SUPER MICRO Computer Server SuperServer 5016I T User Manual

®
SUPER  
SuperServer 5016I-T  
SuperServer 5016I-TF  
USER’S MANUAL  
Revision 1.0  
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Preface  
Preface  
About This Manual  
This manual is written for professional system integrators and PC technicians. It pro-  
vides information for the installation and use of the SuperServer 5016I-T/5016I-TF.  
Installation and maintenance shall be performed by experienced technicians only.  
The SuperServer 5016I-T/5016I-TF is a single processor system based on the  
SC811T-280 1U rackmount chassis and the Super X8SIL/X8SIL-F motherboard.  
Manual Organization  
Chapter 1: Introduction  
The rst chapter provides a checklist of the main components included with the  
system and describes the main features of the Super X8SIL/X8SIL-F motherboard  
and the SC811T-280 chassis.  
Chapter 2: Installation  
This chapter describes the steps necessary to setup the system. If your server was  
ordered without the processor and memory components, this chapter will refer you  
to the appropriate sections of the manual for their installation.  
Chapter 3: System Interface  
Refer to this chapter for details on the system interface, which includes the functions  
and information provided by the control panel on the chassis as well as other LEDs  
located throughout the system.  
Chapter 4: System Safety  
You should thoroughly familiarize yourself with this chapter for a general overview  
of safety precautions that should be followed when installing and servicing the  
SuperServer 5016I-T/5016I-TF.  
Chapter 5: Advanced Motherboard Setup  
Chapter 5 provides detailed information on the X8SIL/X8SIL-F motherboard, in-  
cluding the locations and functions of connectors, headers and jumpers. Refer  
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SUPERSERVER 5016I-T/5016I-TF User's Manual  
to this chapter when adding or removing processors or main memory and when  
reconguring the motherboard.  
Chapter 6: Advanced Chassis Setup  
Refer to Chapter 6 for detailed information on the SC811T-280 chassis. You should  
follow the procedures given in this chapter when installing, removing or recongur-  
ing Serial ATA or peripheral drives and when replacing system power supply units  
and cooling fans.  
Chapter 7: BIOS  
The BIOS chapter includes an introduction to BIOS and provides detailed informa-  
tion on running the CMOS Setup Utility.  
Appendix A: POST Error Beep Codes  
Appendix B: Installing Windows  
Appendix C: System Specications  
iv  
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Preface  
Notes  
v
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SUPERSERVER 5016I-T/5016I-TF User's Manual  
Table of Contents  
Chapter 1 Introduction  
1-1  
1-2  
Overview ......................................................................................................... 1-1  
Motherboard Features..................................................................................... 1-2  
Processors ...................................................................................................... 1-2  
Memory ........................................................................................................... 1-2  
Serial ATA ....................................................................................................... 1-2  
PCI Expansion Slots ....................................................................................... 1-2  
I/O Ports.......................................................................................................... 1-2  
Other Features................................................................................................ 1-2  
Chassis Features ............................................................................................ 1-3  
System Power................................................................................................. 1-3  
Serial ATA Subsystem..................................................................................... 1-3  
Control Panel .................................................................................................. 1-3  
Rear I/O Panel ................................................................................................ 1-3  
Cooling System............................................................................................... 1-3  
Contacting Supermicro.................................................................................... 1-5  
1-3  
1-4  
Chapter 2 Server Installation  
2-1  
2-2  
2-3  
Overview ......................................................................................................... 2-1  
Unpacking the System.................................................................................... 2-1  
Preparing for Setup......................................................................................... 2-1  
Choosing a Setup Location............................................................................. 2-2  
Rack Mounting Considerations....................................................................... 2-3  
Ambient Operating Temperature ................................................................ 2-3  
Reduced Airow ......................................................................................... 2-3  
Mechanical Loading ................................................................................... 2-3  
Installing the System into a Rack ................................................................... 2-4  
Installing the Chassis Rails............................................................................. 2-5  
Installing the Rack Rails ................................................................................. 2-5  
Checking the Serverboard Setup.................................................................... 2-8  
Checking the Drive Bay Setup...................................................................... 2-10  
2-4  
2-5  
2-6  
Chapter 3 System Interface  
3-1  
3-2  
Overview ......................................................................................................... 3-1  
Control Panel Buttons..................................................................................... 3-1  
Reset Button ................................................................................................... 3-1  
Power .............................................................................................................. 3-1  
Control Panel LEDs ........................................................................................ 3-1  
3-3  
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Table of Contents  
Overheat/Fan Fail ........................................................................................... 3-2  
NIC2 ................................................................................................................ 3-2  
NIC1 ................................................................................................................ 3-2  
HDD................................................................................................................. 3-2  
Power .............................................................................................................. 3-3  
3-4 Serial ATA Drive Carrier LEDs ........................................................................ 3-3  
Chapter 4 System Safety  
4-1  
4-2  
4-3  
4-4  
Electrical Safety Precautions .......................................................................... 4-1  
General Safety Precautions............................................................................ 4-2  
ESD Precautions............................................................................................. 4-3  
Operating Precautions .................................................................................... 4-4  
Chapter 5 Advanced Motherboard Setup  
5-1  
Handling the Motherboard .............................................................................. 5-1  
Precautions ..................................................................................................... 5-1  
Unpacking ....................................................................................................... 5-1  
Motherboard Installation.................................................................................. 5-2  
Connecting Cables.......................................................................................... 5-2  
Connecting Data Cables................................................................................. 5-2  
Connecting Power Cables .............................................................................. 5-3  
Connecting the Control Panel......................................................................... 5-3  
I/O Ports.......................................................................................................... 5-4  
Processor and Heatsink Installation................................................................ 5-4  
Installing the LGA1156 Processor ................................................................. 5-5  
Installing a Passive CPU Heatsink ................................................................. 5-7  
Installing Memory............................................................................................ 5-9  
DIMM Installation ............................................................................................ 5-9  
Memory Support.............................................................................................. 5-9  
Memory Population Guidelines..................................................................... 5-10  
Installing a PCI Expansion Card................................................................... 5-12  
Motherboard Details...................................................................................... 5-13  
Connector Denitions ................................................................................... 5-15  
Main ATX Power Supply Connector......................................................... 5-15  
Processor Power Connector .................................................................... 5-15  
Power Button ........................................................................................... 5-15  
Reset Button ........................................................................................... 5-15  
Overheat (OH)/Fan Fail............................................................................ 5-16  
NIC1/NIC2 (LAN1/LAN2).......................................................................... 5-16  
HDD LED.................................................................................................. 5-16  
5-2  
5-3  
5-4  
5-5  
5-6  
5-7  
5-8  
5-9  
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Power On LED ......................................................................................... 5-16  
Chassis Intrusion...................................................................................... 5-17  
ATX PS/2 Keyboard and PS/2 Mouse Ports............................................ 5-17  
Fan Headers............................................................................................. 5-17  
Onboard Speaker..................................................................................... 5-17  
Speaker .................................................................................................... 5-18  
Serial Ports............................................................................................... 5-18  
Universal Serial Bus (USB)...................................................................... 5-18  
LAN1/LAN2 (Ethernet Ports).................................................................... 5-18  
Onboard Power LED................................................................................ 5-19  
Power Supply I2C Connector.................................................................... 5-19  
T-SGPIO 0/1 Headers.............................................................................. 5-19  
Alarm Reset.............................................................................................. 5-19  
5-10 Jumper Settings ............................................................................................ 5-20  
Explanation of Jumpers............................................................................ 5-20  
CMOS Clear............................................................................................. 5-20  
VGA Enable.............................................................................................. 5-20  
LAN1/LAN2 Enable/Disable .................................................................... 5-21  
PCI Slot SMB Enable............................................................................... 5-21  
USB Wake-Up ......................................................................................... 5-21  
BMC Jumper ............................................................................................ 5-21  
5-11 Onboard Indicators........................................................................................ 5-22  
LAN1/2 LEDs............................................................................................ 5-22  
IPMI Dedicated LAN LEDs ..................................................................... 5-22  
Onboard Power LED ............................................................................................................ 5-22  
IPMI Heartbeat LED................................................................................. 5-22  
5-12 SATA and Floppy Drive Connections............................................................ 5-23  
SATA Ports ............................................................................................... 5-23  
Floppy Connector..................................................................................... 5-23  
Chapter 6 Advanced Chassis Setup  
6-1  
Static-Sensitive Devices.................................................................................. 6-1  
Precautions ..................................................................................................... 6-1  
Unpacking ............................................................................................................  
Control Panel .................................................................................................. 6-2  
System Fans ................................................................................................... 6-3  
System Fan Failure......................................................................................... 6-3  
Drive Bay Installation/Removal....................................................................... 6-4  
Accessing the Drive Bays............................................................................... 6-4  
6-2  
6-3  
6-4  
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Table of Contents  
Serial ATA Drive Installation............................................................................ 6-4  
SATA Power Cables ................................................................................... 6-6  
DVD-ROM Drive Installation ........................................................................... 6-6  
Power Supply Failure...................................................................................... 6-7  
Chapter 7 BIOS  
7-1  
Introduction...................................................................................................... 7-1  
Starting BIOS Setup Utility.............................................................................. 7-1  
How To Change the Conguration Data......................................................... 7-1  
How to Start the Setup Utility ......................................................................... 7-2  
Main Setup...................................................................................................... 7-2  
Advanced Setup Congurations...................................................................... 7-4  
Security Settings ........................................................................................... 7-20  
Boot Settings ................................................................................................ 7-21  
7-2  
7-3  
7-4  
7-5  
7-6  
Exit Options................................................................................................... 7-22  
Appendix A POST Error Beep Codes  
Appendix B Installing Windows  
Appendix C System Specications  
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Notes  
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Chapter 1: Introduction  
Chapter 1  
Introduction  
1-1 Overview  
The SuperServer 5016I-T/5016I-TF is a high-end server comprised of two main sub-  
systems: the SC811T-280 1U chassis and the X8SIL/X8SIL-F motherboard. Please  
refer to our web site for information on operating systems that have been certied  
for use with the SuperServer 5016I-T/5016I-TF (www.supermicro.com).  
In addition to the motherboard and chassis, various hardware components have  
been included with the SuperServer 5016I-T/5016I-TF, as listed below:  
Two 10-cm blower fans (FAN-0059L4)  
One passive heatsink (SNK-P0046P)  
One PCI-Express x8 riser card (CSE-RR1U-E8)  
One slim DVD-ROM drive (DVM-TEAC-DVD-SBT or DVM-PNSC-DVD-SBT)  
SATA Accessories  
One SATA backplane (CSE-SAS-810TQ)  
Two SATA cables (CBL-0061L)  
One SGPIO cable (CBL-0157L)  
Two hot-swap hard disk trays (MCP-220-00003-01)  
One SuperServer 5016I-T/5016I-TF User's Manual  
One rackmount rail kit (CSE-PT8)  
1-1  
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1-2 Motherboard Features  
At the heart of the SuperServer 5016I-T/5016I-TF lies the X8SIL/X8SIL-F, a single  
processor motherboard based on the Intel® 3400/3420 chipset. Below are the main  
features of the X8SIL/X8SIL-F. See Figure 1-1 for a block diagram of the chipset.  
Processors  
The X8SIL/X8SIL-F supports a single Intel® 3400 series processor in an LGA1156  
socket. Please refer to the motherboard description pages on our web site for a  
complete listing of supported processors (www.supermicro.com).  
Memory  
The X8SIL/X8SIL-F has four DIMM slots that can support up to 16 GB of UDIMM  
(unbuffered DIMMs) or up to 32 GB or RDIMM (registered DIMMs) DDR3-1333-  
/1066/800 memory. Dual-channel congurations are supported. Memory modules  
of the same size and speed should be used. See Chapter 5 for details.  
Serial ATA  
A SATA controller is integrated into the chipset to provide a 3 Gb/s Serial ATA sub-  
system, which is RAID 0, 1, 10 and (Windows only) 5 capable. The SATA drives  
are hot-swappable units. The X8SIL has four SATA ports while the X8SIL-F has  
six SATA ports.  
PCI Expansion Slots  
The X8SIL/X8SIL-F has two PCI-Express 2.0 x8 slots, one PCI-Express 2.0 x4 (in  
a x8 slot) and one 32-bit PCI 33 MHz slot.  
I/O Ports  
The color-coded I/O ports include a COM port, two USB 2.0 ports, PS/2 mouse  
and keyboard ports and two Gb Ethernet ports. An IPMI LAN port is also included  
on the X8SIL-F.  
Other Features  
Other onboard features that promote system health include onboard voltage moni-  
tors, a chassis intrusion header, 3-phase switching voltage regulators, chassis and  
CPU overheat sensors, Thermal Monitor 2 (TM2) support and a BIOS ash upgrade  
utility.  
1-2  
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Chapter 1: Introduction  
1-3 Chassis Features  
System Power  
The SC811T-280 chassis includes a single 280W power supply.  
Serial ATA Subsystem  
The SC811T-280 chassis was designed to support two Serial ATA drives, which  
are hot-swappable units.  
Note: The operating system you use must have RAID support to enable the hot-  
swap capability of the Serial ATA drives.  
Control Panel  
The control panel on the SC811T-280 provides important system monitoring and  
control information. LEDs indicate power on, network activity, hard disk drive activ-  
ity and system overheat conditions. The control panel also includes a main power  
button and a system reset button.  
Rear I/O Panel  
The SC811T-280 is a 1U rackmount chassis. Its I/O panel provides one expansion  
card slot, one COM port (another is internal), two USB ports, PS/2 mouse and  
keyboard ports, a graphics port and two Gb Ethernet ports.  
Cooling System  
The SC811T-280 chassis has an innovative cooling design that features two 10-cm  
blower system cooling fans. These blower fans plug into a chassis fan header on the  
serverboard. A fan speed control setting in BIOS allows fan speed to be determined  
by system temperature [the recommended setting is 3-pin (Server)].  
1-3  
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Figure 1-1. Intel 3400/3420 Chipset:  
System Block Diagram  
Note: This is a general block diagram. Please see Chapter 5 for details.  
