The information in this User’s Manual has been carefully reviewed and is believed to be
accurate. The vendor assumes no responsibility for any inaccuracies that may be
contained in this document, makes no commitment to update or to keep current the
information in this manual, or to notify any person or organization of the updates.
Please Note: For the most up-to-date version of this manual, please see our web site at
www.supermicro.com.
SUPER MICRO COMPUTER reserves the right to make changes to the product described
in this manual at any time and without notice. This product, including software, if any, and
documentation may not, in whole or in part, be copied, photocopied, reproduced, translated
or reduced to any medium or machine without prior written consent.
IN NO EVENT WILL SUPER MICRO COMPUTER BE LIABLE FOR DIRECT, INDIRECT,
SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES ARISING FROM THE USE OR
INABILITY TO USE THIS PRODUCT OR DOCUMENTATION, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE
POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES. IN PARTICULAR, SUPER MICRO COMPUTER SHALL
NOT HAVE LIABILITY FOR ANY HARDWARE, SOFTWARE, OR DATA STORED OR USED
WITH THE PRODUCT, INCLUDING THE COSTS OF REPAIRING, REPLACING,
INTEGRATING, INSTALLING OR RECOVERING SUCH HARDWARE, SOFTWARE, OR
DATA.
Any disputes arising between manufacturer and customer shall be governed by the laws of
Santa Clara County in the State of California, USA. The State of California, County of
Santa Clara shall be the exclusive venue for the resolution of any such disputes. Super
Micro's total liability for all claims will not exceed the price paid for the hardware product.
*
California Best Management Practices Regulations for Perchlorate Materials: This Perchlorate warning applies only to products containing CR (Manganese Dioxide) Lithium coin cells.
"Perchlorate Material-special handling may apply. See WWW.dtsc.ca.gov/hazardouswaste/
perchlorate".
WARNING: Handling of lead solder materials used in this
product may expose you to lead, a chemical known to the
State of California to cause birth defects and other reproductive harm.
FCC Statement: This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a
Class A digital device pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC Rules. These limits are designed to
provide reasonable protection against harmful interference when the equipment is operated
in a commercial environment. This equipment generates, uses, and can radiate radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the manufacturer’s instruction manual, may cause harmful interference with radio communications. Operation of this
equipment in a residential area is likely to cause harmful interference, in which case you
will be required to correct the interference at your own expense.
Revision Number: Rev. 1.1b
Release Date: June 8, 2007
Unless you request and receive written permission from SUPER MICRO COMPUTER, you
may not copy any part of this document.
Preface
About This Manual
This manual is written for system integrators, PC technicians and
knowledgeable PC users. It provides information for the installation and use
of the X6DVA-4G/X6DVA-EG motherboard. The X6DVA4G/X6DVA-EG supports single or dual Intel® Xeon NoconaTM processors
(w/ext. EM64T) at a 800 MHz front side bus. Based upon Intel's NetBurst
microarchitecture, the Nocona processor supports the IA-32 software and
includes features found in the XeonTM processor such as Hyper Pipelined
Technology, which includes a multi-stage pipeline, allowing the processor
to operate at much higher core frequencies. Packaged in a 604-pin Flip
Chip Micro Pin Grid Array(FC-mPGA4) platform in a Zero Insertion
Force(ZIF) socket (mPGA 604), the Nocona Processor (800 MHz) supports
Hyper-Threading Technology and is ideal for high performance workstation and server environments with up to two processors on one system
bus. Please refer to the motherboard specifications pages on our web site
(http://www.supermicro.com/products/motherboard/)for updates on supported processors. This product is intended to be professionally installed.
Manual Organization
Chapter 1 begins with a checklist of what should be included in your
mainboard box, describes the features, specifications and performance of
the motherboard and provides detailed information about the chipset.
Preface
Chapter 2 begins with instructions on handling static-sensitive devices.
Read this chapter when you want to install the processor and DIMM memory
modules and when mounting the mainboard in the chassis. Also refer to
this chapter to connect the floppy and hard disk drives, SCSI drives, the IDE
interfaces, the parallel and serial ports, the keyboard and mouse, the power
supply and various control panel buttons and indicators.
If you encounter any problems, see Chapter 3, which describes troubleshooting procedures for the video, the memory and the setup configuration
stored in CMOS. For quick reference, a general FAQ [Frequently Asked
Questions] section is provided.
Chapter 4 includes an introduction to BIOS and provides detailed information on running the CMOS Setup utility.
Appendix A gives information on BIOS POST messages.
Appendix B provides BIOS POST codes.
Appendix C provides software and the OS installation instructions.
Appendix A: BIOS POST Messages ..................................................................... A-1
Appendix B: BIOS POST Codes .............................................................................B-1
Appendix C: Installing Software Drivers and the Operating System ..............C-1
v
X6DVA-4G/X6DVA-EG User's Manual
vi
1-1Overview
Chapter 1: Introduction
Chapter 1
Introduction
Checklist
Congratulations on purchasing your computer motherboard from an acknowledged leader in the industry. Supermicro boards are designed with
the utmost attention to detail to provide you with the highest standards in
quality and performance. Check that the following items have all been included with your motherboard. If anything listed here is damaged or missing, contact your retailer. All included with Retail Box.
