Manual PDF
Manual PDF
Owner’s Guide
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LA DOCUMENTATION EST FOURNIE "EN L’ÉTAT" ET TOUTES AUTRES CONDITIONS, DECLARATIONS ET GARANTIES EXPRESSES
OU TACITES SONT FORMELLEMENT EXCLUES, DANS LA MESURE AUTORISEE PAR LA LOI APPLICABLE, Y COMPRIS NOTAMMENT
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L’ABSENCE DE CONTREFAÇON.
Please
Recycle
Contents
Preface xxxiii
1. System Overview 1
About the Sun Fire V890 Server 1
Physical Enclosure 1
Processing Capability 2
System Memory 2
System I/O 2
FC-AL Storage Array 3
Other Peripherals 3
Ethernet Interfaces 4
Serial Ports and System Console 4
Monitoring and Management With Remote System Control Software 5
Power 5
Rackmounting Options 5
v
Reliability, Availability, and Serviceability Features 6
Locating Front Panel Features 7
Locating Rear Panel Features 9
About the Status and Control Panel 11
LED Status Indicators 12
Power Button 13
Security Keyswitch 14
About Reliability, Availability, and Serviceability Features 15
Hot-Pluggable Disk Drives and PCI Cards 16
N+1 Power Supply Redundancy 16
Hot-Swappable Power Supplies 17
Redundant, Hot-Swappable Fan Trays 17
Environmental Monitoring and Control 17
Thermal Monitoring 18
Fan Monitoring 18
Power Subsystem Monitoring 18
Automatic System Recovery 19
Hardware Watchdog Mechanism 19
Remote System Control Software 20
Dual-Loop Enabled FC-AL Mass Storage Subsystem 20
Support for RAID Storage Configurations 21
Error Correction and Parity Checking 21
Status LEDs 21
Four Levels of Diagnostics 22
3. Hardware Configuration 47
Contents vii
About CPU/Memory Boards 48
About Memory Modules 51
Memory Interleaving 53
Independent Memory Subsystems 53
Configuration Rules 54
About PCI Cards and Buses 56
Configuration Rules 58
About the System Controller Card and RSC Software 59
Configuration Rule 60
About Power Supplies 61
Configuration Rules 63
About Fan Trays 64
Configuration Rules 66
About Removable Media Devices 67
About the Serial Ports 67
About the USB Ports 68
About Hardware Jumpers 69
About Serial Port Jumpers 70
About Flash PROM Jumpers 72
System I/O Board 72
FC-AL Disk Backplane 74
Contents ix
6. Configuring System Firmware 103
About OpenBoot Environmental Monitoring 104
Enabling or Disabling the OpenBoot Environmental Monitor 104
Automatic System Shutdown 105
OpenBoot Environmental Status Information 105
How to Enable OpenBoot Environmental Monitoring 106
Before You Begin 106
What to Do 106
How to Disable OpenBoot Environmental Monitoring 107
What to Do 107
How to Obtain OpenBoot Environmental Status Information 108
What to Do 108
About Automatic System Recovery 109
Auto-Boot Options 110
Error Handling Summary 111
Reset Scenarios 112
Normal Mode and Service Mode Information 112
ASR User Commands 113
How to Enable ASR 113
What to Do 113
How to Disable ASR 114
What to Do 114
About Manually Configuring Devices 114
Deconfiguring Devices vs. Slots 114
Deconfiguring All System Processors 115
Device Paths 115
How to Deconfigure a Device Manually 116
What to Do 116
Contents xi
RSC Capabilities 133
RSC User Interfaces 134
For More Information 134
About Volume Management Software 134
Multipathing Software 135
RAID Concepts 135
Disk Concatenation 136
RAID 1: Disk Mirroring 136
RAID 0: Disk Striping 137
RAID 5: Disk Striping With Parity 137
Hot Spares (Hot Relocation) 137
About the Solaris luxadm Utility 138
For More Information 138
About Sun Cluster Software 139
Contents xiii
Before You Begin 173
What to Do 173
Index 187
xv
ICES-003 Class A Notice - Avis NMB-003, Classe A
This Class A digital apparatus complies with Canadian ICES-003.
Cet appareil numérique de la classe A est conforme à la norme NMB-003 du Canada.
EMC
European Union
This equipment complies with the following requirements of the EMC Directive 89/336/EEC:
As Telecommunication Network Equipment (TNE) in both Telecom Centers and Other Than Telecom Centers per (as applicable):
EN300-386 V.1.3.1 (09-2001) Required Limits:
EN55022/CISPR22 Class A
EN61000-3-2 Pass
EN61000-3-3 Pass
EN61000-4-2 6 kV (Direct), 8 kV (Air)
EN61000-4-3 3 V/m 80-1000MHz, 10 V/m 800-960 MHz and 1400-2000 MHz
EN61000-4-4 1 kV AC and DC Power Lines, 0.5 kV Signal Lines,
EN61000-4-5 2 kV AC Line-Gnd, 1 kV AC Line-Line and Outdoor Signal Lines, 0.5 kV Indoor Signal Lines > 10m.
EN61000-4-6 3V
EN61000-4-11 Pass
/S/
xix
xx Sun Fire V890 Server Owner’s Guide • October 2005
Safety Agency Compliance Depending on the type of power switch your device has,
one of the following symbols may be used:
Statements
On – Applies AC power to the system.
Read this section before beginning any procedure. The
following text provides safety precautions to follow when
installing a Sun Microsystems product.
Off – Removes AC power from the system.
Safety Precautions
For your protection, observe the following safety Standby – The On/Standby switch is in the
precautions when setting up your equipment: standby position.
■ Follow all cautions and instructions marked on the
equipment.
■ Ensure that the voltage and frequency of your power Modifications to Equipment
source match the voltage and frequency inscribed on Do not make mechanical or electrical modifications to the
the equipment’s electrical rating label.
equipment. Sun Microsystems is not responsible for
■ Never push objects of any kind through openings in regulatory compliance of a modified Sun product.
the equipment. Dangerous voltages may be present.
Conductive foreign objects could produce a short
circuit that could cause fire, electric shock, or damage Placement of a Sun Product
to your equipment.
Caution – Do not block or cover the openings
Symbols of your Sun product. Never place a Sun
The following symbols may appear in this book: product near a radiator or heat register.
Failure to follow these guidelines can cause
overheating and affect the reliability of your
Caution – There is a risk of personal injury Sun product.
and equipment damage. Follow the
instructions.
Noise Level
Caution – Hot surface. Avoid contact. In compliance with the requirements defined in DIN 45635
Surfaces are hot and may cause personal Part 1000, the workplace-dependent noise level of this
injury if touched. product is less than 70 db(A).
xxi
SELV Compliance The following caution applies only to devices with multiple
power cords:
Safety status of I/O connections comply to SELV
requirements.
Caution – For products with multiple power
cords, all power cords must be disconnected
Power Cord Connection to completely remove power from the system.
Caution – For safety, equipment should Caution – Use of controls, adjustments, or the
always be loaded from the bottom up. That is, performance of procedures other than those
install the equipment that will be mounted in specified herein may result in hazardous
the lowest part of the rack first, then the next radiation exposure.
higher systems, etc.
Symboles
Class 1 Laser Product Vous trouverez ci-dessous la signification des différents
Luokan 1 Laserlaite symboles utilisés:
Klasse 1 Laser Apparat
Laser Klasse 1
Attention – Vous risquez d'endommager le
matériel ou de vous blesser. Veuillez suivre les
instructions.
Couvercle de l'unité
Pour ajouter des cartes, de la mémoire ou des périphériques Avis de conformité des appareils laser
de stockage internes, vous devez retirer le couvercle de Les produits Sun qui font appel aux technologies lasers sont
votre système Sun. Remettez le couvercle supérieur en conformes aux normes de la classe 1 en la matière.
place avant de mettre votre système sous tension.
Sverige
Danmark
Suomi
The Sun Fire V890 Server Owner’s Guide answers your questions about setting up and
running the Sun Fire™ V890 server. Features and options, system setup and
installation, hardware configuration, and system administration topics for the
Sun Fire V890 server are covered in this manual.
This manual presents information in a modular format designed to answer the type
of questions that you might ask while installing, configuring, and using the
Sun Fire V890 server. Look at the titles of the modules and you’ll find the cue words
that direct you to the categories of questions and answers, such as:
■ How to . . . How do I do something?
■ About . . . Is there more information about this topic?
■ Reference for . . . Where can I find reference material for something?
You determine how much or how little of the information you need to read.
Using the table of contents or the task list on the first page of each chapter, you can
quickly find a specific topic or task. The information modules are brief; however,
they are interrelated and refer to other modules that you may want to read. For
instance, if you’re manually reconfiguring a device and you’re already familiar with
the task, you could go to “How to Reconfigure a Device Manually” and follow the
procedure. But if you need more background information before performing the
task, you should first read “About Manually Configuring Devices.”
xxxiii
Using UNIX Commands
This document might not contain information on basic UNIX® commands and
procedures such as shutting down the system, booting the system, and configuring
devices. See one or more of the following for this information:
■ Solaris Handbook for Sun Peripherals
■ Documentation for the Solaris™ Operating System
Typographic Conventions
Typeface Meaning Examples
C shell machine-name%
C shell superuser machine-name#
Bourne shell and Korn shell $
Bourne shell and Korn shell superuser #
Preface xxxv
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Preface xxxvii
xxxviii Sun Fire V890 Server Owner’s Guide • October 2005
CHAPTER 1
System Overview
This chapter introduces you to the Sun Fire V890 server and describes some of its
features. The following information is covered in this chapter:
■ “About the Sun Fire V890 Server” on page 1
■ “Locating Front Panel Features” on page 7
■ “Locating Rear Panel Features” on page 9
■ “About the Status and Control Panel” on page 11
■ “About Reliability, Availability, and Serviceability Features” on page 15
Physical Enclosure
The system is housed in a roll-around tower enclosure, which measures 28.1 inches
high, 18.9 inches wide, and 32.9 inches deep (71.4 cm x 48.0 cm x 83.6 cm). The
system has a maximum weight of 288 lb (130.6 kg).
1
Processing Capability
Processing power is provided by up to four CPU/Memory boards. Each board
incorporates:
■ Two dual-threaded UltraSPARC processors
■ Local static random access memory (SRAM) external cache memory
■ Slots for 16 memory modules (eight per processor)
System Memory
System main memory is provided by up to 64 dual inline memory modules
(DIMMs), which operate at a 75-MHz clock frequency. A variety of DIMM capacities
are supported. For more information, see Sun Fire V490/V890 CPU/Memory Module
Configuration Guide, available at:
http://www.sun.com/products-n-solutions/hardware/docs/Servers/
Total system memory is shared by all processors in the system. Minimum and
mamimum depends on capacity of the DIMM modules. For more information about
system memory, see “About Memory Modules” on page 51.
System I/O
System I/O is handled by four separate Peripheral Component Interconnect (PCI)
buses. These industry-standard buses support all of the system’s on-board I/O
controllers in addition to nine slots for PCI interface cards. Seven of the PCI slots
operate at a 33-MHz clock rate, and two slots operate at either 33 or 66 MHz. All
slots comply with PCI Local Bus Specification Revision 2.1 and support PCI hot-plug
operations. You can hot-plug any standard PCI card, provided a suitable software
driver exists for the Solaris Operating System (Solaris OS) and the driver supports
PCI hot-plug operations. For additional details, see “About PCI Cards and Buses” on
page 56.
Other Peripherals
The Sun Fire V890 server provides front-panel access to three mounting bays. One
bay houses an IDE DVD-ROM drive, which is standard in all system configurations.
The other two bays accommodate an optional removable wide SCSI tape device,
which must be ordered separately. The tape drive option also requires a SCSI cable
and a SCSI adapter card, which must be ordered separately. You can easily convert
the two SCSI device bays into a single full-height bay by removing the metal shelf
divider. For additional details, see “About Removable Media Devices” on page 67.
The rear panel also provides two Universal Serial Bus (USB) ports for connecting
USB peripheral devices such as modems, printers, scanners, digital cameras, or a
Sun Type-6 USB keyboard and mouse. The USB ports support both isochronous
mode and asynchronous mode and enable data transmission at speeds of 1.5 and
12 Mbps. For additional details, see “About the USB Ports” on page 68.
The local system console device can be either a standard ASCII character terminal or
a local graphics console. The ASCII terminal connects to one of the system’s two
serial ports, while a local graphics console requires installation of a PCI graphics
card, monitor, USB keyboard, and mouse. You can also administer the system from a
remote workstation connected to the Ethernet or from a Sun Remote System Control
(RSC) console.
For additional details, see “About the System Controller Card and RSC Software” on
page 59 and “About Sun Remote System Control Software” on page 133.
Power
The basic system includes three 1629-watt output, 200–240-VAC input, power
supplies with internal fans. Two power supplies provide sufficient power for a
maximally configured system. The third power supply provides N+1 redundancy,
allowing the system to continue operating should any one of the power supplies fail.
Power supplies in a redundant configuration are hot-swappable, so that you can
remove and replace a faulty power supply without shutting down the operating
system or turning off the system power. For more information about the power
supplies, see “About Power Supplies” on page 61.
