Справочник Пользователя для Intel SE7520JR2

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Platform Management 
Intel® Server Board SE7520JR2 
 
 
Revision 1.0 
C78844-002 
116 
 
5.1.1 5V 
Standby 
The power supply must provide a 5V Standby power source for the platform to provide any 
management functionality. 5V Standby is a low power 5V supply that is active whenever the 
system is plugged into AC power. 5V Standby is used by the following onboard management 
devices: 
• 
Management Controller (BMC and/or mBMC) and associated RAM, Flash, and 
SEEPROM which are used to monitor the various system power control sources 
including the front panel Power Button, the baseboard RTC alarm signal, and power on 
request messages from the auxiliary IPMB connector and PCI SMBus. 
• 
On-board NICs that support IPMI-over-LAN and LAN Alerting, Wake-On LAN, and Magic 
Packet* operation.  
• 
Emergency management port 
• 
IPMB 
• 
PCI SMBus in addition to certain logic and private busses used for power control 
• 
ICMB Transceiver card (if present) 
• 
IPMB isolation circuit 
• 
System Status LED on the front panel  
• 
System Identify LED 
5.1.2 
IPMI Messaging, Commands, and Abstractions xxx 
The IPMI specification defines a standardized, abstracted, message-based interface between 
software and the platform management subsystem, and a common set of messages 
(commands) for performing operations such as accessing temperature, voltage, and fan 
sensors, setting thresholds, logging events, controlling a watchdog timer, etc. 
IPMI also includes a set of records called Sensor Data Records (SDRs) that make the platform 
management subsystem self-descriptive to system management software. The SDRs include 
software information such as how many sensors are present, what type they are and what 
events they generate. The SDRs also include information such as minimum and maximum 
ranges, sensor type, accuracy and tolerance, etc., that guides software in interpreting and 
presenting sensor data. 
Together, IPMI Messaging and the SDRs provide a self-descriptive, abstracted platform 
interface that allows management software to automatically configure itself to the number and 
types of platform management features on the system. In turn, this enables one piece of 
management software to be used on multiple systems. Since the same IPMI messages are 
used over the serial/modem and LAN interfaces, a software stack designed for in-band (local) 
management access can readily be re-used as an out-of-band remote management stack by 
changing the underlying communications layer for IPMI messaging.