DIMM1(Far)  
DIMM2  
DDR3 (CHA)  
1333/1066MHz  
PCIe2.0_x8  
5.0Gb  
Xeon 3400  
Series  
PCIe x8 SLOT  
PCIe x8 SLOT  
4 UDIMM  
4 RDIMM  
PCIe2.0_x8  
5.0Gb  
DIMM1(Far)  
DIMM2  
DDR3 (CHB)  
1333/1066MHz  
(4 Quad rank  
RDIMM run on  
800MHz)  
VID[0-7]  
VRM 11.1  
MISC VRs  
PCIe_x1 GLAN1  
2.5Gbps 82574L  
PCIe_x4  
2.5Gbps  
PCI 32  
RJ45  
RJ45  
PCIe x8 SLOT  
1 PCI 32 SLOT  
4/6 SATA PORTS  
5/7 USB PORTS  
IBexPeak  
Intel 3400/3420  
PCH  
PCIe_x1 GLAN2  
2.5Gbps 82574L  
P15  
SATA-II  
LPC  
TPM1.2  
(option)  
300MB/s  
USB2.0  
480Mbps  
PCI32  
HERMON WPCM450  
WINBOND  
CK505  
CLOCK  
SPI  
LPC  
Rev1.0  
RMII  
FLASH  
SPI 16Mb  
RTL8201N  
PHY  
VGA  
PORT  
COM1,2  
P/S2  
RJ45  
W83627DHG  
LPC I/O  
HEALTH  
INFO  
1-4  
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Chapter 1: Introduction  
1-4 Contacting Supermicro  
Headquarters  
Address:  
Super Micro Computer, Inc.  
980 Rock Ave.  
San Jose, CA 95131 U.S.A.  
Tel:  
+1 (408) 503-8000  
+1 (408) 503-8008  
Fax:  
Email:  
[email protected] (General Information)  
[email protected] (Technical Support)  
Web Site:  
Europe  
Address:  
Super Micro Computer B.V.  
Het Sterrenbeeld 28, 5215 ML  
's-Hertogenbosch, The Netherlands  
Tel:  
+31 (0) 73-6400390  
Fax:  
Email:  
+31 (0) 73-6416525  
[email protected] (General Information)  
[email protected] (Technical Support)  
[email protected] (Customer Support)  
Asia-Pacic  
Address:  
Super Micro Computer, Inc.  
4F, No. 232-1, Liancheng Rd.  
Chung-Ho 235, Taipei County  
Taiwan, R.O.C.  
Tel:  
+886-(2) 8226-3990  
+886-(2) 8226-3991  
Fax:  
Web Site:  
Technical Support:  
Email:  
Tel:  
886-2-8228-1366, ext.132 or 139  
1-5  
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Notes  
1-6  
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Chapter 2: Server Installation  
Chapter 2  
Server Installation  
2-1 Overview  
This chapter provides a quick setup checklist to get your SuperServer 5016I-  
T/5016I-TF up and running. Following the steps in the order given should enable  
you to have the system operational within a minimal amount of time. This quick  
setup assumes that your 5016I-T/5016I-TF system has come to you with the proces-  
sor and memory preinstalled. If your system is not already fully integrated with a  
serverboard, processor, system memory etc., please turn to the chapter or section  
noted in each step for details on installing specic components.  
2-2 Unpacking the System  
You should inspect the box the SuperServer 5016I-T/5016I-TF 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 the carrier who delivered it.  
Decide on a suitable location for the rack unit that will hold the SuperServer 5016I-  
T/5016I-TF. It should be situated in a clean, dust-free area that is well ventilated.  
Avoid areas where heat, electrical noise and electromagnetic elds are generated.  
You will also need it placed near a grounded power outlet. Read the Rack and  
Server Precautions in the next section.  
2-3 Preparing for Setup  
The box the SuperServer 5016I-T/5016I-TF was shipped in should include two  
sets of rail assemblies, two rail mounting brackets and the mounting screws you  
will need to install the system into the rack. Follow the steps in the order given to  
complete the installation process in a minimal amount of time. Please read this  
section in its entirety before you begin the installation procedure outlined in the  
sections that follow.  
2-1  
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Choosing a Setup Location  
Leave enough clearance in front of the rack to enable you to open the front  
door completely (~25 inches).  
Leave approximately 30 inches of clearance in the back of the rack to allow for  
sufcient airow and ease in servicing.  
This product is for installation only in a Restricted Access Location (dedicated  
equipment rooms, service closets, etc.).  
This product is not suitable for use with visual display work place devices accord-  
ing to §2 of the the German Ordinance for Work with Visual Display Units.  
Warnings and Precautions!  
!
!
Rack Precautions  
Ensure that the leveling jacks on the bottom of the rack are fully extended to  
the oor with the full weight of the rack resting on them.  
In a single rack installation, stabilizers 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 one component at a time - extending two or more si-  
multaneously may cause the rack to become unstable.  
Server Precautions  
Review the electrical and general safety precautions in Chapter 4.  
Determine the placement of each component in the rack before you install the  
rails.  
Install the heaviest server components on the bottom of the rack rst, and then  
work up.  
2-2  
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Chapter 2: Server Installation  
Use a regulating uninterruptible power supply (UPS) to protect the server from  
power surges, voltage spikes and to keep your system operating in case of a  
power failure.  
Allow the power supply units and hot plug Serial ATA drives to cool before  
touching them.  
Always keep the rack's front door and all panels and components on the servers  
closed when not servicing to maintain proper cooling.  
Rack Mounting Considerations  
Ambient Operating Temperature  
If installed in a closed or multi-unit rack assembly, the ambient operating tempera-  
ture of the rack environment may be greater than the ambient temperature of the  
room. Therefore, consideration should be given to installing the equipment in an  
environment compatible with the manufacturer’s maximum rated ambient tempera-  
ture (Tmra).  
Reduced Airow  
Equipment should be mounted into a rack so that the amount of airow required  
for safe operation is not compromised.  
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 connection of the equipment to the power  
supply circuitry and the effect that any possible overloading of circuits might have  
on overcurrent protection and power supply wiring. Appropriate consideration of  
equipment nameplate ratings should be used when addressing this concern.  
Reliable Ground  
A reliable ground must be maintained at all times. To ensure this, the rack itself  
should be grounded. Particular attention should be given to power supply connec-  
tions other than the direct connections to the branch circuit (i.e. the use of power  
strips, etc.).  
2-3  
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2-4 Installing the System into a Rack  
This section provides information on installing the SuperServer 5016I-T/5016I-TF  
into a rack unit. If the system has already been mounted into a rack, you can skip  
ahead to Sections 2-5 and 2-6. There are a variety of rack units on the market, which  
may mean the assembly procedure will differ slightly. The following is a guideline  
for installing the unit into a rack with the rack rails provided with the system. You  
should also refer to the installation instructions that came with the rack unit you  
are using.  
Identifying the Sections of the Rack Rails  
You should have received two rack rail assemblies with the SuperServer 5016I-  
T/5016I-TF. Each of these assemblies consist of two sections: an inner xed chas-  
sis rail that secures to the unit (A) and an outer xed rack rail (B) that secures to  
the rail brackets. A sliding rail guide sandwiched between the two should remain  
attached to the xed rack rail (see Figure 2-1). The A and B rails must be detached  
from each other to install.  
To remove the xed chassis rail (A), pull it out as far as possible - you should hear  
a "click" sound as a locking tab emerges from inside the rail assembly and locks  
the inner rail. Then depress the locking tab to pull the inner rail completely out. Do  
this for both the left and right side rack rail assemblies.  
Figure 2-1. Identifying the Sections of the Rack Rails  
Outer rail (to be  
installed in the  
rack)  
B
Pull out the inner  
rail(to be attached  
on the chassis)  
A
2-4  
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Chapter 2: Server Installation  
Installing the Chassis Rails  
Position the fixed chassis rail sections you just removed along the side of  
the chassis making sure the ve screw holes line up. Note that these two rails are  
left/right specic. Screw the rail securely to the side of the chassis (see Figure 2-2).  
Repeat this procedure for the other rail on the other side of the chassis. You will  
also need to attach the rail brackets when installing into a telco rack.  
Locking Tabs: As you have seen, both chassis rails have a locking tab, which  
serves two functions. The rst is to lock the server into place when installed and  
pushed fully into the rack, which is its normal position. Secondly, these tabs also  
lock the server in place when fully extended from the rack. This prevents the server  
from coming completely out of the rack when you pull it out for servicing.  
Figure 2-2. Installing Chassis Rails  
Installing the Rack Rails  
Determine where you want to place the server in the rack (see Rack and Server  
Precautions in Section 2-3). Position the xed 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 provided.  
Attach the other assembly to the other side of the rack, making sure that both are  
at the exact same height and with the rail guides facing inward.  
2-5  
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Installing the Server into the Rack  
You should now have rails attached to both the chassis and the rack unit. The next  
step is to install the server into the rack. Do this by lining up the rear of the chassis  
rails with the front of the rack rails. Slide the chassis rails into the rack rails, keeping  
the pressure even on both sides (you may have to depress the locking tabs when  
inserting). See Figure 2-3.  
When the server has been pushed completely into the rack, you should hear the  
locking tabs "click".  
Figure 2-3. Installing the Server into a Rack  
2-6  
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Chapter 2: Server Installation  
Installing the Server into a Telco Rack  
If you are installing the server into a Telco type rack, follow the directions given  
on the previous pages for rack installation. The only difference in the installation  
procedure will be the positioning of the rack brackets to the rack. They should be  
spaced apart just enough to accomodate the width of the telco rack.  
Figure 2-4. Installing the Server into a Telco Rack  
2-7  
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2-5 Checking the Serverboard Setup  
After you install the 5016I-T/5016I-TF in the rack, you will need to open the unit  
to make sure the serverboard is properly installed and all the connections have  
been made.  
Accessing the Inside of the System (Figure 2-5)  
1. First, grasp the two handles on either side and pull the unit straight out until it  
locks (you will hear a "click").  
2. Next, depress the two buttons on the top of the chassis to release the top  
cover. There is a large rectangular recess in the middle front of the top cover  
to help you push the cover away from you until it stops.  
3. You can then lift the top cover from the chassis to gain full access to the  
inside of the server.  
Checking the Components  
1. You may have one or two processors already installed into the system board.  
Each processor should have its own heatsink attached. See Chapter 5 for  
instructions on processor and heatsink installation.  
2. Your 5016T-TB server system may have come with system memory already  
installed. Make sure all DIMMs are fully seated in their slots. For details on  
adding system memory, refer to Chapter 5.  
3. If desired, you can install an add-on card to the system. See Chapter 5 for  
details on installing a PCI add-on card.  
4. Make sure all power and data cables are properly connected and not blocking  
the airow. See Chapter 5 for details on cable connections.  
5. Check the air seals for damage. The air seals are located under the blower  
fan and beneath the frame cross section that separates the drive bay area  
from the serverboard area of the chassis.  
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Chapter 2: Server Installation  
Figure 2-5. Accessing the Inside of the System  
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2-6 Checking the Drive Bay Setup  
Next, you should check to make sure the peripheral drives and the Serial ATA drives  
have been properly installed and all essential connections have been made.  
Checking the Drives  
1. All drives can be accessed from the front of the server. For servicing the  
DVD-ROM and oppy drives, you will need to remove the top chassis cover.  
2. Refer to Chapter 6 if you need to reinstall a DVD-ROM and/or oppy disk  
drive to the system.  
3. Depending upon your system's conguration, your system may have one or  
two Serial ATA drives already installed. If you need to install Serial ATA drives,  
please refer to the appropriate section in Chapter 6.  
Checking the Airow  
1. Airow is provided by two 10-cm input fans. The system component layout  
was carefully designed to promote sufcient airow through the small 1U  
rackmount space.  
2. Note that all power and data cables have been routed in such a way that they  
do not block the airow generated by the fans.  
Providing Power  
1. The last thing you must do is to provide input power to the system. Plug the  
power cord from the power supply unit into a high-quality power strip that of-  
fers protection from electrical noise and power surges. It is recommended that  
you use an uninterruptible power supply (UPS).  
2. Finish by depressing the power button on the chassis control panel.  
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Chapter 3: System Interface  
Chapter 3  
System Interface  
3-1 Overview  
There are several LEDs on the control panel as well as others on the Serial ATA  
drive carriers to keep you constantly informed of the overall status of the system  
as well as the activity and health of specic components. There are also two but-  
tons on the chassis control panel. This chapter explains the meanings of all LED  
indicators and the appropriate response you may need to take.  
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 reset button and a power on/off button.  
Reset Button  
The reset button reboots the system.  
Power  
This is the main power button, which is used to apply or turn off the main system  
power. Turning off system power with this button removes the main power but keeps  
standby power supplied to the system.  
3-3 Control Panel LEDs  
The control panel located on the front of the chassis has ve LEDs. These LEDs  
provide you with critical information related to different parts of the system. This  
section explains what each LED indicates when illuminated and any corrective ac-  
tion you may need to take.  
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Overheat/Fan Fail  
When this LED ashes, it indicates a fan failure. When on continuously it indicates  
an overheat condition, which may be caused by cables obstructing the airow in  
the system or the ambient room temperature being too warm. Check the routing of  
the cables and make sure all fans are present and operating normally. You should  
also check to make sure that the chassis covers are installed. Finally, verify that  
the heatsinks are installed properly (see Chapter 5). This LED will remain ashing  
or on as long as the indicated condition exists.  
2
NIC2  
Indicates network activity on LAN2 when ashing .  
1
NIC1  
Indicates network activity on LAN1 when ashing.  
HDD  
Channel activity for all HDDs. This light indicates DVD-ROM and/or SATA drive  
activity when ashing.  
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Chapter 3: System Interface  
Power  
Indicates power is being supplied to the system's power supply units. This LED  
should normally be illuminated when the system is operating.  
3-4 Serial ATA Drive Carrier LEDs  
Each Serial ATA drive has both a green and a red LED.  
Green: Each Serial ATA drive carrier has a green LED. When illuminated, this  
green LED (on the front of the SATA drive carrier) indicates drive activity. A  
connection to the SATA backplane enables this LED to blink on and off when  
that particular drive is being accessed. Please refer to Chapter 6 for instructions  
on replacing failed SATA drives.  
Red: The red LED to indicate an SATA drive failure. If one of the SATA drives  
fail, you should be notied by your system management software. Please refer  
to Chapter 6 for instructions on replacing failed SATA drives.  
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Notes  
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Chapter 4: System Safety  
Chapter 4  
System Safety  
4-1 Electrical Safety Precautions  
Note: power should always be disconnected before perform-  
ing any service on the system.  
!
Basic electrical safety precautions shall be followed to protect yourself from harm  
and the SuperServer 5016I-T/5016I-TF from damage:  
Be aware of the locations of the power on/off switch on the chassis as well  
as the room's emergency power-off switch, disconnection switch or electrical  
outlet. If an electrical accident occurs, you can then quickly remove power from  
the system.  
Do not work alone when working with high voltage components.  
Power should always be disconnected from the system when removing or in-  
stalling main system components, such as the serverboard, memory modules  
and oppy drive. When disconnecting power, you should rst power down the  
system with the operating system rst and then unplug the power cords of all  
the power supply units in the system.  
When working around exposed electrical circuits, another person who is familiar  
with the power-off controls should be nearby to switch off the power if neces-  
sary.  
