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Sun Fire X4800 Server Installation Guide Sun Fire X4800 Server Documentation |
About This Documentation (PDF and HTML)
Front and Back Features and Components
Unpacking the Server and Identifying the Rack Mounting Hardware
How to Identify Your Rack Mounting Kit
Installing the Server In the Rack Using the Standard Rack Mounting Kit
Contents of the Standard Rack Mounting Kit
Location of the Rack Mounting Kit and the Shipping Bracket Kit
Installing the Server In a Rack Using the Standard Rack Mounting Kit
Removing and Installing the Standard Rack Mounting Kit Shipping Brackets
Installing the Server In the Rack Using the Universal Rack Mounting Kit
Contents of the Universal Rack Mounting Kit
Installing the Server in a Rack Using the Universal Rack Mounting Kit
Installing and Removing the Universal Rack Mounting Kit Shipping Brackets
Removing the Server From the Rack
How to Remove the Server From the Rack
How to Remove the Rack Mounting Hardware from the Rack
Attaching Administration (SP) Cables
Powering the Server On and Off
Getting Service for Your Server
How to Find the Server's Serial Number
Setting Up the Preinstalled Solaris Operating System
Configuring the Preinstalled Oracle Solaris OS
How to Connect to the Server Using the Server's IP Address
(Optional) How to Redirect the Console Output to the Video Port
How to Connect to the Server Using a Serial Capture Program
Oracle Solaris OS Information Products and Training
Communicating With the ILOM and the System Console
About ILOM SP IP Addresses and the ILOM Interfaces
Connecting to the System Console
I/O and Interrupt Resource Allocation
Option ROM and I/O Space Allocation
How to Determine Whether You Need to Allocate Option ROM and I/O Space
How to Configure I/O Space Allocation
How to Identify and Fix Interrupt Resource Shortages
Sun Fire X4800 Server Specifications
Physical Specifications for the Sun Fire X4800 Server
The Oracle Solaris OS is designed to allocate 32 interrupt vectors at priority level six. Because each network device is assigned two interrupts, if the system contains more than 16 network devices the available interrupts at priority level 6 will be exhausted, leaving some devices non-functional.
Note - The Oracle Solaris OS is currently limited to 31 interrupts at priority level six, meaning that it can support only 15 network devices on level six. This will be fixed in a future patch or release.