Bull Escala PL820R Service guide

Category
Servers
Type
Service guide
Bull ESCALA PL 820R
Service Guide
86 A1 21EG 01
ORDER REFERENCE
Bull ESCALA PL 820R
Service Guide
Hardware
June 2003
BULL CEDOC
357 AVENUE PATTON
B.P.20845
49008 ANGERS CEDEX 01
FRANCE
86 A1 21EG 01
ORDER REFERENCE
The following copyright notice protects this book under the Copyright laws of the United States of America
and other countries which prohibit such actions as, but not limited to, copying, distributing, modifying, and
making derivative works.
Copyright
Bull S.A. 1992, 2003
Printed in France
Suggestions and criticisms concerning the form, content, and presentation of
this book are invited. A form is provided at the end of this book for this purpose.
To order additional copies of this book or other Bull Technical Publications, you
are invited to use the Ordering Form also provided at the end of this book.
Trademarks and Acknowledgements
We acknowledge the right of proprietors of trademarks mentioned in this book.
AIX
R
is a registered trademark of International Business Machines Corporation, and is being used under
licence.
UNIX is a registered trademark in the United States of America and other countries licensed exclusively through
the Open Group.
Linux is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds.
The information in this document is subject to change without notice. Groupe Bull will not be liable for errors
contained herein, or for incidental or consequential damages in connection with the use of this material.
Contents
Safety Notices .................................xi
Electrical Safety .................................xi
Laser Safety Information..............................xiii
Laser Compliance ...............................xiii
Data Integrity and Verification ...........................xv
About This Book................................xvii
ISO 9000 ...................................xvii
Highlighting ..................................xvii
References to AIX Operating System .........................xvii
Related Publications ...............................xviii
Trademarks ..................................xviii
Chapter 1. Reference Information ..........................1
386/50 Overview .................................1
386/50 System Locations ..............................2
386/M2 Processor Subsystem Locations .......................3
I/O Subsystem Locations .............................5
Subsystem Positioning and Cabling ..........................8
SPCN Cabling .................................8
RIO Cabling .................................11
Hardware Management Console (HMC) to the HMC Connector ..............15
386/50 Data Flow ................................16
System Memory .................................17
Processor Card DIMM Locations ..........................17
Initial System Memory Configurations ........................17
Hardware Management Console (HMC) ........................20
Partition Standby and Full System Partition Power-On Options...............20
Partition Standby Memory Issues..........................20
Partition Requirements .............................21
Powering the System On and Off ..........................23
Power-On Self-Test................................23
POST Indicators .................................23
POST Keys ..................................23
1Key....................................23
5Key....................................24
6Key....................................24
System Attention LED ...............................24
Logical and Physical Locations ...........................25
Physical Location Codes..............................25
Location Code Format..............................25
Multiple FRU Callout Instructions..........................26
FRU Identify LEDs ...............................26
AIX Location Codes ...............................27
Non-SCSI Devices ...............................27
SCSI Devices .................................28
AIX and Physical Location Code Reference Tables ...................29
Specifications ..................................57
386/50 Physical Specifications and Loads ......................57
Service Inspection Guide..............................59
Chapter 2. Diagnostics Overview ..........................61
iii
Maintenance Analysis Procedures (MAPs) .......................61
System LEDs ..................................61
System Attention LED ..............................61
Checkpoints ..................................62
FRU Isolation ..................................63
FRU Identify LEDs ................................64
Service Focal Point................................64
Getting Started ................................65
Testing Error Reporting .............................65
Service Focal Point Settings ...........................65
Working With Serviceable Events .........................67
Activating and Deactivating FRU LEDs .......................69
Accessing System Log Error Information ........................70
Accessing Errors when a System is Attached to an HMC .................70
Accessing Errors when a System is Running AIX and the Console is Not an HMC .......71
Accessing Errors when a System is Running Linux and the Console is Not an HMC .......71
Resetting the System Attention LED .........................71
Resetting the LED when a System is Attached To an HMC ................71
Resetting the LED when a System is Running AIX and the Console is not an HMC .......71
Resetting the LED when a System is Running Linux and the Console is not an HMC ......72
Chapter 3. Maintenance Analysis Procedures (MAPs) ..................73
Entry MAP ...................................73
Quick Entry MAP ................................75
Quick Entry MAP Table of Contents.........................75
MAP 1020: Problem Determination ..........................82
