Foxconn 720A User Manual

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720A/730A/M78A Series
Motherboard
User’s Manual
Page 2
Statement:
This manual is the intellectual property of Foxconn, Inc. Although the information
in this manual may be changed or modied at any time, Foxconn does not obligate
Trademark:
All trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
Version:
User’s Manual V1.1 for 720A/730A/M78A Series motherboard.
P/N: 3A220YL00-000-G
Symbol description:
Caution : refers to important information that can help you to use motherboard
better, and tells you how to avoid problems.
Warning : indicating a potential risk of hardware damage or physical injury
may exist.
WEEE:
The use of this symbol indicates that this product may not be treated as household
waste. By ensuring this product is disposed of correctly, you will help prevent potential
negative consequences for the environment and human health, which could other-
wise be caused by inappropriate waste handling of this product. For more detailed
information about recycling of this product, please contact your local city ofce, your
household waste disposal service or the shop where you purchased this product.
More information:
If you want more information about our products, please visit Foxconn’s
website: http://www.foxconnchannel.com
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© All rights reserved.
All trade names are registered trademarks of respective manufacturers listed.
All images are for reference only, please refer to the physical motherboard for specic features.
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Declaration of conformity
HON HAI PRECISION INDUSTRY COMPANY LTD
66 , CHUNG SHAN RD., TU-CHENG INDUSTRIAL DISTRICT,
TAIPEI HSIEN, TAIWAN, R.O.C.
declares that the product
Motherboard 720A/730A-S/M78A-S
is in conformity with
(reference to the specication under which conformity is declared in
accordance with 89/336 EEC-EMC Directive)
■ EN 55022:1998/A2: 2003 Limits and methods of measurements of radio
disturbance characteristics of information technology equipment
■ EN 61000-3-2/:2000 Electromagnetic compatibility (EMC)
Part 3: Limits Section 2: Limits for harmonic current emissions (equipment input current <= 16A per phase)
■ EN 61000-3-3/A1:2001 Electromagnetic compatibility (EMC)
Part 3: Limits
Section 2: Limits of voltage uctuations and icker in low
voltage supply systems for equipment with rated current <= 16A
■ EN 55024/A2:2003 Information technology equipment-Immunity
characteristics limits and methods of measurement
Signature : Place / Date : TAIPEI/2008
Printed Name : James Liang
Page 4
Declaration of conformity
Trade Name: FOXCONN
Model Name: 720A/730A-S/M78A-S
Responsible Party: PCE Industry Inc.
Address: 458 E. Lambert Rd.
Fullerton, CA 92835
Telephone: 714-738-8868
Facsimile: 714-738-8838
Equipment Classication: FCC Class B Subassembly
Type of Product: Motherboard
Manufacturer: HON HAI PRECISION INDUSTRY
COMPANY LTD
Address: 66 , CHUNG SHAN RD., TU-CHENG
INDUSTRIAL DISTRICT, TAIPEI HSIEN,
TAIWAN, R.O.C.
Supplementary Information:
This device complies with Part 15 of the FCC Rules. Operation is subject to the following
two conditions : (1) this device may not cause harmful interference, and (2) this device
must accept any interference received, including interference that may cause undesired
operation.
Tested to comply with FCC standards.
Signature : Date : 2008
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Installation Precautions
Please carefully read the following procedures to install your computer :
It is suggested to select high-quality, certied fans in order to avoid damage
to the motherboard and CPU due to high temperature. Never turn on the
computer if the CPU fan is not properly installed.
We cannot guarantee that your system can operate normally when your
CPU is overclocked. Normal operation depends on the overclocking capac-
ity of your device.
If there is any, when connecting USB, audio, RS232 COM, IrDA or S/PDIF
cables to the internal connectors on the motherboard, make sure their
pinouts are matching with the connectors on the motherboard. Incorrect con-
nections might damage the motherboard.
When handling the motherboard, avoid touching any metal leads or connec-
tors.
If there is a PCI Express x16 graphics card installed in your system, we
recommend using a 24-pin ATX power supply to get the best performance.
Before turning on the power, please make sure the power supply AC input
voltage setting has been congured to the local standard.
To prevent damage to the motherboard, do not allow screws to come in contact
with the motherboard circuit or its components. Also, make sure there are no
leftover screws or metal components placed on the motherboard or within the
computer casing.
If you are uncertain about any installation steps or have a problem related to
the use of the product, please consult a certied computer technician.
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Electrostatic discharge (ESD) is the sudden and momentary electric current
that ows between two objects at different electrical potentials. Normally it
comes out as a spark which will quickly damage your electronic equipment.
Please wear an electrostatic discharge (ESD) wrist strap when handling
components such as a motherboard, CPU or memory.
Ensure that the DC power supply is turned off before installing or removing
CPU, memory, expansion cards or other peripherals. It is recommended to
unplug the AC power cord from the power supply outlet. Failure to unplug
the power supply cord may result in serious damage to your system.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
Chapter 1 Product Introduction
Product Specications .................................................................. 2
Layout ........................................................................................... 4
Back Panel Connectors ................................................................ 5
Chapter 2 Hardware Install
Install the CPU and CPU Cooler ..................................................8
Install the Memory ......................................................................10
Install an Expansion Card .......................................................... 12
Install other Internal Connectors ................................................ 13
Jumpers ......................................................................................17
Chapter 3 BIOS Setup
Enter BIOS Setup ....................................................................... 20
Main Menu ..................................................................................20
System Information .................................................................... 22
Fox Central Control Unit ............................................................. 24
Advanced BIOS Features ........................................................... 30
Advanced Chipset Features .......................................................31
Integrated Peripherals ................................................................33
Power Management Setup ......................................................... 38
PC Health Status ........................................................................ 41
Load Optimized Defaults ...........................................................42
Set Supervisor Password ...........................................................42
Set User Password .....................................................................42
Save & Exit Setup ...................................................................... 42
Exit Without Saving ....................................................................42
Chapter 4 CD Instruction
Utility CD content ........................................................................44
Install driver and utility ................................................................ 45
FOX ONE
Main Page ............................................................................. 48
CPU Control .......................................................................... 52
Frequency Control ................................................................54
Limit Setting ..........................................................................55
Page 7
Voltage Control .....................................................................57
Fan Control ...........................................................................58
FOX LiveUpdate
Local Update ......................................................................... 59
Online Update ....................................................................... 61
Congure .............................................................................64
About & Help ......................................................................... 66
FOX LOGO .................................................................................67
FOX DMI .................................................................................... 68
Chapter 5 RAID Conguration
RAID Conguration Introduction ................................................. 71
NVIDIA® MediaShield Driver.......................................................73
Create two RAID Driver Diskettes .............................................. 75
RAID Enable in BIOS .................................................................77
Select a RAID Array for Use .......................................................77
Install a New Windows XP.......................................................... 93
Setting Up a Non-Bootable RAID Array .................................... 100
Technical Support :
Website :
http://www.foxconnchannel.com
Support Website :
http://www.foxconnsupport.com
Worldwide online contact Support :
http://www.foxconnchannel.com/support/online.aspx
CPU, Memory, VGA Compatibility Supporting Website :
http://www.foxconnchannel.com/product/Motherboards/compatibility.aspx
Support
Page 8
Thank you for buying Foxconn 720A/730A/M78A Series mother-
board. Foxconn products are engineered to maximize computing
power, providing only what you need for break-through perform-
ance.
With advanced overclocking capability and a range of connec-
tivity features for today multi-media computing requirements,
720A/730A-S/M78A-S enables you to unleash more power from
your computer.
This chapter includes the following information:
■ Product Specications
■ Layout
■ Back Panel Connectors
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1-1 Product Specications
CPU Support AMD socket AM2+ Phenom
TM
FX / Phenom
TM
series processors
Support AMD socket AM2 series processors :
AthlonTM 64 FX / Athlon
TM
64 X2 Dual-Core / Athlon
TM
X2 Dual-Core / Athlon
TM
64 / Sempron
TM
HyperTransport 2000/1600MT/s for AM2 CPU
Up to 5200MT/s (HT3.0) for AM2+ CPU
Chipset NVIDIA nForce 720a (720A)
NVIDIA nForce 730a (730A-S)
NVIDIA GeForce 8200 (M78A-S)
Memory 4 x 240-pin DDR2 DIMM sockets
Support up to 8GB of system memory
Dual channel DDR2 1066*/800/667/533MHz architecture
*DDR2 1066 is only supported by some AM2+ CPU
Audio Realtek 8-channel audio chip
High Denition Audio
2/4/5.1/7.1-channel
Support for S/PDIF Out
Support Jack-Sensing function
LAN Realtek 10/100/1000Mb/s LAN chip
Expansion Slots 1 x PCI Express x16 slot
2 x PCI Express x1 slots
3 x PCI slots
Onboard Serial ATA 5 x SATA connectors
300MB/s data transfer rate
Support hot plug and NCQ (Native Command Queuing )
USB Support hot plug
Support up to 12 x USB 2.0 ports (4 rear panel ports, 4 onboard USB
headers supporting 8 extra ports)
Support USB 2.0 protocol up to 480Mb/s
Internal Connectors 1 x 24-pin ATX main power connector
1 x 8-pin ATX 12V power connector
1 x AUX Power connector
1 x Floppy disk drive connector
1 x IDE connector
5 x SATA connectors
4 x USB 2.0 connectors (supporting 8 x USB devices)
1 x CPU fan header (4-pin)
1 x System fan header (4-pin)
1 x NB fan header (3-pin)
1 x Front panel connector
1 x CD_IN connector
1 x Front Audio connector
1 x COM1 connector
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1 x COM2 connector
1 x IR connector
1 x Chassis intrusion alarm header (INTR)
1 x S/PDIF_OUT connector
Back Panel 1 x PS/2 keyboard port
Connectors 1 x PS/2 mouse port
1 x VGA port
1 x DVI-D port
1 x HDMI port
4 x USB 2.0 ports
1 x RJ-45 LAN port
1 x External SATA port
8-channel Audio ports
Hardware Monitor System voltage detection
CPU/System temperature detection
CPU/System fan speed detection
CPU/System overheating warning
CPU/System fan speed control
PCI Express x1 Support 250MB/s (500MB/s concurrent) bandwidth
Low power consumption and power management features
PCI Express x16 Support 4GB/s (8GB/s concurrent) bandwidth
Low power consumption and power management features
Green Function Support ACPI (Advanced Conguration and Power Interface)
Support S0 (normal), S1 (power on suspend), S3 (suspend to RAM), S4
(suspend to disk), and S5 (soft - off)
Bundled Software FOX ONE
FOX LiveUpdate
FOX LOGO
FOX DMI
Operating System Support for Microsoft® Windows® Vista/XP only
Form Factor ATX Form Factor, 12 inches x 9.0 inches (30.5cm x 22.9cm)
The chipset driver of this motherboard does not support Windows® 2000.
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1-2 Layout
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1
1. CD_IN Connector
2. Front Audio Connector
3. S/PDIF Out Connector
4. Buzzer
5. NB_FAN Header
6. Clear CMOS Jumper
7. USB_PWR3 Jumper
8. Front USB Connectors
9. USB_PWR1 Jumper
10. Front Panel Connector
11. Chassis Intrusion Alarm Header
12. IR Header
13. SATA Connectors
14. COM Connectors
15. Chipset: NVIDIA nForce 720a (720A) /
NVIDIA nForce 730a (730A-S) /
NVIDIA GeForce 8200 (M78A-S)
16. IDE Connector
17. SYS_FAN Header
18. Floppy Connector
19. 24-pin ATX Power Connector
20. DDR2 DIMM Slots
21. CPU_FAN Header
22. CPU Socket
23. 8-pin ATX 12V Power Connector
24. USB_PWR2 Jumper
25. AUX Power Connector: PWR3
26. PCI Express x16 Slot
27. PCI Express x1 Slots
28. PCI Slots
Note : The above motherboard layout is for reference only, please refer to the physical mother-
board for detail.
15 1716
2
3
5
10
18 19
8
7
9
11 12 13 14
21
20
23
24
27
26
28
4
6
25
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5
1-3 Back Panel Connectors
1. PS/2 Mouse Port
Use the upper port (green) to connect a PS/2 mouse.
2. PS/2 Keyboard Port
Use the lower port (purple) to connect a PS/2 keyboard.
3. VGA Port
To connect with external display devices, such as monitor or LCD display.
4. DVI-D Port
The DVI-D port supports DVI-D specication. Connect a monitor that supports DVI-D connection
to this port.
5. HDMI Port
The HDMI (High-Denition Multimedia Interface) provides an all-digital audio/video interface
to transmit the uncompressed audio/video signals and is HDCP compliant. Connect the
HDMI audio/video to this port. The HDMI Technology can support a maximum resolution of
1920x1080p, but the actual resolutions supported depend on the monitor being used.
6. External SATA Port
To connect external SATA device(s) to your system by expanding the internal SATA port(s) to
the chassis back panel. External SATA device shall provide power by its own.
7. Audio Ports
For the denition of each audio port, please refer to the table below :
3
PS/2 Mouse Port
DVI-D Port
7
Audio Ports
Line Out
Microphone
Subwoofer
Rear Speaker
Side Speaker
Line In
LAN Port
8
VGA Port
5
4
PS/2 Keyboard Port
2
External SATA Port
6
HDMI Port
9
USB Ports
1
Port 2-channel 4-channel 5.1-channel 7.1-channel
Blue Line In Line In Line In Line In
Green Line Out Front Speaker Out Front Speaker Out Front Speaker Out
Pink Microphone In Microphone In Microphone In Microphone In
Orange - - Center/Subwoofer Out Center/Subwoofer Out
Black - Rear Speaker Out Rear Speaker Out Rear Speaker Out
Grey - - - Side Speaker Out
Both HDMI and DVI ports share the same signals. They are not able to work at the same time.
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* : Please refer to Chapter 4, and install the Realtek audio driver (in CD) to assign the audio
output ports for different applications of 2/4/5.1 channels. The fundamental audio outputs are
depicted in the table above.
8. RJ-45 LAN Port
The Ethernet LAN port provides Internet connection at up to 10/100/1000Mb/s data rate.
9. USB Ports
The USB port supports the USB 2.0/1.1 specication. Use this port for USB devices such as an
USB keyboard/mouse, USB printer, USB ash drive and etc.
LAN Type
Left: Active Right: Link
Status Description Status Description
1000M
Off No Link Off No Link
Green
Blinking
Data Activity
Off 10Mb/s Connection
Green 100Mb/s Connection
Orange 1000Mb/s Connection
Link
LED
Active
LED
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Please visit this website for more supporting information about CPU, Memory and
VGA for your motherboard :
http://www.foxconnchannel.com/product/Motherboards/compatibility.aspx
This chapter introduces the hardware installation process, including
the installation of the CPU, memory, power supply, slots, pin headers
and the mounting of jumpers. Caution should be exercised during
the installation of these modules. Please refer to the motherboard
layout prior to any installation and read the contents in this chapter
carefully.
This chapter includes the following information :
■ Install the CPU and CPU Cooler
■ Install the Memory
■ Install an Expansion Card
■ Install other Internal Connectors
■ Jumpers
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2-1 Install the CPU and CPU Cooler
Install the CPU
Locate the Pin-1 CPU triangle mark and the Pin-1 of the CPU socket.
