Справочник Пользователя для Intel SE7520JR2

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Platform Management 
Intel® Server Board SE7520JR2 
 
 
Revision 1.0 
C78844-002 
118 
 
5.1.4 
Private Management Busses 
A ‘Private Management Bus’ is a single-master I
2
C bus that is controlled by the management 
controller. Access to any of the devices on the Private Management Bus is accomplished 
indirectly via commands to the management controller via the IPMB or system interfaces. 
Private Management busses are a common mechanism used for accessing temperature 
sensors, system processor information, and other baseboard monitoring devices that are 
located in various locations in the system.  
The devices on the Private Management Bus are isolated from traffic on the IPMB. Since 
devices such as temperature sensors are polled by the management controller, this gets the 
polling traffic off the ‘public’ IPMB bus. This also increases the reliability of access to the 
information, since issues with IPMB bus arbitration and message retries are avoided.  
Furthermore, placing managed I
2
C devices on the private management bus frees up the I
2
addresses that those devices would have used up on the IPMB. 
5.1.5 Management 
Controllers 
At the heart of platform management is a management controller. To support the tiered 
management model, the Server Board SE7520JR2 supports two different management 
controllers, the PC87431M mini-Baseboard Management Controller (mBMC) from National 
Semiconductor* and Intel’s Sahalee BMC. The Professional and Advanced modules electrically 
replace the mBMC with the more full featured ‘Sahalee’ microcontroller. Sahalee is a custom 
ARM7-TDMI based microcontroller designed for baseboard management applications on Intel 
Server baseboards.  
The management controller is a microcontroller that provides the intelligence at the heart of the 
Intelligent Platform Management architecture. The primary purpose of the management 
controller is to autonomously monitor system ‘sensors’ for system platform management events, 
such as over-temperature, out-of-range voltages, etc., and log their occurrence in the non-
volatile System Event Log (SEL). This includes events such as over-temperature and over-
voltage conditions, fan failures, etc. The management controller also provides the interface to 
the sensors and SEL so System Management Software can poll and retrieve the present status 
of the platform. The contents of the log can be retrieved ‘post mortem’ in order provide failure 
analysis information to field service personnel. It is also accessible by System Management 
Software, such as Intel Server Management (ISM), running under the OS. 
The management controller includes the ability to generate a selectable action, such as a 
system power-off or reset, when a match occurs to one of a configurable set of events. This 
capability is called Platform Event Filtering, or PEF. 
The management controller includes ‘recovery control’ functions that allow local or remote 
software to request actions such as power on/off, power cycle, and system hard resets, plus an 
IPMI Watchdog Timer that can be used by BIOS andr run-time management software as a way 
to detect software hangs. 
The management controller provides ‘out-of-band’ remote management interfaces providing 
access to the platform health, event log, and recovery control features via LAN (all tiers). IMM 
based systems also allow access via serial/modem, IPMB, PCI SMBus, and ICMB interfaces.