One (1) Supermicro Mainboard
One (1) ribbon cable for IDE devices (CBL-036)
One (1) floppy ribbon cable (CBL-022)
One (1) 9-pin serial port DTK cable (CBL-010)
One (1) SATA cable (CBL-044)
One (1) SCSI Cable (CBL-034-0320) (*X6DVA-4G only)
One (1) CPU mounting plate (SKT-0159)
Two (2) CPU retention brackets-(*Pre-installed) (SKT-0158)
One (1) I/O backpanel shield (CSE-PT7)
Introduction
One (1) Supermicro CD containing drivers and utilities (CDR-INTC)
One (1) User's/BIOS Manual
1-1
X6DVA-4G/X6DVA-EG User's Manual
Contacting Supermicro
Introduction
Headquarters
Address:SuperMicro Computer, Inc.
980 Rock Ave.
San Jose, CA 95131 U.S.A.
Tel:+1 (408) 503-8000
Fax:+1 (408) 503-8008
Email:marketing@supermicro.com (General Information)
support@supermicro.com (Technical Support)
Web Site:www.supermicro.com
Chung-Ho 235, Taipei Hsien, Taiwan, R.O.C.
Tel:+886-(2) 8226-3990
Fax:+886-(2) 8226-3991
Web Site:www.supermicro.com.tw
Technical Support:
Email:support@supermicro.com.tw
Tel:886-2-8228-1366, ext.132 or 139
1-2
Chapter 1: Introduction
Figure 1-1. SUPER X6DVA-4G/X6DVA-EG Image
Introduction
1-3
Introduction
Figure 1-2. SUPER X6DVA-4G/X6DVA-EG Motherboard Layout
X6DVA-4G/X6DVA-EG User's Manual
(not drawn to scale)
KB/
Mouse
USB0/1
J3
COM1
VGA
Fan6
J2
J4
J1
GLAN1
GLAN2
SMB
PWR
Alarm
Reset
PWR
Fault
GLAN
CTLR
LAN1Enable
GLAN
CTLR
JPL2
LAN2Enable
Fan5
BIOS
SI/O
COM2
J5
PW3
JPR1
PW4
Printer
ATX
24-Pin
CPU
PW LED
DS1
PWR1
8-pin
PWR2
JPF
PWR Force On
PW1
PW2
DIMM 1B
DIMM 1A
DIMM 2B
DIMM 2A
DIMM 3B
DIMM 3A
Battery
PXH
(PCI-E/
PCIX
Interface)
JPL1
UPER X6DVA-4G
S
64- bit
PCIX #6 (PCIX-133)
J8B1
64- bit
J10
J15
J13
PCI-E#4
VGA
CTLR
VGA Enable
32- bit PCI #1
Floppy
PCIX #5 (PCIX-100)
J9B1
PCIX slots/
SMB Connect
X4 PCI-Epxess
WOR
JPG1
WOL
JWOL
J14
JPA1
SCSI LED
J24
®
SCSI (LSI
53C20)
MCH
E7320
(Lindenhurst
-VS)
North
Bridge
(*SCSI Enable)
DS3
J17
SCSI
CPU1 VRM
OHLED
JF2
Speaker
SCSI
ChannelTerm.
Enable
PWLED/
SPKR
JA1
J28
J23
J22
J21
J20
J19
J18
DS4
Fan1
Cha. Intru
JL1
SATA0
IDE 2
CPU 1
CPU 2
Fan2
Fan3
CPU2 VRM
DS2
OH LED
PWR LED
DS5
FP CTRL
JWD
WD
IPMI
J41
6300ESB
ICH
Clr CMOS
JSLED
SATA1
JS1
JS0
System LED
JBT1
SATA
LED
J38
USB2,3
POST
DS8
JF1
DS9
IDE 1
LED
DS7
J44
Fan4
Notes:
1. All images and layouts shown in this manual were based upon the latest
PCB revision available at the time of publishing. The motherboard you’ve received may or may not look exactly the same as the graphics shown in this
manual.
2. Jumpers not indicated are for test purposes only.
3. See Chapter 2 for detailed information on jumpers, I/O ports and JF1
front panel connections.
4. " " indicates the location of Pin 1.
5. SCSI is for the X6DVA-4G only.
6. Use the correct type of onboard CMOS battery as specified by the
manufacturer. Do not install the onboard battery upside down.
1-4
Chapter 1: Introduction
Quick Reference ( X6DVA-4G/X6DVA-EG)
(*Please refer to Chapter 2 for pin definitions.)