Pin-1 triangle
marking of CPU
Pin-1 corner of the
CPU socket
1. Release the CPU socket lever.
2. Align Pin-1 of the CPU with the CPU
socket, and gently put the CPU
onto the socket.
Read the following guidelines before you begin to install the CPU :
Make sure that the motherboard supports the CPU.
Always turn off the computer and unplug the power cord from the power supply before
installing the CPU to prevent hardware damage.
■ Locate the Pin-1 of the CPU. The CPU cannot be inserted if oriented incorrectly.
■ Apply an even and thin layer of thermal grease on the surface of the CPU.
■ Do not turn on the computer if the CPU cooler is not installed, otherwise overheating
and damage of the CPU may occur.
■ Set the CPU host frequency in accordance with the CPU specications. It is not
recommended that the system bus frequency be set beyond hardware specications
since it does not meet the standard requirements for the peripherals. If you want to
set the frequency beyond the standard specications, please do so according to your
hardware specications including the CPU, graphics card, memory, hard drive, etc.
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3. When CPU is properly seated,
push the CPU socket lever back
to its locked position.
Install the CPU Cooler
Follow the steps below to correctly install the CPU cooler. (The following procedures use Foxconn cooler as the example.)
1. Apply and spread an even thermal
grease on the surface of CPU.
2. Buckle the heatsink rmly at one side of the stand.
3. Buckle the heatsink at another
side, and press the fasten lever
down to tightly seat the cooler.
4. Attach t he 3-wire C PU cooler
connector to the CPU fan header
on the motherboard .
Use extreme care when removing the CPU cooler because the thermal grease may adhere to the CPU. Inadequately removing the CPU cooler may damage the CPU.
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2-2 Install the Memory
Dual Channel Memory Conguration
This motherboard provides four DDR2 memory sockets and supports Dual Channel Technology.
When memory is installed, the BIOS will automatically check the memory in your system.
Four DDR2 memory sockets are divided into two channels :
Channel 0 : DIMM1, DIMM3
Channel 1 : DIMM2, DIMM4
The combinations of DIMM modules are :
It is recommended that memory of the same capacity, brand, speed, and chips be
used and please select dual channel rst to achieve optimum performance.
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Read the following guidelines before you begin to install the memory :
Make sure that the motherboard supports the memory. It is recommended that memory
of the same capacity, brand, speed, and chips be used.
Always turn off the computer and unplug the power cord from the power outlet before
installing the memory to prevent hardware damage.
Memory modules have a foolproof design. A memory module can be installed in only
one direction. If you are unable to insert the memory, switch the direction.
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DIMM1 DIMM2 DIMM3 DIMM4
Single Channel DS/SS - - -
Single Channel DS/SS - DS/SS -
Single Channel - - DS/SS -
Single Channel - DS/SS - DS/SS
Dual Channel DS/SS DS/SS - -
Dual Channel - - DS/SS DS/SS
Dual Channel DS/SS DS/SS DS/SS DS/SS
(DS : Dual Side, SS : Single Side, - : No Memory)
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Installing a Memory
If you take a look at front side of memory module, it has asymmetric pin counts on both sides separated
by a notch in the middle, so it can only t in one direction. Follow the steps below to correctly install
your memory modules into the sockets.
Step 1: Spread the clips at both ends of the memory socket. Place the memory module onto the socket, then put
your ngers on top edge of the module, and push it down rmly and seat it vertically into the memory
socket.
Step 2: The clips at both ends of the socket will snap into place when the memory module is securely inserted.
Before installing a memory module, make sure to turn off the computer and unplug the
power cord from the power outlet to prevent damage to the memory module. Be sure
to install DDR2 DIMMs on this motherboard.
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112-Pin128-Pin
Notch
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2-3 Install an Expansion Card
Follow the steps below to correctly install your expansion card in the expansion slot.
1. Locate an expansion slot that supports your card. Remove the metal slot cover from the chassis
back panel.
2. Align the card with the slot, and press down on the card until it is fully seated in the slot.
3. Make sure the metal contacts on the card are completely inserted into the slot.
4. Secure the card's metal bracket to the chassis back panel with a screw.
5. After installing all expansion cards, replace the chassis cover.
6. Turn on your computer. If necessary, go to BIOS Setup to make any required BIOS changes for
your expansion card(s).
7. Install the driver provided with the expansion card in your operating system.
Installing and Removing a PCI Express x16 Graphics Card :
• Installing a Graphics Card:
Gently insert the graphics card into the PCI Express x16 slot. Make
sure the graphics card is locked by the latch at the end of the PCI
Express x16 slot.
• Removing the Card:
Push the latch at the end of the PCI Express x16 slot to release the card and then pull the card straight up from the slot.
PCI
PCI Express x1
PCI Express x16
■ Make sure the motherboard supports the expansion card. Carefully read the manual that
came with your expansion card.
Always turn off the computer and unplug the power cord from the power outlet before
installing an expansion card to prevent hardware damage.
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2-4 Install other Internal Connectors
Power Connectors
This motherboard uses an ATX power supply. In order not to damage any device, make sure all the devices have been installed properly before applying the power supply.
24-pin ATX power connector : PWR1
PWR1 is the ATX power supply connector. Make sure that the power supply cable and pins are properly aligned with the connector on the motherboard. Firmly plug the power supply cable into the connector and make sure it is secure.
8-pin ATX 12 V Power Connector : PWR2
Connect the 8-pin ATX 12V power supply to PWR2 and provides power to the CPU.
We recommend you using a 24-pin power supply.
If you are using a 20-pin power supply, you need to align the ATX power connector according to the picture.
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20-Pin Power
Pin No. 24
Pin # Denition Pin # Denition
1 3.3V 13 3.3V
2 3.3V 14 -12V
3 GND 15 GND
4 +5V 16 PS_ON(Soft On/Off)
5 GND 17 GND
6 +5V 18 GND
7 GND 19 GND
8 Power Good 20 NC
9 +5V SB(Stand by +5V) 21 +5V
10 +12V 22 +5V
11 +12V 23 +5V
12 3.3V 24 GND
PWR1
24
13
12
1
Pin # Denition Pin # Denition
1 GND 5 +12V
2 GND 6 +12V
3 GND 7 +12V
4 GND 8 +12V
145
8
PWR2
GND
+12V
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Exclusive Graphics power Connector : PWR3
This connector is an auxiliary power for graphics card. Exclusive power for graphics card is for better graphics performance and future upgrade usage.
Front Panel Connector : FP1
This motherboard includes one connector for connecting the front panel switch and LED Indicators.
Hard Disk LED Connector (HDD-LED)
Connect to the chassis front panel IDE indicator LED. It indicates the active status of the hard disks. This 2-pin connector is directional with +/- sign.
Reset Switch (RESET-SW)
Attach the connector to the Reset switch on the front panel of the case; the system will restart when the switch is pressed.
Power LED Connector (PWR-LED)
Connect to the power LED indicator on the front panel of the chassis. The Power LED indicates the system’s status. When the system is in operation (S0 status), the LED is on. When the system gets into sleep mode (S1) , the LED
is blinking; When the system is in S3/S4 sleep state or power off mode (S5), the LED is off. This 2-pin connector
is directional with +/- sign.
Power Switch Connector (PWR-SW)
Connect to the power button on the front panel of the chassis. Push this switch allows the system to be turned on and off rather than using the power supply button.
Serial ATA Connectors : SATA_1/2/3/4/5
The Serial ATA connector is used to connect with SATA Hard Disk or CD devices which support this feature. The current Serial ATA II interface allows up to 300MB/s data transfer rate.
HDD-LED
RESET-SW
NC
+
-
PWR-SW
+
-
PWR-LED
EMPTY
1
2
10
9
FP1
SATA_1/2/3/4/5
GND TX+ TX­GND RX­RX+
GND
1
We recommend you using an 8-pin ATX 12V power supply. If
you are using a 4-pin power supply, you need to align the ATX
power connector according to the picture on the right.
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Connect a 4-pin
power plug
+5V
GND
GND
+12V
1
4
PWR3
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Audio Connector : CD_IN
CD_IN is a Sony standard audio connector, it can be connected to a CD/DVD-ROM drive through a CD/DVD audio cable.
Audio Connector : F_AUDIO
The audio connector supports HD Audio standard. It provides the Front Audio output choice.
S/PDIF Connector : SPDIF_OUT
The connector is used for S/PDIF output.
USB Connectors : F_USB1/2/3/4
In addition to the four USB ports on the rear panel, this product also provides four 10-pin USB headers on its motherboard. By connecting through USB cables with them, user can quickly expand another eight USB ports on the front panel.
COM Connectors : COM1/2
This motherboard supports two serial RS232 COM ports for legacy compatibility. User must purchase another RS232 cable with a 9-pin D-sub connector at one end to connect with the external RS232 device and another end with 10-pin female connector to connect with COM
connector in the motherboard.
Floppy Disk Drive Connector : FLOPPY
This motherboard includes a standard oppy disk drive
(FDD) connector, supporting 360KB, 720KB, 1.2MB,
1.44MB, and 2.88MB FDDs.
PORT1_L
PORT1_R
PORT2_L
SENSE_SEND
SENSE1_RETURN
PRESENCEJ
EMPTY SENSE2_RETURN
AUD_GND
1 2
109
F_AUDIO
PORT2_R
SPDIF_OUT
+5V
EMPTY
SPDIF_OUT
GND
1
2
3
4
RLSD SOUT
RI
GND
RTS
DSR
DTR
CTS EMPTY
SIN
1
2
10
9
COM1/2
1
CD_IN
CD_L GND CD_R
1 2
109
NC
GND
VCC
D+
D-
D+
GND
D-
VCC
EMPTY
F_USB 1/2/3/4
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Fan Connectors : CPU_FAN, SYS_FAN, NB-
FAN
There are three fan headers on this motherboard. The fan speed can be controlled and monitored in “PC Health Status” section of the BIOS Setup. These fans can be automatically turned off after the system enters
S3, S4 and S5 sleeping states.
IrDA Connector : IR
This connector supports infrared wireless transmitting and receiving device.
Chassis Intrusion Alarm Header : INTR
The header can be connected to a security switch on the chassis. The system can detect the chassis intrusion through the function of this header. If eventually the chas­sis was closed, the system will send a message out.
IDE Connector : PIDE
With the provided Ultra DMA IDE ribbon cable, you can connect to any IDE type of hard disk and CD/DVD ROM/RW drive.
INTR
GND
INTRUDERJ
1
1
SYS_FAN/CPU_FAN
GND POWER SENSE CONTROL
NB_FAN
GND +12V SENSE
1
2
3
4
5
+5V
EMPTY
IRRX
GND
IRTX
IR
1
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17
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17
2-5 Jumpers
For some features needed, users can change the jumper settings on this motherboard to modify them. This section explains how to use the various functions of this motherboard by changing the jumper settings. Users should read the following content carefully prior to modifying any jumper setting.
Description of Jumpers
1. For any jumper on this motherboard, pin 1 can be identied by the bold silkscreen next to it.
However, in this manual, pin 1 is simply labeled as “1”.
2. The following table explains different types of the jumper settings. “Closed” means placing a jumper
cap on the two pins to temporarily short them. The shorting can also be done by touching two
pins by a screwdriver for a few seconds, but using jumper cap is recommended. It can prevent
hazardous ESD (Electrical Static Discharge) problem.
Clear CMOS Jumper: CLR_CMOS
The motherboard uses CMOS RAM to store the basic hardware information (such as BIOS data, date, time information, hardware password...etc.). Clear CMOS data is the fast way to go back to
factory default when the BIOS settings were mistakenly modied.
The steps to clear CMOS data are :
1. Turn off the computer, unplug the power cord from the power outlet.
2. Remove jumper cap from pins 2-3, put it onto pins 1-2 to short them. This will clear CMOS data.
3. Return the setting to its original with pins 2-3 closed.
4. Plug in the power cord to your computer and turn it on.
5. Go to BIOS Setup to congure new system as described in next chapter.
Jumper Diagram Denition Description
1-2 Set Pin 1 and Pin 2 closed
2-3 Set Pin 2 and Pin 3 closed
1
1
1
Clear
1
2
3
Normal (Default)
1
2
3
CLR_CMOS
■ Disconnect the power cable before adjusting the jumper settings.
■ Do not clear the CMOS while the system is turned on.
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USB device wake-up Jumpers: USB_PWR1/2/3
1. Set the jumper to pins 1-2 (+5V) to wake up the computer from S1 sleep mode using the
connected USB devices.
2. Set the jumper to pins 2-3 (+5VSB) to wake up the computer from S3 and S4 sleep modes
using the connected USB devices.
USB_PWR1/2/3
+5V
(Default)
1
2
3
+5VSB
1
2
3
USBPWR1/ USBPWR3 is for the internal USB connectors, USBPWR2 is for the rear
USB ports.
The USB device wake-up feature requires a power supply that can provide 500mA
on +5VSB lead for each USB port; otherwise, the system will not power up.
The total current consumed must not exceed the power supply capability (+5VSB)
whether under normal condition or in sleep mode.
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Page 26
This chapter tells how to change system settings through
the BIOS Setup menus. Detailed descriptions of the BIOS
parameters are also provided.
You have to run the Setup Program when the following cases
occur :
1. An error message appears on the screen during the system
Power On Self Test (POST) process.
2. You want to change the default CMOS settings.
This chapter includes the following information :
■ Enter BIOS Setup
■ Main Menu
■ System Information
■ Fox Central Control Unit
■ Advanced BIOS Features
■ Advanced Chipset Features
■ Integrated Peripherals
■ Power Management Setup
■ PC Health Status
■ Load Optimized Defaults
■ Set Supervisor Password
■ Set User Password
Save & Exit Setup
Exit Without Saving
Since BIOS could be updated some other times, the BIOS information described
in this manual is for reference only. We do not guarantee the content of this
manual will remain consistent with the newly released BIOS at any given time in
the future. Please visit our website for updated manual if it is available.
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Enter BIOS Setup
The BIOS is the communication bridge between hardware and software, correctly setting up the BIOS parameters is critical to maintain optimal system performance. Power on the computer, when the message "Press [DEL] to enter Setup, [ESC] to boot menu" appears at the bottom of the screen, you can press [Del] key to enter Setup.
Main Menu
The main menu allows you to select from a list of setup functions together with two exit choices.
Use the arrow keys to select a specic item and press [Enter] to go to the sub-menu.
Each item in the main menu is explained below:
► System Information
It displays the basic system conguration, such as BIOS ID, system date, time and oppy
drive. They all can be set up through this menu.
► Fox Central Control Unit
Some special proprietary features (such as overclocking) can be set up through this menu.
► Advanced BIOS Features
The advanced system features can be set up through this menu.
► Advanced Chipset Features
The values for the chipset can be changed through this menu, and the system performance
can be optimized.
► Integrated Peripherals
All onboard peripherals can be set up through this menu. There are IDE devices, Super I/O
devices such as Serial I/O, Parallel port and other USB ports...etc.
We do not suggest that you change the default values in the BIOS Setup, and we shall not be responsible for any damage which resulted from the change you made.