Purpose of This MAP ..............................82
MAP 1320: Service Focal Point Procedures.......................87
MAP 1321: Quick Entry MAP for Systems with Service Focal Point ..............88
MAP 1322: End of Call MAP for Systems with Service Focal Point ..............96
MAP 1420: Recovery Procedures for Hot-Pluggable PCI Adapters ..............101
MAP 1421: Partition Will Not Boot Due to Faulty Adapter ................101
MAP 1422: Slot is Empty Even When Populated ...................102
MAP 1520: Power................................105
FRU Identify LEDs ..............................106
Map 1521: The Base Processor Subsystem Drawer Will Not Power On and No Error Codes are
Available .................................107
Map 1522: Cannot Power On the I/O Drawer .....................114
Map 1523: The SPCN Error Codes Table Directed You Here and the Error Code is 1011 1B0x 123
MAP 1540: Problem Isolation Procedures .......................127
FRU Identify LEDs ..............................127
MAP 1541: JTAG Problem Isolation ........................128
MAP 1542: I/O Problem Isolation .........................129
MAP 1547: RIO Adapter Card Problem Isolation....................154
MAP 1548: Memory and Processor Problem Isolation..................155
MAP 1549: Attention Problem Isolation .......................157
MAP 154A: I2C Bus Problem Isolation .......................161
MAP 154B: Insufficient Hardware Resources Problem Isolation ..............164
MAP 154C: SPCN Cable Problem Isolation .....................165
Chapter 4. Checkpoints .............................167
IPL Flow with an HMC Attached to the System .....................167
IPL Flow Without an HMC Attached to the System ...................167
Service Processor Checkpoints ...........................171
Firmware Checkpoints ..............................178
Boot Problems ................................212
iv 386/50 Service Guide
Chapter 5. Error Code to FRU Index ........................215
Performing Slow Boot ..............................215
Confirming Initial Error Code ............................216
Four-Character Checkpoints ............................217
Replacing the Operator Panel ...........................217
Replacing the Network Adapter ...........................217
Determining the Location Code ...........................217
FRU Identify LEDs ...............................217
Checkpoints and Error Codes Index .........................219
Operator Panel Error Codes ............................222
SPCN Error Codes ...............................223
Firmware/POST Error Codes............................235
Service Processor Error Codes ...........................259
Memory DIMM Present Detect Bits (PD-Bits) ......................387
Error Log Utility Procedure ............................388
System Firmware Update Messages .........................389
Scan Dump Messages ..............................389
Common Firmware Error Codes ..........................390
HMC Surveillance Error Codes ...........................400
Problem Determination-Generated Error Codes .....................401
Hypervisor Dump Retrieval Procedure ........................402
Hypervisor Dump Indications ...........................402
Chapter 6. Using the Online and Standalone Diagnostics ................405
Operating Considerations for Online and Standalone Diagnostics ..............405
Identifying the Terminal Type to the Diagnostics ....................406
Undefined Terminal Types ............................406
Resetting the Terminal .............................406
Online Diagnostics Modes of Operation ........................406
Service Mode ................................406
Using the HMC to Load the Diagnostics in Service Mode ................406
Concurrent Mode ...............................408
Running the Online Diagnostics in Concurrent Mode ..................408
Maintenance Mode ..............................408
Running the Online Diagnostics in Maintenance Mode .................409
Standalone Diagnostic Operation with an HMC Attached to the System ............410
Partitioned System Considerations for Standalone Diagnostics ..............410
Considerations for Running Standalone Diagnostics from CD-ROM.............410
Loading the Standalone Diagnostics from CDROM...................410
Running Standalone Diagnostics from a Network Installation Management (NIM) Server with an
HMC Attached to the System ..........................411
NIM Server Configuration ............................411
Client Configuration and Booting Standalone Diagnostics from the NIM Server ........412
Running the Online Diagnostics with No HMC Attached ..................413
Running the Standalone Diagnostics with No HMC Attached ................413
Chapter 7. Running Online Diagnostics .......................415
Chapter 8. Using the Service Processor.......................417
Service Processor Menus .............................417
Accessing the Service Processor Menus Locally ...................418
Accessing the Service Processor Menus Remotely...................418
Saving and Restoring Service Processor Settings ...................418
Menu Inactivity ................................418
General User Menu ...............................419
Privileged User Menus ..............................419
Contents v
Main Menu .................................420
Service Processor Setup Menu ..........................421
Passwords .................................422
System Power Control Menu ...........................426
System Information Menu ............................430
Language Selection Menu............................438
Call-In/Call-Out Setup Menu ...........................439
Modem Configuration Menu ...........................440
Serial Port Selection Menu ...........................441