Rackmounting Options
The Sun Fire V890 server can be installed in any standard Electronic Industries
Association (EIA) 310-compliant 19-inch (48.3-cm) rack with at least 17 rack units
(29.8 inches, 75.6 cm) of available vertical mounting space and sufficient load-
DVD-ROM drive
Status and
control panel
Disk drives
For information about front panel controls and indicators, see “About the Status and
Control Panel” on page 11.
Note – The same key operates the front panel keyswitch and the locks on the front
and side doors.
SC Gigabit
PCI slot 8
Ethernet interface
PCI slot 7
PCI slot 6
PCI slot 5
PCI slot 4
PCI slot 3
PCI slot 2
PCI slot 1
USB B PCI slot 0
USB A
TPE Fast
Ethernet
Serial port A/B interface
System controller
card
Grounding screw
Power supply 0
Power supply 2
Power supply 1
A grounding screw is located just above the center power supply. When installing a
Sun Fire V890 server into a rack, or connecting the server to an external storage
array, be sure to connect an appropriate grounding strap between the server’s
grounding screw and the grounding screw on the rack enclosure or external storage
array. A grounding strap prevents ground loops between systems and peripherals
and helps guard against possible data loss.
Power button
Security keyswitch
Power Fault
Attention Attention
Left Side Right Side
Thermal Thermal
Fault Fault
Disk Fault
The general status LEDs work in conjunction with the specific fault LED icons. For
example, a fault in the disk subsystem illuminates both the System Fault LED at the
top of the panel and the Disk Fault icon in the graphical display below it. Fault LEDs
within the enclosure help pinpoint the location of the faulty device. Since all front
panel status LEDs are powered by the system’s 5-volt standby power source, fault
LEDs remain lit for any fault condition that results in a system shutdown. For more
information about LED indicators on the rear panel and inside the enclosure, see
“LED Status Indicators” on page 141.
During system startup, the front panel LEDs are individually toggled on and off to
verify that each one is working correctly. After that, the front panel LEDs operate as
described in the following table.
Power/OK This green LED lights when the system power is on.
System Fault This amber LED lights to indicate a serious system fault.
When this LED is lit, one or more icons in the display panel
may also light to indicate the specific nature and location of
the fault.
Disk Fault This amber LED lights to indicate a serious disk subsystem
fault that is likely to bring down the system. When this
LED is lit, one or more disk LEDs may also be lit at the
front of the disk cage, indicating the source of the fault. See
“About Disk Drive LEDs” on page 156.
Thermal Fault This amber LED lights to indicate a serious thermal fault
(fan fault or overtemperature condition) that is likely to
bring down the system. There are two Thermal Fault LEDs
in the display to indicate whether the fault is located on the
left or right side of the system. In the event of a fan fault, a
fault LED inside the system will indicate the faulty fan
assembly. See “About Fan Tray LEDs” on page 152.
Attention This amber LED lights to indicate that an internal
Left Side component on the left side of the system requires servicing.
Power Button
The system Power button is recessed to prevent accidentally turning the system on
or off. The ability of the Power button to turn the system on or off is controlled by
the security keyswitch.
If the operating system is running, pressing and releasing the Power button initiates
a graceful software system shutdown. Pressing and holding in the Power button for
five seconds causes an immediate hardware shutdown.
Caution – Whenever possible, you should use the graceful shutdown method.
Forcing an immediate hardware shutdown may cause disk drive corruption and loss
of data. Use this method only as a last resort.
Normal This setting enables the system Power button to power the
system on or off. If the operating system is running, pressing
and releasing the Power button initiates a graceful software
system shutdown. Pressing and holding the Power button in
for five seconds causes an immediate hardware power off.
Locked The Locked setting:
• Disables the system Power button to prevent unauthorized
users from powering the system on or off
• Disables the keyboard Stop-A command, terminal Break key
command, ~# tip window command, and RSC break
command, preventing users from suspending system
operation to access the system ok prompt
• Prevents unauthorized programming of the system flash
PROMs
The Locked position is the recommended setting for normal
day-to-day operations.
Diagnostics This setting puts the system into service mode, forcing power-
on self-test (POST) and OpenBoot Diagnostics software to run
at a Sun prescribed level during system startup and system
resets. The Power button functions the same as when the
keyswitch is in the Normal position.
Forced Off This setting forces the system to power off immediately and
enter 5-volt standby mode. It also disables the system Power
button. You may want to use this setting when AC power is
interrupted and you do not want the system to restart
automatically when power is restored. With the keyswitch in
any other position, if the system was running prior to losing
power, it restarts automatically once power is restored.
To deliver high levels of reliability, availability, and serviceability, the Sun Fire V890
system offers the following features:
■ Hot-pluggable disk drives and PCI cards
■ N+1 power supply redundancy
■ Hot-swappable power supplies
■ Redundant, hot-swappable fan trays
■ Environmental monitoring and fault protection
■ Automatic system recovery (ASR) capabilities
■ Hardware watchdog mechanism
■ Remote System Control (RSC) remote “lights out” management capability
■ Support for disk and network multipathing with automatic failover capability
■ Dual-loop enabled FC-AL mass storage subsystem
■ Support for RAID 0, 1, 0+1, 1+0, and 5 storage configurations
■ Error correction and parity checking for improved data integrity
■ Easy access to all internal replaceable components
■ Easily accessible LED status indicators
■ Four different levels of system diagnostics
A qualified service technician can hot-plug any standard PCI card, provided a
suitable software driver exists for the Solaris OS, and the driver supports PCI hot-
plug operations. In addition, the card must comply with the PCI Hot-Plug
Specification Revision 1.1, and the system must be running the Solaris 8 2/04
Operating System or a subsequent release that supports Sun Fire V890 PCI hot-plug
operations.
PCI hot-plug procedures may involve software commands for preparing the system
prior to removing a card and for reconfiguring the operating system after installing
a PCI card. For more information about PCI hot-plug procedures, see “About Hot-
Pluggable and Hot-Swappable Components” on page 127.
Caution – Do not attempt to hot-plug a PCI card until you are certain that its device
drivers support PCI hot-plug operations; otherwise, you may cause a system panic.
For a list of Sun PCI cards and device drivers that support PCI hot-plug operations,
see the Sun Fire V890 Server Product Notes.
For more information about power supplies, redundancy, and configuration rules,
see “About Power Supplies” on page 61.
All fan trays feature a hot-swap capability. Qualified service technicians can remove
and replace a faulty fan tray without shutting down the operating system. For
additional details, see “About Fan Trays” on page 64.
Monitoring and control capabilities reside at the operating system level as well as in
the system’s flash PROM firmware. This ensures that monitoring capabilities remain
operational even if the system has halted or is unable to boot.
The environmental monitoring subsystem uses an industry standard I2C bus. The I2C
bus is a simple two-wire serial bus, used throughout the system to allow the
monitoring and control of temperature sensors, fans, power supplies, status LEDs,
and the front panel keyswitch.
The hardware and software together ensure that the temperatures within the
enclosure do not stray outside predetermined “safe operation” ranges. If the
temperature observed by a sensor falls below a low-temperature warning threshold
or rises above a high-temperature warning threshold, the monitoring subsystem
software generates a WARNING message to the system console. If the temperature
exceeds a low- or high-temperature critical threshold, the software will issue a
CRITICAL message and proceed to gracefully shut down the system. In both cases,
the System Fault and Thermal Fault LEDs on the front status panel are illuminated
to indicate the nature of the problem.
This thermal shutdown capability is also built into the hardware circuitry as a
fail-safe measure. This feature provides backup thermal protection in the unlikely
event that the environmental monitoring subsystem becomes disabled at both the
software and firmware levels.
All error and warning messages are displayed on the system console (if one is
attached) and are logged in the /var/adm/messages file. Front panel fault LEDs
remain lit after an automatic system shutdown to aid in problem diagnosis.
Fan Monitoring
The monitoring subsystem is also designed to detect fan failures. The system
features three primary fan trays, which include a total of five individual fans, plus
three additional (secondary) fan trays for a total of 10 individual fans. During
normal operation, only the five primary fans are active. If any fan fails, the
monitoring subsystem detects the failure and:
■ Generates an error message and logs it in the /var/adm/messages file
■ Lights the System Fault and Thermal Fault LEDs on the status and control panel
■ Lights the appropriate fan fault LED inside the system
■ Automatically activates the appropriate secondary fan tray
For more information, see “About Automatic System Recovery” on page 109.
Note – To enhance system restoration and server availability, Sun has recently
introduced a new standard (default) OpenBoot firmware configuration. These
changes, which affect the behavior of servers like the Sun Fire V890, are described in
OpenBoot PROM Enhancements for Diagnostic Operation. This document is included on
the Sun Fire V890 Documentation CD.
Note – The hardware watchdog mechanism is not activated until you enable it.
To enable this feature, you must edit the /etc/system file to include the
following entry:
set watchdog_enable = 1
Once RSC is configured to manage your server, you can use it to run diagnostic tests,
view diagnostic and error messages, reboot your server, and display environmental
status information from a remote console.
For additional details, see “About the System Controller Card and RSC Software” on
page 59 and “About Sun Remote System Control Software” on page 133.
For more information, see “About Volume Management Software” on page 134.
The system reports and logs correctable ECC errors. A correctable ECC error is any
single-bit error in a 128-bit field. Such errors are corrected as soon as they are
detected. The ECC implementation can also detect double-bit errors in the same
128-bit field and multiple-bit errors in the same nibble (4 bits).
In addition to providing ECC protection for data, the system offers parity protection
on all system address buses. Parity protection is also used on the PCI bus, and in the
UltraSPARC processors’ internal and external cache.
Status LEDs
The system provides easily accessible light-emitting diode (LED) indicators to
provide a visual indication of system and component status. LEDs are located on the
system front panel, internal disk bays, power supplies, fan tray assemblies, and near
each CPU/Memory board and PCI slot. Status LEDs eliminate guesswork and
simplify problem diagnosis for enhanced serviceability.
POST and OpenBoot Diagnostics are firmware-resident diagnostics that can run
even if the server is unable to boot the operating system. POST diagnostics check the
functions of the core system hardware. OpenBoot Diagnostics focus on testing I/O
subsystems and plug-in cards.
Note – To enhance system restoration and server availability, Sun has recently
introduced a new standard (default) OpenBoot firmware configuration. These
changes, which affect the behavior of servers like the Sun Fire V890, are described in
OpenBoot PROM Enhancements for Diagnostic Operation. This document is included on
the Sun Fire V890 Documentation CD.
This chapter describes what you need to do to get the Sun Fire V890 server up and
running. Where software is involved, this chapter explains some of what you need
to do, and points you to the appropriate software manuals for the rest.
Also, you should have received the Solaris Media Kit and documentation for all
appropriate system software. Check that you have received everything you ordered.
Inspect the shipping carton for evidence of physical damage. If a shipping carton is
damaged, request that the carrier's agent be present when the carton is opened. Keep
all contents and packing material for the agent’s inspection. Unpacking instructions
are printed on the outside of the shipping carton.
23
How to Install the Sun Fire V890 Server
Each step in this procedure refers you to a particular document or to a section of this
guide for instructions. Complete each step in the order listed.
Software included in the Solaris Media Kit or other software products may impose
certain disk space or disk partitioning requirements. Refer to the documentation
accompanying the software to determine those requirements.
Note – Refer to the Sun Fire V890 Server Product Notes for information about the
software applications and Solaris OS for your system, before you install your Sun
Fire V890 server.
What to Do
1. Verify that you have received all the parts of your system.
See “About the Parts Shipped to You” on page 23.
Note – Do not install optional equipment into a system that you are rackmounting
until after you have installed the system into the rack.
If you are installing your server as a deskside system and need information about
positioning the system in an appropriate environment, see the Site Planning Guide for
Entry-Level Servers, which is included on the Sun Fire V890 Documentation CD.
3. Connect an AC power cord to each AC inlet at the back of each power supply.
Connect the opposite end of each power cord to a grounded, dedicated AC power
outlet.
Use the power cord supplied with the V890 server. The V890 server uses 200-240
VAC line input only.
Note – You must connect each power supply to a dedicated AC circuit. Consult
your local electrical codes for any additional requirements.
Note – Do not install optional PCI cards into the system until after you have
powered on and tested the system.
Caution – The AC power cords provide a discharge path for static electricity, so
they must remain plugged in to AC power outlets when installing or handling any
internal component, except for the system controller card. Prior to servicing the system
controller card, make sure that all AC power cords are disconnected.
Caution – All internal options (except disk drives and power supplies) must be
installed only by qualified service personnel. Installation procedures for these
components are covered in the Sun Fire V890 Server Service Manual, which is
included on the Sun Fire V890 Documentation CD.
Note – By default, power-on self-test (POST) messages are output to serial port A
(ttya). After initial installation you can configure the system to use RSC as the
system console and the system will redirect POST output to the RSC console. To
perform initial installation, you need a console connected to serial port A to view
POST diagnostic output.
Note – You cannot use RSC to perform the initial installation of the Solaris OS. You
must install the operating system prior to setting up an RSC console.