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Phoenix - AwardBIOS CMOS Setup Utility
System Information ► PC Health Status
► Fox Central Control Unit Load Optimized Defaults
► Advanced BIOS Features Set Supervisor Password
► Advanced Chipset Features
Set User Password
► Integrated Peripherals Save & Exit Setup
► Power Management Setup Exit Without Saving
Esc : Quit ↑↓←→ : Select Item
F10 : Save & Exit Setup
Time, Date, Hard Disk Type...
► System Information
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► Power Management Setup
All the items related with Green function features can be set up through this menu.
► PC Health Status
This setup enables you to read/change Fan speeds, and displays temperatures and voltages
of your CPU/System.
► Load Optimized Defaults
The optimal performance settings can be loaded through this menu. However, it may offer
better performance in some ways (such as less I/O cards, less memory ...etc.), still, it may
cause problem if you have more memory or I/O cards installed. It means, if your system
loading is heavy, set to optimal default may sometimes come out an unstable system. What
you need now is to adjust BIOS setting one by one, trial and error, to nd out the best setting
for your current system.
► Set Supervisor Password
The supervisor password can be set up through this menu.
► Set User Password
The user password can be set up through this menu.
► Save & Exit Setup
Save setting values to CMOS and exit.
► Exit Without Saving
Do not change anything and exit the setup.
When we talk about [+] and [-] keys in this manual, they are the single-keypad keys of the numeric keypad which is located at the right hand side of your desktop keyboard. They are not the combination keys made by pressing and holding down [Shift] key
rst, then press [+ =] or [ _-] key the next.
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System Information
This submenu is used to set up the standard BIOS features, such as the date, time, oppy drive
and so on. Use the arrow up/down keys to select an item, then use the [+] or [-] keys to change the setting.
Date - <weekday><month><date><year> format
Day—weekday from Sun. to Sat., automatically displayed by BIOS (Read Only).
Month—month from 1 to 12.
Date—date from 1st to 31st.
Year—year, set up by users.
Use [Enter], [Tab] keys to select a eld. Use [+], [-], [PageUp] or [PageDown] to select a value.
► Time - <hour> : <minute> : <second> format
This item allows you to congure the desired time. Use [Enter], [Tab] to move forward and
select a eld. Directly input a value or use [PageUp], [PageDown], [+] or [-] to select a value.
► IDE Channel Master / Slave
These categories identify the hard disks connected to the PATA port in the system.
In each channel’s display, you can press [Enter] to go to its submenu. You can further
congure specic drive settings. [None] and [Auto] settings allow you to enable or disable this
drive. [None] means no HDD is installed or set, and [Auto] means the system can auto-detect
the hard disk when booting up. In Access Mode setting, selections of [CHS], [LBA], [Large] and
[Auto] can help you to select hard drive for legacy compatibility.
Award (Phoenix) BIOS can support 3 HDD modes: CHS, LBA and Large.
Note: Set to [Auto] , the system can detect the hard disk and select the HDD mode
automatically. Suggest you select this option.
CHS For HDD <528MB
LBA For HDD >528MB & Supporting LBA (Logical Block Addressing)
Large For HDD >528MB but not supporting LBA
Phoenix - AwardBIOS CMOS Setup Utility
System Information
Date (mm:dd:yy)
Fri, Feb 29 2008 Item Help
Time (hh:mm:ss) 17 : 44 : 13 Menu Level ►
► IDE Channel Master
[HDS728080PLAT20]
IDE Channel Slave
[DVD-ROM DDU1642] Change the day, month,
SATA Channel 1 Master
[ None ] year and century
SATA Channel 2 Master [ None ]
SATA Channel 3 Master
[ None ]
SATA Channel 4 Master
[ None ]
Drive A
[1.44M, 3.5 in.]
Halt On [All , But Keyboard]
Model Name M78A-S BIOS Version D18
Memory 1024M MAC Address 04 4B 80 80 80 10 AMD Athlon(tm) 64 X2 Dual Core Processor 5000+
↑↓→←:Move Enter:Select +/-/PU/PD:Value F10:Save ESC:Exit F1:General Help F5: Previous Values F7: Optimized Defaults
Feb
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► SATA Channel 1/2/3/4 Master
When SATA Operation Mode is set to [IDE], These items will appear. The relationships
between SATA channels and SATA ports on the motherboard are :
SATA Channel 1 Master is the SATA port 1 of the motherboard.
SATA Channel 2 Master is the SATA port 2.
SATA Channel 3 Master is the SATA port 3.
SATA Channel 4 Master is the SATA port 4.
► Drive A
This option allows you to select which kind of the Floppy Disk Drive is installed in your system.
It can be [None], [360KB, 5.25 in], [1.2MB, 5.25 in], [720KB, 3.5 in], [1.44MB, 3.5 in] and
[2.88 MB, 3.5in].
► Halt On
This category determines whether or not the computer will stop if an error is detected during
powering up.
► Model Name
This item shows the model name.
► BIOS Version
This item shows the BIOS version.
► Memory
These are Display-Only information of the system memory, determined by POST(Power On
Self Test) of the BIOS.
► MAC Address
This item shows the MAC address.
► CPU Name
This item shows the CPU name installed in your system.
All Errors Whenever the BIOS detects a nonfatal error, the system will stop
and you will be prompted.
No Errors The system boot will not stop for any errors that may be
detected.
All, But Keyboard The system boot will not stop for a keyboard error; but it will stop
for all other errors.
All, But Diskette The system boot will not stop for a diskette error; but it will stop
for all other errors.
All, But Disk/Key The system boot will not stop for a keyboard or disk error, but it
will stop for all other errors.
SATA port 5 and e-SATA port are working under RAID mode, AHCI mode or Linux
AHCI mode. In IDE mode, these two ports do not function.
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Fox Central Control Unit
► Smart BIOS / Fox Intelligent Overclock / Memory Timing Setting / Voltage Options
Press [Enter] to get into each submenu.
► AMD K8 Cool&Quiet Control (Appears only when CPU support)
This option helps lowering down the CPU frequency and voltage when system is idling. When
the CPU speed is slowing down, the temperature will drop as well. This option will be displayed
only if your CPU is supporting this feature.
► AMD Family 10h Down Core (Appears only when CPU support)
At this moment, AMD family 10 series is equivalent to AM2+, and most CPU in this series are
Quad Cores. This option enables shutting down portions of the circuits in core when not in load,
it is a new feature of AM2+ CPU. This option will be displayed only if your CPU is supporting
this feature.
[Auto] : Enable entire cores,
[Single Core] : Enable 1 core,
[Dual Core] : Enable 2 cores,
[Tri Core] : Enable 3 cores,
[Quad Core] : Enable 4 cores.
► CPU Spread Spectrum
This option is used to enable or disable clock generator spread spectrum. If you enabled this
function, it can signicantly reduce the EMI (Electromagnetic Interference) generated by the
system, so to comply with FCC regulation. But if overclocking is activated, you had better dis-
able it.
► PCI Spread Spectrum
This option is used to enable or disable the PCI spread spectrum function. If you enabled this
function, it can signicantly reduce the EMI (Electromagnetic Interference) generated by the
system, so to comply with FCC regulation.
► K8<->NB HT Speed
HT stands for HyperTransport bus. The CPU<->NB HT Speed option controls the physical
speed of the CPU to Northbridge HT link. The settings are [Auto], [200 MHz], [400 MHz], [800
MHz] and [1 GHz].
Phoenix - AwardBIOS CMOS Setup Utility
Fox Central Control Unit
► Smart BIOS [Press Enter] Item Help
► Fox Intelligent Overclock [Press Enter] ► Memory Timing Setting [Press Enter] Menu Level ► ► Voltage Options [Press Enter] AMD K8 Cool&Quiet Control [Auto] CPU Spread Spectrum [Disabled]
PCI Spread Spectrum [Disabled]
K8<->NB HT Speed [Auto] K8<->NB HT Width [Auto]
Auto Detect PCI CIK [Disabled]
Super BIOS Protect [Disabled]
↑↓→←:Move Enter:Select +/-/PU/PD:Value F10:Save ESC:Exit F1:General Help F5: Previous Values F7: Optimized Defaults
Press Enter
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► K8<->NB HT Width
The CPU<->NB HT Width controls the CPU to Northbridge link bandwidth, it is highly
recommended to set to [Auto] for overall performance.
► Auto Detect PCI Clk
This option is used to auto detect PCI slots. When enabled, the system will turn off clock of the
empty PCI slot to reduce EMI (Electromagnetic Interference).
► Super BIOS Protect
To protect the system BIOS from virus attack, there is a BIOS write-protection mechanism
provided. Super BIOS Protect function protects your BIOS from being affected by viruses, e.g.
CIH.
Smart BIOS
► Smart Boot Menu
When PC starts, if [Enabled] is selected, a Boot Menu will be automatically displayed to inform
you to select a boot device. If no device is selected, the rst device will be used. If [Disabled] is
selected, then PC will ask you to press [Esc] key to get into Boot Menu. This setting simplies
multiple boot devices user from pressing [Esc] key to enter boot menu.
► Smart Power LED
Smart Power LED is a feature built on your motherboard to indicate different states during
Power On System Test (POST). The LED is located at the front panel, and it displays POST
state by different long-short blinking intervals. You can always leave this state enabled.
Phoenix - AwardBIOS CMOS Setup Utility
Smart BIOS
Smart Boot Menu
[Disabled] Item Help
Smart Power LED
[Enabled]
Menu Level ►
Smart Boot Menu with a timer to let user to control boot device easily.
↑↓→←:Move Enter:Select +/-/PU/PD:Value F10:Save ESC:Exit F1:General Help F5: Previous Values F7: Optimized Defaults
Disabled
System Status Power LED Status Stop Blinking Condition
Normal Always On Always On
No Memory Continue blinking On (1sec.), Off (1sec.) Reboot & Memory OK
No Display Continue blinking On (2sec.), Off (2sec.) Reboot & Display OK
Post Error Message
Quick blinking twice (1/3sec. On, 1/3sec. Off), one long On (1sec.), continuously.
Enter Setup or Skip
No CPU Fan Continue blinking On (1/2sec.), Off (1/2sec.) Reboot & Fan OK
Page 33
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Fox Intelligent Overclock
► CPU Clock / PCIE Clock
These items allow you to select different CPU clock and PCIE clock.
► NPT FID Control (Appears only when CPU support)
This is CPU multiplier. It allows you to congure CPU's speed much easier. This option will be
displayed only if your CPU is supporting this feature.
Memory Timing Setting
► Timing Mode
This item allows you to set the memory timing mode. The available options are:
[Auto]: System will detect the timing automatically;
[MaxMemCLK]: The memory timing is limited by the memory clock value set in the next item.
► Memory Clock Value Limit
Phoenix - AwardBIOS CMOS Setup Utility
Memory Timing Setting
Timing Mode [A uto]
Item Help
x Memory Clock Value Limit DDR 400
SPD Checksum Restart
[Ignore] Menu Level ►
CKE Base Power Down Mode [Enabled] CKE Base Power Down [Per Channel] Auto, no user limit Memclock Tri-stating [Disabled] MaxMemCLK, limit by Memory Hole Remapping [Enabled] memory clock value
Auto Optimize Bottom IO [Enabled]
x Bottom of [31:24] IO Space D0
Bottom of UMA DRAM [31:24] [FC]
Memory Timing Setting
[Disabled]
x TwTr Command Delay 3 Bus Clocks
x Trfc0 for DIMM0 195ns x Trfc1 for DIMM1 195ns x Trfc2 for DIMM2 195ns x Trfc3 for DIMM3 195ns
x [Twr] Write Recovery Time 6 Bus Clocks x [Trtp] Precharge Time 3 Clocks x [Trc] Row Cycle Time 26 Bus Clocks
↑↓→←:Move Enter:Select +/-/PU/PD:Value F10:Save ESC:Exit F1:General Help F5: Previous Values F7: Optimized Defaults
Auto
Phoenix - AwardBIOS CMOS Setup Utility
Fox Intelligent Overclock
CPU Clock [200] Item Help PCIE Clock [100] NPT FID Control [Auto]
Menu Level ►
↑↓→←:Move Enter:Select +/-/PU/PD:Value F10:Save ESC:Exit F1:General Help F5: Previous Values F7: Optimized Defaults
200
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This item allows you to set the system memory's clock value.
► SPD Checksum Restart
The Serial Presence Detect (SPD) device is a small EEPROM chip, mounted on a DDR
memory module. This item allows you to check if the memory fails when booting. Select
[Ignore], the system will not check memory module. Select [Exit], system will check, report
error if there is any, then stop booting.
► DCTs Mode (Appears only when CPU support)
DCT stands for DRAM Controller.
Ganged refers to the use of both DRAM controllers within a memory controller acting in con-
cert to access memory. For a description of ganged (128-bit DRAM data width) and unganged
(64-bit DRAM data width) DRAM modes :
Ganged channels (DDR2) :
DCT channels A and B can be ganged as a single logical 128-bit DIMM.
Offers highest DDR2 bandwidth.
Requires both DIMMs in a logical pair to have identical size and timing parameters, both
DCTs programmed identically.
Unganged channels
■ DCT channels A and B operate as two completely independent 64-bit channels (both chan-
nels operate at the same frequency).
■ Reduce DRAM page conicts – more concurrent open dram pages .
■ Better bus efciency.
Burst lengths supported
When both DCTs are enabled in unganged mode, BIOS must initialize the frequency of each
DCT in order.
► CKE Base Power Down Mode
This item allows you to enable or disable the CKE base power down mode.
► CKE Base Power Down
CKE power down mode selection.
► Memclock Tri-stating
Enables the DDR memory clocks to be tristated when alternate VID mode is enabled.
► Memory Hole Remapping
This item is used to enable/disable memory remapping around memory hole. PCI doesn't actu-
ally care much which addresses are used, but by convention the PC platform puts them at the
top of the 32-bit address space. For many years it wasn't possible or practical to put that much
RAM into a PC. But now it is, so it's up to the memory controller and host bridge to gure out
what to do. Many systems cause that high RAM to simply be ignored, resulting in the loss of
effective RAM. More complex systems will take the RAM that would occupy that 3.5-4GB
address space and re-map it into the 4.0-4.5 address space. The RAM doesn't care because
it's just an array of storage cells, it's up to the memory controller to associate addresses
with those storage cells. Of course, that only works if you're using a 64-bit (or 32-bit physical
address extension (PAE) enabled) OS that can deal with physical addresses larger than 32
bits.Once this option is enabled, the BIOS can see 4096MB of memory.
► Auto Optimize Bottom IO
Auto optimize maximum DRAM size when kernel assigns PCI resources done.
► Bottom of [31:24] IO Space
Select bottom of [31:24] IO space manually when "Auto Optimize Bottom IO" option is
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disabled.
► Bottom of UMA DRAM [31:24]
This is a memory allocation method addition to the Unied Memory Architecture (UMA)
concept. Normally, select the default value.
► Memory Timing Setting
Select [Enabled], you can congure the DRAM timing manually.
Select [Disabled], then system will use the DRAM timing provided by the memory vendor.
The provision of DRAM timing is done by a SPD device. The Serial Presence Detect (SPD)
device is a small EEPROM chip, mounted on a DDR2 memory module. It contains important
information about the module's speed, size, addressing mode and various other parameters,
so that the motherboard memory controller (chipset) can better access the memory device.
The following 8 settings are valid only when the DRAM Timing Setting is set to [Enabled].