Use only one hand when working with powered-on electrical equipment. This  
is to avoid making a complete circuit, which will cause electrical shock. Use  
extreme caution when using metal tools, which can easily damage any electrical  
components or circuit boards they come into contact with.  
Do not use mats designed to decrease static electrical discharge as protection  
from electrical shock. Instead, use rubber mats that have been specically  
designed as electrical insulators.  
The power supply power cords must include a grounding plug and must be  
plugged into grounded electrical outlets.  
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This product may be connected to an IT power system. In all cases, make sure  
that the unit is also reliably connected to Earth (ground).  
Serverboard Battery: CAUTION - There is a danger of explosion if the onboard  
battery is installed upside down, which will reverse its polarites (see Figure  
4-1). This battery must be replaced only with the same or an equivalent type  
recommended by the manufacturer. Dispose of used batteries according to the  
manufacturer's instructions.  
DVD-ROM Laser: CAUTION - this server may have come equipped with a  
DVD-ROM drive. To prevent direct exposure to the laser beam and hazardous  
radiation exposure, do not open the enclosure or use the unit in any uncon-  
ventional way.  
Mainboard replaceable soldered-in fuses: Self-resetting PTC (Positive Tempera-  
ture Coefcient) fuses on the mainboard must be replaced by trained service  
technicians only. The new fuse must be the same or equivalent as the one  
replaced. Contact technical support for details and support.  
4-2 General Safety Precautions  
!
Follow these rules to ensure general safety:  
Keep the area around the SuperServer 5016I-T/5016I-TF clean and free of  
clutter.  
The SuperServer 5016I-T/5016I-TF weighs approximately 30 lbs. (13.6 kg)  
when fully loaded. When lifting the system, two people at either end should lift  
slowly with their feet spread out to distribute the weight. Always keep your back  
straight and lift with your legs.  
Place the chassis top cover and any system components that have been re-  
moved away from the system or on a table so that they won't accidentally be  
stepped on.  
While working on the system, do not wear loose clothing such as neckties and  
unbuttoned shirt sleeves, which can come into contact with electrical circuits or  
be pulled into a cooling fan.  
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Chapter 4: System Safety  
Remove any jewelry or metal objects from your body, which are excellent metal  
conductors that can create short circuits and harm you if they come into contact  
with printed circuit boards or areas where power is present.  
After accessing the inside of the system, close the system back up and secure  
it to the rack unit with the retention screws after ensuring that all connections  
have been made.  
4-3 ESD Precautions  
!
Electrostatic Discharge (ESD) is generated by two objects with different electrical  
charges coming into contact with each other. An electrical discharge is created to  
neutralize this difference, which can damage electronic components and printed  
circuit boards. The following measures are generally sufcient to neutralize this  
difference before contact is made to protect your equipment from ESD:  
Use a grounded wrist strap designed to prevent static discharge.  
Keep all components and printed circuit boards (PCBs) in their antistatic bags  
until ready for use.  
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 a wrist strap.  
Handle a board by its edges only; do not touch its components, peripheral chips,  
memory modules or contacts.  
When handling chips or modules, avoid touching their pins.  
Put the serverboard and peripherals back into their antistatic bags when not  
in use.  
For grounding purposes, make sure your computer chassis provides excellent  
conductivity between the power supply, the case, the mounting fasteners and  
the serverboard.  
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4-4 Operating Precautions  
!
Care must be taken to assure that the chassis cover is in place when the 5016I-  
T/5016I-TF is operating to assure proper cooling. Out of warranty damage to the  
system can occur if this practice is not strictly followed.  
Figure 4-1. Installing the Onboard Battery  
LITHIUM BATTERY  
BATTERY HOLDER  
!
Please handle used batteries carefully. Do not damage the battery in any way; a  
damaged battery may release hazardous materials into the environment. Do not  
discard a used battery in the garbage or a public landll. Please comply with the  
regulations set up by your local hazardous waste management agency to dispose  
of your used battery properly.  
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Chapter 5: Advanced Motherboard Setup  
Chapter 5  
Advanced Motherboard Setup  
This chapter covers the steps required to install the X8SIL/X8SIL-F motherboard  
into the chassis, connect the data and power cables and install add-on cards. All  
jumpers and connections are described and a layout and quick reference chart are  
included for your reference. Remember to completely close the chassis when you  
have nished working with the motherboard to better cool and protect the system.  
5-1 Handling the Motherboard  
Electrostatic Discharge (ESD) can damage electronic components. To prevent dam-  
age to any printed circuit boards (PCBs), it is important to handle them very carefully  
(see previous chapter). To prevent the motherboard from bending, keep one hand  
under the center of the board to support it when handling. The following measures  
are generally sufcient to protect your equipment from electric static discharge.  
Precautions  
Use a grounded wrist strap designed to prevent Electrostatic Discharge.  
Touch a grounded metal object before removing any board from its antistatic  
bag.  
Handle a board by its edges only; do not touch its components, peripheral chips,  
memory modules or gold contacts.  
When handling chips or modules, avoid touching their pins.  
Put the motherboard, add-on cards and peripherals back into their antistatic  
bags when not in use.  
For grounding purposes, make sure your computer chassis provides excellent  
conductivity between the power supply, the case, the mounting fasteners and  
the motherboard.  
Unpacking  
The motherboard is shipped in antistatic packaging to avoid electrical static dis-  
charge. When unpacking the board, make sure the person handling it is static  
protected.  
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5-2 Motherboard Installation  
This section explains the rst step of physically mounting the X8SIL/X8SIL-F into the  
SC811T-280 chassis. Following the steps in the order given will eliminate the most  
common problems encountered in such an installation. To remove the motherboard,  
follow the procedure in reverse order.  
Installing to the Chassis  
1. Access the inside of the system (see procedure in Chapter 6).  
2. Make sure that the I/O ports on the motherboard align properly with their  
respective holes in the I/O shield at the back of the chassis.  
3. Carefully mount the motherboard to the motherboard tray by aligning the  
board holes with the raised metal standoffs that are visible in the chassis. You  
may need to add an extra standoff for the hole near the Fan 3 header.  
4. Insert screws into all the mounting holes on your motherboard that line up  
with the standoffs and tighten until snug (if you screw them in too tight, you  
might strip the threads).  
5. Finish by replacing the top cover of the chassis.  
Note: Metal screws provide an electrical contact to the serverboard ground to  
provide a continuous ground for the system.  
Warning: To avoid damaging the serverboard and its components, do not apply  
any force greater than 8 lbs. per square inch when installing a screw into a mount-  
ing hole.  
5-3 Connecting Cables  
Now that the motherboard is installed, the next step is to connect the cables to the  
board. These include the data (ribbon) cables for the peripherals and control panel  
and the power cables.  
Connecting Data Cables  
The cables used to transfer data from the peripheral devices have been carefully  
routed to prevent them from blocking the ow of cooling air that moves through  
the system from front to back. If you need to disconnect any of these cables, you  
should take care to keep them routed as they were originally after reconnecting  
them (make sure the red wires connect to the pin 1 locations). The following data  
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Chapter 5: Advanced Motherboard Setup  
cables (with their locations noted) should be connected. (See the layout on page  
5-9 for connector locations.)  
SATA drive data cable (I-SATA0 ~ I-SATA3)  
Control Panel cable (JF1)  
Important! Make sure the the cables do not come into contact with the fans.  
Connecting Power Cables  
The X8SIL/X8SIL-F has a 24-pin primary power supply connector (JPW1) for con-  
nection to the ATX power supply. In addition, an 8-pin processor power connector  
(JPW2) must also be connected to your power supply. See Section 5-9 for power  
connector pin denitions.  
Connecting the Control Panel  
JF1 contains header pins for various front control panel connectors. See Figure 5-1  
for the pin locations of the various front control panel buttons and LED indicators.  
All JF1 wires have been bundled into a single ribbon cable to simplify this connec-  
tion. Make sure the red wire plugs into pin 1 as marked on the board. The other  
end connects to the Control Panel PCB board, located just behind the system status  
LEDs on the chassis. See Chapter 5 for details and pin descriptions.  
Figure 5-1. Control Panel Header Pins  
16 15  
Power LED  
HDD LED  
NIC1 LED  
NIC2 LED  
OH/Fan Fail LED  
x (Key)  
LED Anode  
LED Anode  
LED Anode  
LED Anode  
LED Anode  
x (Key)  
Ground  
Reset (Button)  
Power (Button)  
Ground  
2
1
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5-4 I/O Ports  
The I/O ports are color coded in conformance with the PC 99 specication. See  
Figure 5-2 below for the colors and locations of the various I/O ports.  
Figure 5-2. I/O Ports  
5
2
1
4
3
6
7
8
9
1. Keyboard (Purple)  
6. COM1 Port  
7. VGA Port (Blue)  
8. LAN1  
2. PS/2 Mouse (Green)  
3. USB Port 0  
4. USB Port 1  
9. LAN2  
5. IPMI LAN Port*  
*X8SIL-F only  
5-5 Processor and Heatsink Installation  
When handling the processor package, avoid placing direct pressure on  
the label area of the fan.  
!
Notes:  
Always connect the power cord last and always remove it before adding, re-  
moving or changing any hardware components. Make sure that you install the  
processor into the CPU socket before you install the CPU heatsink.  
If you buy a CPU separately, make sure that you use an Intel-certied multi-  
directional heatsink only.  
Make sure to install the serverboard into the chassis before you install the CPU  
heatsinks.  
When receiving a serverboard without a processor pre-installed, make sure that  
the plastic CPU socket cap is in place and none of the socket pins are bent;  
otherwise, contact your retailer immediately.  
Refer to the Supermicro web site for updates on CPU support.  
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Chapter 5: Advanced Motherboard Setup  
Installing the LGA1156 Processor  
1. Press the load lever to release the load plate, which covers the CPU socket,  
from its locked position.  
2. Gently lift the load lever to open the load plate. Remove the plate cap.  
3. Use your thumb and your index nger to hold the CPU at the top center edge  
and the bottom center edge of the CPU.  
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4. Align the CPU key that is the semi-circle cutouts against the socket keys.  
Once aligned, carefully lower the CPU straight down to the socket. (Do not  
drop the CPU on the socket. Do not move the CPU horizontally or vertically.  
Do not rub the CPU against the surface or against any pins of the socket to  
avoid damage to the CPU or the socket.)  
With the CPU inside the socket, inspect the four corners of the CPU to make  
sure that the CPU is properly installed.  
5. Use your thumb to gently push the load lever down to the lever lock.  
Save the plastic PnP cap. The motherboard must be shipped with the PnP  
cap properly installed to protect the CPU socket pins. Shipment without the  
PnP cap properly installed will cause damage to the socket pins.  
CPU properly  
installed  
Load lever locked  
into place.  
Warning: The CPU will only seat inside the socket in one direction. Make  
sure it is properly inserted before closing the load plate. If it doesn't close  
!
properly, do not force it as it may damage your CPU. Instead, open the load  
plate again and double-check that the CPU is aligned properly.  
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Chapter 5: Advanced Motherboard Setup  
Installing a Passive CPU Heatsink  
1. Do not apply any thermal grease to the heatsink or the CPU die -- the re-  
quired amount has already been applied.  
2. Place the heatsink on top of the CPU so that the four mounting holes are  
aligned with those on the motherboard and the heatsink bracket underneath.  
3. Screw in two diagonal screws (i.e., the #1 and the #2 screws) until just snug  
(do not over-tighten the screws to avoid possible damage to the CPU.)  
4. Finish the installation by fully tightening all four screws.  
Figure 5-3. Installing the Heatsink  
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Removing the Heatsink  
Warning: We do not recommend removing the CPU or the heatsink. How-  
!
ever, if you do need to remove the heatsink, please follow the instructions  
below to prevent damage to the CPU or other components.  
1. Unscrew the heatsink screws from the motherboard in the sequence as  
shown in the illustration below.  
2. Gently wriggle the heatsink to loosen it from the CPU. (Do not use excessive  
force when wriggling the heatsink!)  
3. Once the CPU is loose, remove the it from the CPU socket.  
4. Clean the surface of the CPU and the heatsink, removing the used thermal  
grease. Reapply the proper amount of thermal grease on the surface before  
re-installing the CPU and the heatsink.  
Figure 5-4. Removing the Heatsink  
Screw #4  
Loosen screws in the  
sequence shown  
Screw #1  
Screw #2  
Motherboard  
Screw #3  
Remove the heatsink  
bracket from underneath  
the motherboard  
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Chapter 5: Advanced Motherboard Setup  
5-6 Installing Memory  
Note: Check the Supermicro web site for recommended memory modules.  
CAUTION  
Exercise extreme care when installing or removing DIMM modules to  
prevent any possible damage.  
DIMM Installation  
1. Insert the desired number of DIMMs into the memory slots, starting with  
DIMM1A. Insert each DIMM module vertically into its slot. Pay attention to  
the notch along the bottom of the module to prevent incorrect DIMM module  
installation.  
2. Gently press down on the DIMM module until it snaps into place in the slot.  
Repeat step 1 to install DIMM1B if needed.  
Memory Support  
The X8SIL/X8SIL-F supports up to 16GB of DDR3 ECC UDIMM or up to 32GB  
of ECC DDR3 RDIMM (1333/1066/800 MHz in 4 DIMM slots.) Populating these  
DIMM slots with a pair of memory modules of the same type and same size will  
result in interleaved memory, which will improve memory performance. Please  
refer to the table below:  
Platform  
DIMM Type  
Intel® Xeon® Series Processors  
Not Supported  
X8SIL/X8SIL-F  
Non-ECC UDIMM Only  
ECC UDIMM Only  
RDIMM Only (with ECC)  
Supported (see Table 1)  
Supported (see Table 2)  
Mixed ECC with non-ECC Not Supported  
Mixed UDIMM/RDIMM Not Supported  
Table 1 - DDR3 ECC/Unbuffered (UDIMM) Memory Support  
ECC UDIMM  
1Gb (x8 DRAM)  
2Gb (x8 DRAM)  
Single Rank  
Up to 4GB  
Up to 8GB  
(4 x 1GB DIMM Modules)  
(4 x 2GB DIMM Modules)  
Dual Rank  
Quad Rank  
Up to 8GB  
(4 x 2GB DIMM Modules)  
Up to 16GB  
(4 x 4GB DIMM Modules)  
Not Supported  
Not Supported  
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SUPERSERVER 5016I-T/5016I-TF User's Manual  
Table 2 - DDR3 ECC Registered (RDIMM) Memory Support  
RDIMM  
1Gb (x8 DRAM)  
2Gb (x8 DRAM)  
Single Rank  
Up to 4GB  
Up to 8GB  
(4 x 1GB DIMM Modules)  
(4 x 2GB DIMM Modules)  
Dual Rank  
Quad Rank  
Up to 8GB  
(4 x 2GB DIMM Modules)  
Up to 16GB  
(4 x 4GB DIMM Modules)  
Up to 16GB  
Up to 32GB  
(4 x 4GB DIMM Modules)  
(4 x 8GB DIMM Modules)  
Note: All other memory sizes, types, die, density, that are not listed in these tables  
are NOT supported.  
