileName.BIN> /ME. 7. Do AC cycle system after finishing ME part flashing. 4.11.3 Update under Linux AMI Flash Utility: 1. Copy AfuLnx_64 and RomFileName.BIN to Linux OS. 2. Open the folder with terminal. 3. Enter AfuLnx_64 <RomFileName.BIN> /P /B. 4. Restart the system after finishing BIOS part flashing. If you also want to reflash ME part, follow the steps below. 5. Boot in Linux OS. 6. Enter AfuLnx_64 <RomFileName.BIN> /ME 7. Restart system after finishing ME part flashing. 4.11.4 Update under Windows AMI Flash Utility: 1. Download AFUWINGUI.EXE, RomFileName.BIN to Windows. 2. Run AFUWINGUI.EXE. 3. Click “Open” to load RomFileName.BIN, check Main BIOS, NVRAM, Bootblock, and then click “Flash.” 4. Restart the system after finishing BIOS part flashing. If you also want to reflash ME part, follow the steps below. 5. Boot in Windows OS. 6. Run AFUWINGUI.EXE, click “Open” to load RomFileName.BIN, ME, and then click “Flash”. 7. Restart system after finishing ME part flashing. 39 Chapter 5. BMC Configuration Settings Ursa User Manual Chapter 5. BMC Configuration Settings This chapter displays the configuration settings of IPMI BMC in your system device. 5.1 Login The IP address below is an example using the default IP setting. The IP address is configurable. Step 1 Open the browser then type in the default BMC IP address: 192.168.22.108 Step 2 Use the default user name and password for first-time BMC WEB GUI login. Field: UserName: Password: Default admin admin NOTE The default user name and password are in lower-case characters. Users who login with the root user name and password will have full administrative power. The root password can be changed after login. 40 Ursa User Manual Chapter 5. BMC Configuration Settings 5.2 Web GUI 5.2.1 User Information and Quick Button The user information and quick access buttons are located at the top right corner. It displays the logged-in user, his/her privilege and the four quick buttons allowing you to perform different functions. Button Description User Only valid commands are allowed. Operator All BMC commands are allowed except for the configuration commands that can change the behavior of the out-of-hand interfaces. Administrator All BMC commands are allowed. No access Login access denied. Notification Warning Sync Refresh Root-administrator Help Click to view notification messages. Click to view warning messages. Click to synchronize with the latest sensor and event log updates. Click to reload the current page. Sign out: Click to log out of the GUI Profile: Click to enter the User Management Configuration dialog box in figure xx. Click to view more details on field descriptions. 41 Ursa User Manual Chapter 5. BMC Configuration Settings 5.2.2 BMC Watchdog BMC Watchdog IPMI Standard Watchdog Allow host software check pointing and system recovery on a timeout. Automatic System Recovery Simplify recovery of a computer's system or boot volumes. Hard Reset Power Down Power Cycle Watchdog Event Logging Indicate an watchdog timer timeout occurred. FRB2 Timeout Detection Implemented with IPMI Watchdog Timer and supports BMC Watchdog Timer Commands. 5.2.3 System LED Indicator System LED Green System Health (Front Panel) Amber Red On System is Good. No Error. Off Normally in Standby. Blink (1Hz) Blink (1Hz) Critical event occurred. On Non-recovery event occurred. Off Normally. On Off UID Blue Blink Heart Beat (Motherboard) On Green Non-Critical Control By CPLD event occurred. Blink (1Hz) 42 UID LED only is controlled by CPLD when BMC is not ready or boot fail. UID is able to be controlled by BMC and UID button. Blink is only be controlled by BMC command. Heart Beat LED is On when AC On. After BMC ready, BMC will control Heart Beat LED blink when BMC is alive. Ursa User Manual Chapter 5. BMC Configuration Settings 5.2.4 LAN LAN DHCP