► TwTr Command Delay
This item allows you to select a delay time (in clock cycles) between sending the last
data from a write operation to the memory and issuing a read command.
► Trfc0/1/2/3 for DIMM0/1/2/3
Refresh to Refresh or Refresh to Active command interval.
Trfc3: auto-refresh row cycle time for logical DIMM 3
Trfc2: auto-refresh row cycle time for logical DIMM 2
Trfc1: auto-refresh row cycle time for logical DIMM 1
Trfc0: auto-refresh row cycle time for logical DIMM 0
► [Twr] Write Recovery Time
This item allows you to select the write recovery time (in clock cycles).
► [Trtp] Precharge Time
Internal READ Command to PRECHARGE Command delay.
► [Trc] Row Cycle Time
This item allows you to set the row cycle time (in clock cycles).
► [Trcd] RAS to CAS R/W Delay
This item allows you to select a delay time (in clock cycles) between the CAS# and RAS#
strobe signals.
► [Trrd] Ras to RAS Delay
This item allows you to select a delay time (in clock cycles) between the RAS# and RAS#
strobe signals.
► [Trp] Row Precharge Time
This item allows you to select the row precharge time (in clock cycles).
► [Tras] Minimum RAS Active Time
This item allows you to set the minimum RAS# active time (in clock cycles).
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Voltage Options
► CPU Voltage
This option is used to change the CPU voltage.
► Memory Voltage
This option is used to change the memory voltage.
Phoenix - AwardBIOS CMOS Setup Utility
Voltage Options
CPU Voltage
[Default] Item Help
Memory Voltage
[Default]
Menu Level ►
.
↑↓→←:Move Enter:Select +/-/PU/PD:Value F10:Save ESC:Exit F1:General Help F5: Previous Values F7: Optimized Defaults
Default
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Advanced BIOS Features
► Removable Device Priority
This option is used to select the priority for removable device.
► Hard Disk Boot Priority
This option is used to select the priority for HDD startup. After pressing [Enter], you can
select the HDD using the Up/Down arrow keys, and change the HDD priority using [PageUp]/
[PageDown]; you can exit this menu by pressing [Esc].
► CD-ROM Boot Priority
This option is used to select the priority for CD-ROM startup.
► First / Second / Third Boot Device
These three options allow you to select the priority of boot sequence from different devices.
► Boot Other Device
With this function set to enable, the system will boot from some other devices provided that the
rst/second/third boot devices failed.
► Boot Up Floppy Seek
This item controls whether the BIOS will check for a oppy drive while booting up. If it cannot
detect one (either due to improper conguration or physical unavailability), it will appear an
error message. Disabling this function, then POST will not detect the oppy.
► Boot Up NumLock Status
This item denes if the keyboard Num Lock key is active when your system is started. The
available settings are: On (default) and Off.
► Security Option
When it is set to “Setup”, a password is required to enter the CMOS Setup screen. When it
is set to “System”, a password is required not only to enter CMOS Setup, but also to start up
your PC.
► Delay For HDD (Secs)
This item allows you to select the delay for detecting ATA/ATAPI devices while booting. Time
out value:0~15s.
► Full Screen Logo Show
This item allows you to enable or disable full screen customer's logo.
Phoenix - AwardBIOS CMOS Setup Utility
Advanced BIOS Features
► Removable Device Priority
[Press Enter] Item Help
► Hard Disk Boot Priority
[Press Enter]
► CD-ROM Boot Priority
[Press Enter] Menu Level ►
First Boot Device [Hard Disk]
Select removable boot
Second Boot Device
[CDROM] device priority
Third Boot Device
[Removable]
Boot Other Device
[Enabled]
Boot Up Floppy Seek
[Disabled]
Boot Up NumLock Status
[on]
Security Option
[Setup]
Delay For HDD (Secs)
[0]
Full Screen Logo Show
[Enabled]
↑↓→←:Move Enter:Select +/-/PU/PD:Value F10:Save ESC:Exit F1:General Help F5: Previous Values F7: Optimized Defaults
Press Enter
Page 38
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Advanced Chipset Features
► Hybrid SLI
Hybrid SLI Support is based on NVIDIA’s industry-leading SLI technology, delivers multi-GPU
benets when an NVIDIA® motherboard GPU is combined with an NVIDIA discrete GPU.
Hybrid SLI increases graphics performance with GeForce® Boost and provides intelligent
power management with Hybrid Power™.
You can ignore this setting if this option is not supported due to memory size is small or CPU is
not AM2+ or display card does not support Hybrid SLI technology.
► Display Detection
When Hybrid SLI feature is turned on, it means you already have two graphics GPUs installed.
You must decide which one is the primary adapter, and this option will automatically select the
one with display monitor attached as the primary graphics adapter.
If both two graphics ports are connected to monitors, then you must use one more option "Init
Display First" to select.
If none of the monitor is connected, then the "Init Display First" setting denes which one is the
primary.
► iGPU Frame Buffer Control
This item is used to control the "Frame Buffer Size" setting. Select [Auto], BIOS will automatically
reserve some of the system memory as video memory. Select [Manual], you can set the size
of video memory manually.
► Frame Buffer Size
Allocates system memory for use as video memory to ensure the most efcient use of
available resources for maximum 2D/3D graphics performance.
This is a memory allocation method addition to the Unied Memory Architecture (UMA)
concept, wherein a static amount of page-locked graphics memory is allocated during driver
initialization. This xed amount of memory will provide the user with a guaranteed graphics
memory at all times, and will no longer be available to the OS.
► Onboard GPU
This item is used to set whether to enable the onboard GPU (Graphic Processor Unit) in
Phoenix - AwardBIOS CMOS Setup Utility
Advanced Chipset Features
Hybrid SLI Disabled Item Help Dispaly Detection Enabled iGPU Frame Buffer Control [Auto]
Menu Level ►
x Frame Buffer Size 64M
Onboard GPU
[Enable if NO Ext GPU]
MCP78 PCIE Training
[Gen2 If Supported]
Init Display First
[PCIEx]
FOX VGA BIOS Select [For DVI]
↑↓→←:Move Enter:Select +/-/PU/PD:Value F10:Save ESC:Exit F1:General Help F5: Previous Values F7: Optimized Defaults
Auto
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the North Bridge. [Enable If No Ext GPU] means if there is no external graphics card on the
motherboard, the onboard GPU will be enabled. [Always Enable] means the onboard GPU is
always enabled.
► MCP78 PCIE Training
[Gen2 If Supported] sets the PCI Express slot working by following Generation II specication.
[Only Gen1] sets the PCI Express slot working by following Generation I specication.
► Init Display First
Select PCI-Express graphics card as the default rst display device.
This option is used to select the source of primary display device.
► FOX VGA BIOS Select
This item is used to select the HDMI or DVI vedio BIOS, If the HDMI monitor is connected
to your system, please choose [For HDMI]. If the DVI monitor is connected to your system,
please choose [For DVI].
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Integrated Peripherals
► OnChip IDE Devices / MCP SATA Mode / OnBoard Devices / SuperIO Devices / USB
Devices
Press [Enter] to go to each submenu.
OnChip IDE Devices
► OnChip IDE Channel
This option is used to enable/disable function of IDE drives connected to the PATA interface.
► IDE DMA Transfer Access
[Disabled] : to disable DMA transfers for all IDE drives. They will revert to PIO mode transfers.
[Enabled] : to enable DMA transfers for all IDE drives. The proper DMA mode will be detected
at boot-up. If the drive does not support DMA transfers, then it will use PIO mode instead.
► SATA Controller
This option is used to enable/disable function of SATA drives connected to the SATA ports.
Phoenix - AwardBIOS CMOS Setup Utility
OnChip IDE Devices
OnChip IDE Channel [Enabled] Item Help
IDE DMA Transfer Access [Enabled]
SATA Controller
[Enabled] Menu Level ►
↑↓→←:Move Enter:Select +/-/PU/PD:Value F10:Save ESC:Exit F1:General Help F5: Previous Values F7: Optimized Defaults
Enabled
Phoenix - AwardBIOS CMOS Setup Utility
Integrated Peripherals
► OnChip IDE Devices [Press Enter] Item Help ► MCP SATA Mode [Press Enter] ► OnBoard Devices
[Press Enter] Menu Level ►
► SuperIO Devices
[Press Enter]
► USB Devices
[Press Enter]
↑↓→←:Move Enter:Select +/-/PU/PD:Value F10:Save ESC:Exit F1:General Help F5: Previous Values F7: Optimized Defaults
Press Enter
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MCP SATA Mode
► SATA Operation Mode
This item is used to set the operating mode of your SATA ports. The available options are:
[IDE] - This congures the SATA ports to support legacy PATA mode or SATA mode.
[AHCI] - The Advanced Host Controller Interface (AHCI) specication describes the register
level interface for a Host Controller for Serial ATA. The specication includes a description of
the hardware/software interface between system software and the host controller hardware.
AHCI provides more advanced features including SATA features, but some SATA drives may
not support AHCI, unless they are labeled with AHCI support in its specication.
If your motherboard supporting AHCI, and you have a SATA device, which also supports AHCI,
then you can select IDE option to have fair performance (only PATA, SATA level), or you can
select AHCI to get its best performance.
[RAID] - When you enable RAID, it means all your SATA drives must also support AHCI.
[Linux AHCI] - For advanced Linux system if it supports AHCI, then you can select this option.
► SATA Pri-Master RAID / SATA Pri-Slave RAID / SATA Sec-Master RAID / SATA Sec-Slave
RAID / SATA Thr-Master RAID / SATA Thr-Slave RAID
These items are valid only when "SATA Operation Mode" is set to RAID. They are used to
enable or disable the RAID function of each SATA port on the motherboard.
The relationships between RAID settings and SATA ports on the motherboard are :
SATA Pri-Master RAID is the SATA port 1 of the motherboard.
With your motherboard and SATA hard disk both supporting AHCI, you had better set
this BIOS setting to AHCI, then install your Operating System (such as Windows XP).
Later, if you ever change this BIOS setting to IDE, OS still can run.
But if you at the rst time set this setting to IDE, then install the Operating System.
Later, if you change this BIOS setting to AHCI, this operating system can not run.
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Phoenix - AwardBIOS CMOS Setup Utility
MCP SATA Mode
SATA Operation Mode [IDE] Item Help
x SATA Pri-Master RAID Disabled x SATA Pri-Slave RAID Disabled
Menu Level ►
x SATA Sec-Master RAID Disabled x SATA Sec-Slave RAID Disabled x SATA Thr-Master RAID Disabled x SATA Thr-Slave RAID Disabled
↑↓→←:Move Enter:Select +/-/PU/PD:Value F10:Save ESC:Exit F1:General Help F5: Previous Values F7: Optimized Defaults
IDE
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SATA Pri-Slave RAID is the SATA port 2.
SATA Sec-Master RAID is the SATA port 3.
SATA Sec-Slave RAID is the SATA port 4.
SATA Thr-Master RAID is the SATA port 5.
SATA Thr-Slave RAID is the External SATA port located on the back panel.
OnBoard Devices
► OnBoard Audio Controller
This item is used to select the operation of your audio controller. You can select [Internal
Codec] to enable and select HDMI audio output. Select [External Codec] to enable Realtek
audio output. Select [INT Codec + EXT Codec] to enable both HDMI and Realtek audio
outputs. Select [Disabled] will turn off audio function.
► OnBoard LAN Controller
This item is used to enable or disable the onboard LAN controller.
► OnBoard LAN Boot ROM
This item is used to enable or disable the onboard LAN boot optional ROM. A LAN boot ROM
lets you set up a diskless workstation on the network. By installing a boot ROM in the network
board, you can enable a client PC system on the network to be booted remotely.
Phoenix - AwardBIOS CMOS Setup Utility
OnBoard Devices
OnBoard Audio Controller
[ ] Item Help
OnBoard LAN Controller
[Auto]
OnBoard LAN Boot ROM
[Disabled] Menu Level ►
↑↓→←:Move Enter:Select +/-/PU/PD:Value F10:Save ESC:Exit F1:General Help F5: Previous Values F7: Optimized Defaults
INT Codec + Ext Codec
The Installation procedures for AHCI and RAID drivers are the same, they are :
■ Creating a bootable drive (or RAID array).
■ Creating a non-bootable drive (or RAID array).
In Chapter 5, only RAID is introduced. AHCI installation is almost the same, the only
difference is BIOS SATA Operation Mode is set to [AHCI] instead of [RAID].
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SuperIO Devices
► OnBoard FDC Controller
This item is used to enable or disable the onboard FDC controller.
► OnBoard Serial Port 1
This item is used to assign the I/O address and interrupt request (IRQ) for the onboard serial
port COM1.
► OnBoard Serial Port 2
This item is used to assign the I/O address and interrupt request (IRQ) for the onboard serial
port COM2.
► Serial Port 2 Mode Select
This item is used to congure COM2 PORT as :
[Normal] : A RS232 device.
[IrDA] : An IrDA device for maximum 115200 bit/s.
[ASKIR] : A faster IrDA for 1152000 bit/s.
► IrDA Duplex Mode
This item enables you to determine the transfer mode of the onboard infrared chip.
Phoenix - AwardBIOS CMOS Setup Utility
SuperIO Devices
OnBoard FDC Controller
[Enabled] Item Help
OnBoard Serial Port 1
[3F8/IRQ4]
OnBoard Serial Port 2
[2F8/IRQ3] Menu Level ►
Serial Port 2 Mode Select [Normal]
x IrDA Duplex Mode Half
↑↓→←:Move Enter:Select +/-/PU/PD:Value F10:Save ESC:Exit F1:General Help F5: Previous Values F7: Optimized Defaults
Enabled
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USB Devices
► USB 1.1 Controller
This item is used to enable or disable the Universal Host Controller Interface for USB.
► USB 2.0 Controller
This item is used to enable or disable the Enhanced Host Controller Interface for USB.
► USB Operation Mode
This item is used to set the USB operation mode. If you select the [High Speed], then the USB
operation mode is determined by the USB device; select [Full/Low Speed], the USB device
operates on full/low speed.
► USB Keyboard Support
This item is used to enable the support for USB keyboard on legacy OS. If you have a USB
keyboard, set to enabled.
► USB Mouse Support
This item is used to enable the support for USB mouse on legacy OS. If you have a USB
mouse, set to enabled.
► USB Storage Support
This option is used to set whether the USB Mass Storage controller is enabled in a legacy
operating system (such as DOS).
► ***USB Mass Storage Device Boot Setting***
BIOS auto detects the presence of USB Mass Storage Devices, you can congure the boot
setting mode for the detected USB device. Setting Options: [Auto]; [FDD Mode]; [HDD Mode].
Phoenix - AwardBIOS CMOS Setup Utility
USB Devices
USB 1.1 Controller
[ ] Item Help USB 2.0 Controller [Enabled]
USB Operation Mode
[High Speed] Menu Level ►
USB Keyboard Support
[Enabled]
USB Mouse Support [Enabled] [Enable] or [Disable] USB Storage Support [Enabled] universal host
controller interface *** USB Mass Storage Device Boot Setting *** for universal serial bus
↑↓→←:Move Enter:Select +/-/PU/PD:Value F10:Save ESC:Exit F1:General Help F5: Previous Values F7: Optimized Defaults
Enabled
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Power Management Setup
ACPI (Advanced Conguration and Power Interface) is an open industry standard that denes
power and conguration management interfaces between an operating system and the BIOS.