JumperDescriptionDefault Setting
J13/J15PCI #1/PCI-X #5,#6 to System SMB On (Connected)
JA1(*Note)SCSI Channel Term. EnableOff (Enable)
JBT1CMOS ClearSee Chapter 2
JPA1(*Note)SCSI Controller EnablePins 1-2 (Enabled)
JPFPower Force onOpen (Disabled)
JPG1VGA EnablePins 1-2 (Enabled)
JPL1/JPL2LAN1/LAN 2 Enable/DisablePins 1-2 (Enabled)
JPR1Power Fail Alarm ResetOpen (Disabled)
JWDWatch Dog EnablePins 1-2 (Reset)
• LSI Logic Single Channel 53C1020 Ultra 320 SCSI(*X6DVA-G4 only)
• One IPMI 2.0
• Two Intel 82541 GI Gigabit Ethernet controllers
• 2 EIDE Ultra DMA/100 bus master interfaces
• 1 floppy port interface (up to 2.88 MB)
• 1 EPP/ECP Parallel Header
• PS/2 mouse and PS/2 keyboard ports
• Up to 4 USB 2.0 (Universal Serial Bus) (2 ports/2 headers)
• 2 Intel 6300 ESB Serial ATA
• Super I/O
• 2 Serial port/header
Introduction
Other
• Internal/external modem ring-on
• Wake-on-Ring (WOR)
• Console redirection
CD/Diskette Utilities
• BIOS flash upgrade utility and device drivers
Dimensions
• ATX 12" x 10" (304.8 x 254 mm)
1-7
Introduction
6
X6DVA-4G/X6DVA-EG User's Manual
5
4
82541
82541
6300ESB-
FPUSB
FPUSB
USB
USB
COM1
Flpy/Prntr
Keyboard
Mouse
PCI 33MHz Slot#1
Video
SRAM
SATA
IDE
IDE
SATA
Figure 1-9. Block Diagram of the E7320 (Lindenhurst-VS) Chipset
Note: This is a general block diagram. Please see the previous Motherboard
Features pages for details on the features of each motherboard.
1-8
Chapter 1: Introduction
1-2Chipset Overview
Built upon the functionality and the capability of the E7320 (LindenhurstVS) chipset, the X6DVA-4G/X6DVA-EG motherboard provides the performance and feature set required for dual processor-based servers, with
configuration options optimized for communications, presentation, storage,
computation or database applications. The Intel E7320 (Lindenhurst-VS)
chipset consists of the following components: the E7320 (Lindenhurst-VS)
Memory Controller Hub (MCH), the I/O Controller Hub (6300ESB ICH), and
THE PCI-X Hub (PXH).
The E7320 (Lindenhurst-VS) MCH supports single or dual Nocona processors with Front Side Bus speeds of up to 800 MHz(*Note). Its memory
controller provides direct connection to two channels of registered DDR266,
DDR333 with a marched system bus address and data bandwidths of up to
6.4GB/s. The E7320 (Lindenhurst-VS) also supports the new PCI Express
high speed serial I/O interface for superior I/O bandwidth. The MCH provides configurable x8 PCI Express interfaces which may alternatively be
configured as two independent x4 PCI Express interfaces. These interfaces
support connection of the MCH to a variety of other bridges that are compliant with the PCI Express Interface Specification, Rev. 1.0a. The MCH
interfaces with the 6300ESB I/O Controller Hub (6300ESB ICH) via Hub
Interface. The PCI- Bus provides connection between a PCI Express interface and two independent PCI bus interfaces that can be configured for
standard PCI 2.3 protocol, as well as the enhanced high-frequency PCI-X
protocol. The PXH can be configured to support for 32- or 64-bit PCI devices running at 33 MHz, 66 MHz, 100 MHz, and 133 MHz.
Introduction
6300ESB ICH System Features
In addition to providing the I/O subsystem with access to the rest of the
system, the 6300ESB I/O Controller Hub (6300ESB ICH) integrates many I/
O functions.
The 6300ESB integrates: 2-channel Ultra ATA/100 Bus Master IDE Controller, two Serial ATA (SATA) Host Controllers, SMBus 2.0 Controller, LPC/
Flash BIOS Interface, PCI-X (66MHz) 1.0 Interface, PCI 2.2 Interface and
System Management Controller.
(*Notes: The CPU FSB speed is set at 800 MHz by the Manufacturer.
Please do not change the CPU FSB setting.)
1-9
X6DVA-4G/X6DVA-EG User's Manual
1-3Special Features
Introduction
Recovery from AC Power Loss
BIOS provides a setting for you to determine how the system will respond
when AC power is lost and then restored to the system. You can choose
for the system to remain powered off (in which case you must hit the
power switch to turn it back on) or for it to automatically return to a poweron state. See the Power Lost Control setting in the Advanced BIOS Setup
section (Advanced Power Configuration) to change this setting. The default setting is Last State.
1-4PC Health Monitoring
This section describes the PC health monitoring features of the SUPER
X6DVA-4G/X6DVA-EG. All have an onboard System Hardware Monitor chip
that supports PC health monitoring.
Onboard Voltage Monitors for the CPU Cores, Chipset
Voltage, Memory Voltage, +3.3V, +5V, +12V, -12V, +3.3V
Standby, and +5V Standby
An onboard voltage monitor will scan these voltages continuously. Once a
voltage becomes unstable, a warning is given or an error message is sent
to the screen. Users can adjust the voltage thresholds (in SDIII) to define
the sensitivity of the voltage monitor.