Note – The system may take up to 30 minutes or longer to run diagnostic tests and
display status messages before the ok prompt appears on the system console. The
time depends on the system configuration (number of processors, memory modules,
and PCI cards) and the standard configuration of the OpenBoot variables, which by
default are set at diag-level=max and verbosity=normal. To estimate boot
time, and to customize the standard configuration after initial power-on, see the
OpenBoot PROM Enhancements for Diagnostic Operation guide, which is included on
the Sun Fire V890 Documentation CD.
Note – Once you install RSC software, you can configure the system to use RSC as
the system console. For detailed instructions, see “How to Redirect the System
Console to RSC” on page 42.
12. (Optional) Load additional software from the Solaris Media Kit.
The Solaris Media Kit (sold separately) includes several CDs containing software to
help you operate, configure, and administer your server. See the documentation
provided with the Solaris Media Kit for a complete listing of included software and
detailed installation instructions.
17. Load the electronic documentation from the Sun Fire V890 Documentation CD.
Directions for loading the documentation are printed in the booklet that
accompanies the CD.
Note – Power-on self-test (POST) messages are output to serial port A (ttya) or the
RSC console only.
Note – You cannot use an RSC console to perform the initial installation of the
Solaris OS. The operating system must be installed prior to setting up an RSC
console. Once you install the operating system and the RSC software, you can
configure the system to use RSC as the system console. For detailed instructions, see
“How to Redirect the System Console to RSC” on page 42.
Note – You cannot use an RSC console to perform the initial installation of the
Solaris OS. The Solaris OS must be installed prior to setting up an RSC console.
What to Do
1. Connect a DB-25 null modem serial cable or a DB-25 serial cable and null modem
adapter to the terminal’s serial port.
2. Connect the opposite end of the cable to the system’s serial port connector or to
serial port A on the serial splitter cable.
What Next
You can now issue system commands and view system messages. Continue with
your installation or diagnostic procedure as needed.
Note – You cannot use an RSC console to perform the initial installation of the
Solaris OS. The Solaris OS must be installed prior to setting up an RSC console.
What to Do
1. Install the graphics card into an appropriate PCI slot.
For information about PCI buses and slots, see “About PCI Cards and Buses” on
page 56.
Note – PCI cards must be installed only by qualified service personnel. Installation
procedures for PCI cards are covered in the Sun Fire V890 Server Service Manual,
which is included on the Sun Fire V890 Documentation CD.
What Next
You can now issue system commands and view system messages. Continue with
your installation or diagnostic procedure as needed.
What to Do
Caution – Before you power on the system, make sure that the front and side doors
and all plastic outer panels are properly installed.
Normal
position
Diagnostics
position
Note – The system will require a manual boot to the operating environment when
the keyswitch is in the Diagnostics position.
Note – For high availability environments, place the keyswitch in the Locked or
Normal postion.
Note – The system may take up to 30 minutes or longer to run diagnostic tests and
display status messages before the ok prompt appears on the system console. The
time depends on the system configuration (number of processors, memory modules,
and PCI cards) and the configuration of the OpenBoot variables, which by default
are set at diag-level=max and verbosity=normal. To estimate boot time, and
to customize the standard configuration after initial power on, see the OpenBoot
PROM Enhancements for Diagnostic Operation guide, which is included on the Sun
Fire V890 Documentation CD.
Locked
position
6. Remove the key from the keyswitch and keep it in a secure place.
What Next
The system’s front panel LED indicators provide power-on status information.
For more information about the system LEDs, see “About the Status and Control
Panel” on page 11.
What to Do
1. Notify users that the system will be powered down.
3. Ensure that the front panel keyswitch is in the Normal or Diagnostics position.
Normal
position
Diagnostics
position
4. Press and release the Power button on the system front panel.
The system begins a graceful software system shutdown.
Note – Pressing and releasing the Power button initiates a graceful software system
shutdown. Pressing and holding in the Power button for five seconds causes an
immediate hardware shutdown. Whenever possible, you should use the graceful
shutdown method. Forcing an immediate hardware shutdown may cause disk drive
corruption and loss of data. Use this method only as a last resort.
Caution – Be sure to turn the keyswitch to the Forced Off position before handling
any internal components. Otherwise, it is possible for an RSC user to restart the
system remotely while you are working inside it. The Forced Off position is the only
keyswitch position that prevents an RSC user from restarting the system.
7. Remove the key from the keyswitch and keep it in a secure place.
Caution – All internal options (except disk drives and power supplies) must be
installed only by qualified service personnel. Installation procedures for these
components are covered in the Sun Fire V890 Server Service Manual, which is
included on the Sun Fire V890 Documentation CD.
Caution – Before you power on the system, make sure that the front and side doors
and all plastic outer panels are properly installed.
What to Do
1. Turn on power to any peripherals and external storage devices.
Read the documentation supplied with the device for specific instructions.
4. Press the Power button to the left of the keyswitch to power on the system.
Normal
position
5. When the diagnostic tests are completed, the system banner is displayed on the
system console followed by the ok prompt.
The system banner contains the Ethernet address and host ID.
Note – The system may take up to 30 minutes or longer to run diagnostic tests and
display status messages before the ok prompt appears on the system console. The
time depends on the system configuration (number of processors, memory modules,
and PCI cards) and the standard default configuration of the OpenBoot variables,
which by default are set at diag-level=max and verbosity=normal. To
customize the standard configuration after initial power on, see the OpenBoot PROM
Enhancements for Diagnostic Operation guide, which is included on the Sun Fire V890
Documentation CD.
ok env-on
Environmental monitor is ON
ok boot -r
The env-on command re-enables the OpenBoot environmental monitor, which may
have been disabled as a result of the abort key sequence. The boot -r command
rebuilds the device tree for the system, incorporating any newly installed options so
that the operating system will recognize them.
Locked
position
What Next
The system’s front panel LED indicators provide power-on status information.
For more information about the system LEDs, see “About the Status and Control
Panel” on page 11.
If your system encounters a problem during system start-up, and the keyswitch is in
the Normal position, try restarting the system with the keyswitch in the Diagnostics
position to determine the source of the problem. Turn the front panel keyswitch to
the Diagnostics position and power cycle the system.
What to Do
1. Type the following commands at the system ok prompt:
ok diag-console rsc
ok setenv input-device rsc-console
ok setenv output-device rsc-console
The system permanently stores the new settings. The changes will take effect after
the next reset.
2. To cause the changes to take effect immediately, reset the system, type:
ok reset-all
The system permanently stores the changes and boots automatically if the OpenBoot
variable auto-boot? is set to true (its default value).
A power cycle will also cause the changes to take effect immediately.
Caution – All internal options (except disk drives and power supplies) must be
installed only by qualified service personnel. Installation procedures for these
components are covered in the Sun Fire V890 Server Service Manual, which is
included on the Sun Fire V890 Documentation CD.
What Next
For instructions on how to use the system controller card and RSC software, see the
Sun Remote System Control (RSC) User’s Guide, which is included on the Sun Fire
V890 Documentation CD.
What to Do
1. Type the following commands at the system ok prompt:
ok diag-console ttya
ok setenv input-device keyboard
ok setenv output-device screen
The system permanently stores the new settings. The changes will take effect after
the next reset.
ok reset-all
The system permanently stores the parameter changes and boots automatically if the
OpenBoot variable auto-boot? is set to true (its default value).
Note – A power-cycle will also cause the changes to take effect immediately.
Hardware Configuration
This chapter provides hardware configuration information for the Sun Fire V890
server. The following topics are covered in this chapter:
■ “About CPU/Memory Boards” on page 48
■ “About Memory Modules” on page 51
■ “About PCI Cards and Buses” on page 56
■ “About the System Controller Card and RSC Software” on page 59
■ “About Power Supplies” on page 61
■ “About Fan Trays” on page 64
■ “About Removable Media Devices” on page 67
■ “About the Serial Ports” on page 67
■ “About the USB Ports” on page 68
■ “About Hardware Jumpers” on page 69
■ “About Serial Port Jumpers” on page 70
■ “About Flash PROM Jumpers” on page 72
Note – For configuration information about the internal mass storage subsystem,
see “Mass Storage Subsystem Configuration” on page 77. For configuration
information about network interfaces, see “Configuring Network Interfaces” on
page 89.
47
About CPU/Memory Boards
The system motherboard provides slots for up to four CPU/Memory boards. Each
CPU/Memory board incorporates two UltraSPARC chip multithreading (CMP)
processors, with 16 Mbytes of static random access memory (SRAM) Level 2 external
cache memory per processor, and slots for 16 memory modules. The external cache
memory cannot be upgraded.
Note – You must use CPU/Memory boards of the same speed within a Sun Fire
V890 system.
Chip multithreading technology allows two threads per UltraSPARC processor. With
this dual-threaded architecture, each UltraSPARC processor consists of two virtual
processors with shared memory. A dynamic arbitration scheme enables each thread
to make optimal use of the available memory, resulting in higher performance.
7,23
5,21
Slot D
6,22
4,20
Slot C
3,19
1,17
Slot B
2,18
0,16
Slot A
For information about memory modules and memory configuration guidelines, see
“About Memory Modules” on page 51.
Each CPU/Memory board contains slots for 16 DIMMs. Total system memory
available depends on the capacity of the DIMMs installed.
Within each CPU/Memory board, the 16 DIMM slots are organized into groups of
four. The system reads from, or writes to, all four DIMMs in a group simultaneously.
DIMMs, therefore, must be added in sets of four.
The figure below shows the DIMM slots and DIMM groups on a Sun Fire V890
CPU/Memory board. Every fourth slot belongs to the same DIMM group. The four
groups are designated A0, A1, B0, and B1.
A0 A1 B0 B1
A0 A1 B0 B1
A0 A1 B0 B1
The Sun Fire V890 system uses a shared-memory architecture. During normal system
operations, the total system memory is shared by all processors in the system.
However, in the event of a processor failure, the two DIMM groups associated with
the failed processor become unavailable to all other processors in the system.
The following table shows the association between the processors and their
corresponding DIMM groups.
Processor
Number CPU/Memory Slot Associated DIMM Groups
0 Slot A A0, A1
2 Slot A B0, B1
1 Slot B A0, A1
3 Slot B B0, B1
4 Slot C A0, A1
6 Slot C B0, B1
5 Slot D A0, A1
7 Slot D B0, B1
Configuration Rules
■ DIMMs must be added four-at-a-time within the same group of DIMM slots;
every fourth slot belongs to the same DIMM group.
■ Each group used must have four identical DIMMs installed—that is, all four
DIMMs must be from the same manufacturing vendor and must have the same
capacity (for example, four 512-Mbyte or four 1-Gbyte DIMMs).
■ Each CPU/Memory board must be populated with a minimum of 8 identical
DIMMs
Caution – All internal options (except disk drives and power supplies) must be
installed only by qualified service personnel. For information about installing or
removing DIMMs, see the Sun Fire V890 Server Service Manual, which is included on
the Sun Fire V890 Documentation CD.
Caution – DIMMs are made of electronic components that are extremely sensitive
to static electricity. Static from your clothes or work environment can destroy the
modules. Do not remove a DIMM from its antistatic packaging until you are ready to
install it on the CPU/Memory board. Handle the modules only by their edges. Do
not touch the components or any metal parts. Always wear an antistatic grounding
strap when you handle the modules. For more information about avoiding
electrostatic discharge, see the Sun Fire V890 Server Service Manual, which is included
on the Sun Fire V890 Documentation CD.
The following table describes the PCI bus characteristics and maps each bus to its
associated bridge chip, motherboard devices, and PCI slots. All slots comply with
PCI Local Bus Specification Revision 2.1.
The system’s PCI hot-plug feature allows a qualified service technician to remove
and install PCI cards while the system is running. A qualified service technician can
hot-plug any standard PCI card, provided that its Solaris device drivers support PCI
hot-plug operations, and the system is running a Solaris Operating System that
supports Sun Fire V890 PCI hot-plug operations. In addition, the PCI card must
comply with the PCI Hot-Plug Specification Revision 1.1.
PCI hot-plug procedures may involve software commands for preparing the
system prior to removing a card and for reconfiguring the operating system
after installing a PCI card. For more information about PCI hot-plug
procedures, see “About Hot-Pluggable and Hot-Swappable Components” on
page 127.
Status LEDs provide power, fault, and hot-plug status indications for each PCI slot.
A contact push button is also provided for each slot, which allows the service
technician to initiate the hot-plug procedure at the server. For information about the
status indicator LEDs, see “About PCI Slot LEDs” on page 144.
The following figure shows the PCI slots on the I/O board.
Caution – All internal options (except disk drives and power supplies) must be
installed only by qualified service personnel. For information about installing or
removing PCI cards, see the Sun Fire V890 Server Service Manual, which is included
on the Sun Fire V890 Documentation CD.
The system controller card runs independently of the host server, and operates
on 5-volt standby power from the system’s power supplies. The card features
on-board devices that interface with the system’s environmental monitoring
subsystem and can automatically alert administrators to system problems.
Together these features allow the system controller card and RSC software to
serve as a “lights-out” management tool that continues to function even when
the server operating system goes offline or the system is powered off.