In other words, it is a standard that describes how computer components work together
to manage system hardware. In order to use this function the ACPI specication must be
supported by the OS (for example, Windows2000 or WindowsXP).
ACPI denes ve sleeping states, they are :
S1 - The S1 sleeping state is a low wake latency sleeping state. In this state, no system
context is lost (CPU or chip set) and hardware maintains all system context. (also called
Power On Suspend)
S2 - The S2 sleeping state is a low wake latency sleeping state. This state is similar to
the S1 sleeping state except that the CPU and system cache context is lost (the OS
is responsible for maintaining the caches and CPU context). Control starts from the
processor’s reset vector after the wake event.
S3 - The S3 sleeping state is a low wake latency sleeping state where all system context is lost
except system memory. CPU, cache, and chip set context are lost in this state. Hardware
maintains memory context and restores some CPU and L2 conguration context. Control
starts from the processor’s reset vector after the wake event. (also called Suspend to
RAM)
S4 - The S4 sleeping state is the lowest power, longest wake latency sleeping state supported
by ACPI. In order to reduce power to a minimum, it is assumed that the hardware platform
has powered off all devices. Platform context is maintained. (also called Suspend to
Disk)
S5 - The S5 state is similar to the S4 state except that the OS does not save any context. The
system is in the “soft” off state and requires a complete boot when it wakes. Software
uses a different state value to distinguish between the S5 state and the S4 state to allow
for initial boot operations within the BIOS to distinguish whether or not the boot is going to
wake from a saved memory image.
Phoenix - AwardBIOS CMOS Setup Utility
Power Management Setup
ACPI Function
[Enabled] Item Help
ACPI Suspend Type
[S3(STR)]
Power Button [Instant-Off]
Menu Level ►
PWRON After PWR-Fail [Off]
HPET Support [Enabled]
** Power Management Events **
Wake Up by PCI/PCIE PME
[Disabled] USB Resume from S3 [Disabled]
Resume by Alarm
[Disabled]
x Date of Month Alarm 0 x Time (hh:mm:ss) Alarm 0
: 0 : 0
x Power On by Button Enabled
PS/2 Mouse Resume from S3 [Disabled] PS/2 KB Resume from S3 [Disabled]
x KB Resume Password Enter x Hot Key Resume Ctrl-F1
↑↓→←:Move Enter:Select +/-/PU/PD:Value F10:Save ESC:Exit F1:General Help F5: Previous Values F7: Optimized Defaults
Enabled
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► ACPI Function
This item is used to enable or disable the ACPI function.
► ACPI Suspend Type
This item is used to set the energy saving mode of the ACPI function. When you select “S1
(POS)” mode, the power is always on and computer can be resumed at any time. When
you select “S3 (STR)” mode, the power will be down after a period of time. The status of the
computer before it entering STR will be saved in memory, and the computer can quickly return
to previous state when the STR function wakes.
► Power Button
This item is used to set the power down method. This function is only valid for systems using
an ATX power supply. When set to [Delay 4 Sec.], the power button will put the system in
Suspend mode if you push the power button in less than 4 Second then release. If set to
[Instant-Off], the PC powers off immediately when the power button is pressed.
► PWRON After PWR-Fail
This item is used to set which state the PC will take with when it resumes after an AC power
loss.
► HPET Support
HPET stands for High Precision Even Timer. If you have the HPET disabled, then windows
does not have access to it and therefore falls back to less accurate timing methods. This item
is used to enable or disable the HPET Support.
** Power Management Events ** ► Wake Up by PCI/PCIE PME
This item is used to set the system to be waken up by PCI/PCIE card.
► USB Resume from S3
This item is used to set the system to be waken up by USB device when it is staying at
S3 (Suspend to RAM) state.
► Resume by Alarm
This item is used to set the timing of the start-up function. In order to use this function, the
start-up password function must be disabled. Also, the PC power source must not be turned
off.
► Date of Month Alarm
When "Resume by Alarm" is set to “Enabled”, this item can be modied. It is used to set the
timing for the start-up date.
► Time (hh:mm:ss) Alarm
When "Resume by Alarm" is set to “Enabled”, this item can be modied. It is used to set the
timing for the start-up time.
► Power On by Button
This feature is valid only when "PS/2 KB Resume from S3" is set to Password, Hot key or
Keyboard 98. Enabling this feature allows normal powering on by pressing power button, while
disabling it then pressing power button has no function.
► PS/2 Mouse Resume from S3
When enabled, it allows you to use the PS/2 mouse to wake up the system from S3 mode.
This feature requires an ATX power supply.
PS/2 KB Resume from S3
This item allows you to use the PS/2 keyboard to wake up the system from S3 mode. This
feature requires an ATX power supply. The setting values: [Disabled]; [Password]; [Hot KEY];
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[Any KEY], and [Keyboard 98].
► KB Resume Password
When "PS/2 KB Resume from S3" is set to [Password], this item allows you to input a
password to wake up the system from S3 mode.
► Hot Key Resume
Wen "PS/2 KB Resume from S3" is set to [Hot KEY], this item allows you to press a [Ctrl] +
Function key to wake up the system from S3 mode.
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PC Health Status
► Case Open Warning
This item is used to enable or disable case open warning function.
► Shutdown Temperature
This item is used to set the system temperature upper limit. When the temperature exceeds
the set value, the system will shut down automatically.
► CPU Vcore/VTT(V)/+ 3.3V/+5V/+12V/5VSB(V)/Voltage of Battery
The current voltages are automatically detected and displayed by the system.
CPU/System Temperature
The CPU/System temperature are automatically detected and displayed by the system.
► CPU Fan/System Fan Speed
The CPU fan/System fan speed are automatically detected and displayed by the system.
Smart Fan Control
This option is used to enable or disable smart fan function. Only when this option is enabled,
you can set some correlative parameters.
► Start PWM Temperature
It allows you set a temperature value from which smart fan starts its operation.
Start PWM Value
It allows you to set an initial PWM value to drive the fan when the temperature reaches Start
PWM value and smart fan begins its operation. The higher PWM value can achieve the faster
fan speed.
Slope PWM Value
When temperature changes one degree celsius, the PWM will be increased or decreased
by a step value accordingly.
Phoenix - AwardBIOS CMOS Setup Utility
PC Health Status
Case Open Warning
[Disabled] Item Help
Shutdown Temperature
[Disabled]
CPU Vcore 1.28 V Menu Level ► VTT(V) 1.89 V +3.3V 3.31 V + 5V 5.25 V + 12V 11.50 V 5VSB(V) 5.12V
Voltage of Battery 3.38V
CPU Temperature 38oC System Temperature 38oC CPU Fan Speed 4272 RPM System Fan Speed 0 RPM
Smart Fan Control [Disabled]
x Start
PWM Temperature 35
x Start PWM Value 64 x Slope PWM Value 2
↑↓→←:Move Enter:Select +/-/PU/PD:Value F10:Save ESC:Exit F1:General Help F5: Previous Values F7: Optimized Defaults
Disabled
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Load Optimized Defaults
Select this option and press [Enter]. A dialogue pops out, input [Y] then press [Enter] to load the defaults; press [N] to skip. By this default, BIOS have set the optimized performance parameters of system to improve the performances of system components. But if the optimized performance parameters to be set cannot be supported by your hardware devices, the system may fail to work. It may happen on when you installed too many add-on cards on your system, or overloaded the hardware until it can not afford.
Set Supervisor Password
The access rights and permissions associated with the Supervisor password are higher than those of a regular User password. The Supervisor password can be used to start the system or modify the CMOS settings, while User password can only be used to start the system, view the CMOS settings, but modify CMOS settings is not allowable.
When you select the Set Supervisor/User Password option, the Enter Password message will appear :
The supervisor password can be set up through this menu. Key in a password, not exceeding 8 characters, save the change and exit. The next time, when you enter the BIOS,
it will ask you to input this password to conrm your access right. After you get the right to
access the BIOS, you then can select this setting again, and press [Enter] to disable this function or input a new password to replace the original one.
If you select “System” for the Security Option in “Advanced BIOS Features” menu, then you will be asked to enter a password when the system is started or when you try to enter the CMOS setting program. If an incorrect password is entered, it will hold there. If you select “Setup” for the Security Option in “Advanced BIOS Features” menu, you will be asked to enter a password only when you enter the CMOS setting program.
Set User Password
The user password can be set up through this menu. Only when there exists a Supervisor
password, then this setting can be activated.
Save & Exit Setup
When you select this option and press [Enter], Press [Y] to save your changes to CMOS and exit the program; Press [N] or [ESC] to return to the main menu.
Exit Without Saving
If you select this option and press [Enter],
Press [Y] to exit CMOS without saving your modications;
Press [N] or [ESC] to return to the main menu.
Load Optimized Defaults (Y/N)? N
SAVE to CMOS and EXIT (Y/N)? Y
Quit Without Saving (Y/N)? N
Enter Password:
PASSWORD DISABLED !!! Press any key to continue...
Page 50
The utility CD that came with the motherboard contains useful software
and several utility drivers that enhance the motherboard features.
This chapter includes the following information:
■ Utility CD content
■ Install driver and utility
■ FOX ONE
■ FOX LiveUpdate
■ FOX LOGO
■ FOX DMI
Note : Because each module is independent, so the section number
will be reorganized and unique to each module, please understand.
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Utility CD content
This motherboard comes with one DVD. You can simply put it into your DVD-ROM drive, and the main menu will be displayed on your PC screen to guide you how to install.
1. Install Driver
Use these options to install all the drivers for your system. You should install the drivers in order,
and you need to restart your computer after all the drivers have been installed.
A. NVIDIA MCP78 Chipset Driver
B. Realtek HDA Audio Driver
C. Realtek 811X LAN Driver
D. NVIDIA Azalia/HDMI Audio Driver
2. Software Utilities
Use these options to install additional software programs. FOX ONE is a very powerful user
interface program which allows you to change your system setting without going to BIOS. Some
auto features help user to improve (or overclock) your system without being a computer literate.
A. FOX ONE
B. FOX LiveUpdate
C. FOX LOGO
D. FOX DMI
E. Microsoft DirectX 9.0
F. Adobe Acrobat Reader
G. Norton Internet Security
H. Create RAID Driver Floppy
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Install driver and utility
1. Install MCP78 Chipset Driver / Realtek HDA Audio Driver / Realtek 811X LAN Driver
You must click "NVIDIA MCP78 Chipset Driver" to install it rst. It may take a while to install it
because the driver size is big. When installation is completed, do not restart your PC. You can then click "One Click Setup" to install the other drivers left, or you can click on each driver to in-
stall them individually. After that, when prompted to reboot your PC, click "Yes" to nish the driver
installations.
2. Install NVIDIA Azalia/HDMI Audio Device
After PC restarts, in Windows, browse the driver CD again to run the Setup. A new "NVIDIA
Azalia/HDMI Audio Driver" will appear. Click on it to install. HDMI port locates beneath display
port on the real panel, and can be enabled/disabled through BIOS setting - "OnBoard Audio
Controller".
Manual Installation Step by Step
Select to
Install Utilities
Select to
Install Drivers
Click to visit
Foxconn's
website
Browse CD
Exit the program
Drop to System Tray
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3. Install Utility
You can select the specic utility to install.
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FOX ONE
FOX ONE is a powerful utility for easily modifying system settings. It also allows users to monitor
various temperature values, voltage values, frequencies and fan speeds at any time.
With FOX ONE, you can :
■ Modify system performance settings, such as the CPU and memory bus speeds, CPU
voltages, fan speeds, and other system performance options.
■ Monitor hardware temperatures, voltages, frequencies and fan speeds.
Supporting Operating Systems :
■ Windows 2000 ■ Windows XP (32-bit and 64-bit)
■ Windows 2003 (32-bit and 64-bit) ■ Windows Vista (32-bit and 64-bit)
Using FOX ONE :
The very rst time you run FOX ONE, F.I.S. Calibration function (FOX Intelligent
Stepping) will require you to calibrate the CPU’s loading. Click “OK” to proceed
and start the Utility. F.I.S. is a feature of FOX ONE, which can automatically adjust your CPU
clock based on your current system loading.
Before you running the FOX ONE program, the system parameters (such as CPU
clock, voltage...etc.) are controlled by BIOS settings. After you run FOX ONE, it will
take over, and the controlling right will be transferred to FOX ONE. Later, if you exit
FOX ONE, then BIOS control will be back again.
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Depending on hardware support, voltage monitoring and Fox Intelligent Stepping features are optional and only supported in some models. If the option is selectable, it also means the feature is supported.
■ Voltage Monitoring is supported only in FOX ONE Premium & Deluxe products.
■ Fox Intelligent Stepping is supported only in FOX ONE Deluxe products.
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1. Main Page
Toolbar
Use the toolbar to navigate to other pages.
Alert Lamp
When the system is in healthy state, the color of alert lamp is green. When the system is in
abnormal state, the alert lamp color is red.
Switch Button
Click this button, it will simplify the whole FOX ONE control panel to a smaller information bar (i.e.
Simple Mode) as depicted below, you can drag this bar to any place on your screen to help you
monitoring system status.
Click here to go back to
FOX ONE full screen
Click here will drop the FOX ONE to Windows system tray
Exit FOX ONE
Show CPU
Information
Toolbar
Alert Lamp
Switch Button
Exit
Minimum
Homepage
Monitor Frequency/Voltage/Fan
speed/Temperature value
Conguration
Skin Button
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Skin Button
There are more choices of FOX ONE screen panels. Click this button, you can select your
favorite skin (FOX ONE Panel).
Exit
Click this button to exit the program.
Minimum
Click this button to drop the FOX ONE to Windows system tray located at the lower right corner of
your screen.
Homepage
Click this button to visit Foxconn motherboard website :
http://www.foxconnchannel.com
Apply the changes
Click the new skin
picture to select
the new skin
Cancel the changes
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Conguration
This menu allows you to congure :
1). Monitor interval (ms) :
This is to dene the interval of different messages of system settings which are to be
displayed on Simple Mode screen. Minimum value is 1 second.
2). Simple Mode :
To select which message of system settings are to be displayed in the Simple Mode.
Messages such as CPU frequency, voltage...etc., they can be displayed one by one in Simple
Mode.
3). F.I.S. Calibration (FOX Intelligent Stepping, Optional)
This function will re-calibrate the CPU's loading, and it may take several minutes to proceed.
The FOX ONE calibration process will apply different loadings to your CPU, record PWM IC
voltage together with the CPU clock running at these loadings, so it can dene and estimate
within a particular range of system loading, what the CPU clock should be.
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Step 1 : Click Calibration icon, a message pops out to ask for continue. Select Yes.
Step 2 : After data is collected, it will ask you to restart your computer now.
Later on, when the FOX ONE program is activated, and F.I.S. feature (in CPU Page) is
also enabled, FOX ONE will automatically adjust your CPU clock according to your system
loadings. (Loadings are like Power Gaming, Data Mining...etc.)
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2. CPU Page - CPU Control
This page lets you select (or overclock) CPU clock to meet the current performance level of the
system. The fastest and suitable CPU clock running for current system can be calculated by FOX
ONE automatically or manually input by yourselves.