IP Support LAN protocol RMCP(V1.5)+RMCP+(V2.0) support ARP This function is implemented by BMC. (Default: Enable) Enabled Authentications Administrator[Password] Session timeout 1800s(default) + 10s(tolerance) Multi session Support Max 15 sessions simultaneously Anonymous Login Not Support LAN Alerting Support SNMP Trap User account Support 10 user account including USER ID 1-10 Cipher Suite Entry Support 3 entry, Cipher Suite IDs: 1, 2, 3 5.2.5 System Event Log (SEL) System Event Log (SEL) Time stamping is a key part of event logging and tracking. SEL timestamp need to be set through BIOS or System Management Software. There are 3 scenarios that BMC would synchronize its Real Time clock (RTC) with the host system: • During system Power-on Self Test (POST), BIOS would wait BMC function ready (approximate 120 sec.), then send the Set SEL Time command with the current system time to sync RTC timer. • In runtime, on every BMC reset, BMC will assert GPIO to generate SMI to BIOS, then BIOS would send the Set SEL Time command with the current system time to sync RTC timer. • The BMC would automatically sync its RTC timer every 24 hours to maintain the tolerance within 3sec, via issue a SMI to BIOS. Time Synchronization Single Entry Delete: The Delete SEL Entry Command of IPMI is able to remove the individual records. The Behavior when SEL is full. SEL Entry for SEL overflow: When SEL is about to fill, the last entry recorded would be a SEL entry stating the SEL has overflowed. This entry gives the system an indication that subsequent SEL entries were lost. SEL Circle Log: When SEL is full, the system will record an "overflow" message and the oldest log is instead of a new one. And then it records an event for “SEL full”. SEL Clear: When all events are captured by SMS tool, SMS tool is able to clear SEL entry. After all events are cleaned, SEL agent will create a new event for this action. 43 Ursa User Manual Chapter 5. BMC Configuration Settings 5.2.6 Serial Interface Serial Interface Serial over LAN enables the serial controller of a managed system to be redirected over an IPMI session over IP. Channel# Serial Over LAN Baud Rate (SOL) SOL Information Flow control Payload port SOL Configuration 0x01 9600 19200 38400 57600 115200 (default) BPS Hardware flow control 623 OL Enable Disabled Disable SOL payload type SSOL Authentications Administrator Administrator access over SOL Non-Volatile Bit Rate 115200 115200 baud rate. Volatile Bit Rate 115200 115200 baud rate. Gratuitous ARP Interval 4 seconds ARP responses Enabled Access Mode Enabled Access Privilege Limit Enabled Enabled Authentications Administrator [Password] All other Authentications disabled. SOL Payload Access Enabled Enable SOL payload access. The BMC is able to connect and switch UART port between COM Port 1 and The Behavior of SOL. If the SOL connection is abnormal, the watchdog of BMC would reset SOL itself and return configuration (routing) to the default settings. 44 Ursa User Manual Chapter 5. BMC Configuration Settings 5.2.7 RMCP(IPMI v1.5)/RMCP + (IPMI v2.0) and Payload Support RMCP(IPMI v1.5)/RMCP+(IPMI v2.0) and Payload Support RMCP Payloads RMCP+ Payloads OEM Disable Straight Password Enable MD5 Enable MD2 Enable None Authentication Enable None O X O O X HMAC SHA1 O O O O X Authentication HMAC MD5 X X X X X HMAC SHA2 X X X X X None O O O O X HMAC SHA1 96 O O O O X HMAC MD5 128 O O X X X MD5 128 X X X X X HMAC SHA2 128 X X X X X None O O O O X AES CBC 128 O O O O X XRC4 128 X X X X X XRC4 40 X X X X X Integrity Confidentiality 1 Cipher Suite of 2 RMCP+ 3 S S,A S,A,E 01h, 00h, 00h RAKP01h, 01h, HMAC00h SHA1 01h, 01h, 01h None None Administrator None Administrator HMACSHA1-96 AES-CBC-128 Administrator S = authenticated session setup (correct role, username and password/key required to establish