Dell PowerEdge SC1425

This exhibit is too new for this collection. I decided to put a limit on ca. 1GHz machines, which became widespread around 2002. However, I decided to put this machine in my webpage just to show how it looks inside.
This is a typical Xeon-based Blade-type server, usually installed in a rack. It has 2 dual-thread 3GHz Xeon CPUs and 8GB of RAM. It allows two 3.5" SATA disk drives to be installed. Display driver is not a bog thing - ATI Mobility series, like one from the laptop, but these servers were rarely connected to display - most maintenance has been made using serial port.
The place of this machine is a rack in server room, so its 11 fans (8 for CPUs, 2 for power supply unit, 1 for hard disk) make quite significant noise. It can be expanded with PCI-X board.
The operating system installed on it is currently Debian Linux. It doesn't need any drivers and just works.


Manufacturer Dell

Origin USA
Year of unit 2007
Year of introduction 2006?
Class ATX
CPU 2x Intel Xeon
Speed 3GHz
RAM 8GB
(4x2GB DDR DIMM)
ROM PC BIOS
Graphics ATI Mobility?
Sound None
System expansion bus PCI-X 1 slot
Floppy/removable media drives None
 
 
Hard disk: 40GB and 80GB, SATA.
IDE CD-ROM - notebook-like.

Peripherals in collection:
 - None

Other boards:

 

None
Non-standard expansions: On-board 2 network adapters
Operating system(s): Debian GNU/Linux 8.

This particular unit has been bought to replace older Athlon-based server in company which made web services. It was working for few years (being upgraded from 2GB to 8GB of RAM) and then was withdrawn from inventory, one employee took it to try to adapt it as home computer. After it became totally obsolete as a server, I got it with some other pieces of unneeded hardware.
My unit has a flaw, a defect in graphics system as in text mode picture is partially filled with garbage characters. These characters persist even when text-mode is redirected to serial port (yes, garbage passes through serial port), so it can be problem with e.g. BIOS.


Contents: Starting, usage Linux through serial port Links

Starting

The machine boots typical Dell/Phoenix BIOS, but it can be configured to be used through serial port. Unfortunately any problem with text mode is visible on serial port too, probably BIOS takes information from graphics memory and passes it to serial port.

Later it loads all ROM expansions: Network-boot PXE ROM and RAID controller ROM.

 

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Installation of Debian through serial port

To prepare Linux installation media to be installed through serial port, you can use this forum post (archived) but instead of remaking ISO from scratch, you can just use any ISO file manager to modify image, in my case, in Linux, I used ISOMaster.

Burn CD, boot the server off it, use 115200bps, 8-bit, no parity, 1 stop bit, VT100 emulation (nullmodem cable) and see how the Linux runs. For obvious reasons only a simplified text-mode installer is available.

Remember that this particular machine boots very slowly. It loads BIOS, all extensions, looking for network from BIOS, then it launches PXE looking for network again, and, RAID driver detecting disks. Diagnostic LEDs slowly change their states. Finally it boots from CD-ROM first, then tries HDD.

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Links:

http://www.dell.com/support/home/us/en/19/product-support/product/poweredge-1425sc/manuals - Support page. Download documentation for it.


 

 

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