Fan Status Monitor with Fan Speed Control
The PC health monitor can check the RPM status of the cooling fans. The
onboard CPU and chassis fans are controlled by Thermal Management via
BIOS.
Environmental Temperature Control
The thermal control sensor monitors the CPU temperature in real time and
will turn on the thermal control fan whenever the CPU temperature exceeds
a user-defined threshold. The overheat circuitry runs independently from
the CPU. It can continue to monitor for overheat conditions even when the
CPU is in sleep mode. Once it detects that the CPU temperature is too high,
it will automatically turn on the thermal control fan to prevent any overheat
1-10
Chapter 1: Introduction
damage to the CPU. The onboard chassis thermal circuitry can monitor the
overall system temperature and alert users when the chassis temperature
is too high.
CPU Overheat LED and Control
This feature is available when the user enables the CPU overheat warning
function in the BIOS. This allows the user to define an overheat temperature.
TM2/CPU VRM Overheat
When the CPU reaches 700 C and above (Overheat), the CPU will slow down
and the CPU voltage will drop to reduce CPU power consumption and VRM
heat dissipation.
When CPU temperature reaches 780 C (*Default) and above, the system will
go into the throttling state. The Overheat LED and Alarm Buzzer will be
turned on. The CPU speed will decrease. When this happens, you can go to
the Health Monitor Setting in the BIOS to reset CPU Overheat Temperature.
VRM Protection
Introduction
When the CPU VRM temperature reaches the threshold preset by the user
in the BIOS, the system will go into the TM2 Mode. The CPU will slow down,
the VRM current will drop to prevent the VRM from overheat. (The settings
are: 880C, *980C, 1080C.) (*Default)
Auto-Switching Voltage Regulator for the CPU Core
The auto-switching voltage regulator for the CPU core can support up to
20A current and auto-sense voltage IDs ranging from .8375V to 1.6V. This
will allow the regulator to run cooler and thus make the system more stable.
1-5 ACPI Features
ACPI stands for Advanced Configuration and Power Interface. The ACPI
specification defines a flexible and abstract hardware interface that provides a standard way to integrate power management features throughout
a PC system, including its hardware, operating system and application software. This enables the system to automatically turn on and off peripherals
1-11
such as CD-ROMs, network cards, hard disk drives and printers. This also
includes consumer devices connected to the PC such as VCRs, TVs, telephones and stereos.
Introduction
In addition to enabling operating system-directed power management, ACPI
provides a generic system event mechanism for Plug and Play and an operating system-independent interface for configuration control. ACPI leverages the Plug and Play BIOS data structures while providing a processor
architecture-independent implementation that is compatible with Windows
2000, Windows NT 5.0, Windows XP, and Windows Server 2003 .
The OnNow design initiative is a comprehensive, system-wide approach to
system and device power control. OnNow is a term for a PC that is always
on but appears to be off and responds immediately to user or other requests.
When the CPU goes into a suspend state, the chassis power LED will start
blinking to indicate that the CPU is in suspend mode. When the user presses
any key, the CPU will wake-up and the LED will automatically stop blinking
and remain on.
X6DVA-4G/X6DVA-EG User's Manual
Microsoft OnNow
Slow Blinking LED for Suspend-State Indicator
Main Switch Override Mechanism
When an ATX power supply is used, the power button can function as a
system suspend button to make the system enter a SoftOff state. The
monitor will be suspended and the hard drive will spin down. Pressing the
power button again will cause the whole system to wake-up. During the
SoftOff state, the ATX power supply provides power to keep the required
circuitry in the system alive. In case the system malfunctions and you want
to turn off the power, just press and hold the power button for 4 seconds.
This option can be set in the Power section of the BIOS Setup routine.
External Modem Ring-On (WOR)
Wake-up events can be triggered by a device such as the external modem
ringing when the system is in the SoftOff state. Note that external modem
ring-on can only be used with an ATX 2.01 (or above) compliant power
supply.
1-12
Chapter 1: Introduction
Wake-On-LAN (WOL)
Wake-On-LAN is defined as the ability of a management application to remotely power up a computer that is powered off. Remote PC setup, updates and asset tracking can occur after hours and on weekends so that
daily LAN traffic is kept to a minimum and users are not interrupted. The
motherboard has a 3-pin header (WOL) to connect to the 3-pin header on a
Network Interface Card (NIC) that has WOL capability. Wake-On-LAN must
be enabled in BIOS. Note that Wake-On-LAN can only be used with an ATX
2.01 (or above) compliant power supply.
1-6Power Supply
As with all computer products, a stable power source is necessary for
proper and reliable operation. It is even more important for processors that
have high CPU clock rates.
The SUPER X6DVA-4G/X6DVA-EG can only accommodate ATX 24-pin
power supplies. Although most power supplies generally meet the specifications required by the CPU, some are inadequate. You should use one
that will supply at least 400W of power and includes the additional +12V, 8pin power connector - an even higher wattage power supply is recommended for high-load configurations. Also your power supply must supply
1.5A for the Ethernet ports.