Memory Population Guidelines  
Please follow the tables below when populating the X8SIL/X8SIL-F.  
DDR3 ECC UDIMM Memory  
DIMM Slots DIMMs  
per Channel Populated  
per Channel  
DIMM Type POR Speeds Ranks per DIMM  
(any combination)  
2
1
Unbuffered 1066, 1333  
DDR3 ECC  
Single Rank, Dual  
Rank  
2
2
Unbuffered 1066, 1333  
DDR3 ECC  
Single Rank, Dual  
Rank  
DDR3 ECC RDIMM Memory  
DIMM Slots DIMMs  
per Channel Populated  
per Channel  
DIMM Type POR Speeds Ranks per DIMM  
(any combination)  
2
2
2
2
1
1
2
2
Registered  
DDR3 ECC  
1066, 1333  
1066  
Single Rank, Dual  
Rank  
Registered  
DDR3 ECC  
Quad Rank  
Registered  
DDR3 ECC  
1066, 1333  
800*  
Single Rank, Dual  
Rank  
Registered  
DDR3 ECC  
Quad Rank  
*Note: 1066 RDIMMs running at 800MHz-BIOS will have their speed automatically  
downgraded to 800 MHz.  
Slot 2, Channel B  
Slot 2, Channel A  
Slot 1, Channel A  
Slot 1, Channel B  
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Chapter 5: Advanced Motherboard Setup  
Figure 5-5. DIMM Installation  
Notch  
Notch  
To Install: Insert module  
vertically and press  
down until it snaps into  
place. Pay attention to  
the alignment notch at  
the bottom.  
Front View  
To Remove:  
Note: Notch should align  
with the receptive key  
point on the slot.  
Use your thumbs to  
gently push the release  
tabs near both ends of  
the module. This should  
release it from the slot.  
Release Tab  
Release Tab  
Top View of DDR3 Slot  
Note: Due to memory allocation to system devices, the amount of memory that  
remains available for operational use will be reduced when 4 GB of RAM is used.  
The reduction in memory availability is disproportional.  
For Microsoft Windows users: Microsoft implemented a design change in Windows  
XP with Service Pack 2 (SP2) and Windows Vista. This change is specic to the  
Physical Address Extension (PAE) mode behavior which improves driver compatibil-  
ity. For more information, please read the following article at Microsoft’s Knowledge  
Possible System Memory Allocation & Availability  
Physical Memory  
Remaining (Available)  
(4 GB Total System  
Memory)  
System Device  
Size  
Firmware Hub ash memory (System BIOS)  
Local APIC  
1 MB  
3.99  
3.99  
3.99  
3.99  
3.76  
3.51  
3.01  
4 KB  
Area Reserved for the chipset  
I/O APIC (4 Kbytes)  
2 MB  
4 KB  
PCI Enumeration Area 1  
PCI Express (256 MB)  
256 MB  
256 MB  
PCI Enumeration Area 2 (if needed) -Aligned on 256- 512 MB  
MB boundary-  
VGA Memory  
16 MB  
1 MB  
2.85  
2.84  
2.84  
TSEG  
Memory available to OS and other applications  
5-11  
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SUPERSERVER 5016I-T/5016I-TF User's Manual  
5-7 Installing a PCI Expansion Card  
The SC811T-280 chassis can accommodate one full-size PCI-Express expansion  
card with the use of a riser card.  
Installing an Expansion Card  
1. After powering down the system, remove the PCI slot shield.  
2. Fully seat the riser card into the slot, pushing down with your thumbs evenly  
on both sides of the card. Seat the expansion card into the riser card.  
3. Finish by using a screw to secure the top of the card shield to the chassis.  
The PCI slot shield protects the serverboard and its components from EMI  
and aid in proper ventilation, so make sure it is always in place.  
5-12  
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Chapter 5: Advanced Motherboard Setup  
5-8 Motherboard Details  
Figure 5-6. X8SIL/X8SIL-F Layout  
38  
37 36  
35  
34  
JPUSB1:B/P USB WAKE UP  
1-2:ENABLE  
2-3:DISABLE  
JPI2C:PWR I2C  
KB/MOUSE  
FLOPPY  
1
2
3
4
JPW1  
1
JPUSB1  
33  
32  
31  
5
6
7
30  
29  
8
9
10  
JI2C1  
JI2C2  
1
1
28  
SLOT7 PCI-E X8 GEN2  
11  
JI2C1/JI2C2  
ON:Enable  
OFF:Disable  
27  
26  
25  
24  
LE4  
LE3  
12  
13  
14  
SLOT6 PCI-E X8 GEN2  
SLOT5 PCI-E X4 on X8  
SLOT4 PCI 33MHZ  
JBT1  
MAC CODE  
BAR CODE  
JBT1:CMOS CLEAR  
I-SATA5  
I-SATA1  
I-SATA0  
I-SATA3  
I-SATA4  
I-SATA2  
PCI1  
JPG1: VGA  
1-2:Enable  
2-3:Disable  
J16  
J24  
15  
JL1:CHASSIS INTRUSION  
JPG1  
USB 10/11  
JPL2:LAN2  
1-2:ENABLE  
2-3:DISABLE  
JPL1:LAN1  
1-2:ENABLE  
2-3:DISABLE  
1
USB2/3  
USB4  
23  
16 17 18 19 20  
21  
22  
5-13  
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X8SIL/X8SIL-F Jumpers  
Number  
38  
Jumper  
JPUSB1  
JBT1  
Description  
Default  
BP USB0/1 Wake-up  
CMOS Clear  
Pins 1-2 (Enabled)  
(See Section 5-9)  
(See Section 5-9)  
Pins 1-2 (Enabled)  
Pins 1-2 (Enabled)  
Pins 1-2 (Enabled)  
25  
13,14  
17  
JI2C1/JI2C2  
SMB to PCI Slots  
Onboard VGA Enable  
LAN1/LAN2 Enable  
BMC Jumper  
JPG1  
11,12  
10  
JPL1/JPL2  
JPB  
X8SIL/X8SIL-F Headers/Connectors  
Number  
4,16  
Connector  
COM1/COM2  
Description  
COM1/2 Serial Ports  
33,32,27,23,7 Fans 1~5  
System/CPU Fan Headers  
34  
5
Floppy  
JAR  
Floppy Disk Drive Connector  
Alarm Reset  
30  
28  
18  
29  
37  
36  
1
JD1  
Speaker Header  
JF1  
Control Panel Header  
JL1  
Chassis Intrusion Header  
JLED  
Power LED Indicator Header  
24-pin ATX Main Power Connector (required)  
+12V 8-pin CPU Power Connector (required)  
Keyboard/Mouse Ports  
JPW1  
JPW2  
KB/Mouse  
LAN1~LAN2,  
I-SATA 0~5  
IPMI  
8,9  
22  
2
Gigabit Ethernet (RJ45) Ports  
Serial ATA Ports (X8SIL has 4 SATA Ports)  
IPMI LAN Port (X8SIL-F Only)  
PWR Supply (I2C) System Management Bus  
Onboard Speaker  
35  
31  
24  
3,21  
20  
19  
6
JPI2C  
SPKR1  
T-SGPIO-0/1  
Serial General Purpose IO Headers (for SATA)  
USB0/1, USB 2/3 Rear (USB0/1) and Front Accessible (USB2/3)  
USB 4  
Type A USB Port  
USB 10/11  
VGA  
Front Panel USB Header (X8SIL-F Only)  
Onboard Video Port  
X8SIL/X8SIL-F LED Indicators  
Number LED  
Description  
Standby PWR LED Indicator Green: Solid on PWR On  
IPMI Heartbeat LED Yellow: Blinking IPMI: Normal  
Color/State  
Status  
26  
15  
LE4  
LE7  
5-14  
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Chapter 5: Advanced Motherboard Setup  
5-9 Connector Denitions  
ATX Power 24-pin Connector  
Pin Denitions (JPW1)  
Pin# Denition  
Pin #  
1
Denition  
+3.3V  
+3.3V  
COM  
Main ATX Power Supply  
Connector  
13  
14  
15  
16  
17  
18  
19  
20  
21  
22  
23  
24  
+3.3V  
-12V  
2
The primary power supply connec-  
tor (JPW1) meets the SSI EPS 12V  
specication. Refer to the table on  
the right for the pin denitions of the  
ATX 24-pin power connector. You  
must also connect the 8-pin (JPW2)  
power connector to your power supply  
(see below).  
COM  
PS_ON  
COM  
COM  
COM  
Res (NC)  
+5V  
3
4
+5V  
5
COM  
6
+5V  
7
COM  
8
PWR_OK  
5VSB  
+12V  
9
+5V  
10  
11  
12  
+5V  
+12V  
COM  
+3.3V  
Required Connection  
Processor Power Connector  
8-pin (+12V) Processor Power  
Pin Denitions (JPW2)  
JPW2 must also be connected to pro-  
vide power to the South Bridge, North  
Bridge and all VRMs. See the table on  
the right for pin denitions.  
Pins Denition  
1 - 4  
5 - 8  
Ground  
+12V  
Required Connection  
Power Button  
The Power Button connection is located  
on pins 1 and 2 of JF1. Momentarily  
contacting both pins will power on/off  
the system. This button can also be con-  
gured to function as a suspend button  
(with a setting in the BIOS - see Chapter  
7). To turn off the power in the suspend  
mode, press the button for at least 4  
seconds. Refer to the table on the right  
for pin denitions.  
Power Button  
Pin Denitions (JF1)  
Pin# Denition  
1
2
PW_ON  
Ground  
Reset Button  
The Reset Button connection is located  
on pins 3 and 4 of JF1. Attach it to a  
hardware reset switch on the computer  
case to reset the system. Refer to the  
table on the right for pin denitions.  
Reset Button  
Pin Denitions (JF1)  
Pin# Denition  
3
4
Reset  
Ground  
5-15  
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SUPERSERVER 5016I-T/5016I-TF User's Manual  
Overheat (OH)/Fan Fail  
OH/Fan Fail LED  
Pin Denitions (JF1)  
OH/Fan Fail Indicator  
Status  
Connect an LED cable to pins 7 and 8  
of JF1 to provide warnings for chassis  
overheating or fan failure. Refer to the  
table on the right for pin denitions.  
Pin# Denition  
State Denition  
7
8
Vcc/Blue UID LED  
OH/Fan Fail LED  
Off  
On  
Normal  
Overheat  
Fan Fail  
Flash-  
ing  
NIC1/NIC2 (LAN1/LAN2)  
LAN1/LAN2 LED  
Pin Denitions (JF1)  
The NIC (Network Interface Control-  
ler) LED connection for LAN port 1 is  
located on pins 11 and 12 of JF1, and  
the LED connection for LAN Port 2 is  
on pins 9 and 10. NIC1 LED and NIC2  
LED are 2-pin NIC LED headers. At-  
tach NIC LED cables to NIC1 LED and  
NIC2 LED to display network activities  
for LAN 1 and LAN2. Refer to the table  
on the right for pin denitions.  
Pin# Denition  
9/11  
Vcc  
10/12 Ground  
HDD LED  
HDD LED  
Pin Denitions (JF1)  
The HDD LED connection is located  
on pins 13 and 14 of JF1. This LED is  
used to display HDD activity. See the  
table on the right for pin denitions.  
Pin# Denition  
13  
14  
+5V  
HD Active  
Power On LED  
Power LED  
Pin Denitions (JF1)  
The Power On LED connector is lo-  
cated on pins 15 and 16 of JF1 This  
connection is used to provide LED  
indication of power being supplied to  
the system. See the table on the right  
for pin denitions.  
Pin# Denition  
15  
16  
+5V  
Control  
5-16  
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Chapter 5: Advanced Motherboard Setup  
Chassis Intrusion  
Chassis Intrusion  
Pin Denitions (JL1)  
The Chassis Intrusion header is des-  
ignated JL1. Attach an appropriate  
cable from the chassis to inform you  
of a chassis intrusion when the chas-  
sis is opened  
Pin# Denition  
1
2
Intrusion Input  
Ground  
PS/2 Keyboard and  
Mouse Port Pin  
Denitions  
ATX PS/2 Keyboard and PS/2  
Mouse Ports  
Pin# Denition  
The ATX PS/2 keyboard and the PS/2  
mouse are located on the I/O back-  
panel. The mouse port is above the  
keyboard port. See the table on the  
right for pin denitions.  
1
2
3
4
5
6
Data  
NC  
Ground  
VCC  
Clock  
NC  
Fan Headers  
The X8SIL/X8SIL-F has five fan  
headers, all of which are 4-pin fans.  
However, pins 1-3 of the fan headers  
are backward compatible with the  
traditional 3-pin fans. See the table  
on the right for pin denitions. Fan 1  
is intended for use with the CPU. A  
fan speed control setting in the BIOS  
Hardware Monitoring section allows  
the BIOS to automatically set fan  
speeds based on the system tempera-  
ture. The default setting is Disabled  
which allows the onboard fans to run  
at full speed. Refer to the table on the  
right for pin denitions.  
Fan Header  
Pin Denitions  
(FAN1-5)  
Pin# Denition  
1
2
3
4
Ground (Black)  
2.5A/+16V (Red)  
Tachometer  
PWM Control  
Note: Please use all 3-pin fans or all 4-pin fans  
on a motherboard. Please do not use 3-pin fans  
and 4-pin fans on the same board.  
Onboard Speaker  
Pin Denition  
Onboard Speaker  
The onboard speaker (SPKR1) can be  
used to provide audible indications for  
various beep codes. See the table on  
the right for pin denitions.  
Pin#  
Pin 1  
Pin 2  
Denitions  
Pos. (+)  
Neg. (-)  
Beep In  
Alarm  
Speaker  
5-17  
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SUPERSERVER 5016I-T/5016I-TF User's Manual  
Speaker  
Speaker Connector  
Pin Denitions  
On the JD1 header, pins 3~4 are used  
for internal speaker. Close pins 3~4  
with a cap to use the onboard speaker.  
If you wish to use an external speaker,  
close pins 1~4 with a cable. See the  
table on the right for pin denitions.  
Pin Setting Denition  
Pins 3~4  
Pins1~4  
Internal Speaker  
External Speaker  
Serial Port  
Pin Denitions  
Serial Ports  
Pin #  
Denition  
Pin #  
Denition  
1
2
3
4
5
DCD  
RXD  
6
7
8
9
DSR  
RTS  
CTS  
RI  
Two serial ports are included on the  
X8SIL/X8SIL-F. See the table on the  
right for pin denitions.  