Serial Port Speed Setup Menu ..........................442
Telephone Number Setup Menu..........................443
Call-Out Policy Setup Menu ...........................445
Customer Account Setup Menu ..........................446
Call-out Test .................................446
Service Processor Parameters in Service Mode (Full System Partition) ............446
System Power-On Methods ............................447
Service Processor Reboot/Restart Recovery ......................448
Boot (IPL) Speed ...............................448
Failure During Boot Process ...........................448
Failure During Normal System Operation ......................448
Service Processor Reboot/Restart Policy Controls ...................448
Firmware Updates................................450
General Information on System Firmware Updates...................450
Determining the Level of Firmware on the System ...................451
Updating System Firmware From the Service Processor Menus ..............452
Updating System Firmware from a NIM Server ....................452
Recovery Mode................................453
Configuring and Deconfiguring Processors or Memory ..................453
Run-Time CPU Deconfiguration (CPU Gard) .....................453
Service Processor System Monitoring - Surveillance ...................454
System Firmware Surveillance ..........................454
Operating System Surveillance ..........................455
Call-Out (Call-Home)...............................456
Console Mirroring ................................457
System Configuration .............................457
Service Processor Error Logs ...........................458
LCD Progress Indicator Log ............................459
Service Processor Operational Phases ........................460
Pre-Standby Phase ..............................460
Standby Phase ................................461
Bring-Up Phase ...............................461
Runtime Phase................................462
Restoring Service Processor Settings ........................463
Chapter 9. Using System Management Services ...................465
Select Language ................................467
Change Password Options ............................467
Set Privileged-Access Password .........................467
View Error Log .................................468
Setup Remote IPL (Initial Program Load) .......................469
Change SCSI Settings ..............................472
Select Console .................................473
Select Boot Options ...............................473
Select Boot Devices ...............................476
Display Current Settings .............................478
Restore Default Settings .............................478
vi 386/50 Service Guide
Multiboot Startup ................................479
Exiting System Management Services ........................479
Chapter 10. Removal and Replacement Procedures ..................481
Handling Static-Sensitive Devices ..........................481
Powering Off and Powering On the System ......................482
Stopping the System without an HMC Attached ....................482
Stopping the System With an HMC Attached and AIX Installed ..............482
Stopping the System With an HMC Attached and Linux Installed .............482
Starting the System Without an HMC Attached ....................483
Starting the System With an HMC Attached .....................483
Hot-Pluggable FRUs ...............................484
Processor Subsystem Access ...........................485
Service Position ...............................485
Operating Position...............................485
Processor Subsystem Top Covers ..........................486
PCI Adapter Cover ..............................486
Processor Access Cover ............................486
Internal Processor EMC Cover ..........................486
PCI Adapters .................................488
Removing and Replacing a PCI Adapter Cassette ....................489
Removing a PCI Adapter Cassette.........................489
Replacing a PCI Adapter Cassette.........................492
Non-Hot-Pluggable PCI Adapter Removal and Replacement ................495
Removing a Non-Hot-Pluggable PCI Adapter .....................495
Replacing a Non-Hot-Pluggable PCI Adapter .....................495
Hot-Pluggable PCI Adapter Removal and Replacement ..................496
Removing and Replacing a Hot-Pluggable PCI Adapter .................496
Removing a Hot-Pluggable PCI Adapter.......................498
Installing a Hot-Pluggable PCI Adapter .......................500
PCI Hot-Plug Manager Access ...........................501
Accessing Hot-Plug Management Functions .....................501
PCI Hot-Plug Manager Menu...........................501
PCI Adapter or Blank Filler Removal from a Cassette Assembly ...............504
Short Adapter or Blank Filler Removal .......................512
Long Adapter Removal .............................514
Replacing an Adapter in a PCI Adapter Cassette ....................515
Short Adapter or Blank Filler Installation........................519
Long Adapter Installation .............................534
Processor Subsystem Procedures ..........................549
Processor Card................................549
Memory DIMMs ...............................550
RIO Connector Card ..............................550
Service Processor/PCI Backplane .........................551
System Backplane ..............................556
Battery ...................................557
Deconfiguring or Configuring a SCSI Drive......................558
Disk Drive Assembly ..............................559
SCSI Repeater Card ..............................562
Disk Drive 4-Pack and Split (2+2) 4-Pack Cage ....................562