Introduction
NOTE: An additional 12V 8-pin power connector (PW2) is required to
support Intel Xeon CPUs. Failure to provide this extra power will
result in instability of the CPU after only a few minutes of operation. See Section 2-5 for details on connecting the power supply.
It is strongly recommended that you use a high quality power supply that
meets ATX power supply Specification 2.02 or above. It must also be SSI
compliant (info at http://www.ssiforum.org/). Additionally, in areas where
noisy power transmission is present, you may choose to install a line filter
to shield the computer from noise. It is recommended that you also install a
power surge protector to help avoid problems caused by power surges.
1-7Super I/O
The disk drive adapter functions of the Super I/O chip include a floppy disk
drive controller that is compatible with industry standard 82077/765, a data
separator, write pre-compensation circuitry, decode logic, data rate selection, a clock generator, drive interface control logic and interrupt and DMA
1-13
logic. The wide range of functions integrated onto the Super I/O greatly
reduces the number of components required for interfacing with floppy disk
Introduction
drives. The Super I/O supports 360 K, 720 K, 1.2 M, 1.44 M or 2.88 M disk
drives and data transfer rates of 250 Kb/s, 500 Kb/s or 1 Mb/s.It also
provides two high-speed, 16550 compatible serial communication ports
(UARTs), one of which supports serial infrared communication. Each UART
includes a 16-byte send/receive FIFO, a programmable baud rate generator,
complete modem control capability and a processor interrupt system. Both
UARTs provide legacy speed with baud rate of up to 115.2 Kbps as well as
an advanced speed with baud rates of 250 K, 500 K, or 1 Mb/s, which
support higher speed modems.
The Super I/O supports one PC-compatible printer port (SPP), Bi-directional
Printer Port (BPP) , Enhanced Parallel Port (EPP) or Extended Capabilities
Port (ECP).
The Super I/O provides functions that comply with ACPI (Advanced Configuration and Power Interface), which includes support of legacy and ACPI
power management through an SMI or SCI function pin. It also features
auto power management to reduce power consumption.
The IRQs, DMAs and I/O space resources of the Super I/O can flexibly
adjust to meet ISA PnP requirements, which support ACPI and APM (Advanced Power Management).
X6DVA-4G/X6DVA-EG User's Manual
1-14
Chapter 2: Installation
Chapter 2
Installation
2-1Static-Sensitive Devices
Electric-Static-Discharge (ESD) can damage electronic components. To prevent damage to your system board, it is important to handle it very carefully.
The following measures are generally sufficient to protect your equipment
from ESD.
Precautions
• Use a grounded wrist strap designed to prevent static discharge.
• Touch a grounded metal object before removing the board from the antistatic bag.
• Handle the board by its edges only; do not touch its components, peripheral chips, memory modules or gold contacts.
• When handling chips or modules, avoid touching their pins.
• Put the motherboard and peripherals back into their antistatic bags when
not in use.
• For grounding purposes, make sure your computer chassis provides excellent conductivity between the power supply, the case, the mounting
fasteners and the motherboard.
• Use only the correct type of onboard CMOS battery as specified by the
manufacturer. Do not install the onboard battery upside down to avoid
possible explosion.
Unpacking
The motherboard is shipped in antistatic packaging to avoid static damage.
When unpacking the board, make sure the person handling it is static protected.
2-1
X6DVA-4G/X6DVA-EG User's Manual
2-2PGA Processor and Heatsink Installation
When handling the processor package, avoid placing direct
pressure on the label area of the fan. Also, do not place the
!
motherboard on a conductive surface, which can damage the
BIOS battery and prevent the system from booting up.
IMPORTANT: Always connect the power cord last and always remove it
before adding, removing or changing any hardware components. Make
sure that you install the processor into the CPU socket before you install
the CPU heat sink. Note that for the X6DVA-4G/X6DVA-EG you need to
install the Xeon mounting plate under the board.
Installing the CPU Mounting Plate and Retention Bracket
Place the CPU mounting plate(*)
below the pre-installed retention
brackets on the reverse side of the
motherboard. (*Note: You must
install the mounting plate on the
motherboard to provide the
heatsink with adequate support.)
CPU Socket
Motherboard
*CPU Mounting
Plate
Mounting Holes
Xeon CPU
CPU Socket
CPU Retention
Bracket (x2 for dual
CPU board)
*CPU Mounting Plate
Heatsink
Heatsink
CPU Installation
Mounting
Holes
CPU
1. Lift the lever on the CPU socket:
lift the lever completely as shown
on the picture on the right;
otherwise, you will damage the
CPU socket when power is
applied. (Install CPU1 first.)
Socket lever
2-2
2. Insert the CPU in the socket,
making sure that pin 1 of the CPU
aligns with pin 1 of the socket
(both corners are marked with a
triangle). When using only one
CPU, install it into CPU socket #1
(Socket #2 is automatically disabled
if only one CPU is used).
3. Press the lever down until
you hear the *click* so you
can be sure that the CPU is
securely installed in the CPU
socket.