Note – You must install the Solaris Operating System and the Sun Remote System
Control software prior to setting up an RSC console. For more information, see
“About Sun Remote System Control Software” on page 133.
Once you install the operating system and the RSC software, you can then configure
the system to use RSC as the system console. For detailed instructions, see “How to
Redirect the System Console to RSC” on page 42.
Configuration Rule
A qualified service technician can install the system controller card into a dedicated
slot at the base of the system I/O board. Never move the system controller card to
another system slot, as it is not a PCI-compatible card.
Caution – All internal options (except disk drives and power supplies) must be
installed only by qualified service personnel. For information about installing or
removing the system controller card, see the Sun Fire V890 Server Service Manual,
which is included on the Sun Fire V890 Documentation CD.
Sun Fire V890 power supplies are modular units, designed for fast, easy installation
or removal, even while the system is fully operational. Power supplies are installed
in bays at the rear of the system, as shown in the following figure.
Each power supply provides a total of five DC output voltages (3.3V, 5.0V, 12V, 48V,
and 5.0V standby). Output current is shared equally between each of the supplies
via active current sharing circuitry.
Each power supply has three status LEDs to provide power and fault status
information. For additional details, see “About Power Supply LEDs” on page 148.
Configuration Rules
■ Sun Microsystems recommends that you connect each power supply to a
dedicated AC circuit. Consult your local electrical codes for any additional
requirements.
■ The minimum system configuration requires two power supplies. The basic
system configuration comes with three power supplies installed. Systems
configured with only one power supply are not supported.
■ A system configured with two power supplies may shut down abruptly if either
power supply fails. The third power supply enables the system to remain fully
operational should any one of the power supplies fail.
■ Power supply bays 0 and 1 must always contain power supplies. If a power
supply in either bay fails and the system can continue to operate, you must leave
the failed power supply in its bay until you are able to install a functioning
replacement power supply. A failed power supply in bay 0 or 1 still acts as an air
baffle, channeling airflow to cool the bottom row of disk drives in the disk cage.
The failed power supply should be replaced as soon as possible to regain N+1
power redundancy.
Caution – If any power supply fails, leave the supply in its bay until you are ready
to install a replacement.
For information about installing power supplies, see the Sun Fire V890 Server Service
Manual, which is included on the Sun Fire V890 Documentation CD.
The motherboard fan tray is also known as the I/O bridge fan tray since its primary
purpose is to cool the I/O bridge chips on the system motherboard.
Primary CPU fan tray 1 One fan tray with two 6-inch fans
Secondary CPU fan tray 2 One fan tray with two 6-inch fans
Primary I/O fan tray 3 One fan tray with two 4-inch fans
Secondary I/O fan tray 4 One fan tray with two 4-inch fans
Primary motherboard fan tray 5 One 3-inch fan
Secondary motherboard fan tray 6 One 3-inch fan
Secondary
CPU fan tray
Only the primary fan trays are running during normal system operation. If a
primary fan tray fails, the environmental monitoring subsystem detects the failure
and automatically activates the secondary fan tray.
All fan trays feature a hot-swap capability. Qualified service technicians can remove
and replace a faulty fan tray without shutting down the operating system or turning
off the system power. For additional details, see “About Hot-Pluggable and Hot-
Swappable Components” on page 127.
For each fan in the system, the environmental monitoring subsystem monitors or
controls the following:
■ Fan present (monitored)
■ Fan speed in revolutions per minute (RPM) (monitored) – Used to detect early fan
degradation
■ Fan power input (controlled) – Used to increase or decrease the airflow and
cooling capacity
■ Fan fault LEDs (controlled)
Status indicator LEDs provide power, fault, and hot-swap indications for each fan
tray. For information about the status indicator LEDs, see “About Fan Tray LEDs” on
page 152.
Caution – All internal options (except disk drives and power supplies) must be
installed only by qualified service technicians. For information about installing or
removing fan tray assemblies, see the Sun Fire V890 Server Service Manual, which is
included on the Sun Fire V890 Documentation CD.
Configuration Rules
■ The minimum system configuration requires a complete set of three working fan
trays—an I/O fan tray, a CPU fan tray, and a motherboard fan tray.
■ If the system does not include a secondary CPU fan tray, a CPU fan tray filler
panel must be installed in its place.
Caution – A complete set of three working fan trays must be present in the system
at all times. After removing a fan tray, if the system is left with fewer than three
working fan trays, a qualified service technician must install a replacement fan tray
immediately to avoid an automatic thermal shutdown. For more information, see
“Environmental Monitoring and Control” on page 17.
The SCSI bus that supports the removable media devices is Fast/Wide-capable
(20 Mbytes per second) and can support single-ended, wide SCSI devices.
Target addresses (also know as SCSI IDs) for the SCSI bus are available in the ranges
of 0 through 5 and 8 through 15.
If no tape drive is installed, you can use this address for an external device. If you
later install an internal tape drive, you must use 5 as its address and assign a
different address to the external device.
Caution – All internal options (except disk drives and power supplies) must be
installed only by qualified service personnel. For information about installing or
removing removable media devices, see the Sun Fire V890 Server Service Manual,
which is included on the Sun Fire V890 Documentation CD.
A qualified service technician can configure both serial ports to comply with the
Electronics Industries Association EIA-423 or EIA-232D standards using jumpers
located on the system’s I/O board. The jumpers are factory-set for the EIA-423
standard, which is the default standard for North American users. Compliance with
the EIA-232D standard is required for digital telecommunication in nations of the
European Community. For more information about configuring the serial port
jumpers, see “” on page 71.
See “Reference for the Serial Port A and B Connectors” on page 176 for the connector
diagram, rear panel icon, and pin assignments.
For USB port locations, see “Locating Rear Panel Features” on page 9.
Note – For Sun Fire V890 servers, you must order the keyboard and mouse as
options. If the version of your Sun Type 6 keyboard does not have an integrated USB
hub, the keyboard and mouse will consume both USB ports on the system rear
panel. If you need to connect additional USB devices, you must add a USB hub.
The USB ports are compliant with the Open Host Controller Interface (Open
HCI) specification for USB Revision 1.0. Both ports support isochronous and
asynchronous modes and enable data transmission at speeds of 1.5 Mbps
and 12 Mbps. Note that the USB data transmission speed is significantly
faster than that of the standard serial ports, which operate at a maximum
rate of 460 Kbaud.
Note – The Universal Serial Bus provides power for smaller USB devices such as
modems. Larger USB devices, such as scanners, require their own power source.
Both USB ports support hot-plugging. You can connect and disconnect the USB cable
and peripheral devices while the system is running, without affecting system
operations.
Note – You can only perform USB hot-plug operations while the operating system is
running. USB hot-plug operations are not supported when the system ok prompt is
displayed.
Caution – Do not change the configuration of J0501 and J0502 on the system
controller card from the default settings; otherwise, the system controller card will
not boot.
Instructions for performing a firmware update procedure are provided with the
downloaded firmware image.
Several jumpers located on the system I/O board and FC-AL disk backplane affect
flash PROM operation. The jumper locations and settings are provided in the
sections that follow. For an explanation of how each jumper affects the flash PROM
update procedure, see the instructions supplied with the firmware image.
J0803
J01003
This chapter describes the features of the Sun Fire V890 mass storage subsystem, its
components, and supported configurations. The following topics are covered in this
chapter:
■ “About FC-AL Technology” on page 77
■ “About Sun Fire V890 Mass Storage Features” on page 79
■ “About the Mass Storage Subsystem Components” on page 80
■ “About the FC-AL Disk Backplanes” on page 82
■ “About Internal Disk Drives” on page 84
■ “About FC-AL Host Adapters” on page 86
■ “About FC-AL Device Addresses” on page 88
77
The unique features of FC-AL provide many advantages over other data transfer
technologies. The following table lists the features and advantages of FC-AL. For
additional information about FC-AL technology, visit the Fibre Channel Association
web site at http://www.fibrechannel.com.
Supports 100-Mbyte per second data transfer High throughput meets the demands of current
rate (200 Mbytes per second with dual generation high-performance processors and
porting) disks.
Capable of addressing up to 126 devices, High connectivity controlled by one device
plus a single controller, per loop allows flexible and simpler configurations.
Supports distances up to 10 km between Long distances between devices offers
devices using fiber-optic cable (up to 30 improved data availability by allowing remote
meters using copper cable) mirroring and campus clustering.
Provides for reliability, availability, and RAS features provide improved fault tolerance
serviceability (RAS) features such as hot- and data availability.
pluggable and dual-ported disks, redundant
data paths, and multiple host connections
Supports standard protocols such as IP and Migration to FC-AL produces small or no
SCSI impact on software and firmware.
Implements a simple serial protocol over Configurations that use serial connections are
copper or fiber cable less complex because of the reduced number of
cables per connection.
Supports redundant array of independent RAID support enhances data availability.
disks (RAID)
The following table describes Sun Fire V890 mass storage subsystem features that
enhance RAS capabilities.
Dual-ported FC-AL disk drives, These features provide fault tolerance and high
dual-loop backplanes, and availability of data. You can implement automatic
multiple FC-AL host adapters failover by configuring up to four independent and
redundant data paths using up to four FC-AL host
adapters and appropriate multipathing software. If a
component in any path fails, the software
automatically detects the failure and switches all data
transfers to an alternate path. For additional details,
see “About Multipathing Software” on page 131.
Support for RAID software Using a software RAID application (like Solstice
DiskSuite), you can ensure high availability of data
through fault tolerance and data redundancy. For more
information, see “About Volume Management
Software” on page 134.
Hot-pluggable disk drives Hot-pluggable disk drives ensure high data
availability and enhanced serviceability. You can
quickly replace a failed disk drive in a powered-on
system, without affecting the rest of the system’s
capabilities. For more information, see “About Internal
Disk Drives” on page 84 and “About Hot-Pluggable
and Hot-Swappable Components” on page 127.
Dual-ported FC-AL disk drives, These features enable simultaneous access to the
dual-loop backplanes, and internal storage array via two separate loops. When
multiple FC-AL host adapters combined with volume management software that
takes advantage of the Sun Fire V890 server’s
multipathing capability, disk throughput can be
increased. For additional details, see “About the FC-
AL Disk Backplanes” on page 82 and “About Volume
Management Software” on page 134.
Support for RAID levels 0, 0+1, When configured with optional RAID software, the
1+0, and 5 Sun Fire V890 system supports RAID levels 0, 0+1,
1+0, and 5, which incorporate disk striping. Disk
striping distributes contiguous blocks of data across
multiple disks. This speeds up data access by enabling
multiple disk controllers to access the data
simultaneously. For additional information, see
“About Volume Management Software” on page 134.
The FC-AL backplane accepts low-profile (1.0-inch) dual-ported FC-AL disk drives.
Each disk drive connects to the backplane via a standard 40-pin single connector
attachment (SCA) interface. Incorporating all power and signal connections into a
single, blind-mating connector, SCA technology makes it easy to add or remove disk
drives from the system. Disks using SCA connectors provide higher availability and
better serviceability than disks using other types of connectors.
For more information on the RAS and performance capabilities of the mass storage
subsystem, see “About Sun Fire V890 Mass Storage Features” on page 79.
Port bypass controllers (PBCs) on the disk backplane ensure loop integrity. When a
disk or external device is unplugged or fails, the PBCs automatically bypass the
device, closing the loop to maintain data availability.
Each backplane also includes two integrated SSC100 SCSI Enclosure Services (SES)
controllers, one for each loop. The SES controllers:
■ Interpret enclosure service commands from the host software
■ Manage the backplane’s FC-AL loop configuration
■ Monitor status signals from disks and disk backplanes
■ Control disk status LEDs
When a second backplane is installed to form an expanded 12-disk array, only the
SES controllers on the base backplane are active; the SES controllers on the upper
backplane remain inactive.
Configuration Rules
■ The FC-AL disk backplane requires low-profile (1.0-inch) disk drives.
■ The optional expansion disk backplane is installed above the base backplane.
Caution – All internal options (except disk drives and power supplies) must be
installed only by qualified service personnel. For information about installing or
removing an FC-AL disk backplane, see the Sun Fire V890 Server Service Manual,
which is included on the Sun Fire V890 Documentation CD.
All Sun Fire V890 disk drives are dual-ported for multipath access. When used in a
dual-loop configuration, each drive can be accessed through two separate and
distinct data paths. Dual data paths provide the following benefits:
For more information on the RAS and performance capabilities of the mass storage
subsystem, see “About Sun Fire V890 Mass Storage Features” on page 79.
Sun Fire V890 disk drives are hot-pluggable. You can add, remove, or replace disks
while the system continues to operate. This capability significantly reduces system
downtime associated with disk drive replacement. Disk drive hot-plug procedures
involve software commands for preparing the system prior to removing a disk drive
and for reconfiguring the operating system after installing a drive. For additional
details, see “About Hot-Pluggable and Hot-Swappable Components” on page 127.
At the front of the system disk cage are several disk drive status LEDs. There are
three LEDs associated with each drive, indicating the drive’s operating status,
hot-plug readiness, and any fault conditions associated with the drive. These status
LEDs help administrators to quickly identify drives requiring service. For additional
details, see “About Disk Drive LEDs” on page 156.