Manual :
You can press the up/down button to adjust your CPU clock.
Auto :
Click this button to let FOX ONE check the highest CPU clock you can use. System will raise the
CPU clock step by step until it hangs, you can then push the RESET button on your PC panel to
restart the system. When system restarts, run FOX ONE again, it will display a recommended
highest CPU clock for you, click <Yes> to apply it.
A message informs you to
push RESET button later if the
system hangs nally.
Click Yes to continue.
Press Auto button to let FOX
ONE check the highest CPU
clock you can use.
Go to CPU page
FIS Features :
Select the different
benchmarks
Adjust by manual
Apply the
changes
Reset the
changes
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You can see the system is
raising CPU clock until the
system hangs.
Push RESET button on the front
panel of your system to restart
the computer.
Run FOX ONE program again,
it will inform you the previous
test found that 255MHz is the
recommended CPU clock for
your system.
Click Yes to apply it to your
system.
Now, your system is running at
a CPU clock of 255MHz.
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FOX Intelligent Stepping (F.I.S., Optional)
Select FOX Intelligent Stepping will allow your system to automatically adjust your CPU clock rate
based on different system loadings. For example, if you select Power Gaming, CPU clock will
be driven to run at its maximum speed. While in Energy Saving, CPU will lower down its speed
to a minimum. The four benchmarks - Power Gaming, Data Mining, Ofce and Energy Saving,
the references of their system loading were calculated and dened in the FIS Calibration option
of Conguration menu. Select Auto, CPU will automatically adjust its clock according to current
system loading.
3. Frequency Page - Frequency Control
This page lets you set memory and PCI Express frequencies by manual.
Go to Freq. page
Close this page
Reset the changes
Apply the changes
Select the option
you want to set
Adjust by manual
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4. Limit Setting
4.1 Limit Setting - CPU Temperature
This page lets you to set CPU high limit temperature and enable the alert function.
4.2 Limit Setting - System Temperature
This page lets you to set system high limit temperature and enable the alert function.
Go to Limit Setting
page
Set high limit by
dragging the lever
Show current CPU
temperature value
Enable alert function
when the CPU
temperature is higher
than high limit value
Show current high
limit value of the CPU
temperature
Set high limit by
dragging the lever
Show current system
temperature value
Enable alert function
when the system
temperature is higher
than high limit value
Show current high
limit value of system
temperature
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4.3 Limit Setting - CPU Fan
This page lets you to set CPU fan low limit rpm and enable the alert function.
4.4 Limit Setting - System Fan
This page lets you to set system fan low limit rpm and enable the alert function.
Set low limit rpm by
dragging the lever
Show current CPU
fan rpm value
Enable alert function
when the CPU fan runs
slower than the low
limit rpm value
Show current low limit
rpm value of CPU fan
Set low limit rpm by
dragging the lever
Show current system
fan rpm value
Enable alert function
when the system fan
runs slower than low
limit rpm value
Show current low limit
rpm value of system
fan
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4.5 Limit Setting - FAN1 Fan
This page lets you to set FAN1 fan low limit rpm and enable the alert function.
5. Voltage Page - Voltage Control (Optional)
This page lets you set CPU voltage, memory voltage and North Bridge voltage manually. CPU
voltage can be stepped up/down by a unit of 12.5mV, while memory is 0.05V/step, and North
Bridge is 0.04V/step.
Set low limit rpm by
dragging the lever
Show current FAN1
fan rpm value
Enable alert function
when the FAN1 fan
runs slower than low
limit rpm value
Show current low limit
rpm value of FAN1 fan
Go to Voltage page
Select the option
you want to set
Adjust by manual
Reset the changes
Apply the changes
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6. Fan Page - Fan Control
This page lets you enable Smart Fan function or set the fan speed by manual.
When Smart Fan is selected, you must use a 4-pin CPU cooler in your system.
Go to Fan page
Set fan speed by
dragging the lever
Enable or disable
smart fan function
Apply the changes
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FOX LiveUpdate
FOX LiveUpdate is a useful utility to backup and update your system BIOS, drivers and utilities by
local or online.
Supporting Operating Systems :
■ Windows 2000
■ Windows XP (32-bit and 64-bit)
■ Windows 2003 (32-bit and 64-bit)
■ Windows Vista (32-bit and 64-bit)
Using FOX LiveUpdate :
1. Local Update
1-1 Local Update - BIOS Information
This page lets you know your system BIOS information.
*** : please refer to the physical motherboard for detail.
Exit
Toolbar
Minimum
Show current
BIOS information
Link to website
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1-2 Local Update - Backup
This page can backup your system BIOS. You can click “Backup”, and key in a le name, then
click “Save” to nish the backup operation. The extension of this backup le is ".BIN" for Award
BIOS and ".ROM" for AMI BIOS. Default directory is "C:\Desktop\My Documents" in Windows XP
and "Documents" in Vista. Make sure you can remember the le name together with the directory
which it is stored, prevented that you may need them to recover your BIOS later.
1-3 Local Update - Update
This page helps you to update your BIOS from a local le. After click “Update”, An alert message
will be displayed to ensure if you really want to continue, click “Yes” to conrm. A setup wizard
will guide you to load a local BIOS le to nish the operation. You must remember from which
directory to load your new BIOS le (with an extension of ".BIN" for Award BIOS, ".ROM" for AMI
BIOS) before the setup wizard starts.
Key in a BIOS name
Click here
FOX LiveUpdate can automatically backup old BIOS before update. This feature can be
enabled in the "Congure-System" setup. Please refer to "Congure-System" section
for more detail. The default backup directory is C:\LiveUpdate_Temp, but the backup
le name will be automatically generated. It is hard to nd it out from a backup directory,
and we recommend you using Explorer to check date/time message of this backup le
to nd it out and write its name down to remember it.
C
A
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T
I
O
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!
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2. Online Update
2-1 Online Update - Update BIOS
This page lets you update your system BIOS from Internet. Click “start”, it will search the new
BIOS from Internet. Then follow the wizard to nish the update operation.
2-2 Online Update - Update Driver
This page lets you update your system drivers from Internet. Click “start”, it will search the new
drivers from Internet. Then follow the wizard to nish the update operation.
Click here
Current information
Search new BIOS
from Internet
Browse detailed
information
Update BIOS
Close the window
Select BIOS to update
Click here
Current information
Search new drivers
from Internet
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2-3 Online Update - Update Utility
This page lets you update utilities from Internet. Click “start”, it will search the new utilities from
Internet. Then follow the wizard to nish the update operation.
Browse detailed
information
Install the selected
driver
Close the window
Select the driver to update
Click here
Current information
Search new utilities
from Internet
Browse detailed
information
Install the selected
utility
Close the window
Select the utility to update
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2-4 Online Update - Update All
This page lets you update your system drivers from Internet. Click “start”, it will search all new
BIOS/drivers/utilities from Internet. Then follow the wizard to nish the update operation.
Click here
Current information
Search all new BIOS/
drivers/utilities from
Internet
Browse detailed
BIOS information
Close the window
Browse detailed
driver information
Browse detailed
utility information
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3. Congure
3-1 Congure - option
This page lets you set auto search options. After you enable the auto search function, FOX
LiveUpdate will start its searching from Internet and if any qualied item found, it will pop out a
message on the task bar to inform you to do the next step.
Double click on the icon as show below, you can see the detailed information.
Double click here
Apply the changes
Reset to default value
Click here
Set auto
search options
Select search
which kind of
versions
Set auto search
the latest
FOX LiveUpdate
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When you enable "Auto Search FOX LiveUpdate", if your FOX LiveUpdate version is older, it will
auto search from internet and prompt you to install the new version.
3-2 Congure - System
This page lets you set the backup BIOS location and change different skin of the FOX LiveUpdate
utility.
Click here
Set the location of
download les or
auto backup BIOS
Determine if the FOX LiveUpdate can
auto run when the system starts up
Select different skin
of the software
Apply the changes
Reset to default value
Prompt you to
install the new
FOX LiveUpdate
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3-3 Congure - Advance
This page lets you select to ash BIOS / Boot Block and clear CMOS. If you choose Flash Boot
Block, it means BIOS is not protective, and you must make sure the ash process is continuous
and without any interruption.
4. About & Help
This page shows some information about FOX LiveUpdate.
Click here
Select which BIOS ROM
to ash(Only available to
motherboard with backup
BIOS ROM )
Apply the changes
Reset to default value
Select to ash Boot Block
Select to clear CMOS
Click here
Show information about
FOX LiveUpdate
We recommend that you had better keep the default setting unchanged to avoid any
damage.
C
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I
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FOX LOGO
FOX LOGO is a simple and useful utility to backup, change and delete the boot time Logo. The
boot Logo is the image that appears on screen during POST (Power-On Self-Test).
You can prepare a bitmap image (1024x768) le, then use FOX LOGO to open it and change the
boot time Logo. Boot time Logo will be displayed if you enable the BIOS "Quiet Boot" setting in
"Advanced BIOS Features" menu.
Supporting Operating Systems :
■ Windows 2000
■ Windows XP (32-bit and 64-bit)
■ Windows 2003 (32-bit and 64-bit)
■ Windows Vista (32-bit and 64-bit)
Using FOX LOGO:
Main Page
When you change Logo or delete current Logo, the system will ash BIOS le auto-
matically. During this time, please DO NOT shut down the application and the system,
or the motherboard will be damaged seriously.
W
A
R
N
I
N
G
!
Minimize
Exit
Website
About
Backup
Change
De l e t e
Main screen
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FOX DMI
FOX DMI is a full Desktop Management Interface viewer, and it provides three DMI data formats :
Report, Data Fields and Memory Dump.
With DMI information, system maker can easily analyze and troubleshoot your motherboard if there
is any problem occurred.
Supporting Operating Systems :
■ Windows 2000
■ Windows XP (32-bit and 64-bit)
■ Windows 2003 (32-bit and 64-bit)
■ Windows Vista (32-bit and 64-bit)
Using FOX DMI:
Please operate this utility as the comments shows.
Click here to select the DMI Data format you need
Click here to select the type you want to view.
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This chapter will cover two topics :
■ Creating a Bootable Array - Installing a new Windows XP
(Vista) in a brand new RAID system.
■ Creating a Non-Bootable Array - Existing Windows XP
(Vista) system with new RAID built as data storage.
It includes the following information :
■ RAID Conguration Introduction
NVIDIA® MediaShield Driver
■ Create two RAID Driver Diskettes
■ RAID Enable in BIOS
■ Select a RAID Array for Use
■ Install a New Windows XP
■ Setting Up a Non-Bootable RAID Array
The RAID BIOS Setup pictures shown in this chapter are for
reference only, please refer to the practical screen.
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Creating a Bootable Array - Installing a new Windows XP (or Vista) in
a brand new RAID system.
1. Follow 5-1 to create two RAID driver diskettes.
2. Follow 5-2 to set RAID enabled in BIOS.
3. Follow 5-3 to select a RAID array for use.
4. Follow 5-4 to Install a new Windows Operating System.
What kinds of hardware and software you need here :
1. A oppy drive.
2. A DVD-ROM drive.
3. Several SATA hard disks.
4. Two RAID driver diskettes. (Can be created by using motherboard driver CD)
5. A motherboard driver CD.
6. Windows XP or Vista Install CD.
Creating a Non-Bootable Array - Existing Windows XP (or Vista)
system with new RAID built as data storage.
Follow 5-5 to go through the processes to build a new RAID array in your existing
Windows XP system, it includes :
1. Set RAID enabled in BIOS.
2. Follow 5-3 to select a RAID array for use.
3. Run setup program to install NVIDIA RAID driver into your current Windows XP
system.
4. Use Administrative Tools in Control Panel to format new RAID array.
What kinds of hardware and software you need here :
1. A DVD-ROM drive.
2. Several SATA hard disks.
3. A motherboard driver CD.
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RAID Conguration Introduction
RAID (Redundant Array of Independent Disks) is a method for computer data storage
schemes that divide and/or replicate data among multiple hard drives. RAID can be
designed to provide increased data reliability (fault tolerance) or increased I/O (input/
output) performance, or both. The following RAID congurations are provided for
users.
There are three major key concepts in RAID:
1. Mirroring : The copying of data to more than one disk;
2. Striping : The splitting of data across more than one disk;
3. Error correction : Where redundant data is stored to allow problems to be detected
and possibly xed (known as fault tolerance).
Different RAID levels use one or more of these techniques, depending on the system
requirements. The main aims of using RAID are to improve reliability, important for
protecting information that is critical to a business, for example a database of customer
orders; or where speed is important, for example a system that delivers video on
demand TV programs to many viewers.
The conguration affects reliability and performance in different ways. The problem
with using more disks is that it is more likely that one will go wrong, but by using
error checking the total system can be made more reliable by being able to survive
and repair the failure. Basic mirroring can speed up reading data as a system can
read different data from both the disks, but it may be slow for writing if it insists that
both disks must conrm that the data is correctly written. Striping is often used for
performance, where it allows sequences of data to be read off multiple disks at the
same time. Error checking typically will slow the system down as data needs to be
read from several places and compared. The design of RAID systems is therefore a
compromise and understanding the requirements of a system is important. Modern
disk arrays typically provide the facility to select the appropriate RAID conguration.
RAID is often used in high availability systems, where it is important that the system
keeps running as much of the time as possible.
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RAID 0 (Striped)
RAID 0 reads and writes sectors of data interleaved among multiple drives. If any disk
member fails, it affects the entire array. The disk array data capacity is equal to the
number of drive members times the capacity of the smallest member. RAID 0 does
not support fault tolerance.
RAID 1 (Mirror)
RAID 1 writes duplicate data onto a pair of drives and reads both sets of data in
parallel. If one of the mirrored drives suffers a mechanical failure or does not respond,
the remaining drive will continue to function. Due to redundancy, the drive capacity of
the array is the capacity of the smallest drive.
RAID 5 (Parity)
RAID 5 provides data striping at the byte level and also stripes error correction
information. This results in excellent performance and good fault tolerance. Level 5 is
one of the most popular implementations of RAID.
RAID 0+1 (Striped Mirror)
RAID 10 is a combination of striping and mirroring. This conguration provides optimal
speed and reliability, but you need four SATA hard disks.
Spanning (JBOD)
JBOD stands for “Just a Bunch of Disks”. Each drive is accessed as if it was on a
standard SCSI host bus adapter. This is useful when a single drive conguration is
needed, but it offers no speed improvement or fault tolerance. A spanned volume is a
formatted partition which data is stored on more than one hard disk, yet appears as
one volume. Unlike RAID, spanned volumes have no fault-tolerance, so if any disk
fails, the data on the whole volume could be lost. Additionally, the system or boot
partitions cannot be included in a spanned volume. FAT16/32 and NTFS le systems
may be used, and the volume can span up to 32 hard disks.
Comparison Table :
Solution Hard Disks No. Capacity Performance Reliability Application
RAID0 >=2 All Highest Dangerous Look for speed
RAID1 2 50% Read faster Excellent 100% Data backup
RAID5 >=3 N-1 Read faster
Write slower
Good Limited budget
RAID0+1 >=4
(Even number)
Smallest
*2
High Excellent Unlimited budget
Span >=1 All none Dangerous Big disk space
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NVIDIA® MediaShield Driver
The NVIDIA® MediaShield driver supports RAID 0, RAID 1, RAID 5, and RAID 0+1 functions. It allows you to get high performance with fault tolerance, big capacity, or data safety provided by different RAID functions.