Heatsink Installation
(*Note: Heatsinks are very heavy, please
handle with care.)
Chapter 2: Installation
Pin1
Socket lever
1. Do not apply any thermal grease to
the heatsink or the CPU die; the required
amount of thermal grease has already
been applied.
2. Place the heatsink on top of the
CPU so that the four mounting holes
are aligned with those on the retention
mechanism.
3. Screw in two diagonal screws (ie
the #1 and the #2 screws) until just
snug (-do not fully tighten the screws
to avoid possible damage to the CPU.)
4. Finish the installation by fully
tightening all four screws.
To Un-install the Heatsink
(Caution! We do not recommend that the
CPU or the heatsink be removed. However,
if you do need to un-install the heatsink,
please follow the instructions below to
uninstall the heatsink to prevent damage
done to the CPU or the CPU socket.)
CEK Heatsink
Screw#1
Screw#1
Screw#2
2-3
X6DVA-4G/X6DVA-EG User's Manual
1. Unscrew and remove the heatsink
screws from the motherboard in the
sequence as showin the second
picture on the right.
2. Hold the heatsink as showin the
picture on the right and gently wriggle
the heatsink to loosen it from the CPU.
(Do not use excessive force when
wriggling the heatsink!!)
3. Once the CPU is loosened from the
heatsink, remove the heatsink from the
CPU socket.
4. Clean the surface of the CPU and
the heatsink to get rid of the old
thermal grease. Reapply the proper
amount of thermal grease on the
surface before you re-install the CPU
and the heatsink.
Figure 2-1. PGA604 Socket: Empty and with Processor Installed
Empty socket
!
Lever
Warning! Make
sure you lift the
lever completely
when installing the
CPU. If the lever is
only partly raised,
damage to the
socket or CPU may
result.
2-4
Triangle
Processor
(installed)
Triangle
Chapter 2: Installation
Mounting the Motherboard in the Chassis
All motherboards have standard mounting holes to fit different types of
chassis. Make sure the location of all the mounting holes for both the
motherboard and the chassis match. Although a chassis may have both
plastic and metal mounting fasteners, metal ones are highly recommended
because they ground the motherboard to the chassis. Make sure the metal
standoffs click in or are screwed in tightly. Then use a screwdriver to
secure the motherboard.
2-3 Installing DIMMs
Note: Check the Supermicro web site for recommended memory modules:
(http://www.supermicro.com/support/resources/)
CAUTION Exercise extreme care when installing or removing
DIMM modules to prevent any possible damage. Also note that
the memory is interleaved to improve performance (see step1.)
DIMM Installation (See Figure 2-2)
1. Insert the desired number of DIMMs into the memory slots, starting with
DIMM #1A. The memory scheme is interleaved so you must install two
modules at a time, beginning with DIMM #1A, then DIMM #1B, and so on.
2. Insert each DIMM module vertically into its slot. Pay attention to the
notch along the bottom of the module to prevent inserting the DIMM
module incorrectly.
3. Gently press down on the DIMM module until it snaps into place in the
slot. Repeat for all modules (see step 1 above).
Memory Support
The X6DVA-4G/X6DVA-EG supports up to 12/24 GB of Reg. ECC DDR 333/
266 (PC2700/PC2100) memory. All motherboards were designed to support
4 GB modules in each slot, but has only been verified for up to 2 GB
modules.
Figure 2-2. Installing and Removing DIMMs
To Install:
Insert module
vertically and
press down
until it snaps
into place.
Pay attention
to the
alignment
notch at the
bottom.
2-5
X6DVA-4G/X6DVA-EG User's Manual
To Remove:
Use your thumbs to gently push near the edge of both ends of
the module. This should release it from the slot.
2-4I/OPorts/Control Panel Connectors
The I/O ports are color coded in conformance with the PC 99 specification.
See Figure 2-3 below for the locations of the various I/O ports.
Figure 2-3. I/O Port Locations and Definitions
2-6
Chapter 2: Installation
Front Control Panel
JF1 contains header pins for various buttons and indicators that are normally located on a control panel at the front of the chassis. These connectors are designed specifically for use with Supermicro server chassis. See
Figure 2-4 for the descriptions of the various control panel buttons and LED
indicators. Refer to the following section for descriptions and pin definitions.
Figure 2-4. JF1 Header Pins
1920
Ground
NMI
Power LED
HDD LED
NIC1 LED
NIC2 LED
OH/Fan Fa i l L ED
Power Fa il LED
Ground
Ground
X
2
X
Vcc
Vcc
Vcc
Vcc
Vcc
Vcc
Reset
1
Pwr
Reset Button
Power Button
2-7
X6DVA-4G/X6DVA-EG User's Manual
2-5Connecting Cables
ATX Power Connector
There is a 24-pin main power
supply connector(PW1) and an optional 8-pin CPU PWR connector
(PW2) on the board. This power
connector meets the SSI EPS 12V
specification. See the table on the
right for pin definitions. For CPU
PWR (PWR2), please refer to the
item listed below.