Media Drives.................................565
Media Cage .................................568
Diskette Drive ................................569
Operator Panel ................................570
Power Supplies................................572
Fans....................................572
Contents vii
Power Distribution Assembly ...........................573
Chapter 11. Parts Information ...........................575
386/M2 Processor Subsystem ...........................576
Front View .................................576
Rear View..................................578
Internal Cables ................................580
Processor Connector Cards, Power, and Cooling ...................582
Media Bays and Disk Bays ...........................584
Cooling and Diskette Drive ...........................586
Processor Cards and Memory ..........................588
Processor Subsystem Disks and Media .......................590
Processor Subsystem Covers and Bezel ......................592
Processor Subsystem Internal Cables .......................593
SPCN, RIO, and Rack Beacon Cables ........................596
Keyboards and Mouse ..............................597
I/O Subsystem Parts ...............................598
Chapter 12. Fault and Attention LEDs........................599
Component LEDs ................................599
Resetting the LEDs ..............................602
Appendix A. Environmental Notices ........................603
Product Recycling and Disposal...........................603
Acoustical Noise Emissions ............................604
Declared Acoustical Noise Emissions........................604
Appendix B. Notices ..............................605
Appendix C. Service Processor Setup and Test ....................607
Service Processor Setup Checklist..........................607
Testing the Setup ................................608
Testing Call-In ................................608
Testing Call-Out ...............................609
Serial Port Configuration ............................609
Appendix D. Modem Configurations ........................611
Sample Modem Configuration Files .........................611
Generic Modem Configuration Files ........................611
Specific Modem Configuration Files ........................611
Configuration File Selection ............................612
Examples for Using the Generic Sample Modem Configuration Files ............613
Customizing the Modem Configuration Files .....................614
IBM 7852-400 DIP Switch Settings ........................614
Xon/Xoff Modems ...............................615
Ring Detection ................................616
Terminal Emulators ..............................616
Recovery Procedures .............................616
Transfer of a Modem Session ...........................617
Recovery Strategy...............................618
Prevention Strategy ..............................618
Modem Configuration Sample Files .........................619
Sample File modem_m0.cfg ...........................619
Sample File modem_m1.cfg ...........................622
Sample File modem_z.cfg ............................624
Sample File modem_z0.cfg ...........................627
viii 386/50 Service Guide
Sample File modem_f.cfg ............................630
Sample File modem_f0.cfg ...........................633
Sample File modem_f1.cfg ...........................636
Index ....................................639
Contents ix
x 386/50 Service Guide
Safety Notices
A
danger
notice indicates the presence of a hazard that has the potential of causing death or serious
personal injury.
Danger
notices appear on the following pages:
v xi
v 105
v 481
A
caution
notice indicates the presence of a hazard that has the potential of causing moderate or minor
personal injury.
Caution
notices appear on the following pages:
v 57
v 57
v 105
v 481
v 565
v 557
For a translation of the safety notices contained in this book, see the
System Unit Safety Information
,
order number SA23-2652.
Electrical Safety
Observe the following safety instructions any time you are connecting or disconnecting devices attached to
the system.
DANGER
An electrical outlet that is not correctly wired could place hazardous voltage on metal parts of
the system or the devices that attach to the system. It is the responsibility of the customer to
ensure that the outlet is correctly wired and grounded to prevent an electrical shock.
Use one hand, when possible, to connect or disconnect signal cables to prevent a possible
shock from touching two surfaces with different electrical potentials.
During an electrical storm, do not connect cables for display stations, printers, telephones, or
station protectors for communications lines.
D06
CAUTION:
This product is equipped with a three-wire power cable and plug for the user’s safety. Use this
power cable with a properly grounded electrical outlet to avoid electrical shock.
C01
DANGER
To prevent electrical shock hazard, disconnect all power cables from the electrical outlet before
relocating the system.
D01
xi
CAUTION:
This unit has more than one power supply cord. Follow procedures for removal of power from the
system when directed.
C28
CAUTION:
Energy hazard, remove power before servicing.
C22
CAUTION:
Energy hazard, remove all jewelry before servicing.
C29
xii 386/50 Service Guide
Laser Safety Information
CAUTION:
This product may contain a CD-ROM, DVD-ROM, or laser module on a PCI card, which are class 1
laser products.
C30
Laser Compliance
All lasers are certified in the U.S. to conform to the requirements of DHHS 21 CFR Subchapter J for class
1 laser products. Outside the U.S., they are certified to be in compliance with the IEC 825 (first edition
1984) as a class 1 laser product. Consult the label on each part for laser certification numbers and
approval information.