Here, we will use four SATA hard disks as an example to guide you how to select your
RAID system. Assume four hard disks are connected to the motherboard :
SATA port 1 - WDC WD1200JD-98HBBO, 111.79GB
SATA port 2 - Hitachi HDT725025VLA, 232.88GB
SATA port 3 - HDS728080PLA380, 76.69GB
SATA port 4 - ST3320620AS, 298.09GB
The relationships between RAID settings and SATA ports on the motherboard are :
SATA Pri-Master RAID is the SATA port 1 of the motherboard.
SATA Pri-Slave RAID is the SATA port 2.
SATA Sec-Master RAID is the SATA port 3.
SATA Sec-Slave RAID is the SATA port 4.
SATA Thr-Master RAID is the SATA port 5.
SATA Thr-Slave RAID is the e-SATA port on the real panel.
In section 5-3 later, you will know the relationships between port numbers in the
MediaShield BIOS and SATA ports on the motherboard. We put their descriptions here
for better arrangement. They are :
Port 0.0 is the SATA port 1 of the motherboard.
Port 0.2 is the SATA port 2.
Port 0.1 is the SATA port 3.
Phoenix - AwardBIOS CMOS Setup Utility
MCP SATA Mode
SATA Operation Mode
[RAID] Item Help
SATA Pri-Master RAID [Enabled] SATA Pri-Slave RAID [Enabled] Menu Level SATA Sec-Master RAID [Enabled] SATA Sec-Slave RAID [Enabled]
SATA Thr-Master RAID
[Enabled]
SATA Thr-Slave RAID
[Enabled]
↑↓→←:Move Enter:Select +/-/PU/PD:Value F10:Save ESC:Exit F1:General Help F5:Previous Values F7:Optimized Defaults
RAID
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To achieve the best performance and reliability, we highly recommend you
using the hard disks with the same brand, size and model number. Though
we are using four different hard disks as an example to describe RAID
function in this chapter, it is only helpful in explaining what the nal disk
volume of the RAID array will be. In the real world, using the same model to
build a disk array is strongly recommended.
W
A
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N
I
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!
Port 0.3 is the SATA port 4.
Port 0.4 is the SATA port 5.
Port 0.5 is the e-SATA port.
Two topics will be covered in the following sections :
1). Creating a Bootable Array - Installing a new Windows XP in a brand new RAID
system.
2). Creating a Non-Bootable Array - Existing Windows XP system with new RAID
built as data storage.
Install SATA Hard Disks before we continue :
■ Shut down your computer.
■ Install SATA hard disks into the drive bays, connect all power and SATA cables.
MediaShield BIOS Jul 27 2007
- Dene a New Array -
RAID Mode: Mirrored Stripe Block: Optimal
Free Disks Array Disks
Port Disk Model Capacity Port Disk Model Capacity
[+] Add
[-] Del
[ESC] Quit [F6] Back [F7] Finish [TAB] Navigate [↑↓] Select [ENTER] Popup
Optimal
0.0 WDC WD1200JD-9 111.79GB
0.2 Hitachi HDT725 232.88GB
0.1 HDS728080PLA38 76.69GB
0.3 ST3320620AS 298.09GB
Striped
0.0 WDC WD1200JD-9 111.79GB
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1. Find a PC, put a diskette into its oppy
drive A:, this diskette will be formatted
later. Put the driver CD into DVD-ROM
drive, when the screen appears, click on
"Utility" icon, then click on "Create RAID
Driver Floppy" icon.
2. A message pops out telling you where
to nd the routine in driver CD to create
the driver diskette.
3. Depending on which platform your XP
system is, normally, it is a 32-bit system.
Use Windows explorer, and go to CD:\
Driver\NVIDIA\MCP78\Chipset\WinXP\
32bit\IDE\WinXP\sataraid\Floppy\
Disk1, click on RaidTool icon to start the
creation.
4. Click "GO" to start.
5. Select the desired destination FDD drive.
It can be the default drive A: or any USB
FDD. Click "OK" to continue.
5-1 Create two RAID Driver Diskettes
If you want to install a brand new Windows XP on a RAID system, you need to create two
RAID driver oppy diskettes which will be used during Windows XP installation later.
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6. Insert a diskette, click "OK" to continue.
7. You can input a volume label for this diskette,
click on "Start" to format.
8. Click on "OK" to go through this warning
message.
9. Format nished. Click "OK", then click "Close"
to continue copying of RAID driver into this
diskette.
10. Check if the rst diskette contains the
driver les.
11. Go to CD:\Driver\NVIDIA\MCP78\
Chipset\WinXP\32bit\IDE\WinXP\
sataraid\Floppy\Disk2, click on
RaidTool icon to start the second RAID
driver diskette creation. Repeat the
steps from step 4 to step 10.
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5-2 RAID Enable in BIOS
1. Enter the BIOS setup by pressing [DEL] key when boot up.
2. Select the “Integrated Peripherals” from the “Main menu”, then select the “MCP
SATA Mode” menu and press [Enter] to go to the conguration items.
3. Enable RAID function and individual SATA port for hard drive or DVD connection.
4. Press [F10] to save the setting then PC will reboot itself.
5-3 Select a RAID Array for Use
When BIOS is restarted, it will display a message asking you to press [F10] key to
enter the main menu of MediaShield BIOS. Press [F10], the screen appears.
At the bottom of each screen displayed, there is one line listing each key’s function,
such as [Tab], [Enter], [ESC]...etc. It is helpful to make your choice easier.
MediaShield BIOS Jul 27 2007
- Dene a New Array -
RAID Mode: Mirrored Stripe Block: Optimal
Free Disks Array Disks
Port Disk Model Capacity Port Disk Model Capacity
[+] Add
[-] Del
[ESC] Quit [F6] Back [F7] Finish [TAB] Navigate [↑↓] Select [Enter] Popup
0.0 WDC WD1200JD-9 111.79GB
0.2 Hitachi HDT725 232.88GB
0.1 HDS728080PLA38 76.69GB
0.3 ST3320620AS 298.09GB
Mirrored
Optimal
0.0 WDC WD1200JD-9 111.79GB
Phoenix - AwardBIOS CMOS Setup Utility
MCP SATA Mode
SATA Operation Mode
[RAID] Item Help
SATA Pri-Master RAID [Enabled] SATA Pri-Slave RAID [Enabled] Menu Level SATA Sec-Master RAID [Enabled] SATA Sec-Slave RAID [Enabled]
SATA Thr-Master RAID
[Enabled]
SATA Thr-Slave RAID
[Enabled]
↑↓→←:Move Enter:Select +/-/PU/PD:Value F10:Save ESC:Exit F1:General Help F5:Previous Values F7:Optimized Defaults
RAID
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MediaShield BIOS Jul 27 2007
- Dene a New Array -
RAID Mode: Mirrored Stripe Block: Optimal
Free Disks Array Disks
Port Disk Model Capacity Port Disk Model Capacity
[+] Add
[-] Del
[ESC] Quit [F6] Back [F7] Finish [TAB] Navigate [↑↓] Select [ENTER] Popup
Create RAID 0 (Striped)
1. Select "Striped" from the RAID Mode. The menu appears :
2. Select two hard disks to build our RAID0 system.
3. Press [TAB] to navigate to left drive panel, then use [→] and [↓] keys to add the hard
disks to the right drive panel.
Striped
Optimal
0.2 Hitachi HDT725 232.88GB
0.3 ST3320620AS 298.09GB
0.0 WDC WD1200JD-9 111.79GB
0.1 HDS728080PLA38 76.69GB
0.0 WDC WD1200JD-9 111.79GB
0.3 ST3320620AS 298.09GB
MediaShield BIOS Jul 27 2007
- Dene a New Array -
RAID Mode: Mirrored Stripe Block: Optimal
Free Disks Array Disks
Port Disk Model Capacity Port Disk Model Capacity
[+] Add
[-] Del
[ESC] Quit [F6] Back [F7] Finish [TAB] Navigate [↑↓] Select [ENTER] Popup
Optimal
0.0 WDC WD1200JD-9 111.79GB
0.2 Hitachi HDT725 232.88GB
0.1 HDS728080PLA38 76.69GB
0.3 ST3320620AS 298.09GB
Striped
0.0 WDC WD1200JD-9 111.79GB
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4. The stripe value should be selected based on different applications. It ranges from
4KB to 128KB. Some suggested choices are :
16K - Best for sequential transfer.
64K - Good general purpose strip size.
128K - Best performance for most desktops and workstations.
Keep it at Optimal default value. Press [F7] to nish the setting.
5. Press [Y] to continue, and press [Y] again to select "Clear MBR".
MediaShield BIOS Jul 27 2007
- Dene a New Array -
RAID Mode: Mirrored Stripe Block: Optimal
Free Disks Array Disks
Port Disk Model Capacity Port Disk Model Capacity
[+] Add
[-] Del
[ESC] Quit [F6] Back [F7] Finish [TAB] Navigate [↑↓] Select [ENTER] Popup
Striped
Optimal
0.2 Hitachi HDT725 232.88GB
0.3 ST3320620AS 298.09GB
0.0 WDC WD1200JD-9 111.79GB
0.1 HDS728080PLA38 76.79GB
0.0 WDC WD1200JD-9 111.79GB
0.3 ST3320620AS 298.09GB
All data on new (or added) disks will be overwritten. Continue?
[Y] YES [N] NO
MediaShield BIOS Jul 27 2007
- Dene a New Array -
RAID Mode: Mirrored Stripe Block: Optimal
Free Disks Array Disks
Port Disk Model Capacity Port Disk Model Capacity
[+] Add
[-] Del
[ESC] Quit [F6] Back [F7] Finish [TAB] Navigate [↑↓] Select [ENTER] Popup
Striped
Optimal
0.2 Hitachi HDT725 232.88GB
0.3 ST3320620AS 298.09GB
0.0 WDC WD1200JD-9 111.79GB
0.1 HDS728080PLA38 76.69GB
0.0 WDC WD1200JD-9 111.79GB
0.3 ST3320620AS 298.09GB
Clear MBR?
[Y] YES [N] NO
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6. The screen displays a STRIPE array of 153.38GB, which is twice the size of the smallest
hard disk. That is, 2*76.69GB = 153.38GB.
If you want to build a new Operating System (such as Windows XP) in this RAID
system, please press [B] to select it as bootable.
You can then press [Ctrl]+[X] keys to exit the setup program, and restart your PC.
7. In above screen, you also can press [Enter] to know the detailed drive information of
this RAID system. Press [D] here allow you to delete previous settings, and go back
to the rst time when MediaShield was started.
MediaShield BIOS Jul 27 2007
- Array List -
[Ctrl-X] Exit [↑↓] Select [B] Set Bootable [N] New Array [ENTER] Detail
Boot Status Vendor Array Size
Healthy NVIDIA STRIPE 153.38G
Array 4 : NVIDIA STRIPE 153.38G
- Array Detail-
RAID Mode: Striped
Stripe Width : 2 Stripe Block: 64K
[R] Rebuild [D] Delete [C] Clear MBR [ENTER] Return
Port Index Disk Model Capacity
0.0 0 WDC WD1200JD-98HBB0 111.79G
0.1 1 HDS728080PLA380 76.69GB
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Create RAID 1 (Mirrored)
1. Select “Mirrored” from the RAID Mode.
2. Select two hard disks to build our RAID1 system.
3. Press [TAB] to navigate to left drive panel, then use [→] and [↓] keys to add the hard
disks to the right drive panel.
MediaShield BIOS Jul 27 2007
- Dene a New Array -
RAID Mode: Mirrored Stripe Block: Optimal
Free Disks Array Disks
Port Disk Model Capacity Port Disk Model Capacity
[+] Add
[-] Del
[ESC] Quit [F6] Back [F7] Finish [TAB] Navigate [↑↓] Select [ENTER] Popup
Optimal
0.0 WDC WD1200JD-9 111.79GB
0.2 Hitachi HDT725 232.88GB
0.1 HDS728080PLA38 76.69GB
0.3 ST3320620AS 298.09GB
Mirrored
0.0 WDC WD1200JD-9 111.79GB
MediaShield BIOS Jul 27 2007
- Dene a New Array -
RAID Mode: Mirrored Stripe Block: Optimal
Free Disks Array Disks
Port Disk Model Capacity Port Disk Model Capacity
[+] Add
[-] Del
[ESC] Quit [F6] Back [F7] Finish [TAB] Navigate [↑↓] Select [ENTER] Popup
Mirrored
Optimal
0.0 WDC WD1200JD-9 111.79GB
0.1 HDS728080PLA38 76.69GB
0.2 Hitachi HDT725 232.88GB
0.3 ST3320620AS 298.09GB
0.2 Hitachi HDT725 232.88GB
0.1 HDS728080PLA38 76.69GB
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4. The stripe block value is xed and not changeable.
Press [F7] to nish the setting.
5. Press [Y] to continue, and press [Y] again to select "Clear MBR".
MediaShield BIOS Jul 27 2007
- Dene a New Array -
RAID Mode: Mirrored Stripe Block: Optimal
Free Disks Array Disks
Port Disk Model Capacity Port Disk Model Capacity
[+] Add
[-] Del
[ESC] Quit [F6] Back [F7] Finish [TAB] Navigate [↑↓] Select [ENTER] Popup
Mirrored
Optimal
0.2 Hitachi HDT725 232.88GB
0.3 ST3320620AS 298.09GB
0.0 WDC WD1200JD-9 111.79GB
0.1 HDS728080PLA38 76.79GB
0.0 WDC WD1200JD-9 111.79GB
0.3 ST3320620AS 298.09GB
All data on new (or added) disks will be overwritten. Continue?
[Y] YES [N] NO
MediaShield BIOS Jul 27 2007
- Dene a New Array -
RAID Mode: Mirrored Stripe Block: Optimal
Free Disks Array Disks
Port Disk Model Capacity Port Disk Model Capacity
[+] Add
[-] Del
[ESC] Quit [F6] Back [F7] Finish [TAB] Navigate [↑↓] Select [ENTER] Popup
Mirrored
Optimal
0.0 WDC WD1200JD-9 111.79GB
0.1 HDS728080PLA38 76.69GB
0.2 Hitachi HDT725 232.88GB
0.3 ST3320620AS 298.09GB
0.2 Hitachi HDT725 232.88GB
0.1 HDS728080PLA38 76.69GB
Clear MBR?
[Y] YES [N] NO
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6. The screen displays a MIRRORED array of 232.88GB, which is the size of the smallest
hard disk. That is, 232.88GB.
If you want to build a new Operating System (such as Windows XP) in this RAID
system, please press [B] to select it as bootable.
You can then press [Ctrl]+[X] keys to exit the setup program, and restart your PC.
7. In above screen, you also can press [Enter] to know the detailed drive information of
this RAID system. Press [D] here allow you to delete previous settings, and go back
to the rst time when MediaShield was started.