In addition to the Primary ATX
power connector (above), the 12v
8-pin Processor connector at W2
must also be connected to your
power supply. See the table on
the right for pin definitions.
SMB
/
B
K
PWR
e
s
u
o
M
la
A
2
J
e
R
/1
0
B
P
S
U
F
3
J
4
J
1
M
O
C
ATX PWR
T
A
in
PW3
-P
4
2
W
P
8-pin
rm
1
S
D
1
R
P
PWR2
J
t
e
s
U
P
C
R
W
4
W
P
D
E
L
F
W
P
P
J
lt
u
a
DIMM 1B
DIMM 1A
DIMM 2B
DIMM 2A
a
N
R
b
b
rin
DIMM 3B
DIMM 3A
X
P
(P
C
P
te
In
1
L
P
J
le
UPER X6DVA-4G
S
1
B
8
J
1
B
9
J
/
ts
lo
s
IX
C
P
c
e
n
n
o
C
B
M
S
le
X4 PCI-Epxess
PCI-E#4
A
G
V
L
T
C
R
O
W
1
G
P
J
32- bit PCI #1
r
te
0
1
J
A
G
V
1
J
GLAN1
GLAN2
A
L
G
L
T
C
a
n
E
1
N
A
L
N
A
L
G
R
L
T
C
2
L
P
J
n
E
2
N
A
L
6
n
a
F
5
n
a
F
S
IO
B
I/O
S
P
2
M
O
C
5
J
X
PW1
1
R
2
W
P
rc
o
F
R
W
P
Battery
H
/
I-E
C
IX
)
e
c
rfa
64- bit
PCIX #6 (PCIX-133)
64- bit
PCIX #5 (PCIX-100)
5
1
J
3
1
J
t
R
WOL
W
J
b
a
n
E
A
G
V
y
p
p
lo
F
8-pin PWR
n
O
e
E
(L
-V
®
(*S
1
A
P
J
4
1
J
S
C
S
C
3
5
L
O
I L
S
C
le
S
1
J
4
2
J
H
C
M
0
2
3
7
t
rs
u
h
n
e
d
in
)
S
rth
o
N
e
g
rid
B
le
b
a
n
I E
S
C
I
S
I (L
)
0
2
3
S
D
D
E
C
S
h
C
7
a
n
E
I
S
C
S
CPU 8-Pin PWR
Connector (PW2)
Pins
Definition
1 thru 4
Ground
5 thru 8
+12v
1
n
a
F
M
R
V
1
U
P
C
4
S
D
D
E
L
H
O
3
2
J
2
2
J
1
2
J
0
2
J
9
1
J
8
1
J
)
/
D
E
L
W
P
1
4
J
2
F
J
R
K
P
S
r
e
k
a
e
p
S
tru
. In
a
h
C
1
A
J
I
S
1
L
J
.
rm
e
lT
e
n
n
a
0
A
T
A
S
S
le
b
J
2
E
ID
8
2
J
1
U
P
C
2
U
P
C
Fan2
Fan3
M
R
V
2
U
P
C
2
S
D
D
E
L
H
O
D
E
L
R
W
P
5
S
D
FP CTRL
1
F
D
W
J
D
W
I
M
IP
B
S
E
0
0
3
6
H
IC
Clr CMOS
D
E
L
S
J
1
A
T
A
S
1
S
J
0
J
D
E
L
m
te
s
y
S
DS9
,3
2
B
S
U
1
E
ST
ID
PO
LED
T1
S8
DS7
D
JB
A
T
A
S
D
E
L
4
4
J
4
n
a
F
8
3
J
2-8
NMI Button
The non-maskable interrupt button
header is located on pins 19 and
20 of JF1. Refer to the table on
the right for pin definitions.
Power LED
Chapter 2: Installation
NMI Button Pin
Definitions
Pin
Number
Definition
19
Control
20
Ground
The Power LED connection is located on pins 15 and 16 of JF1.
Refer to the table on the right for
pin definitions.
SMB
KB/
Mouse
USB0/1
COM1
VGA
ATX
PW3
24-Pin
PWR
Alarm
J2
JPR1
Reset
PWR
PW4
Fault
J3
J4
J1
GLAN1
GLAN2
GLAN
CTLR
LAN1Enable
GLAN
CTLR
JPL2
LAN2Enable
Fan6
Fan5
BIOS
SI/O
Printer
COM2
J5
CPU
PW LED
JPL1
PCIX slots/
SMB Connect
WOR
PW1
PWR1
8-pin
DS1
PWR2
PW2
JPF
PWR Force On
D
IM
M
1
B
D
IM
M
1
A
D
IM
M
2
B
D
IM
M
2
A
D
IM
M
3
B
D
IM
M
3
A
MCH
Battery
E7320
(Lindenhurst
PXH
-VS)
(PCI-E/
PCIX
Interface)
S
J8B1
J9B1
I-E
C
P
4
X
VGA
CTLR
JPG1
J10
P
U
64- bit
64- bit
J15
J13
s
e
x
p
I-E
C
P
VGA Enable
2- b
3
Floppy
North
Bridge
®
X
R
E
-1
IX
C
(P
6
#
IX
C
P
-1
IX
C
(P
#5
IX
C
P
(*SCSI Enable)
JPA1
s
J14
#4
SCSI (LSI
53C20)
WOL
JWOL
SCSI LED
I #1
C
it P
J17
J24
6D
3
3
0
0
SCSI
V
)
)
DS3
CPU1 VRM
OHLED
-4G
A
JF2
Speaker
SCSI
ChannelTerm.