TXD  
DTR  
Ground  
10  
NC  
NC = No Connection  
USB Port  
Pin Denitions  
Pin# Denition Pin#  
Denition  
+5V  
Universal Serial Bus (USB)  
1
2
3
4
+5V  
5
6
7
8
Two Universal Serial Bus ports (USB  
0 and USB 1) are located on the I/O  
backplane. Additionally, a Type A  
USB header (USB4) and two USB  
connections (USB2/3 and USB 10/11,  
X8SIL-F only) are provided on the  
motherboard to provide front chassis  
access. (Cables are not included).  
See the tables on the right for pin  
denitions.  
USB_PN1  
USB_PP1  
Ground  
USB_PN0  
USB_PP0  
Ground  
Front Panel USB Port  
Pin Denitions  
USB 8, 9, 10  
Pin # Denition  
USB 11  
Pin # Denition  
1
2
3
4
5
+5V  
6
+5V  
USB_PN2  
USB_PP2  
Ground  
7
USB_PN3  
USB_PP3  
Ground  
Key  
8
9
No Con-  
nection  
10  
LAN1/LAN2 (Ethernet Ports)  
Two Ethernet ports are located on the  
I/O backplane. These ports accept  
RJ45 type cables.  
5-18  
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Chapter 5: Advanced Motherboard Setup  
Onboard Power LED  
Onboard PWR LED  
Pin Denitions  
An onboard Power LED header is  
located at JLED. This Power LED  
header is connected to Control Panel  
header located at JF1 to indicate the  
status of system power. See the table  
on the right for pin denitions.  
Pin# Denition  
1
2
VCC  
No Connection  
3
Connection to PWR  
LED in JF1  
PWR Supply I2C  
Pin Denitions  
Power Supply I2C Connector  
Pin# Denition  
The Power Supply (I2C) connector is  
located at SMB_PS1 and is used to  
monitor the status of the power supply,  
fan and system temperature. See the  
table on the right for pin denitions.  
1
2
Clock  
Data  
3
4
5
PWR Fail  
Ground  
3.3V  
T-SGPIO 0/1 Headers  
Serial_Link-SGPIO  
Pin Denitions  
Two T-SGPIO (Serial-Link General  
Purpose Input/Output) headers are  
located near the SATA connectors  
on the motherboard. These headers  
are used to communicate with the  
enclosure management chip in the  
system. See the table on the right for  
pin denitions.  
Pin# Denition  
Pin  
2
Denition  
NC  
1
3
NC  
Ground  
4
DATA Out  
5
7
Load  
6
8
Ground  
NC  
Clock  
NC = No Connection  
Alarm Reset  
If three power supplies are installed  
and Alarm Reset (JAR) is connected,  
the system will notify you when any of  
the three power modules fail. Connect  
JAR to a micro-switch to turn off the  
alarm that is activated when a power  
module fails. See the table on the right  
for pin denitions.  
Alarm Reset  
Pin Denitions  
Pin Setting Denition  
Pin 1  
Pin 2  
Ground  
+5V  
5-19  
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SUPERSERVER 5016I-T/5016I-TF User's Manual  
5-10 Jumper Settings  
Explanation of Jumpers  
To modify the operation of the mother-  
board, jumpers can be used to choose  
between optional settings. Jumpers  
create shorts between two pins to  
change the function of the connector.  
Pin 1 is identied with a square solder  
pad on the printed circuit board. See  
the motherboard layout pages for  
jumper locations.  
3
2
1
Connector  
Pins  
Jumper  
Setting  
3
2
1
Note: On a two-pin jumper, "Closed"  
means the jumper is on both pins and  
"Open" means the jumper is either on  
only one pin or completely removed.  
CMOS Clear  
JBT1 is used to clear CMOS (which 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 unplug the power cord(s).  
2. With the power disconnected, short the CMOS pads with a metal object such  
as a small screwdriver.  
3. Remove the screwdriver (or shorting device).  
4. Reconnect the power cord(s) and power on the system.  
Note: Do not use the PW_ON connector to clear CMOS.  
VGA Enable  
VGA Enable/Disable  
JPG1 allows you to enable or disable  
the onboard VGA connector. The default  
position is on pins 1 and 2 to enable  
VGA. See the table on the right for  
jumper settings.  
Jumper Settings (JPG1)  
Both Jumpers Denition  
Pins 1-2  
Pins 2-3  
Enabled (Default)  
Disabled  
5-20  
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Chapter 5: Advanced Motherboard Setup  
LAN1/LAN2 Enable/Disable  
LAN1/LAN2 Enable/Disable  
Jumper Settings (JPL1/JPL2)  
Change the setting of jumper JPL1 or  
JPL2 to enable or disable the LAN1 and  
LAN2 Ethernet ports, respectively. See  
the table on the right for jumper set-  
tings. The default setting is enabled.  
Jumper Setting Denition  
Pins 1-2  
Pins 2-3  
Enabled  
Disabled  
PCI Slot SMB Enable  
PCI Slot_SMB Enable  
Jumper Settings  
Use Jumpers I2C1/I2C2 to enable PCI  
Slot SMB (System Management Bus)  
support to improve system manage-  
ment for the PCI slots. See the table  
on the right for jumper settings.  
Jumper Setting Denition  
Short  
Enabled  
Disabled  
Open (Default)  
USB Wake-Up  
Use the JPUSB1 jumper to "wake-up"  
your system by pressing a key on a  
USB keyboard or clicking the USB  
mouse. The JPUSB1 jumper is used  
together with the USB Wake-Up feature  
in the BIOS. Enable this jumper and the  
USB feature in the BIOS to wake-up  
your system via USB devices.  
USB0/1 Port Wake-up  
Enable/Disable (JPUSB1)  
Pin# Denition  
1-2  
2-3  
Enabled (Default)  
Disabled  
Note: When the USB function is set  
to Enabled in the BIOS, and a USB  
Wake-up jumper is set to Disabled,  
remove the USB devices from the  
USB ports whose USB jumper is Dis-  
abled before the system goes into the  
standby mode.  
BMC Jumper  
JPB is used to enable or disable the  
BMC (Baseboard Management Con-  
trol) Chip and the onboard IPMI con-  
nection. This jumper is used together  
with the IPMI settings in the BIOS. The  
default position is on pins 1 and 2 to  
Enable BMC. See the table on the right  
for jumper settings.  
BMC IPMI Enable/Disable Jumper  
Settings  
Settings Denition  
Pins 1-2  
Pins 2-3  
Enabled (Default)  
Disabled  
5-21  
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SUPERSERVER 5016I-T/5016I-TF User's Manual  
5-11 Onboard Indicators  
LAN1/LAN2  
Activity LED  
LAN1/2 LEDs  
Color  
Status  
Denition  
Yellow  
Blinking  
Active  
The Ethernet ports (located on the I/O  
backplane) have two LEDs. On each  
port, one LED indicates activity while  
the other LED may be green, amber  
or off to indicate the speed of the con-  
nection. See the tables on the right for  
more information.  
LAN1/2 LED  
Link LED  
LED Color Denition  
Off  
No Connection or 10 Mb/s  
100 Mb/s  
Green  
Amber  
1 Gb/s  
IPMI Dedicated LAN LEDs  
In addition to LAN1/LAN2, a dedicated  
IPMI LAN port is also provided on the  
X8SIL/X8SIL-F. The yellow LED indi-  
cates activity, while the green LED  
indicates the speed of the connec-  
tion. See the table at right for more  
information.  
IPMI LAN Link LED (Left) &  
Activity LED (Right)  
LED  
Status  
Denition  
100 Mb/s  
Active  
Link  
Green: Solid  
Activity  
Yellow: Blink-  
ing  
Onboard Power LED  
An Onboard Power LED is located at  
LE4 on the motherboard. When LE4 is  
on, the AC power cable is connected.  
Make sure to disconnect the power  
cable before removing or installing any  
component. See the table on the right  
for more details.  
Onboard PWR LED  
LED Color Denition  
Off  
On  
System Off  
System on, or  
System off and PWR  
Cable Connected  
IPMI Heartbeat LED  
An IPMI Heartbeat LED is located at  
LE7. When LE7 blinks, IPMI is func-  
tioning properly. Refer to the table on  
the right for details.  
IPMI Heartbeat LED  
Green: Blinking  
IPMI is ready for use  
5-22  
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Chapter 5: Advanced Motherboard Setup  
5-12 SATA and Floppy Drive Connections  
SATA Port  
Pin Denitions  
(I-SATA0 ~ I-SATA5)  
SATA Ports  
Pin #  
Denition  
Ground  
TXP  
Six Serial ATA (SATA) ports (I-SATA  
0~5) are located on the X8SIL-F  
motherboard (4 SATA ports on the  
X8SIL). These Serial Link connections  
provide faster data transmission than  
traditional Parallel ATA. See the table  
on the right for pin denitions.  
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
TXN  
Ground  
RXN  
RXP  
Ground  
Floppy Connector  
Floppy Drive Connector  
Pin Denitions (Floppy)  
The oppy connector is located next  
to the DIMM slots on the motherboard.  
See the table on the right for pin  
denitions.  
Pin# Denition  
Pin #  
Denition  
1
Ground  
Ground  
Key  
2
4
6
8
FDHDIN  
3
Reserved  
FDEDIN  
Note the following when connecting  
5
the oppy cable:  
7
Ground  
Ground  
Ground  
Ground  
Ground  
Ground  
Ground  
Ground  
Ground  
Ground  
Ground  
Ground  
Ground  
Ground  
Index  
9
10  
12  
14  
16  
18  
20  
22  
24  
26  
28  
30  
32  
34  
Motor Enable  
Drive Select B  
Drive Select B  
Motor Enable  
DIR  
The oppy disk drive cable has  
11  
13  
15  
17  
19  
21  
23  
25  
27  
29  
31  
33  
seven twisted wires.  
A red mark on a wire typically des-  
ignates the location of pin 1.  
STEP  
Write Data  
Write Gate  
Track 00  
A single oppy disk drive ribbon  
cable has 34 wires and two con-  
nectors to provide for two oppy  
disk drives. The connector with  
twisted wires always connects to  
drive A, and the connector that  
does not have twisted wires al-  
ways connects to drive B.  
Write Protect  
Read Data  
Side 1 Select  
Diskette  
5-23  
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SUPERSERVER 5016I-T/5016I-TF User's Manual  
Notes  
5-24  
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Chapter 6: Advanced Chassis Setup  
Chapter 6  
Advanced Chassis Setup  
This chapter covers the steps required to install components and perform mainte-  
nance on the SC811T-280 chassis. For component installation, follow the steps in  
the order given to eliminate the most common problems encountered. If a step is  
unnecessary, skip ahead to the step that follows.  
Tools Required  
The only tool you will need to install components and perform maintenance is a  
Philips screwdriver.  
6-1 Static-Sensitive Devices  
Electrostatic Discharge (ESD) can damage electronic components. To prevent  
damage to any printed circuit boards (PCBs), it is important to handle them very  
carefully. The following measures are generally sufcient to protect your equipment  
from ESD discharge.  
Precautions  
Use a grounded wrist strap designed to prevent static discharge.  
Touch a grounded metal object before removing any board from its antistatic  
bag.  
Handle a board by its edges only; do not touch its components, peripheral chips,  
memory modules or gold contacts.  
When handling chips or modules, avoid touching their pins.  
Put the serverboard, add-on cards and peripherals back into their antistatic  
bags when not in use.  
For grounding purposes, make sure your computer chassis provides excellent  
conductivity between the power supply, the case, the mounting fasteners and  
the serverboard.  
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SUPERSERVER 5016I-T/5016I-TF User's Manual  
Figure 6-1. Chassis Front View  
Figure 6-2. Chassis Rear View  
Dedicated IPMI LAN  
Port*  
Keyboard/  
Mouse Ports  
USB Ports  
COM1 Port  
VGA Port  
Ethernet Ports  
*Note: the dedicated IPMI LAN port is included on the 5016I-TF only.  
6-2 Control Panel  
The control panel (located on the front of the chassis) must be connected to the  
JF1 connector on the serverboard to provide you with system control buttons and  
status indicators. These wires have been bundled together in a ribbon cable to  
simplify the connection. Connect the cable from JF1 on the serverboard to the the  
Control Panel PCB (printed circuit board). Make sure the red wire plugs into pin 1  
on both headers. Pull all excess cabling out of the airow path. The LEDs inform  
you of system status. See Chapter 3 for details on the LEDs and the control panel  
buttons. Details on JF1 can be found in Chapter 5.  
6-2  
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Chapter 6: Advanced Chassis Setup  
6-3 System Fans  
Two 10-cm blower fans provide the cooling for the SuperServer 5016I-T/5016I-TF.  
The chassis includes air seals under the blower fans and at the chassis cross sec-  
tion, which separates the drive bay area from the serverboard area of the chassis  
to promote better airow. It is highly important that the air seal is properly installed  
and making a good seal in order for the cooling air to circulate properly through  
the chassis.  
The fans can adjust their speed according to the heat level sensed in the system,  
which results in more efcient and quieter fan operation. Fan speed is controlled  
by a setting in BIOS (see Chapter 7).  
System Fan Failure  
If a fan fails, the ambient air temperature in the chassis will rise and activate the  
overheat LED on the control panel. You will need to power down the system to  
replace this fan with one of the same type (p/n FAN-0038L4). Contact your vendor  
or Supermicro for information on replacement fans.  
Replacing System Cooling Fans  
1. Turn off the power to the system and remove the AC power cord.  
2. Remove the chassis cover and unplug the fan cable from the serverboard  
3. Unscrew the failed blower fan from the chassis and pull it completely out from  
the serverboard.  
4. Replace the failed fan with an identical 10-cm, 12 volt fan. Position the new  
fan in its proper place and secure it to the chassis with the screws you re-  
moved previously.  
5. After the new fan has been installed, plug the fan cable back into the same  
chassis fan header on the serverboard you removed it from.  
6. Reconnect the AC power cord and power up the system.  
7. Check that the fan is working properly and that the overheat LED on the  
control panel has turned off.  
8. Finish by replacing the top panel of the chassis.  
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6-4 Drive Bay Installation/Removal  
Accessing the Drive Bays  
Serial ATA Drives: Because of their hot-swap capability, you do not need to access  
the inside of the chassis or power down the system to install or replace Serial ATA  
drives. Proceed to the next step for instructions.  
DVD-ROM Drive: For installing/removing a DVD-ROM disk drive, you will need  
to gain access to the inside of the server by removing the top cover of the chas-  
sis. Proceed to the "DVD-ROM Drive Installation" section later in this chapter for  
instructions.  
Note: Only a "slim" DVD-ROM drive will t into the 5016I-T/5016I-TF.  