The following figure shows the system’s 12 internal disk slots and associated LEDs.
Disk slots are labeled from 0 to 11.
Loop A
ISP
SES
SES
Expansion Backplane
Motherboard
SES
ISP SES
Loop B
ISP
Base Backplane
Sun StorEdge PCI
Dual Fibre Channel
Host Adapter Card
A variety of PCI FC-AL host adapter cards are available from Sun Microsystems and
other vendors for controlling external FC-AL devices. These include dual-channel
cards and combination cards. Dual-channel cards contain two FC-AL controllers for
controlling two separate loops with a single card. Combination cards combine an
FC-AL controller with a controller of another type (for example, a Gigabit Ethernet
controller). For more information, see the documentation supplied with the host
adapter card.
Configuration Rules
■ The Sun Fire V490 server supports Sun FC-AL host adapter cards that incorporate
the Qlogic ISP2200 series intelligent Fibre Channel processor. Sun host adapter
cards that use the Qlogic ISP2100 series processor are not supported. For a list of
supported cards, contact your authorized Sun sales representative.
■ If your system is configured with a Sun StorEdge PCI Dual Fibre Channel Host
Adapter card, and its internal port is connected to the Loop B port of the FC-AL
disk backplane, you must not use the card’s external Port 1. Connecting Port 1 to
external devices under these circumstances is considered an unsupported
configuration. In this case, use only Port 2 to connect to external devices.
■ Do not use the internal port of the Sun StorEdge PCI Dual Fibre Channel Host
Adapter card to connect to the Loop A port of the FC-AL disk backplane. You
must connect the card’s internal port to Loop B only.
■ For best performance, install 66-MHz FC-AL host adapter cards in a 66-MHz PCI
slot (slot 7 or 8, if available). See “About PCI Cards and Buses” on page 56.
Each FC-AL disk drive is connected directly to a Fibre Channel loop and appears as
a separate node on the loop. Each node on a loop is assigned a unique arbitrated
loop physical address (AL_PA), one of 127 available addresses per loop.
AL_PA values may be hard-assigned or soft-assigned and are determined when the
loop is initialized—typically when booting the system or when adding or removing
a device as part of a hot-plug operation. Hard-assigned AL_PAs are established first,
according to the selection ID for each device. If, for any reason, there are conflicts
with hard-assigned addresses during loop initialization, the devices involved
automatically revert to soft-assigned addresses to resolve the conflicts.
The AL_PA values that are hard-assigned to each device depend on the device’s
location within its backplane (disk slot number). The following table shows the
selection IDs and AL_PA values that are hard-assigned to Sun Fire V890 internal
FC-AL devices, depending on the device location. Both selection IDs and AL_PA
values are expressed as hexadecimal numbers.
Disk 0 00 EF Disk 6 08 D9
Disk 1 01 E8 Disk 7 09 D6
Disk 2 02 E4 Disk 8 0A D5
Disk 3 03 E2 Disk 9 0B D4
Disk 4 04 E1 Disk 10 0C D3
Disk 5 05 E0 Disk 11 0D D2
SES processor 06 DC
This chapter describes the networking options of the system and provides
information and instructions required to plan and configure the supported network
interfaces.
89
About Network Interfaces
The Sun Fire V890 server provides two on-board Ethernet interfaces—one Gigabit
Ethernet and one Fast Ethernet interface. The 100BASE-TX Fast Ethernet interface is
located on the system I/O board and conforms to the IEEE 802.3u Ethernet standard.
The Fast Ethernet interface is an auto-sensing, switchable interface that can operate
at 100 Mbps or 10 Mbps. It negotiates automatically with the remote end of the link
(link partner) to select a common mode of operation.
The 1000BASE-SX Gigabit Ethernet interface resides on the system motherboard and
conforms to the IEEE 802.3z Ethernet standard. The Gigabit Ethernet interface
operates at 1000 Mbps only.
Two rear panel connectors provide access to the on-board Ethernet interfaces:
■ One 1000BASE-SX compliant SC connector for connecting 62.5/125-micron or
50/125-micron fiber-optic cable to the Gigabit Ethernet interface
■ One RJ-45 connector for connecting Category-5 twisted-pair Ethernet (TPE) cable
to the Fast Ethernet interface
The ge Gigabit Ethernet driver, the eri Fast Ethernet driver, and drivers for several
other network interfaces are installed automatically during the Solaris installation
procedure. For more information, see the Solaris documentation included with your
software.
To help maximize system availability, make sure that any redundant network
interfaces reside on separate PCI buses, supported by separate PCI bridges. For
additional details, see “About PCI Cards and Buses” on page 56.
If you are using a PCI network interface card, see the documentation supplied with
the card.
Note – All internal options (except disk drives and power supplies) must be
installed only by qualified service personnel. Installation procedures for these
components are covered in the Sun Fire V890 Server Service Manual, which is
included on the Sun Fire V890 Documentation CD.
What to Do
1. Choose a host name for the system.
The host name must be unique within the network. It can consist only of
alphanumeric characters and the dash (-). Do not use a dot in the host name. Do not
begin the name with a number or a special character. The name must not be longer
than 30 characters.
2. Determine the unique Internet Protocol (IP) address of the network interface and
make a note of it.
You need to furnish the address in a later step.
An IP address must be assigned by your network administrator. Each network
device or interface must have a unique IP address.
What Next
After completing this procedure, the primary network interface is ready for
operation. However, in order for other network devices to communicate with the
system, you must enter the system’s IP address and host name into the namespace
on the network name server. For information about setting up a network name
service, consult:
■ Solaris Naming Configuration Guide for your specific Solaris release
The device driver for the system’s on-board Sun GigaSwift Ethernet interfaces is
automatically installed with the Solaris release. For information about operating
characteristics and configuration parameters for this driver, refer to the following
document:
■ Platform Notes: The Sun GigaSwift Ethernet Device Driver
Note – The Sun Fire V890 system conforms to the Ethernet 10/100BASE-T standard,
which states that the Ethernet 10BASE-T link integrity test function should always
be enabled on both the host system and the Ethernet hub. If you have problems
establishing a connection between this system and your hub, verify that the Ethernet
hub also has the link integrity test function enabled. Consult the manual provided
with your hub for more information about the link integrity test function.
If you are using a PCI network interface card, see the documentation supplied with
the card.
Note – All internal options (except disk drives and power supplies) must be
installed only by qualified service personnel. Installation procedures for these
components are covered in the Sun Fire V890 Server Service Manual, which is
included on the Sun Fire V890 Documentation CD.
What to Do
1. Choose a network host name for each new interface.
The host name must be unique within the network. It can consist of alphanumeric
characters and the dash (-). Do not use a dot in the host name. Do not begin the
name with a number or a special character.
Usually an interface host name is based on the machine host name. For example, if
the machine is assigned the host name sunrise, the added network interface could
be named sunrise-1. The machine’s host name is assigned when Solaris software
is installed. For more information, see the installation instructions accompanying the
Solaris software.
3. Boot the operating system (if it is not already running) and log on to the system as
superuser.
Be sure to perform a reconfiguration boot if you just added a new PCI network
interface card. See “How to Initiate a Reconfiguration Boot” on page 40.
Type the su command at the system prompt, followed by the superuser password.
$ su
Password:
5. Edit the /etc/hostname file(s) created in Step 4 to add the host name(s)
determined in Step 1.
Following is an example of the /etc/hostname files required for a system called
sunrise, which has two on-board Ethernet interfaces (ge0 and eri0) and a PCI
Gigabit Ethernet adapter card (ge1). A network connected to the on-board eri0
6. Create an entry in the /etc/hosts file for each active network interface.
An entry consists of the IP address and the host name for each interface.
The following example shows an /etc/hosts file with entries for the three network
interfaces used as examples in this procedure.
7. Manually plumb and enable each new interface using the ifconfig command.
For example, for the logical interface ge0, type:
What Next
After completing this procedure, any new network interfaces are ready for
operation. However, in order for other network devices to communicate with the
system through the new interface, the IP address and host name for each new
interface must be entered into the namespace on the network name server. For
information about setting up a network name service, consult
■ Solaris Naming Configuration Guide for your specific Solaris release
These documents are available with your Solaris software and online at
http://docs.sun.com, under Solaris on Sun Hardware. Refer also to the Sun
Fire V890 Server Product Notes for late-breaking information.
Note – The Sun Fire V890 system conforms to the Ethernet 10/100BASE-T standard,
which states that the Ethernet 10BASE-T link integrity test function should always
be enabled on both the host system and the Ethernet hub. If you have problems
establishing a connection between this system and your Ethernet hub, verify that the
hub also has the link test function enabled. Consult the manual provided with your
hub for more information about the link integrity test function.
4. Connect the fiber-optic cable to the Gigabit Ethernet connector and to the Ethernet
network.
The cable and connector are keyed for correct mating orientation.
If you are adding an additional network interface to the system, then you need to
configure that interface. See:
■ “How to Configure Additional Network Interfaces” on page 94
What to Do
1. Locate the RJ-45 twisted-pair Ethernet (TPE) connector for the appropriate Fast
Ethernet interface.
See “Locating Rear Panel Features” on page 9. For a PCI Fast Ethernet adapter card,
see the documentation supplied with the card.
Consult your network administrator if you need more information about how to
connect to your network.
What Next
If you are installing your system, complete the installation procedure. Return to:
■ “How to Install the Sun Fire V890 Server” on page 24
If you are adding an additional network interface to the system, then you need to
configure that interface. See:
■ “How to Configure Additional Network Interfaces” on page 94
Specifically, you must set up a system console and power on the system. See:
■ “How to Attach an Alphanumeric Terminal” on page 31
■ “How to Configure a Local Graphics Console” on page 33
■ “How to Power On the System” on page 35
If you want to boot from a network, you must also connect the network interface to
the network and configure the network interfaces. See:
■ “How to Attach a Twisted-Pair Ethernet Cable” on page 99
■ “How to Configure the Primary Network Interface” on page 92
■ “How to Configure Additional Network Interfaces” on page 94
This procedure assumes that you are familiar with the OpenBoot firmware and that
you know how to enter the OpenBoot environment. For more information about the
OpenBoot firmware, see the OpenBoot 4.x Command Reference Manual, which is
available at http://docs.sun.com, under Solaris on Sun Hardware. Refer also to
the Sun Fire V890 Server Product Notes for late-breaking details.
What to Do
1. At the ok prompt, type:
Note – You can also specify the name of the program to be booted as well as the
way the boot program operates. For more information, see the OpenBoot 4.x
Command Reference Manual for your specific Solaris software.
If you want to specify a network interface other than an on-board Ethernet interface
as the default boot device, you can determine the full path name of each interface by
typing:
ok show-devs
The show-devs command lists the system devices and displays the full path name
of each PCI device. An example of a path name for a Fast Ethernet PCI card is shown
below:
/pci@8,700000/pci@2/SUNW,hme@0,1
ok reset-all
Note – To store variable changes, you can also power cycle the system using the
front panel Power button.
Note – To enhance system restoration and server availability, Sun has recently
introduced a new standard (default) OpenBoot firmware configuration. These
changes, which affect the behavior of servers like the Sun Fire V890, are described in
OpenBoot PROM Enhancements for Diagnostic Operation. This document is included on
the Sun Fire V890 Documentation CD.
103
Note – The procedures in this chapter assume that you are familiar with the
OpenBoot firmware and that you know how to enter the OpenBoot environment.
For more information about the OpenBoot firmware, see the OpenBoot 4.x Command
Reference Manual, which is available at http://docs.sun.com, under Solaris on
Sun Hardware. Refer to the Sun Fire V890 Server Product Notes for late-breaking
details.
If necessary, you can type Control-C to abort the automatic shutdown and return to
the system ok prompt; otherwise, after the 30 seconds expire, the system will power
off automatically.
Note – Typing Control-C to abort an impending shutdown also has the effect of
disabling the OpenBoot environmental monitor. This gives you enough time to
replace the component responsible for the critical condition without triggering
another automatic shutdown sequence. After replacing the faulty component, you
must type the env-on command to reinstate OpenBoot environmental monitoring.
Note – The commands env-on and env-off only affect environmental monitoring
at the OpenBoot level. They have no effect on the system’s environmental
monitoring and control capabilities while the operating system is running.
What to Do
● To enable OpenBoot environmental monitoring, type env-on at the system ok
prompt.
ok env-on
Environmental monitor is ON
ok
Note – The commands env-on and env-off only affect environmental monitoring
at the OpenBoot level. They have no effect on the system’s environmental
monitoring and control capabilities while the operating system is running.
Note – Using the Stop-A keyboard command to enter the OpenBoot environment
will immediately disable the OpenBoot environmental monitor. You must then
re-enable the environmental monitor prior to rebooting the system. If you enter the
OpenBoot environment through any other means—by halting the operating system,
by power-cycling the system, or as a result of a system panic—the OpenBoot
environmental monitor will remain enabled.