Enable
Fan1
DS4
J23
J22
J21
J20
J19
J18
PWLED/
SPKR
Cha. Intru
1
A
J
JL1
SATA0
IDE 2
J28
PWR_LED Pin Definitions
Pin
Number
Definition
15
16
Vcc
Control
NMI
PWR LED
CPU 1
Ground
X
CPU 2
CPU2 VRM
DS2
OH LED
PWR LED
JWD
WD
IPMI
J41
6300ESB
ICH
Clr CMOS
JSLED
SATA1
JS0
DS5
System LED
USB2,3
T
S
PO
LED
7
T1
S
S8
D
D
JB
SATA
JS1
LED
Fan4
J38
2
n
a
F
3
n
a
F
FP CTRL
JF1
S9
D
OH/Fan Fail LED
Power Fail LED
IDE 1
J44
Power LED
HDD LED
NIC1 LED
NIC2 L E D
Ground
Ground
1920
NMI
X
Vcc
Vcc
Vcc
Vcc
Vcc
Vcc
Reset
Reset Button
Power Button
Pwr
1
2
2-9
X6DVA-4G/X6DVA-EG User's Manual
HDD LED
The HDD LED connection is located
on pins 13 and 14 of JF1. Attach
the hard drive LED cable here to
display disk activity (for any hard
drives on the system, including
SCSI, Serial ATA and IDE). See
the table on the right for pin definitions.
NIC1/NIC2 LED Indicators
The NIC (Network Interface Controller) LED connections for the
GLAN port1 is located on pins 11
and 12 of JF1, and for the GLAN
port2 is located on pins 9 and 10
of JF1. Attach the NIC LED cables
to display network activity. Refer
to the tables on the right for pin
definitions.
NIC1 LED Pin
Definitions
Pin
Number
11
12
HDD LED Pin
Pin
Number
13
14
Definition
Vcc
GND
Definitions
Definition
Vcc
HD Active
NIC2 LED Pin
Definitions
Pin
Number
9
10
Definition
Vcc
GND
USB0/1
COM1
VGA
KB/
Mouse
HDD LED
SMB
ATX
PW3
24-Pin
PWR
Alarm
J2
JPR1
Reset
PWR
PW4
Fault
J3
J4
J1
GLAN1
GLAN2
GLAN
CTLR
LAN1Enable
GLAN
CTLR
JPL2
LAN2Enable
Fan6
Fan5
BIOS
SI/O
Printer
COM2
J5
CPU
PW LED
JPL1
PCIX slots/
SMB Connect
WOR
JPG1
PW1
PWR1
8-pin
DS1
PWR2
PW2
JPF
PWR Force On
D
IM
M
1
B
D
IM
M
1
A
D
IM
M
2
B
D
IM
M
2
A
D
IM
M
3
B
D
IM
M
3
A
MCH
Battery
E7320
(Lindenhurst
PXH
-VS)
(PCI-E/
PCIX
Interface)
S
J8B1
J9B1
I-E
C
P
4
X
VGA
CTLR
3
J10
P
U
64- bit
64- bit
J15
J13
s
e
x
p
I-E
C
P
VGA Enable
- b
2
Floppy
North
Bridge
®
X
R
E
-1
IX
C
(P
#6
IX
C
P
-10
IX
C
5 (P
#
IX
C
P
(*SCSI Enable)
JPA1
s
J14
4
#
SCSI (LSI
53C20)
WOL
JWOL
SCSI LED
1
I #
C
it P
J17
J24
6D
3
SCSI
)
3
)
0
DS3
CPU1 VRM
OHLED
A
V
Speaker
SCSI
ChannelTerm.
Enable
-4G
JF2
Fan1
DS4
J23
J22
J21
J20
J19
J18
PWLED/
SPKR
1
A
J
JL1
SATA0
J28
Cha. Intru
IDE 2
CPU 1
2
n
a
F
3
n
a
F
FP CTRL
JF1
OH/Fan Fail LED
S9
D
E 1
ID
J44
Fan4
Power LED
HDD LED
NIC1 LED
NIC2 L E D
Power Fail LED
CPU 2
CPU2 VRM
DS2
OH LED
PWR LED
IPMI
Clr CMOS
DS5
System LED
USB2,3
ST
O
P
LED
7
T1
S
S8
D
D
JB
SATA
JS1
LED
J38
JWD
WD
J41
6300ESB
ICH
JSLED
SATA1
JS0
NIC1/NIC2 LED
Ground
X
Ground
Ground
1920
NMI
X
Vcc
Vcc
Vcc
Vcc
Vcc
Vcc
Reset
Reset Button
Power Button
Pwr
1
2
2-10
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