Serial ATA Drive Installation  
The SATA drives are mounted in drive carriers to simplify their installation and  
removal from the chassis. These carriers also help promote proper airow for the  
Serial ATA drive bays. For this reason, even empty carriers without Serial ATA drives  
installed must remain in the chassis.  
The SATA drives are hot-swappable, meaning they can be installed and removed  
without powering down the system  
Figure 6-3. Mounting a Drive in a Carrier  
6-4  
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Chapter 6: Advanced Chassis Setup  
Mounting a SATA Drive in a Drive Carrier  
1. Install a drive into the carrier with the printed circuit board side toward the  
carrier so that the mounting holes align with those in the carrier.  
2. Secure the drive to the carrier with four screws, as shown in Figure 6-3.  
Installing/Removing SATA Drives  
1. To remove, rst push the release button located beside the drive LEDs  
2. Swing the colored handle fully out and use it to pull the unit straight out (see  
Figure 6-4).  
3. To install, simply push the drive carrier into its bay until fully seated.  
Figure 6-4. Removing/Installing SATA Drives  
Important: Regardless of how many SATA drives are installed,  
both drive carriers must remain in the drive bays to maintain  
!
proper airow.  
Use 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 obstruct the holes, which  
aid in proper airow.  
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SATA Power Cables  
SATA power cables should be routed so that they do not block the airow through  
the chassis. See the serverboard layout diagram for the location of the cable con-  
nections.  
DVD-ROM Drive Installation  
The top cover of the chassis must be opened to gain full access to the DVD-ROM  
drive bay. The DVD-ROM drive must have a "slim" prole to t into the server.  
Installing a DVD-ROM Drive  
1. Turn off the power to the system and remove the AC power cord.  
2. Release the retention screws that secure the unit to the rack.  
3. Grasp the two handles on either side and pull the unit straight out until it  
locks (you will hear a "click").  
4. Depress the two buttons on the top of the chassis to release the top cover  
and at the same time, push the cover away from you until it stops.  
5. Lift the top cover from the chassis to gain full access to the inside of the  
server.  
6. Disconnect the power and data cables from the drive to other chassis compo-  
nents including the motherboard and backplane.  
7. Remove the old drive by depressing the release tab, then pulling the drive out  
of the chassis.  
8. Insert the new drive unit in the slot until the tab locks into place.  
9. Connect the data and power cables to the backplane and motherboard.  
10. Replace the chassis cover, reconnect the AC power cord and power up the  
system.  
6-6  
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Chapter 6: Advanced Chassis Setup  
6-5 Power Supply  
The 5016I-T/5016I-TF has a single 280 watt power supply, which can operate at  
100 or 240 input volts. Use the main power button on the front of the chassis to  
power off the system and then unplug the AC power cord before removing the  
power supply.  
Power Supply Failure  
If the power supply unit fails, the system will shut down and you will need to replace  
the power supply unit. Replacement units can be ordered directly from Supermicro  
(see part numbers in Appendix B and contact infomation in Chapter 1).  
Replacing the Power Supply  
1. Turn off the power to the system and remove the AC power cord.  
2. Release the retention screws that secure the unit to the rack.  
3. Grasp the two handles on either side and pull the unit straight out until it  
locks (you will hear a "click").  
4. Depress the two buttons on the top of the chassis to release the top cover  
and at the same time, push the cover away from you until it stops.  
5. Lift the top cover from the chassis to gain full access to the inside of the  
server.  
6. To remove the failed power unit, remove the two screws on the back of the  
power supply, which secure it to the chassis. You can then lift the unit straight  
out of the chassis.  
7. Carefully insert a new power supply into position in the chassis and secure it  
with the two screws at the rear of the unit.  
8. Before reconnecting the power cord, make sure the power switch on the  
power supply is in the off position. Then reconnect the power cord, replace  
the chassis top cover and push the unit back into the rack.  
9. Finish by turning the power switch on the power supply on, and then depress  
the power button on the front of the system.  
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Notes  
6-8  
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Chapter 7: BIOS  
Chapter 7  
BIOS  
7-1 Introduction  
This chapter describes the AMI BIOS Setup Utility for the X8SIL/X8SIL-F. The AMI  
ROM BIOS is stored in a Flash EEPROM and can be easily updated. This chapter  
describes the basic navigation of the AMI BIOS Setup Utility setup screens.  
Note: For instructions on BIOS recovery, please refer to the instruction  
Starting BIOS Setup Utility  
To enter the AMI BIOS Setup Utility screens, press the <Delete> key while the  
system is booting up.  
Note: In most cases, the <Delete> key is used to invoke the AMI BIOS  
setup screen. There are a few cases when other keys are used, such as  
<F1>, <F2>, etc.  
Each main BIOS menu option is described in this manual. The Main BIOS setup  
menu screen has two main frames. The left frame displays all the options that can  
be congured. Grayed-out options cannot be congured. Options in blue can be  
congured by the user. The right frame displays the key legend. Above the key  
legend is an area reserved for a text message. When an option is selected in the  
left frame, it is highlighted in white. Often a text message will accompany it. (Note:  
the AMI BIOS has default text messages built in. Supermicro retains the option to  
include, omit, or change any of these text messages.)  
The AMI BIOS Setup Utility uses a key-based navigation system called "hot keys".  
Most of the AMI BIOS setup utility "hot keys" can be used at any time during the  
setup navigation process. These keys include <F1>, <F10>, <Enter>, <ESC>, ar-  
row keys, etc.  
Note: Options printed in Bold are default settings.  
How To Change the Conguration Data  
The conguration data that determines the system parameters may be changed by  
entering the AMI BIOS Setup utility. This Setup utility can be accessed by pressing  
<Del> at the appropriate time during system boot.  
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How to Start the Setup Utility  
Normally, the only visible Power-On Self-Test (POST) routine is the memory test.  
As the memory is being tested, press the <Delete> key to enter the main menu of  
the AMI BIOS Setup Utility. From the main menu, you can access the other setup  
screens. An AMI BIOS identication string is displayed at the left bottom corner of  
the screen, below the copyright message.  
Warning! Do not upgrade the BIOS unless your system has a BIOS-related  
issue. Flashing the wrong BIOS can cause irreparable damage to the sys-  
tem. In no event shall Supermicro be liable for direct, indirect, special, inci-  
dental, or consequential damages arising from a BIOS update. If you have  
to update the BIOS, do not shut down or reset the system while the BIOS  
is updating to avoid possible boot failure. Refer to our web site for BIOS  
7-2 Main Setup  
7-2  
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Chapter 7: BIOS  
When you rst enter the AMI BIOS Setup Utility, you will enter the Main setup screen.  
You can always return to the Main setup screen by selecting the Main tab on the  
top of the screen. The Main BIOS Setup screen is shown below.  
System Overview: The following BIOS information will be displayed:  
System Time/System Date  
Use this option to change the system time and date. Highlight System Time or Sys-  
tem Date using the arrow keys. Enter new values through the keyboard. Press the  
<Tab> key or the arrow keys to move between elds. The date must be entered in  
Day MM/DD/YY format. The time is entered in HH:MM:SS format. (Note: The time  
is in the 24-hour format. For example, 5:30 P.M. appears as 17:30:00.)  
Supermicro X8SIL/X8SIL-F  
Version  
Build Date  
Processor  
The AMI BIOS will automatically display the status of processor as shown below:  
Type of Processor  
Speed  
Physical Count  
Logical Count  
System Memory  
This displays the size of memory available in the system:  
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7-3 Advanced Setup Congurations  
Use the arrow keys to select Boot Setup and hit <Enter> to access the submenu  
items:  
XBOOT Feature  
Quick Boot  
If Enabled, this option will skip certain tests during POST to reduce the time needed  
for system boot. The options are Enabled and Disabled.  
Quiet Boot  
This option allows the bootup screen options to be modied between POST mes-  
sages or the OEM logo. Select Disabled to display the POST messages. Select  
Enabled to display the OEM logo instead of the normal POST messages. The op-  
tions are Enabled and Disabled.  
AddOn ROM Display Mode  
This sets the display mode for Option ROM. The options are Force BIOS and  
Keep Current.  
Bootup Num-Lock  
This feature selects the Power-on state for Numlock key. The options are Off  
and On.  
PS/2 Mouse Support  
This feature enables support for the PS/2 mouse. The options are Disabled,  
Enabled and Auto.  
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Chapter 7: BIOS  
Wait For 'F1' If Error  
This forces the system to wait until the 'F1' key is pressed if an error occurs. The  
options are Disabled and Enabled.  
Hit 'Del' Message Display  
This feature displays "Press DEL to run Setup" during POST. The options are  
Enabled and Disabled.  
Watch Dog Function  
If enabled, the Watch Dog Timer will allow the system to reboot when it is inactive  
for more than 5 minutes. The options are Enabled and Disabled.  
Restore on AC Power Loss  
Use this feature to set the power state after a power outage. Select Power-Off for  
the system power to remain off after a power loss. Select Power-On for the system  
power to be turned on after a power loss. Select Last State to allow the system to  
resume its last state before a power loss. The options are Power-On, Power-Off  
and Last State.  
Interrupt 19 Capture  
Interrupt 19 is the software interrupt that handles the boot disk function. When this  
item is set to Enabled, the ROM BIOS of the host adaptors will "capture" Interrupt  
19 at boot and allow the drives that are attached to these host adaptors to function  
as bootable disks. If this item is set to Disabled, the ROM BIOS of the host adap-  
tors will not capture Interrupt 19, and the drives attached to these adaptors will not  
function as bootable devices. The options are Enabled and Disabled.  
XProcessor & Clock Options  
Warning: Take Caution when changing the Advanced settings. An incorrect  
value, a very high DRAM frequency or incorrect DRAM timing may cause  
system to become unstable. When this occurs, revert to the default setting.  
CPU Ratio  
This feature allows the user to use the CPU clock multiplier to multiply CPU  
speed in order to enhance performance. Select Manual to Manually set the  
multiplier setting. Select Auto for the BIOS to automatically select the CPU  
multiplier setting for your system. The options are Auto and Manual.  
Clock Spread Spectrum  
Select Enable to use the feature of Clock Spectrum, which will allow the BIOS to  
monitor and attempt to reduce the level of Electromagnetic Interference caused by  
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the components whenever needed. Select Disabled to enhance system stability.  
The options are Disabled and Enabled.  
Hardware Prefetcher (Available when supported by the CPU)  
If set to Enabled, the hardware pre fetcher will pre fetch streams of data and instruc-  
tions from the main memory to the L2 cache in the forward or backward manner to  
improve CPU performance. The options are Disabled and Enabled.  
Adjacent Cache Line Prefetch (Available when supported by the CPU)  
The CPU fetches the cache line for 64 bytes if this option is set to Disabled. The  
CPU fetches both cache lines for 128 bytes as comprised if Enabled.  
Intel® Virtualization Technology (Available when supported by the CPU)  
Select Enabled to use the feature of Virtualization Technology to allow one platform  
to run multiple operating systems and applications in independent partitions, creat-  
ing multiple "virtual" systems in one physical computer. The options are Enabled  
and Disabled. Note: If there is any change to this setting, you will need to power  
off and restart the system for the change to take effect. Please refer to Intel’s web  
site for detailed information.  
Execute-Disable Bit Capability (Available when supported by the OS and  
the CPU)  
Set to Enabled to enable the Execute Disable Bit which will allow the processor  
to designate areas in the system memory where an application code can execute  
and where it cannot, thus preventing a worm or a virus from ooding illegal codes  
to overwhelm the processor or damage the system during an attack. The default is  
Enabled. (Refer to Intel and Microsoft Web Sites for more information.)  
Simultaneous Multi-Threading (Available when supported by the CPU)  
Set to Enabled to use the Hyper-Threading Technology, which will result in increased  
CPU performance. The options are Disabled and Enabled.  
Active Processor Cores  
Set to Enabled to use a processor's Second Core and beyond. (Please refer to  
Intel's web site for more information.) The options are All, 1 and 2.  
Intel® EIST Technology  
EIST (Enhanced Intel SpeedStep Technology) allows the system to automatically  
adjust processor voltage and core frequency in an effort to reduce power consump-  
tion and heat dissipation. Please refer to Intel’s web site for detailed information.  
The options are Disable and Enable.  
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Chapter 7: BIOS  
Intel® Turbo Boost Technology (Available if Intel® EIST technology is  
Enabled)  
This feature allows processor cores to run faster than marked frequency in specic  
conditions. The options are Disabled and Enabled.  
C1E Support  
Select Enabled to use the "Enhanced Halt State" feature. C1E signicantly reduces  
the CPU's power consumption by reducing the CPU's clock cycle and voltage during  
a "Halt State." The options are Disabled and Enabled.  
Intel® C-STATE Tech  
If enabled, C-State is set by the system automatically to either C2, C3 or C4 state. The op-  
tions are Disabled and Enabled.  
C-State package limit setting  
If set to Auto, the AMI BIOS will automatically set the limit on the C-State package register.  
The options are Auto, C1, C3, C6 and C7.  
C1 Auto Demotion  
When enabled, the CPU will conditionally demote C3, C6 or C7 requests to C1 based on  
un-core auto-demote information. The options are Disabled and Enabled.  
C3 Auto Demotion  
When enabled, the CPU will conditionally demote C6 or C7 requests to C3 based on un-core  
auto-demote information. The options are Disabled and Enabled.  
XAdvanced Chipset Control  
The items included in the Advanced Settings submenu are listed below.  
Memory Remap Feature  
This feature when enabled, allows the remapping of everlapped PCI memory above  
the total physical memory. The settings are Enabled and Disabled.  
Intel VT-d  
Select Enabled to enable Intel's Virtualization Technology support for Direct I/O VT-d  
by reporting the I/O device assignments to VMM through the DMAR ACPI Tables.  
This feature offers fully-protected I/O resource-sharing across the Intel platforms,  
providing the user with greater reliability, security and availability in networking and  
data-sharing. The settings are Enabled and Disabled.  
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Active State Power Management  
Select Enabled to start Active-State Power Management for signal transactions  
between L0 and L1 Links on the PCI Express Bus. This maximizes power-saving  
and transaction speed. The options are Enabled and Disabled.  
Route Port 80h Cycles to  
This feature allows the user to decide which bus to send debug information to. The  
options are Disabled, PCI and LPC.  
USB Functions  
This feature allows the user to decide the number of onboard USB ports to be  
enabled. The Options are: Disabled and Enabled.  
Legacy USB Support (available if USB Functions above is Enabled)  
Select Enabled to use Legacy USB devices. If this item is set to Auto, Legacy  
USB support will be automatically enabled if a legacy USB device is installed  
on the motherboard, and vise versa. The settings are Disabled, Enabled and  
Auto.  