MediaShield BIOS Jul 27 2007
- Array List -
[Ctrl-X] Exit [↑↓] Select [B] Set Bootable [N] New Array [ENTER] Detail
Boot Status Vendor Array Size
Healthy NVIDIA MIRROR 232.88G
Array 4 : NVIDIA MIRROR 232.88G
- Array Detail -
RAID Mode: Mirrored
Stripe Width : 1 Stripe Block: 64K
[R] Rebuild [D] Delete [C] Clear MBR [ENTER] Return
Port Index Disk Model Capacity
0.2 0 Hitachi HDT725025VLA380 232.88G
0.3 1 ST3320620AS 298.09G
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Create RAID 0+1 (Striped Mirror)
1. Select “Striped Mirror” from the RAID Mode. The menu appears :
2. Select four hard disks to build our RAID0+1 system.
3. Press [TAB] to navigate to left drive panel, then use [→] and [↓] keys to add the hard
disks to the right drive panel.
MediaShield BIOS Jul 27 2007
- Dene a New Array -
RAID Mode: Mirrored Stripe Block: Optimal
Free Disks Array Disks
Port Disk Model Capacity Port Disk Model Capacity
[+] Add
[-] Del
[ESC] Quit [F6] Back [F7] Finish [TAB] Navigate [↑↓] Select [ENTER] Popup
Striped Mirror
Optimal
0.0 WDC WD1200JD-9 111.79GB
0.1 HDS728080PLA38 76.69GB
0.2 Hitachi HDT725 232.88GB
0.3 ST3320620AS 298.09GB
0.0 WDC WD1200JD-9 111.79GB
MediaShield BIOS Jul 27 2007
- Dene a New Array -
RAID Mode: Mirrored Stripe Block: Optimal
Free Disks Array Disks
Port Disk Model Capacity Port Disk Model Capacity
[+] Add
[-] Del
[ESC] Quit [F6] Back [F7] Finish [TAB] Navigate [↑↓] Select [ENTER] Popup
Optimal
0.0 WDC WD1200JD-9 111.79GB
0.2 Hitachi HDT725 232.88GB
0.1 HDS728080PLA38 76.69GB
0.3 ST3320620AS 298.09GB
Striped Mirror
0.0 WDC WD1200JD-9 111.79GB
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MediaShield BIOS Jul 27 2007
- Dene a New Array -
RAID Mode: Mirrored Stripe Block: Optimal
Free Disks Array Disks
Port Disk Model Capacity Port Disk Model Capacity
[+] Add
[-] Del
[ESC] Quit [F6] Back [F7] Finish [TAB] Navigate [↑↓] Select [ENTER] Popup
4. The stripe value should be selected based on different applications. It ranges from
4KB to 128KB. Some suggested choices are :
16K - Best for sequential transfer.
64K - Good general purpose strip size.
128K - Best performance for most desktops and workstations.
Keep it at Optimal default value. Press [F7] to nish the setting.
5. Press [Y] to continue, and press [Y] again to select "Clear MBR".
MediaShield BIOS Jul 27 2007
- Dene a New Array -
RAID Mode: Mirrored Stripe Block: Optimal
Free Disks Array Disks
Port Disk Model Capacity Port Disk Model Capacity
[+] Add
[-] Del
[ESC] Quit [F6] Back [F7] Finish [TAB] Navigate [↑↓] Select [ENTER] Popup
Striped Mirror
Optimal
0.0 WDC WD1200JD-9 111.79GB
0.1 HDS728080PLA38 76.79GB
0.2 Hitachi HDT725 232.88GB
0.3 ST3320620AS 298.09GB
All data on new (or added) disks will be overwritten. Continue?
[Y] YES [N] NO
Striped Mirror
Optimal
0.0 WDC WD1200JD-9 111.79GB
0.1 HDS728080PLA38 76.69GB
0.2 Hitachi HDT725 232.88GB
0.3 ST3320620AS 298.09GB
0.0 WDC WD1200JD-9 111.79GB
Clear MBR?
[Y] YES [N] NO
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86
6. The screen displays a RAID 0+1 array of 153.38GB, which is twice the size of the
smallest hard disk. That is, 2*76.69= 153.38GB.
If you want to build a new Operating System (such as Windows XP) in this RAID
system, please press [B] to select it as bootable.
You can then press [Ctrl]+[X] keys to exit the setup program, and restart your PC.
7. In above screen, you also can press [Enter] to know the detailed drive information of
this RAID system. Press [D] here allow you to delete previous settings, and go back
to the rst time when MediaShield was started.
MediaShield BIOS Jul 27 2007
- Array List -
[Ctrl-X] Exit [↑↓] Select [B] Set Bootable [N] New Array [ENTER] Detail
Boot Status Vendor Array Size
Healthy NVIDIA RAID 0+1 153.38G
Array 4 : NVIDIA RAID 0+1 153.38G
- Array Detail -
RAID Mode: Striped Mirror
Stripe Width : 2 Stripe Block: 64K
[R] Rebuild [D] Delete [C] Clear MBR [ENTER] Return
Port Index Disk Model Capacity
0.0 0 WDC WD1200JD-98HBB0 111.79G
0.1 1 HDS728080PLA380 76.69GB
0.2 2 Hitachi HDT725025VLA380 232.88G
0.3 3 ST3320620AS 298.09G
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MediaShield BIOS Jul 27 2007
- Dene a New Array -
RAID Mode: Mirrored Stripe Block: Optimal
Free Disks Array Disks
Port Disk Model Capacity Port Disk Model Capacity
[+] Add
[-] Del
[ESC] Quit [F6] Back [F7] Finish [TAB] Navigate [↑↓] Select [ENTER] Popup
Create RAID 5
1. Select “RAID5” from the RAID Mode.
The menu appears :
2. Select three SATA hard disks to build our RAID5 system.
3. Press [TAB] to navigate to left drive panel, then use [→] and [↓] keys to add the hard
disks to the right drive panel.
Optimal
0.0 WDC WD1200JD-9 111.79GB
0.2 Hitachi HDT725 232.88GB
0.1 HDS728080PLA38 76.69GB
0.3 ST3320620AS 298.09GB
RAID5
0.0 WDC WD1200JD-9 111.79GB
MediaShield BIOS Jul 27 2007
- Dene a New Array -
RAID Mode: Mirrored Stripe Block: Optimal
Free Disks Array Disks
Port Disk Model Capacity Port Disk Model Capacity
[+] Add
[-] Del
[ESC] Quit [F6] Back [F7] Finish [TAB] Navigate [↑↓] Select [ENTER] Popup
RAID5
Optimal
0.0 WDC WD1200JD-9 111.79GB
0.1 HDS728080PLA38 76.69GB
0.2 Hitachi HDT725 232.88GB
0.0 WDC WD1200JD-9 111.79GB
0.3 ST3320620AS 298.09GB
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88
4. The stripe value should be selected based on different applications. It ranges from
4KB to 128KB. Some suggested choices are :
16K - Best for sequential transfer.
64K - Good general purpose strip size.
128K - Best performance for most desktops and workstations.
Keep it at Optimal default value. Press [F7] to nish the setting.
5. Press [Y] to continue, and press [Y] again to select "Clear MBR".
MediaShield BIOS Jul 27 2007
- Dene a New Array -
RAID Mode: Mirrored Stripe Block: Optimal
Free Disks Array Disks
Port Disk Model Capacity Port Disk Model Capacity
[+] Add
[-] Del
[ESC] Quit [F6] Back [F7] Finish [TAB] Navigate [↑↓] Select [ENTER] Popup
RAID5
Optimal
0.0 WDC WD1200JD-9 111.79GB
0.1 HDS728080PLA38 76.69GB
0.2 Hitachi HDT725 232.88GB
0.0 WDC WD1200JD-9 111.79GB
0.3 ST3320620AS 298.09GB
All data on new (or added) disks will be overwritten. Continue?
[Y] YES [N] NO
MediaShield BIOS Jul 27 2007
- Dene a New Array -
RAID Mode: Mirrored Stripe Block: Optimal
Free Disks Array Disks
Port Disk Model Capacity Port Disk Model Capacity
[+] Add
[-] Del
[ESC] Quit [F6] Back [F7] Finish [TAB] Navigate [↑↓] Select [ENTER] Popup
RAID5
Optimal
0.0 WDC WD1200JD-9 111.79GB
0.1 HDS728080PLA38 76.69GB
0.2 Hitachi HDT725 232.88GB
0.0 WDC WD1200JD-9 111.79GB
0.3 ST3320620AS 298.09GB
Clear MBR?
[Y] YES [N] NO
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89
6. The screen displays a RAID5 array of 153.38GB, which is twice the size of the smallest
hard disk. That is, 2*76.69= 153.38GB. Another hard disk is used for parity check.
If you want to build a new Operating System (such as Windows XP) in this RAID
system, please press [B] to select it as bootable.
You can then press [Ctrl]+[X] keys to exit the setup program, and restart your PC.
7. In above screen, you also can press [Enter] to know the detailed drive information of
this RAID system. Press [D] here allow you to delete previous settings, and go back
to the rst time when MediaShield was started.
MediaShield BIOS Jul 27 2007
- Array List -
[Ctrl-X] Exit [↑↓] Select [B] Set Bootable [N] New Array [ENTER] Detail
Boot Status Vendor Array Size
Healthy NVIDIA RAID5 153.38G
Array 4 : NVIDIA RAID5 153.38G
- Array Detail -
RAID Mode: RAID5 Stripe Width : 2 Stripe Block: 64K
[R] Rebuild [D] Delete [C] Clear MBR [ENTER] Return
Port Index Disk Model Capacity
0.0 0 WDC WD1200JD-98HBB0 111.79G
0.1 1 HDS728080PLA380 76.69GB
0.2 2 Hitachi HDT725025VLA380 232.88G
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Create Spanned RAID
1. Select “Spanned” from the RAID Mode. The menu appears :
2. Select three SATA hard disks to build our Spanned RAID system.
3. Press [TAB] to navigate to left drive panel, then use [→] and [↓] keys to add the hard
disks to the right drive panel.
MediaShield BIOS Jul 27 2007
- Dene a New Array -
RAID Mode: Mirrored Stripe Block: Optimal
Free Disks Array Disks
Port Disk Model Capacity Port Disk Model Capacity
[+] Add
[-] Del
[ESC] Quit [F6] Back [F7] Finish [TAB] Navigate [↑↓] Select [ENTER] Popup
Spanned
Optimal
0.0 WDC WD1200JD-9 111.79GB
0.1 HDS728080PLA38 76.69GB
0.2 Hitachi HDT725 232.88GB
0.0 WDC WD1200JD-9 111.79GB
0.3 ST3320620AS 298.09GB
MediaShield BIOS Jul 27 2007
- Dene a New Array -
RAID Mode: Mirrored Stripe Block: Optimal
Free Disks Array Disks
Port Disk Model Capacity Port Disk Model Capacity
[+] Add
[-] Del
[ESC] Quit [F6] Back [F7] Finish [TAB] Navigate [↑↓] Select [ENTER] Popup
0.0 WDC WD1200JD-9 111.79GB
0.2 Hitachi HDT725 232.88GB
0.1 HDS728080PLA38 76.69GB
0.3 ST3320620AS 298.09GB
Spanned
0.0 WDC WD1200JD-9 111.79GB
Optimal
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91
4. The stripe block value is xed and not changeable.
Press [F7] to nish the setting.
5. Press [Y] to continue, and press [Y] again to select "Clear MBR".
MediaShield BIOS Jul 27 2007
- Dene a New Array -
RAID Mode: Mirrored Stripe Block: Optimal
Free Disks Array Disks
Port Disk Model Capacity Port Disk Model Capacity
[+] Add
[-] Del
[ESC] Quit [F6] Back [F7] Finish [TAB] Navigate [↑↓] Select [ENTER] Popup
Spanned
Optimal
0.0 WDC WD1200JD-9 111.79GB
0.1 HDS728080PLA38 76.69GB
0.2 Hitachi HDT725 232.88GB
0.0 WDC WD1200JD-9 111.79GB
0.3 ST3320620AS 298.09GB
All data on new (or added) disks will be overwritten. Continue?
[Y] YES [N] NO
MediaShield BIOS Jul 27 2007
- Dene a New Array -
RAID Mode: Mirrored Stripe Block: Optimal
Free Disks Array Disks
Port Disk Model Capacity Port Disk Model Capacity
[+] Add
[-] Del
[ESC] Quit [F6] Back [F7] Finish [TAB] Navigate [↑↓] Select [ENTER] Popup
Spanned
Optimal
0.0 WDC WD1200JD-9 111.79GB
0.1 HDS728080PLA38 76.69GB
0.2 Hitachi HDT725 232.88GB
0.0 WDC WD1200JD-9 111.79GB
0.3 ST3320620AS 298.09GB
Clear MBR?
[Y] YES [N] NO
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92
6. The screen displays a Spanned RAID array of 421.36GB, which is the total sizes of
these three hard disks. That is, 111.79+76.69+232.88= 421.36GB. We recommend
not setting it to bootable as it will be impossible to recover if crashed. You can then
press [Ctrl]+[X] keys to exit the setup program, and restart your PC.
7. In above screen, you also can press [Enter] to know the detailed drive information of
this RAID system. Press [D] here allow you to delete previous settings, and go back
to the rst time when MediaShield was started.
MediaShield BIOS Jul 27 2007
- Array List -
[Ctrl-X] Exit [↑↓] Select [B] Set Bootable [N] New Array [ENTER] Detail
Boot Status Vendor Array Size
Healthy NVIDIA SPAN 421.36G
Array 4 : NVIDIA SPAN 421.36G
- Array Detail -
RAID Mode: Spanned
Stripe Width : 3 Stripe Block: 64K
[R] Rebuild [D] Delete [C] Clear MBR [ENTER] Return
Port Index Disk Model Capacity
0.0 0 WDC WD1200JD-98HBB0 111.79G
0.1 1 HDS728080PLA380 76.69GB
0.2 2 Hitachi HDT725025VLA380 232.88G
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93
5-4 Creating a Bootable Array- Install a New Windows XP
Assume a Mirrored array (232.88GB) was created as introduced in section 5-3, after
the system restarts :
1. Press [DEL] to enter BIOS Setup during POST.
2. Insert the Windows installation CD into the optical drive.
3. Set the “First Boot Device” to “CDROM”, save changes and exit BIOS.
4. The computer will reboot, and it will start installing Windows Operating System.
Watch the screen carefully, when the following picture appears, press [F6] key
immediately. If you forgot to do this, PC will go to an fatal blue screen, and you
may need to reboot the system again. PC may not respond to your [F6] input
immediately, and it keeps loading les until the next screen displays.
Windows Setup
Press F6 if you need to install a 3rd party SCSI or RAID driver.
Phoenix - AwardBIOS CMOS Setup Utility
Advanced BIOS Features
► Removable Device Priority
[Press Enter] Item Help
► Hard Disk Boot Priority
[Press Enter]
► CD-ROM Boot Priority [Press Enter]
Menu Level ►
First Boot Device [CDROM]
Second Boot Device
[CDROM] Select Your Boot Device
Third Boot Device [Removable]
Priority
Boot Other Device
[Enabled]
Boot Up Floppy Seek
[Disabled]
Boot Up NumLock Status
[on]
Security Option
[Setup]
Full Screen Logo Show
[Enabled]
↑↓→←:Move Enter:Select +/-/PU/PD:Value F10:Save ESC:Exit F1:General Help F5:Previous Values F7:Optimized Defaults
CDROM
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