What to Do
● To disable OpenBoot environmental monitoring, type env-off at the system ok
prompt.
ok env-off
Environmental monitor is OFF
ok
What to Do
● To obtain OpenBoot environmental status information, type .env at the system ok
prompt.
ok .env
Environmental Status:
Power Supplies:
PS0: Present, receiving AC power
PS1: Present, receiving AC power
PS2: Present, receiving AC power
Fans:
Tray 1 (CPU): Present, Fan A @ 3225 RPM, Fan B @ 3157 RPM
Tray 2 (CPU): Present, Fan A @ 3529 RPM, Fan B @ 3571 RPM
Tray 3 (I/O): Present, Fan A @ 3529 RPM, Fan B @ 3488 RPM
Tray 4 (I/O): Present, Fan A @ 3157 RPM, Fan B @ 3030 RPM
Fan 5 (IO-Bridge): Present, Fan @ 3846 RPM
Fan 6 (IO-Bridge): Present, Fan @ 3658 RPM
Temperatures:
CMP0: Ambient = 32 deg. C, Die = 56 deg. C
CMP1: Ambient = 34 deg. C, Die = 52 deg. C
CMP2: Ambient = 31 deg. C, Die = 52 deg. C
CMP3: Ambient = 33 deg. C, Die = 57 deg. C
CMP4: Ambient = 36 deg. C, Die = 59 deg. C
CMP5: Ambient = 32 deg. C, Die = 53 deg. C
CMP6: Ambient = 33 deg. C, Die = 59 deg. C
CMP7: Ambient = 32 deg. C, Die = 56 deg. C
Motherboard: Ambient = 22 deg. C
I/O Board: Ambient = 19 deg. C
Disk Backplane 0: Ambient = 19 deg. C
Environmental monitor is ON
In the event of such a hardware failure, firmware-based diagnostic tests isolate the
problem and mark the device (using the 1275 Client Interface, via the device tree) as
either failed or disabled. The OpenBoot firmware then deconfigures the failed device
and reboots the operating system. This all occurs automatically, as long as the Sun
Fire V890 system is capable of functioning without the failed component.
Once restored, the operating system will not attempt to access any deconfigured
device. This prevents a faulty hardware component from keeping the entire system
down or causing the system to crash repeatedly.
As long as the failed component is electrically dormant (that is, it does not cause
random bus errors or introduce noise into signal lines), the system reboots
automatically and resumes operation. Be sure to contact a qualified service
technician about replacing the failed component.
Note – The system will not boot automatically when it is in service mode. For
details, see “Reset Scenarios” on page 112.
If a system fails power-on diagnostics, then auto-boot? is ignored and the system
does not start up unless an operator boots the system manually. This behavior
obviously provides limited system availability. Therefore, the Sun Fire V890
OpenBoot firmware provides a second OpenBoot configuration variable switch
called auto-boot-on-error?. This switch controls whether the system will
attempt to boot when a subsystem failure is detected.
The system will not attempt to boot if it is in service mode, or following any fatal
non-recoverable error. For examples of fatal non-recoverable errors, see “Error
Handling Summary” on page 111.
No errors are The system attempts to boot if By default, auto-boot? and auto-boot-on-
detected auto-boot? is true. error? are both true.
Non-fatal errors are The system attempts to boot if Non-fatal errors include:
detected auto-boot? and auto-boot-on- • IDE bus failure
error? are both true. • FC-AL subsystem failure 1
• Gigabit or Fast Ethernet interface failure
• USB interface failure
• Serial interface failure
• PCI card failure
• Processor failure 2
• Memory failure 3
Fatal non-recoverable The system will not boot regardless Fatal non-recoverable errors include:
errors are detected of OpenBoot configuration variable • All processors failed
settings. • All logical memory banks failed
• Flash RAM cyclical redundancy check
(CRC) failure
• Critical FRU-ID SEEPROM configuration
data failure
• Critical application specific integrated
circuit (ASIC) failure
1. A working alternate path to the boot disk is required. For more information, see “About Multipathing Software” on page 131.
2. A single processor failure causes the entire CPU/Memory module to be deconfigured. Reboot requires that another functional
CPU/Memory module be present.
3. Since each physical DIMM belongs to two logical memory banks, the firmware deconfigures both memory banks associated with the
affected DIMM. This leaves the CPU/Memory module operational, but with one of the processors having a reduced complement of
memory.
When you set the system keyswitch to the Diagnostics position, the system is in
service mode and runs tests at Sun-specified levels, ignoring the settings of
OpenBoot configuration variables.
Setting the diag-switch? variable to true also puts the system in service mode,
producing exactly the same results as setting the system keyswitch to the Diagnostics
position.
When you set the system keyswitch to the Normal position, and when the OpenBoot
diag-switch? variable is set to false (its default value), the system is in normal
mode. When the system is in this mode, you can control diagnostics and auto-boot
behavior by setting OpenBoot configuration variables, principally diag-trigger.
The following table describes the various settings (keywords) of the diag-trigger
variable. You can use the first three of these keywords in any combination.
Keyword Function
What to Do
1. Type the following at the system ok prompt:
What to Do
● Type the following at the system ok prompt:
If you deconfigure a PCI device, the device in question can still be probed by
firmware and recognized by the operating system. Solaris OS “sees” such a device,
reports it as failed, and refrains from using it.
If you deconfigure a PCI slot, firmware will not even probe the slot, and the
operating system will not “know about” any devices that may be plugged into the
slot.
Device Paths
When manually deconfiguring and reconfiguring devices, you might need to
determine the full physical paths to those devices. You can do this by typing:
ok show-devs
The show-devs command lists the system devices and displays the full path name
of each device. An example of a path name for a Fast Ethernet PCI card is shown
below:
/pci@8,700000/pci@2/SUNW,hme@0,1
ok devalias
You can also create your own device alias for a physical device by typing:
Note – If you manually deconfigure a device alias using asr-disable, and then
assign a different alias to the device, the device will remain deconfigured even
though the device alias has changed.
ok .asr
What to Do
1. At the ok prompt, type:
ok asr-disable device-identifier
OpenBoot configuration variable changes take effect after the next system reset.
ok reset-all
Note – To immediately effect the changes, you can also power cycle the system
using the front panel Power button.
What to Do
1. At the ok prompt, type:
ok asr-enable device-identifier
a. If you are reconfiguring a processor, power cycle the system using the front
panel Power button.
ok reset-all
Note – To reconfigure a processor, you must power cycle the system. The
reset-all command will not suffice to bring the processor back online.
What to Do
● Type the following at the system ok prompt:
ok .asr
ASR Disablement Status
Component: Status
CMP0: Enabled
Memory Bank0: Disabled
Memory Bank1: Enabled
Memory Bank2: Enabled
Memory Bank3: Enabled
CMP1/Memory: Enabled
CMP2/Memory: Enabled
CMP3/Memory: Enabled
CMP4/Memory: Enabled
CMP5/Memory: Enabled
CMP6/Memory: Enabled
CMP7/Memory: Enabled
IO-Bridge8: Enabled
IO-Bridge9: Enabled
GPTwo Slots: Enabled
Onboard SCSI: Enabled
Onboard FCAL: Enabled
Onboard GEM: Enabled
PCI Slots: Enabled
Note – The .asr command only shows devices that have been manually disabled
using the asr-disable command. It does not show devices that have been
automatically deconfigured as a result of failing firmware diagnostics. To see which
devices, if any, have failed POST diagnostics, use the show-post-results
command, as described in Sun Fire V890 Diagnostics and Troubleshooting. You can find
this document at: http://www.sun.com/documentation.
Stop-A Functionality
Stop-A (Abort) issues a break that drops the system into OpenBoot firmware control
(indicated by the display of the ok prompt). The key sequence works the same on
the Sun Fire V890 server as it does on systems with older keyboards, except that it
does not work during the first few seconds after the machine is reset.
Stop-D Functionality
The Stop-D (diags) key sequence is not supported on systems with USB keyboards.
However, the Stop-D functionality can be closely emulated by turning the system
keyswitch to the Diagnostics position. For more information, see “About the Status
and Control Panel” on page 11.
Stop-F Functionality
The Stop-F functionality is not available in systems with USB keyboards. However,
the RSC bootmode forth command provides similar functionality. For more
information, see the Sun Remote System Control (RSC) 2.2 User’s Guide, which is
included on the Sun Fire V890 Documentation CD.
Stop-N Functionality
The Stop-N sequence is a method of bypassing problems typically encountered on
systems with misconfigured OpenBoot configuration variables. On systems with
older keyboards, you did this by pressing the Stop-N sequence while powering on
the system.
On systems with USB keyboards, like the Sun Fire V890, the implementation is
somewhat more cumbersome, and involves waiting for the system to reach a
particular state. For instructions, see “How to Implement Stop-N Functionality” on
page 121.
The drawback of using Stop-N on a Sun Fire V890 system is that, if diagnostics are
enabled, it can take some time for the system to reach the desired state. Fortunately,
an alternative exists: Place the system keyswitch in Diagnostics position.
Assuming you have access to RSC software, another possibility is to use the RSC
bootmode reset_nvram command, which provides similar functionality. For more
information, see the Sun Remote System Control (RSC) User’s Guide, which is included
on the Sun Fire V890 Documentation CD.
What To Do
1. Turn on the power to the system.
If POST diagnostics are configured to run, both the Fault and OK-to-Remove LEDs
on the front panel will blink slowly.
2. Wait until only the system Fault LED begins to blink rapidly.
Note – If you have configured the Sun Fire V890 system to run diagnostic tests, this
could take upwards of 30 minutes.
ok
Note – Once the front panel LEDs stop blinking and the Power/OK LED stays lit,
pressing the Power button again will begin a graceful shutdown of the system.
What Next
During the execution of OpenBoot firmware code, all OpenBoot configuration
variables—including the ones that are likely to cause problems, such as input and
output device settings—are temporarily set to “safe” factory default values. The
only exception to this is auto-boot, which is set to false.
By the time the system displays the ok prompt, OpenBoot configuration variables
have been returned to their original, and possibly misconfigured, values. These
values do not take effect until the system is reset. You can display them with the
printenv command and manually change them with the setenv command.
If you do nothing other than reset the system at this point, no values are
permanently changed. All your customized OpenBoot configuration variable
settings are retained, even ones that may have caused problems.
Note – The device identifiers above are not case-sensitive; you can type them as
uppercase or lowercase characters.
You can use wild cards within device identifiers to reconfigure a range of devices, as
shown in the following table.
* All devices
cmp* All processors
cmp0-bank*, cmp1-bank*, ... cmp7-bank* All memory banks for each processor
hba* All PCI bridge chips
gptwo-slot* All CPU/Memory board slots
pci-slot* All PCI slots
pci* All on-board PCI devices (on-board Gigabit Ethernet,
FC-AL, and IDE controllers) and all PCI slots
Server Administration
125
The following table provides a summary of each tool with a pointer to additional
information.
Components that can be serviced without such preparation are called hot-swappable
components. These components can be removed or inserted at any time without
preparing the operating system in advance.
Sun Fire V890 hot-pluggable components fall into three basic groups:
■ Fan trays and power supplies
■ Disk drives
Note – PCI and disk hot-plug operations are not supported when the system ok
prompt is displayed. A qualified service technician can only perform these hot-plug
operations while the operating system is running.
Caution – The system controller (SC) card cannot be serviced while the system is
running. Before installing or removing a system controller card, you must power off
the system and disconnect all AC power cords.
You can install or remove a power supply or fan tray while the system is operating
at the ok prompt. However, in the case of the power supply, you must issue a
reset-all command at the ok prompt in order for the change to be recognized the
next time the operating system is booted.
Note – If you remove a power supply or fan tray while the operating system is
running, wait for an acknowledgement message on the system console before
installing a replacement part; otherwise, the environmental monitoring software will
not recognize the new device and false error conditions will result.
Caution – When hot-swapping a redundant fan tray, do not put your hand into the
empty fan tray bay. The fans in the populated bay are still spinning.
For more information about luxadm, see “About the Solaris luxadm Utility” on
page 138. For complete disk hot-plug procedures, refer to Platform Notes: Using
luxadm Software. This document is included on the Sun Fire V890 Documentation
CD. Refer also to the Sun Fire V890 Server Product Notes for late-breaking details.
Caution – When hot-plugging a disk drive, after disconnecting the drive from its
backplane, allow 30 seconds or so for the drive to spin down completely before
removing it from its drive bay.
PCI Cards
On Sun Fire V890 systems, PCI cards are hot-pluggable, while the system controller
card cannot be serviced when the machine is running.
PCI hot-plug procedures may involve software commands for preparing the system
prior to removing a device, and for reconfiguring the operating system after
installing a new device. In addition, certain system requirements must be met in
order for hot-plug operations to succeed.
For information about system requirements and limitations, and for detailed PCI
hot-plug procedures, refer to the Sun Fire V890 Dynamic Reconfiguration User’s Guide,
which is available at http://docs.sun.com, under Solaris on Sun Hardware.
Refer to the Sun Fire V890 Server Product Notes for late-breaking details.
Note – DR works in conjunction with (but does not require) multipathing software.
You can use multipathing software to switch I/O operations from one I/O controller
to another to prepare for DR operations. With a combination of DR and multipathing
software, a qualified service technician can remove, replace, or deactivate a PCI
controller card with little or no interruption to system operation. Note that this
requires redundant hardware; that is, the system must contain an alternate I/O
controller that is connected to the same device(s) as the card being removed or
replaced. The alternate controller must reside on a different PCI card or be
integrated into the Sun Fire V890 system motherboard or I/O board. For additional
details, see “About Multipathing Software” on page 131.