XSATA / Floppy Conguration  
When this submenu is selected, the AMI BIOS automatically detects the presence  
of the IDE Devices and displays the following items:  
Floppy A  
This feature allows the user to select the type of oppy drive connected to the sys-  
tem. The options are Disabled, 360KB 5 1/4", 1.2MB 5 1/4", 720KB 3 1/2", 1.44MB  
3 1/2" and 2.88MB 3 1/2".  
SATA#1 Conguration  
If Compatible is selected, it sets SATA#1 to legacy compatibility mode, while se-  
lecting Enhanced sets SATA#1 to native SATA mode. The options are Disabled,  
Compatible, Enhanced.  
Congure SATA as  
This feature allows the user to select the drive type for SATA#1. The options are  
IDE, RAID, AHCI and Disabled.  
ICH RAID CodeBase (Available if RAID is selected above)  
Select Intel to enable the Intel SATA Host RAID Utility. Select Adaptec to use the  
Adaptec Host RAID Utility. The options are Intel and Adaptec.  
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Chapter 7: BIOS  
SATA#2 Conguration (Available if IDE is enabled under "Congure SATA#1  
as" above)  
Selecting Enhanced will set SATA#2 to native SATA mode. The options are  
Compatible and Enhanced  
IDE Detect Timeout (sec)  
Use this feature to set the time-out value for the BIOS to detect the ATA, ATAPI  
devices installed in the system. The options are 0 (sec), 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, and  
35.  
Primary IDE Master/Slave, Secondary IDE Master/Slave, Third IDE Master,  
and Fourth IDE Master  
These settings allow the user to set the parameters of Primary IDE Master/Slave,  
Secondary IDE Master/Slave, Third and Fourth IDE Master slots. Hit <Enter> to  
activate the following submenu screen for detailed options of these items. Set the  
correct congurations accordingly. The items included in the submenu are:  
Type  
Select the type of device connected to the system. The options are Not Installed,  
Auto, CD/DVD and ARMD.  
LBA/Large Mode  
LBA (Logical Block Addressing) is a method of addressing data on a disk drive.  
In the LBA mode, the maximum drive capacity is 137 GB. For drive capacities  
over 137 GB, your system must be equipped with a 48-bit LBA mode addressing.  
If not, contact your manufacturer or install an ATA/133 IDE controller card that  
supports 48-bit LBA mode. The options are Disabled and Auto.  
Block (Multi-Sector Transfer)  
Block Mode boosts the IDE drive performance by increasing the amount of data  
transferred. Only 512 bytes of data can be transferred per interrupt if Block Mode  
is not used. Block Mode allows transfers of up to 64 KB per interrupt. Select  
Disabled to allow data to be transferred from and to the device one sector at  
a time. Select Auto to allow data transfer from and to the device occur multiple  
sectors at a time if the device supports it. The options are Auto and Disabled.  
PIO Mode  
The IDE PIO (Programmable I/O) Mode programs timing cycles between the  
IDE drive and the programmable IDE controller. As the PIO mode increases, the  
cycle time decreases. The options are Auto, 0, 1, 2, 3, and 4.  
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Select Auto to allow the AMI BIOS to automatically detect the PIO mode. Use  
this value if the IDE disk drive support cannot be determined.  
Select 0 to allow the AMI BIOS to use PIO mode 0. It has a data transfer rate  
of 3.3 MBs.  
Select 1 to allow the AMI BIOS to use PIO mode 1. It has a data transfer rate  
of 5.2 MBs.  
Select 2 to allow the AMI BIOS to use PIO mode 2. It has a data transfer rate  
of 8.3 MBs.  
Select 3 to allow the AMI BIOS to use PIO mode 3. It has a data transfer rate  
of 11.1 MBs.  
Select 4 to allow the AMI BIOS to use PIO mode 4. It has a data transfer band-  
width of 32-Bits. Select Enabled to enable 32-Bit data transfer.  
DMA Mode  
Select Auto to allow the BIOS to automatically detect IDE DMA mode when the  
IDE disk drive support cannot be determined.  
Select SWDMA0 to allow the BIOS to use Single Word DMA mode 0. It has a  
data transfer rate of 2.1 MBs.  
Select SWDMA1 to allow the BIOS to use Single Word DMA mode 1. It has a  
data transfer rate of 4.2 MBs.  
Select SWDMA2 to allow the BIOS to use Single Word DMA mode 2. It has a  
data transfer rate of 8.3 MBs.  
Select MWDMA0 to allow the BIOS to use Multi Word DMA mode 0. It has a  
data transfer rate of 4.2 MBs.  
Select MWDMA1 to allow the BIOS to use Multi Word DMA mode 1. It has a  
data transfer rate of 13.3 MBs.  
Select MWDMA2 to allow the BIOS to use Multi-Word DMA mode 2. It has a  
data transfer rate of 16.6 MBs.  
Select UDMA0 to allow the BIOS to use Ultra DMA mode 0. It has a data transfer  
rate of 16.6 MBs. It has the same transfer rate as PIO mode 4 and Multi Word  
DMA mode 2.  
Select UDMA1 to allow the BIOS to use Ultra DMA mode 1. It has a data transfer  
rate of 25 MBs.  
Select UDMA2 to allow the BIOS to use Ultra DMA mode 2. It has a data transfer  
rate of 33.3 MBs.  
Select UDMA3 to allow the BIOS to use Ultra DMA mode 3. It has a data transfer  
rate of 66.6 MBs.  
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Chapter 7: BIOS  
Select UDMA4 to allow the BIOS to use Ultra DMA mode 4 . It has a data  
transfer rate of 100 MBs.  
The options are Auto, SWDMAn, MWDMAn, and UDMAn.  
S.M.A.R.T. For Hard disk drives  
Self-Monitoring Analysis and Reporting Technology (SMART) can help predict  
impending drive failures. Select Auto to allow the AMI BIOS to automatically de-  
tect hard disk drive support. Select Disabled to prevent the AMI BIOS from using  
the S.M.A.R.T. Select Enabled to allow the AMI BIOS to use the S.M.A.R.T. to  
support hard drive disk. The options are Disabled, Enabled, and Auto.  
32-Bit Data Transfer  
Select Enable to enable the function of 32-bit IDE data transfer. The options are  
Enabled and Disabled.  
XPCI/PnP Conguration  
This feature allows the user to set the PCI/PnP congurations for the following  
items:  
Clear NVRAM  
This feature clears the NVRAM during system boot. The options are No and  
Yes.  
Plug & Play OS  
Selecting Yes allows the OS to congure Plug & Play devices. (This is not required  
for system boot if your system has an OS that supports Plug & Play.) Select No to  
allow the AMI BIOS to congure all devices in the system.  
PCI Latency Timer  
This feature sets the latency Timer of each PCI device installed on a PCI bus. Select  
64 to set the PCI latency to 64 PCI clock cycles. The options are 32, 64, 96, 128,  
160, 192, 224 and 248.  
PCI IDE Bus Master  
When enabled, the BIOS uses PCI bus mastering for reading/writing to IDE drives.  
The options are Disabled and Enabled.  
PCIE I/O Performace  
This feature selects the setting for the IOH PCIE maximum payload size. The op-  
tions are 128B and 256B.  
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PCI Slots 5, 6, 7 & PCI Slot 4 OPROM  
Use this feature to enable or disable PCI slot Option ROMs. The options are Dis-  
abled and Enabled.  
Onboard LAN Option ROM Select  
This feature selects whether to load the iSCSI or PXE onboard LAN option ROM.  
The options are iSCSI and PXE.  
Load Onboard LAN1 Option ROM/Load Onboard LAN2 Option ROM  
This feature is to enable or disable the onboard option ROMs. The options are  
Disabled and Enabled.  
Initiate Graphic Adapter  
Use the feature to select the graphics controller to be used as the primary boot  
device. The options are Other and Onboard VGA.  
XSuper IO Device Conguration  
Serial Port1 Address/ Serial Port2 Address  
This option species the base I/O port address and the Interrupt Request address  
of Serial Port 1 and Serial Port 2. Select Disabled to prevent the serial port from  
accessing any system resources. When this option is set to Disabled, the serial  
port physically becomes unavailable. Select 3F8/IRQ4 to allow the serial port to  
use 3F8 as its I/O port address and IRQ 4 for the interrupt address. The options  
for Serial Port1 are Disabled, 3F8/IRQ4, 2E8/IRQ3. The options for Serial Port2 are  
Disabled, 2F8/IRQ3, and 2E8/IRQ3.  
Onboard Floppy Controller  
Select Enabled to enable the onboard Floppy Controller. The options are Enabled  
and Disabled.  
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Chapter 7: BIOS  
XRemote Access Conguration  
Remote Access  
This allows the user to enable the Remote Access feature. The options are Dis-  
abled and Enabled.  
If Remote Access is set to Enabled, the following items will display:  
Serial Port Number  
This feature allows the user decide which serial port to be used for Console  
Redirection. The options are COM 1, COM 2 and COM 3.  
Note: Serial Over LAN (SOL) is enabled on COM 3 on the X8SIL-F.  
Serial Port Mode  
This feature allows the user to set the serial port mode for Console Redirection.  
The options are 115200 8, n 1; 57600 8, n, 1; 38400 8, n, 1; 19200 8, n, 1; and  
9600 8, n, 1.  
Flow Control  
This feature allows the user to set the ow control for Console Redirection. The  
options are None, Hardware, and Software.  
Redirection After BIOS POST  
Select Disabled to turn off Console Redirection after Power-On Self-Test  
(POST). Select Always to keep Console Redirection active all the time after  
POST. (Note: This setting may not be supported by some operating systems.)  
Select Boot Loader to keep Console Redirection active during POST and Boot  
Loader. The options are Disabled, Boot Loader, and Always.  
Terminal Type  
This feature allows the user to select the target terminal type for Console Redi-  
rection. The options are ANSI, VT100, and VT-UTF8.  
VT-UTF8 Combo Key Support  
A terminal keyboard denition that provides a way to send commands from a  
remote console. Available options are Enabled and Disabled.  
Sredir Memory Display Delay  
This feature denes the length of time in seconds to display memory information.  
The options are No Delay, Delay 1 Sec, Delay 2 Sec, and Delay 4 Sec.  
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XHardware Health Conguration  
This feature allows the user to monitor Hardware Health of the system and review  
the status of each item when displayed.  
CPU Overheat Alarm  
This option allows the user to select the CPU OverheatAlarm setting which determines  
whentheCPUOHalarmwillbeactivatedtoprovidewarningofpossibleCPUoverheat.  
Warning: Any temperature that exceeds the CPU threshold temperature  
predened by the CPU manufacturer may result in CPU overheat or system  
instability. When the CPU temperature reaches this predened threshold, the  
CPU and system cooling fans will run at full speed.  
The options are:  
The Early Alarm: Select this setting if you want the CPU overheat alarm (includ-  
ing the LED and the buzzer) to be triggered as soon as the CPU temperature  
reaches the CPU overheat threshold as predened by the CPU manufacturer.  
The Default Alarm: Select this setting if you want the CPU overheat alarm  
(including the LED and the buzzer) to be triggered when the CPU temperature  
reaches about 5oC above the threshold temperature as predened by the CPU  
manufacturer to give the CPU and system fans additional time needed for CPU  
and system cooling. In both the alarms above, please take immediate action  
as shown below.  
System Temperature  
This feature displays the absolute system temperature (i.e., 34oC).  
CPU Temperature  
The CPU Temperature feature will display the CPU temperature status as detected  
by the BIOS:  
Low – This level is considered as the ‘normal’ operating state. The CPU temperature  
is well below the CPU ‘Temperature Tolerance’. The motherboard fans and CPU will  
run normally as congured in the BIOS (Fan Speed Control).  
User intervention: No action required.  
Medium – The processor is running warmer. This is a ‘precautionary’ level and  
generally means that there may be factors contributing to this condition, but the CPU  
is still within its normal operating state and below the CPU ‘Temperature Tolerance’.  
The motherboard fans and CPU will run normally as congured in the BIOS. The  
fans may adjust to a faster speed depending on the Fan Speed Control settings.  
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Chapter 7: BIOS  
User intervention: No action is required. However, consider checking the CPU  
fans and the chassis ventilation for blockage.  
High – The processor is running hot. This is a ‘caution’ level since the CPU’s ‘Tem-  
perature Tolerance’ has been reached (or has been exceeded) and may activate  
an overheat alarm:  
The Default Alarm – the Overheat LED and system buzzer will activate if the High  
condition continues for some time after it is reached. The CPU fan will run at full  
speed to bring the CPU temperature down. If the CPU temperature still increases  
even with the CPU fan running at full speed, the system buzzer will activate and  
the Overheat LED will turn on.  
The Early Alarm – the Overheat LED and system buzzer will be activated exactly  
when the High level is reached. The CPU fan will run at full speed to bring the  
CPU temperature down.  
Note: In both the alarms above, please take immediate action as shown below.  
See CPU Overheat Alarm to modify the above alarm settings.  
User intervention: If the system buzzer and Overheat LED has activated, take  
action immediately by checking the system fans, chassis ventilation and room  
temperature to correct any problems. Note: the system may shut down if it con-  
tinues for a long period to prevent damage to the CPU.  
Notes: The CPU thermal technology that reports absolute temperatures  
(Celsius/Fahrenheit) has been upgraded to a more advanced feature by Intel  
in its newer processors. The basic concept is that each CPU is embedded  
by a unique temperature information that the motherboard can read. This  
Temperature Threshold’ or ‘Temperature Tolerance’ has been assigned at  
the factory and is the baseline by which the motherboard takes action during  
different CPU temperature conditions (i.e., by increasing CPU Fan speed,  
triggering the Overheat Alarm, etc). Since CPUs can have different ‘Tem-  
perature Tolerances’, the installed CPU can now send its ‘Temperature Toler-  
ance’ to the motherboard resulting in better CPU thermal management.  
Supermicro has leveraged this feature by assigning a temperature status to  
certain thermal conditions in the processor (Low, Medium and High). This  
makes it easier for the user to understand the CPU’s temperature status,  
rather than by just simply seeing a temperature reading (i.e., 25oC).  
The information provided above is for your reference only. For more information on  
Fan Speed Control Modes  
This feature allows the user to decide how the system controls the speeds of the  
onboard fans. The CPU temperature and the fan speed are correlative. When the  
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CPU on-die temperature increases, the fan speed will also increase, and vice versa.  
Select Workstation if your system is used as a Workstation. Select Server if your  
system is used as a Server. Select “Disabled, (Full Speed @12V)” to disable the  
fan speed control function and allow the onboard fans to constantly run at the full  
speed (12V). The Options are: Disabled, 4-pin (Server), and 4-pin (Workstation).  
Fan1 ~ Fan 6 Reading  
This feature displays the fan speed readings from fan interfaces Fan1 through  
Fan5.  