session) A = authenticated payload data supported. E = authentication and encrypted payload data supported 45 Ursa User Manual Chapter 5. BMC Configuration Settings 5.2.8 Remote KVM Remote KVM KVM over IP Browser Support Because Remote KVM solutions operate out-of-band of the system processor, they don’t place undue burdens on the host processor. This also means that, although the Remote KVM resides in the server box, but it will not put extra loading to the host processor. Internet Explorer (IE) 11.0 or later version for Windows platforms. Firefox 34 or later version for all platforms Google Chrome 47 or later version 640x480 60 Yes Yes 800x600 60 Yes Yes 1024x768 60 Yes Yes 1280x800 60 Yes Yes Screen 1280x1024 Resolution and 1440x900 Color Depth 1600x1200 60 Yes Yes 60 Yes Yes 60 Yes Yes 1680x1050 60 Yes Yes 1920x1080 60 Yes Yes 1920x1200 60 Yes Yes Full Screen and The console is capable of viewing the server side screen in both windowed Window Mode and the full screen. Simultaneous Console Users The KVM/IP console must provide up to three simultaneous users login. This feature should be configurable as 1 or 2 simultaneous console at a time. The first user gets the total control of the console including the keyboard/mouse. The others can only view the screen data or the activity. Launch KVM: Step 1: Open a supported browser. Step 2: Enter the web address with the IP. Step 3: Enter the User name and password to launch the KVM function. 46 Ursa User Manual Chapter 5. BMC Configuration Settings Step 4: Select "Remote Control" from the menu bar. The KVM window will pop up. Step 5: Click the button "Start KVM." To terminate the KVM service, click "Stop KVM." 47 Ursa User Manual Chapter 5. BMC Configuration Settings 5.2.9 BMC Booting BMC Booting The BMC boot loader will verify the checksum of the loaded firmware image before executing it. If the boot loader detects that the loaded firmware image Integrity Check is invalid, it will not be executed. BMC will select another SD storage for boot. If Both of ROMs part are fail, BMC SOC will reboot by WDT again. Firmware Boot Time From the point of reset, the BMC boot to fully operational state and be responsive to the host on KCS channel within 30 seconds. And LAN channel interface will be enable after 78 seconds. 48 Chapter 6. Technical Support Taiwain, Global Headquarters Address: No. 152, Section 4, Linghang N. Rd, Dayuan District, Taoyuan City 337, Taiwan Tel: +886-3-433-9188 Fax: +886-3-287-1818 Sales Email: [email protected] Support Email: [email protected] Shanghai, China Address: Room 1009, No. 777, Zhaojia Bang Rd, Shanghai 200032, Shanghai, China Tel: +86-21-54961421 Fax +86-21-54961422 #608 Sales Email: [email protected] Support Email: [email protected] Moscow, Russia Address: No.500, 5th Floor, 5th Entrance, 32A, Khoroshevskoye Shosse, Moscow, 123007 Tel: +7-4997019998 Sales Email: [email protected] Support Email: [email protected] North California, United States Address: 48531 Warm Springs Boulvard Suite 404 Fremont, CA 94539, United States Tel: +1-510-573-6730 Fax: +1-510-573-6729 Sales Email: [email protected] Support Email: [email protected] South California, United States Address: 21808 Garcia Lane City of Industry, CA 91789, United States Toll free: +7-4997019998 Tel: +1-909-895-8989 Fax: +1-909-895-8989#157 Sales Email: [email protected] Support Email: [email protected] New Jersey, United States Address: 11 Melanie Lane Unit #20 & 21 East Hanover, NJ 07936, United States Tel: +1-973-884-8886 Fax: +1-973-884-4794 Sales Email: [email protected] Support Email: [email protected] Houten, The Netherlands Address: Peppelkade 58, 3992AK, Houten, The Netherlands Tel: +31-30-6386789 Fax: +31-30-6360638 Sales Email: [email protected] Support Email: [email protected]
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