The push-button method relies on push buttons and status LEDs located near each
PCI slot. A qualified service technician can initiate a PCI hot-plug operation by
pressing the push button for the corresponding slot. The command-line method lets
a qualified service technician initiate PCI hot-plug operations via a remote login
session, an RSC console, or a locally attached console. This method involves the
Solaris cfgadm(1) command.
Both hot-plug methods make use of the status LEDs located near each PCI slot.
These LEDs indicate where and when it is safe to insert or remove a card, and also
show whether the operation has succeeded or failed. For additional details on
hot-plug status LEDs, see “About PCI Slot LEDs” on page 144.
For Sun Fire V890 systems, two different types of multipathing software are
available:
■ Solaris IP Network Multipathing provides multipathing and load-balancing
capabilities for IP network interfaces.
■ Sun StorEdge Traffic Manager. See the Sun Fire V890 Server Product Notes for
details about this software.
RSC software works with the system controller card included in all Sun Fire V890
servers. The system controller card runs independently of the host server, and
operates off of 5-volt standby power from the system’s power supplies. Together the
hardware and software allow RSC to serve as a “lights-out” management tool that
continues to function even when the server operating system goes offline or the
system is powered off.
The system controller card plugs in to a dedicated slot on the system I/O board and
provides the following ports through an opening in the system rear panel:
■ 10-Mbps Ethernet port via an RJ-45 twisted-pair Ethernet (TPE) connector
■ EIA-232D serial port via an RJ-45 connector
RSC Capabilities
Using RSC software, you can:
■ Access Solaris and OpenBoot PROM console functions remotely via the serial and
Ethernet ports on the system controller card
■ Run power-on self-test (POST) and OpenBoot Diagnostics from a remote console
■ Remotely monitor server environmental conditions, such as fan, temperature, and
power supply status, even when the server is offline
■ View a graphical representation of the server’s front panel, including keyswitch
position and LED states
■ Perform remote server reboot, power-on, and power-off functions on demand
■ Access a detailed log of RSC events, command history, and detected errors
The Java technology-based GUI client application runs on workstations running the
Solaris, Microsoft Windows 98, or Windows NT operating systems.
Volume management software lets you create disk volumes. Volumes are logical disk
devices comprising one or more physical disks or partitions from several different
disks. Once a volume is created, the operating system uses and maintains the
volume as if it were a single disk. By providing this logical volume management
layer, the software overcomes the restrictions imposed by physical disk devices.
Sun’s volume management products also provide RAID data redundancy and
performance features. RAID, which stands for redundant array of independent disks, is
a technology that helps protect against disk and hardware failures. Through RAID
technology, volume management software is able to provide high data availability,
excellent I/O performance, and simplified administration.
Multipathing Software
Sun StorEdge Traffic Manager software for Solaris OS, which is part of the Sun SAN
Foundation Suite, automates multipath I/O failover, failback, and SAN-wide load
balancing. For more information about this product, see the Sun Fire V890 Server
Product Notes.
RAID Concepts
Solstice DiskSuite software supports RAID technology to optimize performance,
availability, and user cost. RAID technology improves performance, reduces
recovery time in the event of file system errors, and increases data availability even
in the event of a disk failure. There are several levels of RAID configurations that
provide varying degrees of data availability with corresponding trade-offs in
performance and cost.
This section describes some of the most popular and useful of those configurations,
including:
■ Disk concatenation
■ Disk mirroring (RAID 1)
■ Disk striping (RAID 0)
■ Disk striping with parity (RAID 5)
■ Hot spares
Using this method, the concatenated disks are filled with data sequentially, with the
second disk being written to when no space remains on the first, the third when no
room remains on the second, and so on.
Whenever the operating system needs to write to a mirrored volume, both disks are
updated. The disks are maintained at all times with exactly the same information.
When the operating system needs to read from the mirrored volume, it reads from
whichever disk is more readily accessible at the moment, which can result in
enhanced performance for read operations.
RAID 1 offers the highest level of data protection, but storage costs are high, and
write performance is reduced since all data must be stored twice.
System performance using RAID 0 will be better than using RAID 1 or 5, but the
possibility of data loss is greater because there is no way to retrieve or reconstruct
data stored on a failed disk drive.
System performance using RAID 5 will fall between that of RAID 0 and RAID 1;
however, RAID 5 provides limited data redundancy. If more than one disk fails, all
data is lost.
For more information, see the documentation supplied with Solstice DiskSuite
software.
The luxadm utility performs a variety of control and query tasks through a number
of subcommands and command-line options. Using luxadm, you can:
■ Assign a convenient enclosure name to the Sun Fire V890 internal storage array
■ Display the physical and logical device paths, world wide names (WWNs), and
enclosure names for storage arrays and individual disks
■ Display configuration, environmental, and status information for any array or
individual disk
■ Reserve a specific disk for exclusive use by a single host
■ Perform hot-plug insertion or removal of disks
■ Download firmware and fcode updates for mass storage components
Note – Setting the front panel keyswitch to the Locked position prevents
reprogramming of system firmware. If the keyswitch is turned to the Locked
position after a firmware update operation has started, the operation is allowed to
proceed to completion. For more information about the front panel keyswitch, see
“About the Status and Control Panel” on page 11.
Sun Cluster software delivers high availability through automatic fault detection
and recovery, and scalability, ensuring that mission-critical applications and services
are always available when needed.
With Sun Cluster software installed, other nodes in the cluster will automatically
take over and assume the workload when a node goes down. It delivers
predictability and fast recovery capabilities through features such as local
application restart, individual application failover, and local network adapter
failover. Sun Cluster software significantly reduces downtime and increases
productivity by helping ensure continuous service to all users.
The software lets you run both standard and parallel applications on the same
cluster. It supports the dynamic addition or removal of nodes, and enables Sun
servers and storage products to be clustered together in a variety of configurations.
Existing resources are used more efficiently, resulting in additional cost savings.
For more information, see the documentation supplied with the Sun Cluster
software.
This chapter provides information about the system’s interior and rear panel LED
status indicators. Topics covered in this chapter include:
■ “About CPU/Memory Slot LEDs” on page 118
■ “About PCI Slot LEDs” on page 119
■ “About Power Supply LEDs” on page 121
■ “About Fan Tray LEDs” on page 122
■ “About Disk Drive LEDs” on page 123
■ “About Gigabit Ethernet LEDs” on page 125
For a description of the system’s front panel LED indicators, see “About the Status
and Control Panel” on page 11.
117
About CPU/Memory Slot LEDs
The CPU/Memory slot LEDs are located on the horizontal panel between
CPU/Memory slots B and C and are visible when the right side door is open. There
are two LEDs for each CPU/Memory slot, as shown below.
Interpretation
Off Off Off The slot power is off. A PCI card can be safely inserted to
start a hot-plug operation.
On Blinking Off The installed card is being tested, configured, or
deconfigured, or the card is powered on but logically
detached from the operating system.
On Off Off The slot power is on and the PCI card is operating
normally.
Off On On The PCI card has encountered a fault. The card can be
safely removed.
Off Off On The card can be safely removed.
Note – If the slot is empty and the Fault or OK-to-Remove LED is on, pressing the
contact push button for the slot will clear the LED.
For more information about PCI cards and hot-plug operations, see:
■ “About PCI Cards and Buses” on page 56
■ “About Hot-Pluggable and Hot-Swappable Components” on page 127
The fan tray LEDs are located beside or beneath each fan tray assembly. There are
three LEDs per fan tray, as shown below.
OK-to-Remove Lights when it is safe to remove the fan tray assembly from a
powered-on system (only when redundant fan trays are present).
The following table shows how to interpret the various possible LED patterns.
Interpretation
Off Off Off The fan tray is not receiving power or is improperly
inserted.
On Off Off The fan tray is receiving power and operating normally.
Off On On The fan tray has encountered a fault and can be safely
removed from a powered-on system.
For more information about fan trays and hot-plug operations, see:
■ “About Fan Trays” on page 64
■ “About Hot-Pluggable and Hot-Swappable Components” on page 127
There are three LEDs for each disk drive. The disk drive LEDs are located on the
front of the disk cage, as shown below.
Activity Blinks slowly while the disk drive is being tested, configured,
or deconfigured during a hot-plug operation.
OK-to-Remove Lights when it is safe to remove the disk drive during a hot-plug
operation.
Interpretation
Off Off Off Slot power is off. A disk drive can be safely inserted
as part of a hot-plug operation.
Rapid Off Off Disk drive is spinning up or down.
Blinking
Slow Off Off Disk drive is being configured or deconfigured
Blinking during a hot-plug operation.
On Off Off Disk drive is up to speed and operating normally.
Irregular Off Off Disk drive is experiencing read or write activity.
Blinking
On On Off Disk drive has encountered a fault.
Off Off On Disk drive can be safely removed as part of a
hot-plug operation.
For more information about disk drives and hot-plug operations, see:
■ “About Internal Disk Drives” on page 84
■ “About Hot-Pluggable and Hot-Swappable Components” on page 127
This chapter contains basic information about how to use removable media storage
devices.
The Sun Fire V890 server provides front-panel access to three mounting bays. One
bay houses an IDE DVD-ROM drive, which is standard in all system configurations.
The other two bays accommodate an optional wide (68-pin) SCSI removable device,
which must be ordered separately. The tape drive option also requires a SCSI cable
(Sun part number X912A) and a SCSI adapter card (Sun part number X6758A); both
must be ordered separately.
You can easily convert the two SCSI device bays into a single full-height bay by
removing the metal shelf divider.
161
About the DVD-ROM Drive
The digital versatile disc-read only memory (DVD-ROM) drive in your system ships
with a specification sheet that contains the following information:
■ Type of DVD-ROM discs that you can use with the drive
■ Handling and storage information
■ Physical characteristics
■ Power requirements
■ Cleaning instructions
■ Description of DVD-ROM drive controls, indicators, and jumper settings
What to Do
1. Push the Eject button on the DVD-ROM drive to release the drive tray.
What Next
You can eject a CD or DVD from the drive by using one of three methods:
■ With software commands; see “How to Eject a CD or DVD With Software
Commands” on page 164
■ Manually; see “How to Eject a CD or DVD Manually” on page 165
■ Using an emergency procedure; see “How to Eject a CD or DVD in an
Emergency” on page 167
What to Do
1. From the system console device, change directories to a directory that is not in the
/cdrom hierarchy.
% eject cdrom
3. If the disc does not eject, kill any processes accessing the DVD-ROM drive and
repeat Step 2.
The disc will not eject while the drive is in use. To kill any processes accessing the
DVD-ROM drive, become superuser and type the following:
% su
Password:
# fuser -k /cdrom/cdrom0
Note – You should warn users before abruptly halting processes. The command
fuser -u /cdrom/cdrom0 helps identify who is accessing the DVD-ROM drive.
Refer to the Solaris System Administrator’s Guide for more information about the
fuser command.
What to Do
1. From the system console device, change directories to a directory that is not in the
/cdrom hierarchy.
% su
Password:
# fuser -k /cdrom/cdrom0
Note – You should warn users before abruptly halting processes. The command
fuser -u /cdrom/cdrom0 helps identify who is accessing the DVD-ROM drive.
Refer to the Solaris System Administrator’s Guide for more information about the
fuser command.
What Next
You can also eject a disc by using one of these methods:
What to Do
Caution – If this procedure is used while a disc is mounted, you can degrade or
destroy data in your system.
3. Insert the straightened end of the clip into the emergency eject hole and
press firmly.
4. Pull the tray from the drive after the clip is inserted into the hole.
What to Do
1. Clean the disc with compressed air.
Compressed air can remove most accumulations of dust and large dirt particles. If
you have access to the drive’s read head, verify that it is also dust free.
2. If spraying with compressed air fails to remove the dirt on a disc, wipe the disc
using a soft, clean, lint-free, dry cloth.
■ Wipe the data areas of the disc (on both sides if necessary) radially from the center
to the outside.
■ Do not wipe in a circular motion.
■ Wipe only the affected areas of the disc.
The figure below shows the correct and incorrect way to clean a CD or DVD.
Correct Incorrect
What Next
To insert a CD or DVD into the drive, see:
■ “How to Insert a CD or DVD Into the Drive” on page 162.
Thermal Conditioning
To ensure proper thermal conditioning, keep the tape cartridge at the same
temperature as the drive for 24 hours. This applies to cartridges for any of the tape
drives offered for your system.
What to Do
1. Verify that the tape cartridge write-protect switch is set correctly.
If the lock window is open, the tape is write-protected.
Write-protect switch
What Next
To remove a tape cartridge from the drive, see:
■ “How to Remove a Tape Cartridge” on page 172
What to Do
1. Check that there is no drive activity.
The green activity LED should be unlit. A flashing LED indicates drive activity.
Caution – Do not eject the tape cartridge when the drive is active, or you may incur
data loss or equipment damage.