Vcore, AVCC, 3.3Vcc, 12V, V_DIMM, 5V, -12V, 3.3Vsb, and Vbat  
XACPI Conguration  
Use this feature to congure Advanced Conguration and Power Interface (ACPI)  
power management settings for your system.  
High Performance Event Timer  
Select Enabled to activate the High Performance Event Timer (HPET) that produces  
periodic interrupts at a much higher frequency than a Real-time Clock (RTC) does in  
synchronizing multimedia streams, providing smooth playback and reducing the de-  
pendency on other timestamp calculation devices, such as an x86 RDTSC Instruc-  
tion embedded in the CPU. The High Performance Event Timer is used to replace  
the 8254 Programmable Interval Timer. The options are Enabled and Disabled.  
ACPI Aware O/S  
Enable ACPI support if it is supported by the OS to control ACPI through the Operat-  
ing System. Otherwise, disable this feature. The options are Yes and No.  
ACPI APIC Support  
Select Enabled to include the ACPI APIC Table Pointer in the RSDT (Root System  
Description Table) pointer list. The options are Enabled and Disabled.  
APIC ACPI SCI IRQ  
When this item is set to Enabled, APIC ACPI SCI IRQ is supported by the system.  
The options are Enabled and Disabled.  
Headless Mode  
This feature is used to enable the system to function without a keyboard, monitor  
or mouse attached The options are Enabled and Disabled.  
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Chapter 7: BIOS  
ACPI Version Features  
The options are ACPI v1.0, ACPI v2.0 and ACPI v3.0. Please refer to ACPI's website  
XIPMI Conguration (X8SIL-F Only)  
Intelligent Platform Management Interface (IPMI) is a set of common interfaces that  
IT administrators can use to monitor system health and to manage the system as a  
whole. For more information on the IPMI specications, please visit Intel's website  
IPMI Firmware Revision  
This item displays the current IPMI rmware revision.  
Status of BMC  
Baseboard Management Controller (BMC) manages the interface between system  
management software and platform hardware. This is an informational feature which  
returns the status code of the BMC micro controller.  
View BMC System Event Log  
This feature is used to view any BMC events. It shows the total number of entries  
and will allow the viewing of each event by scrolling down on an Entry Number  
and pressing Enter.  
Clear BMC System Event Log  
This feature is used to clear the System Event Log. Caution: Any cleared information  
is unrecoverable. Make absolutely sure you no longer need any data stored in the  
log before clearing the BMC Event Log.  
Set LAN Conguration  
Set this feature to congure the IPMI LAN adapter with a network address.  
Channel Number - Enter the channel number for the SET LAN Cong com-  
mand. This is initially set to [1]. Press "+" or "-" on your keyboard to change  
the Channel Number.  
Channel Number Status - This feature returns the channel status for the  
Channel Number selected above: "Channel Number is OK" or "Wrong Channel  
Number".  
IP Address Source - This feature selects whether the IP address, Subnet Mask  
and Gateway Address are automatically assigned by the network's DHCP server  
(Dynamic Host and Conguration Protocol) or manually entered by the user  
(Static). If Static is selected, the IP Address, Subnet Mask and Gateway Address  
must be manually entered below. The options are Static and DHCP.  
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IP Address - Enter the IP address for this machine. This should be in decimal  
and in dotted quad form (i.e., 192.168.10.253). The value of each three-digit  
number separated by dots should not exceed 255.  
Subnet Mask - Subnet masks tell the network which subnet this machine be-  
longs to. The value of each three-digit number separated by dots should not  
exceed 255.  
Gateway Address - Enter the Gateway address this machine will use (i.e.,  
192.168.10.1).  
MAC Address - The BIOS will automatically enter the MAC address of this  
machine, however it may be over-ridden. MAC addresses are 6 two-digit hexa-  
decimal numbers (Base 16, 0 ~ 9, A, B, C, D, E, F) separated by dots. (i.e.,  
00.30.48.D0.D4.60)  
BMC Watch Dog Timer Action  
Allows the BMC to reset or power down the system if the operating system hangs  
or crashes. The options are Disabled, Reset System, Power Down, Power Cycle.  
BMC WatchDog TimeOut [Min:Sec]  
This option appears if BMC Watch Dog Timer Action (above) is enabled. This  
is a timed delay in minutes or seconds, before a system power down or reset  
after an operating system failure is detected. The options are [5 Min], [1 Min],  
[30 Sec], and [10 Sec].  
XEvent Log Conguration  
View Event Log  
Use this option to view the System Event Log.  
Mark all events as read  
This option marks all events as read. The options are OK and Cancel.  
Clear event log  
This option clears the Event Log memory of all messages. The options are OK  
and Cancel.  
XIntel® TXT (LT) Conguration  
Intel TXT Initialization  
Intel TXT (Trusted Execution Technology) helps protect against software-based at-  
tacks and ensures protection, condentiality and integrity of data stored or created  
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Chapter 7: BIOS  
on the system. The options are Enabled and Disabled. When enabled the following  
information are displayed along with their status.:  
BIOS AS [SCLEAN]  
BIOS AC [SCHECK]  
Lock DPR  
Reset TPM Establishment Flag  
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7-4 Security Settings  
The AMI BIOS provides a Supervisor and a User password. If you use both pass-  
words, the Supervisor password must be set rst.  
Supervisor Password  
This item indicates if a supervisor password 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:  
This item indicates if a user password has been entered for the system. Clear  
means such a password has not been used and Set means a user password has  
been entered for the system.  
Change Supervisor Password  
Select this feature and press <Enter> to access the submenu, and then type in a  
new Supervisor Password.  
User Access Level (Available when Supervisor Password is set as above)  
Available options are Full Access: grants full User read and write access to the  
Setup Utility, View Only: allows access to the Setup Utility but the elds cannot be  
changed, Limited: allows only limited elds to be changed such as Date and Time,  
No Access: prevents User access to the Setup Utility.  
Change User Password  
Select this feature and press <Enter> to access the submenu , and then type in a  
new User Password.  
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Chapter 7: BIOS  
Clear User Password (Available only if User Password has been set)  
Password Check  
Available options are Setup and Always.  
Boot Sector Virus Protection  
When Enabled, the AMI BOIS displays a warning when any program (or virus) is-  
sues a Disk Format command or attempts to write to the boot sector of the hard  
disk drive. The options are Enabled and Disabled.  
7-5 Boot Settings  
Use this feature to congure Boot Settings:  
XBoot Device Priority  
This feature allows the user to specify the sequence of priority for the Boot Device.  
The settings are 1st boot device, 2nd boot device, 3rd boot device, 4th boot device,  
5th boot device and Disabled.  
1st Boot Device - 1st Floppy Drive  
2nd Boot Device - [USB: XXXXXXXXX]  
3rd Boot Device - [SATA: XXXXXXXXX]  
4th Boot Device - [Network: XXXXXXXXX]  
5th Boot Device - [Network: XXXXXXXXX]  
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XRemovable Drives  
This feature allows the user to specify the boot sequence from available Removable  
Drives. The settings are 1st boot device, 2nd boot device, and Disabled.  
1st Drive  
2nd Drive - [USB: XXXXXXXXX]  
Retry Boot Devices  
Select this option to retry booting from the congured boot devices if the systems  
fail to boot initially. The options are Disabled and Enabled.  
XCD/DVD Drives  
This feature allows the user to specify the boot sequence from available CD/DVD  
Drives (i.e., 1st Drive, 2nd Drive, etc).  
7-6 Exit Options  
Select the Exit tab from the AMI BIOS Setup Utility screen to enter the Exit BIOS  
Setup screen.  
Save Changes and Exit  
When you have completed the system conguration changes, select this option  
to leave the BIOS Setup Utility and reboot the computer, so the new system con-  
guration parameters can take effect. Select Save Changes and Exit from the Exit  
menu and press <Enter>.  
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Chapter 7: BIOS  
Discard Changes and Exit  
Select this option to quit the BIOS Setup without making any permanent changes  
to the system conguration, and reboot the computer. Select Discard Changes and  
Exit from the Exit menu and press <Enter>.  
Discard Changes  
Select this option and press <Enter> to discard all the changes and return to the  
AMI BIOS Utility Program.  
Load Optimal Defaults  
To set this feature, select Load Optimal Defaults from the Exit menu and press  
<Enter>. Then, select OK to allow the AMI BIOS to automatically load Optimal De-  
faults to the BIOS Settings. The Optimal settings are designed for maximum system  
performance, but may not work best for all computer applications.  
Load Fail-Safe Defaults  
To set this feature, select Load Fail-Safe Defaults from the Exit menu and press  
<Enter>. The Fail-Safe settings are designed for maximum system stability, but not  
for maximum performance.  
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Notes  
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Appendix A: POST Error Beep Codes  
Appendix A  
POST Error Beep Codes  
This section lists POST (Power On Self Test) error beep codes for the AMI BIOS.  
POST error beep codes are divided into two categories: recoverable and terminal.  
This section lists Beep Codes for recoverable POST errors.  
Recoverable POST Error Beep Codes  
When a recoverable type of error occurs during POST, BIOS will display a POST  
code that describes the problem. BIOS may also issue one of the following beep  
codes:  
1 long and eight short beeps - video conguration error  
1 repetitive long beep - no memory detected  
1 continuous beep with the front panel Overheat LED on - system overheat  
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Notes  
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Appendix B: Installing Windows  
Appendix B  
Installing Windows  
After all hardware components have been installed, you must rst congure Intel  
South Bridge RAID Settings before you install the Windows OS and other software  
drivers. To congure RAID settings, please refer to RAID Conguration User Guides  
Note: The following OS installation instructions are written for the Windows XP/2003  
OS only. If you have the Windows 2008 or Windows Vista OS, please follow the  
instructions displayed on your screen to install the OS.  
B-1 Installing Windows to a RAID System  
1. Insert Microsoft's Windows XP/Windows 2003 Setup CD in the CD-ROM drive  
and the system will start booting up from the CD.  
2. Press the <F6> key when the message "Press F6 if you need to install a third  
party SCSI or RAID driver" displays.  
3. When the Windows XP/Windows 2003 Setup screen appears, press "S" to  
specify additional device(s).  
4. Insert the driver diskette "Intel AA RAID XP/2003 Driver for ICH10R" into  
Drive A: and press the <Enter> key.  
5. Choose the Intel(R) ICH10R SATA RAID Controller from the list indicated in  
the XP/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, do it at this time.) Once all  
devices are specied, press the <Enter> key to continue with the installation.  
7. From the Windows XP/Windows 2003 Setup screen, press the <Enter> key.  
The XP/2003 Setup will automatically load all device les and then, continue  
the Windows XP/Windows 2003 installation.  
8. After the Windows XP/Windows 2003 OS Installation has completed, the  
system will automatically reboot.  
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B-2 Installing Windows to a Non-RAID System  
1. Insert Microsoft's Windows OS Setup CD in the CD-ROM drive and the sys-  
tem will start booting up from the CD.  
2. Continue with the installation. The Windows OS Setup screen will display.  
3. From the Windows OS Setup screen, press the <Enter> key. The OS Setup  
will automatically load all device les and then continue with the Windows  
installation.  
4. After the installation has completed, the system will automatically reboot.  
5. Insert the Supermicro Setup CD that came with your system into the CD-  
ROM drive during system boot and the main screen will display.  
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Appendix C: System Specications  
Appendix C  
System Specications  
Processors  
One Intel® 3400 series processor in an LGA1156 socket  
Note: Please refer to our web site for a complete listing of supported processors.  
Chipset  
Intel 3400 (X8SIL) / Intel 3420 (X8SIL-F)  
BIOS  
8 Mb AMI® BIOS  
Memory Capacity  
Four DIMM slots supporting up to 16 GB of UDIMM (unbuffered DIMMs) or up to  
32 GB or RDIMM (registered DIMMs) DDR3-1333/1066/800 memory  
Note: See the memory section in Chapter 5 for details.  
SATA Controller  
Intel on-chip controller for 3 Gb/s Serial ATA, RAID 0, 1, 5 and 10 supported (10  
supported with Windows OS only)  
Drive Bays  
Two drive bays to house standard SATA drives  
Expansion Slots  
Supports the use of one standard size PCI-Express add-on card with riser card  
(included)  
Serverboard  
5016I-T: X8SIL (microATX form factor)  
Dimensions: 9.6" x 9.6" (244 x 244 mm)  
5016I-TF: X8SIL-F (microATX form factor)  
Dimensions: 9.6" x 9.6" (244 x 244 mm)  
Chassis  
Model: SC811T-280 (1U Rackmount)  
Dimensions (both): (WxHxD) 17.2 x 1.7 x 22.6 in. (437 x 43 x 574 mm)  
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Weight  
Gross Weight: 30 lbs. (13.6 kg.)  
System Cooling  
Two 10-cm blower fans (FAN-0038L4)  
System Input Requirements  
AC Input Voltage: 100-240 VAC  
Rated Input Current: 5A max. (100-240V)  
Rated Input Frequency: 50 to 60 Hz  
Power Supply  
Rated Output Power: 280W (Part# PWS-281-1H)  
Rated Output Voltages: +3.3V (16A), +5V (20A), +12VALL (39A), -12V (0.5A),  
+5Vsb (3A)  
Operating Environment  
Operating Temperature: 10º to 35º C (50º to 95º F)  
Non-Operating Temperature: -40º to 70º C (-40º to 158º F)  
Operating Relative Humidity: 8% to 90% (non-condensing)  
Non-Operating Relative Humidity: 5 to 95% (non-condensing)  
Regulatory Compliance  
Electromagnetic Emissions: FCC Class 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: CSA/EN/IEC/UL 60950-1 Compliant, UL or CSA Listed (USA and  
Canada), CE Marking (Europe)  
California Best Management Practices Regulations for Perchlorate Materials:  
This Perchlorate warning applies only to products containing CR (Manganese  
Dioxide) Lithium coin cells. “Perchlorate Material-special handling may apply. See  
www.dtsc.ca.gov/hazardouswaste/perchlorate”  
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Appendix C: System Specications  
Notes  
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SUPERSERVER 5016I-T/5016I-TF User's Manual  
(continued from front)  
The products sold by Supermicro are not intended for and will not be used in life support systems,  
medical equipment, nuclear facilities or systems, aircraft, aircraft devices, aircraft/emergency com-  
munication devices or other critical systems whose failure to perform be reasonably expected to  
result in signicant injury or loss of life or catastrophic property damage. Accordingly, Supermicro dis-  
claims any and all liability, and should buyer use or sell such products for use in such ultra-hazardous  
applications, it does so entirely at its own risk. Furthermore, buyer agrees to fully indemnify, defend  
and hold Supermicro harmless for and against any and all claims, demands, actions, litigation, and  
proceedings of any kind arising out of or related to such ultra-hazardous use or sale.  
C-4  
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