CAUTION:
All laser modules are designed so that there is never any human access to laser radiation above a
class 1 level during normal operation, user maintenance, or prescribed service conditions. Data
processing environments can contain equipment transmitting on system links with laser modules
that operate at greater than class 1 power levels. For this reason, never look into the end of an
optical fiber cable or open receptacle. Only trained service personnel should perform the
inspection or repair of optical fiber cable assemblies and receptacles.
C25, C26
Preface xiii
xiv 386/50 Service Guide
Data Integrity and Verification
These computer systems contain mechanisms designed to reduce the possibility of undetected data
corruption or loss. This risk, however, cannot be eliminated. Users who experience unplanned outages,
system failures, power fluctuations or outages, or component failures must verify the accuracy of operations
performed and data saved or transmitted by the system at or near the time of the outage or failure. In
addition, users must establish procedures to ensure that there is independent data verification before relying
on such data in sensitive or critical operations. Users should periodically check our support websites for
updated information and fixes applicable to the system and related software.
xv
xvi 386/50 Service Guide
About This Book
This book provides maintenance information that is specific to the 386/50, adapters, and attached devices
that do not have their own service information. It also contains Maintenance Analysis Procedures (MAPs)
that are not common to other systems.
MAPs that are common to all systems are contained in the
Diagnostic Information for Multiple Bus
Systems
.
This book is used by the service representative to repair system failures. This book assumes that the
service representative has had training on the system.
ISO 9000
ISO 9000 registered quality systems were used in the development and manufacturing of this product.
Highlighting
The following highlighting conventions are used in this book:
Bold Identifies commands, subroutines, keywords, files, structures, directories, and other items
whose names are predefined by the system. Also identifies graphical objects such as buttons,
labels, and icons that the user selects.
Italics
Identifies parameters whose actual names or values are to be supplied by the user.
Monospace Identifies examples of specific data values, examples of text similar to what you might see
displayed, examples of portions of program code similar to what you might write as a
programmer, messages from the system, or information you should actually type.
References to AIX Operating System
This document may contain references to the AIX operating system. If you are using another operating
system, consult the appropriate documentation for that operating system.
This document may describe hardware features and functions. While the hardware supports them, the
realization of these features and functions depends upon support from the operating system. AIX provides
this support. If you are using another operating system, consult the appropriate documentation for that
operating system regarding support for those features and functions.
xvii
Related Publications
The following publications are available:
vThe
SystemUnitSafetyInformation
,ordernumber86 X1 11WD,containstranslationsofsafety
information used throughout this book.
vThe
HardwareManagementConsoleInstallationandOperationsGuide
,ordernumber86 A1 83EF,
contains information on how to set up and cable the hardware system console and verify system
operation.
vThe
HardwareManagementConsoleMaintenanceGuide
,ordernumber86 A1 84EF,containsMAPS,
removal and replacement procedures, error codes, and parts information that help trained service
representatives diagnose and repair the hardware system console.
vThe
PL 820R Installation Guide
,ordernumber86 A1 19EG,containsinformationonhowtosetupand
cable the system, installandremoveoptions,andverifysystemoperation.
vThe
PL 820R User's Guide
,ordernumber86 A1 20EG,containsinformationonhowtousethesystem,
use diagnostics, useserviceaids,andverifysystemoperations.
vThe
D10andD20ServiceGuide
,ordernumber86 A1 38EG,containsremovalandreplacement
procedures, and parts information that help trained service representatives repair the D10 I/O
Subsystem and the D20 I/O Subsystem.
vThe
DiagnosticInformationforMultipleBusSystems
,ordernumber86 A1 26HX,containscommon
diagnostic procedures, error codes, service request numbers, and failing function codes. This manual is
intended for trained service technicians.
vThe
Adapters InformationforMultipleBusSystems
,ordernumber86 A1 27HX, contains information about
adapters,externaldevices,andcabling.Thismanualisintendedto supplement information found in the
DiagnosticInformationforMultipleBusSystems
.
vThe
Site Preparation Guide for Rack Systems
,ordernumber86 A1 30PX,containsinformationtohelp
youplanyourinstallation.
vThe
AIXInstallationGuideandReference
,ordernumber86 A2 07EG,describeshowtoinstallthe
operatingsystem,touseanetworkserver,aswellashowtoinstalltheoperatingsystemordiagnostics
on systems connected to a network.
ATTENTION:
In this document, the term 386/50 stands for ESCALA PL 820R.
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Bull Escala PL820R Service guide

Category
Servers
Type
Service guide

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