What Next
To insert a tape cartridge into the drive, see:
■ “How to Insert a Tape Cartridge” on page 171
What to Do
For information about software commands needed to read and write data with your
tape drive, refer to the Solaris Handbook for Sun Peripherals or the Solaris User’s Guide.
1. Clean the drive after the first four hours of use with a new tape.
2. After that, clean the tape drive after every 25 hours of use to maintain reliable
operation.
3. Clean the drive twice as often if you use it in a dusty environment or operate
it infrequently.
What to Do
● Insert a cleaning cartridge into the drive.
The tape should play for a short while, and then eject automatically.
Connector Pinouts
This appendix gives you reference information about the system’s rear panel ports
and pin assignments. Topics covered in this appendix include:
■ “Reference for the Serial Port A and B Connectors” on page 176
■ “Reference for the USB Connectors” on page 177
■ “Reference for the Twisted-Pair Ethernet Connector” on page 178
■ “Reference for the System Controller Ethernet Connector” on page 179
■ “Reference for the System Controller Serial Connector” on page 180
175
Reference for the Serial Port A and B
Connectors
The serial port conforms to EIA-423 and EIA-232D specifications.
13 1
25 14
13 Clear To Send B
A1 B1
A2 B2
A3 B3
A4 B4
A1 +5 VDC B1 +5 VDC
A2 Port Data_N B2 Port Data_N
A3 Port Data_P B3 Port Data_P
A4 Ground B4 Ground
8 1
SERIAL
8 1
System Specifications
This appendix provides the following specifications for the Sun Fire V890 server:
■ “Reference for Physical Specifications” on page 182
■ “Reference for Electrical Specifications” on page 182
■ “Reference for Environmental Requirements” on page 183
■ “Reference for Agency Compliance Specifications” on page 184
■ “Reference for Clearance and Service Access Specifications” on page 185
181
Reference for Physical Specifications
The dimensions and weight of the system are as follows.
Parameter Value
Input
Nominal Frequencies 50 Hz or 60 Hz nominal
Nominal Voltage Range Autoranging 200 to 240 VAC
Maximum Current AC RMS 8 A @ 200 VAC (each power cord for two
power supplies per system)
AC Operating Range 180 to 264 Vrms, 47 - 63Hz
Output
+3.3 VDC 3 to 72 A
+5 VDC 3 to 56 A
+12 VDC 1 to 35 A
+48 VDC 0 to 50 A
Maximum DC Power Output 2509 Watts
Maximum System AC Power Consumption 3200 Watts
Maximum System Heat Dissipation 10,912 BTU/hr
Volt-Ampere Rating 2078 VA with 1629 Watt load (PF=0.98)
Parameter Value
Operating
Temperature 5˚C to 35˚C (41˚F to 95˚F)—IEC 68-2-1, 68-2-2
Humidity 20% to 80% RH, noncondensing; 27 ˚C max wet bulb—IEC 68-2-2,
68-2-3
Altitude 0 to 3000 meters (0 to 10,000 feet)—IEC 68-2-40, 68-2-41
Vibration:
Deskside 0.0002 g2/Hz, 5 to 500 Hz (random)—IEC 68-2-6
Rackmounted 0.00015 g2/Hz, 5 to 500 Hz (random)—IEC 68-2-6
Shock:
Deskside 4 g peak, 11 milliseconds half-sine pulse—IEC 68-2-27
Rackmounted 3 g peak, 11 milliseconds half-sine pulse—IEC 68-2-27
Declared Acoustics 6.7 bels dB(A) operating, 7.6 bels dB(A) at ok prompt
Non-Operating
Temperature -20˚C to 60˚C (-4˚F to 140˚F)—IEC 68-2-1, 68-2-2
Humidity 95% RH, noncondensing at 40˚C—IEC 68-2-2, 68-2-3
Altitude 0 to 12,000 meters (0 to 40,000 feet)—IEC 68-2-40, 68-2-41
Vibration:
Deskside 0.002 g2/Hz, 5 to 500 Hz (random)—IEC 68-2-6
Rackmounted 0.0015 g2/Hz, 5 to 500 Hz (random)—IEC 68-2-6
Shock:
Deskside 15 g peak, 11 milliseconds half-sine pulse—IEC 68-2-27e
Rackmounted 10 g peak, 11 milliseconds half-sine pulse—IEC 68-2-27e
Handling Drops 50 mm—IEC 68-2-31
Threshold Impact 1 m/s—SUN 900-1813
Front
Deskside system 36 in (91 cm)
Rackmounted system 48 in (122 cm)
Rear 36 in (91 cm)
Right 36 in (91 cm)
Left 36 in (91 cm)
187
Control-C, keyboard combination, 105 access door, 8
conventions used in this book, xxxiv configuration guidelines, 84, 86
correctable ECC error, 21 dual-ported, 20, 79, 84
hot-plug, 3, 16, 79, 85, 127 to 130, 138
CPU fan tray, See fan tray assemblies
LEDs, 7, 12, 85, 156
CPU/Memory board, 2, 48, 50
locating drive bays, 7, 85
air baffle, 50
documentation
configuration guidelines, 48, 50
related, xxxvi
CPU numbering, 49
slot status LEDs, 142 door lock, 8
UltraSPARC IV, 48 dual inline memory module (DIMM),See memory
modules
D dual-loop FC-AL configuration, 3, 20, 79, 84, 86
damage, preventing DVD, See digital versatile disc (DVD)
electrostatic, 54 DVD-ROM drive, 162 to 169
to tape cartridges, 170 location, 7
devalias command, 116 to 117 specifications, 162
device trees, rebuilding, 41 Dynamic Multipathing (DMP), 80
diag-console command, 43, 45 Dynamic Reconfiguration (DR), 129
diagnostic testing, 5, 22, 119
diag-switch? configuration variable, 112 to 113, E
122 EIA-232D serial communication, 27
diag-trigger configuration variable, 112, ?? to EIA-232D serial communications, 67, 70
113 EIA-423 serial communication, 27
digital versatile disc EIA-423 serial communications, 67, 70
cleaning, 169 eject cd command, 164, 166
ejecting in an emergency, 167 ejecting a CD or DVD, 164 to 166
ejecting manually, 165 electrical specifications, 182
ejecting with software commands, 164
emergency eject (of a CD or DVD), 167
inserting into drive, 162
when drive cannot read, 169 emergency shutdown, 13, 14
dimensions, See specifications .env command, 105, 108, 109
DIMM, See memory modules environmental monitoring subsystem
See also OpenBoot environmental monitor
disc, compact, See compact disc
and hot-swap events, 128
disc, digital versatile, See digital versatile disc and RSC, 5, 59
disk backplane, See FC-AL disk backplane automatic thermal shutdown, 18, 50, 66, 105
disk configuration error messages, 18, 105, 128
concatenation, 136 monitoring for fan faults, 18, 65, 104, 105, 128
configuration guidelines, 84, 86 monitoring for power faults, 18, 104, 128
hot spares, 21, 137 temperature monitoring, 18, 104, 105
hot-plug, 16, 85, 127 to 130, 138 environmental specifications, 183
mirroring, 21, 135 env-off command, 104, 107
RAID 0, 21, 80, 137
env-on command, 41, 104, 106
RAID 1, 21, 136
RAID 5, 21, 80, 137 eri Fast Ethernet driver, 90, 97
striping, 21, 80, 137 error correcting code (ECC), 21
disk drive, 3, 84, 85 error messages
Index 189
hot-plug feature Normal position, 14, 36, 74
definition, 127 settings, 14
disk drives, 3, 16, 79, 84, 127 to 130, 138
OK-to-Remove LED, 12, 146, 155, 157 L
PCI cards, 2, 16, 56, 58, 127 to 130 LEDs, See status LEDs
user interfaces, 130, 138 link integrity test, 93, 97
hot-swap feature log files
definition, 127 error, 18
fan tray assemblies, 17, 127 to 130 RSC, 20
power supplies, 17, 127 to 130
luxadm utility, 129, 138
I M
I/O board, 20, 60, 70 to 74, 81, 90, 130, 133
memory modules, 2, 51
jumpers, 68, 70
banks of, 51
PCI slot locations, 57
capacities, 51
I/O bridge fan tray, See fan tray assemblies configuration guidelines, 51 to ??
I/O fan tray, See fan tray assemblies handling, 54
I2C bus, 17 memory interleaving, 53, 55
IDE mirroring, disk, 21, 135
parity protection, 21 monitor, attaching, 33
input-device configuration parameter, 43 motherboard, 3, 48, 64, 80, 86, 90, 130
input-device configuration variable, 45, 122 motherboard fan tray, See fan tray assemblies
installing a server, 24 multipathing software, 3, 4, 79, 126, 130, 131
interleaving, memory, 53
internal disk drive bays, locating, 7, 85 N
Internet Protocol (IP) address, 92, 95 network
ISP2100 processor, 87 See also Ethernet
ISP2200A processor, 86, 87 configuring interface, 27, 89
name server, 96
primary interface, 92, 93
J
redundant interfaces, 91
jumpers, 69
types, 27
FC-AL disk backplane, 74
flash PROM jumpers, 72
serial port jumpers, 70
O
ok prompt, See OpenBoot firmware
K OK-to-Remove LED, 12, 146, 155, 157
key lock, 8 OpenBoot configuration variables
auto-boot?, 110 to 113
keyboard, attaching, 33
auto-boot-on-error?, 110 to 114
keyboard/mouse connector, location, 9
boot-device, 111
keyswitch diag-switch?, 112 to 113, 122
Diagnostics position, 36, 74 diag-trigger, 112, ?? to 113
Forced Off position, 14, 38 input-device, 122
effect on RSC, 14, 39 output-device, 122
location, 7, 11 resetting to default values, 122
Locked position, 14, 74, 138
OpenBoot Diagnostics, 5, 22, 59
monitoring and control, 17
Index 191
S Power LED, 12
safety agency compliance, 184 power supply LEDs, 10, 13, 19, 63, 148
SBus cards, 58 System Fault LED, 12, 18
Thermal Fault LED, 13, 18, 152
SCSI
configuration guidelines, 67 Stop-A keyboard combination, 105, 107, 119
disables OpenBoot environmental monitor, 105,
SCSI Enclosure Services (SES) processor, 83
107
security features, 8, 11, 14 disabling, 14
serial ports, 4, 67 Stop-D keyboard combination, 119
configuring, 27, 67, 70
Stop-F keyboard combination, 120
connecting to, 31
jumpers, 70 Stop-N keyboard combination, 122
location, 9 striping of disks, 21, 80, 137
splitter cable, 4, 31, 68 Sun Cluster software, 139
server installation, 24 Sun Management Center software, 22, 126, 132, 133
service access specifications, 185 Sun StorEdge PCI Dual Fibre Channel Host Adapter
SES processor, 83 card, 86, 87
shipping (what you should receive), 23 Sun Validation Test Suite (SunVTS), 22
show-devs command, 102, 115, 116 SunSolve Online web site, 72
shutdown, 13, 14, 18, 38, 105 system banner, 41
Solaris Operating System, 3, 5, 60, 129, 138 system configuration, See hardware configuration
installing, 93 system console, 4, 30
Solstice DiskSuite, 21, 79, 127, 134, 135 redirecting to local console, 45
specifications, ?? to 184 redirecting to RSC, 42
agency compliance, 184 setting up, 30
clearance, 185 system controller card, 59
DVD-ROM drive, 162 and keyswitch Forced Off position, 14
electrical, 182 connector locations, 60
environmental, 183 hardware configuration, 59
Ethernet cable requirements, 98, 99 location, 9
physical, 182 recovering from failed RSC console, 44
service access, 185 System Fault LED, 12, 18
SSC-100 processor, 83 system features, 1 to ??
status and control panel, 7, 11 front panel, 7
status LEDs, 11 to 13, 21, 141 to 159 rear panel, 9
behavior during POST, 12 system interconnect bus, 50
CPU/Memory board slots, 142 system specifications, See specifications
disk drive LEDs, 7, 85, 156
Disk Fault LED, 12, 156 T
environmental fault indicators, 19 tape cartridge
fan tray LEDs, 66, 152 ejecting, 172
Gigabit Ethernet LEDs, 159 handling, 170
location, 11, 141 to 159 inserting into drive, 171
meaning, 12, 141 to 159 magnetic fields and, 170
OK-to-Remove LED, 12, 142, 144, 152, 156 storing, 170
PCI slots, 57, 144 sunlight and, 170
Power Fault LED, 13, 19 write-enabling, 171
U
UltraSPARC IV processor, See CPU/Memory board
undertemperature conditions, 18
universal PCI card, 58
Universal Serial Bus (USB) ports, 4, 35
hot-plug feature, 69
Universal Serial Bus ports, 68
hardware configuration, 68
location, 9
USB hubs, 68
USB, See Universal Serial Bus ports
user interfaces, 134
V
/var/adm/messages file, 18
virtual processor, 49
Visual Instruction Set (VIS), 1, 50
W
watchdog, hardware
enabling, 19
weight, See specifications
wrench LED, See System Fault LED, status LEDs
write-enabling a tape cartridge, 171
write-protecting a tape cartridge, 171
Index 193
194 Sun Fire V890 Server Owner’s Guide • October 2005