Intel® RAID Adapters
RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080
and RSP3WD080
Hardware User Guide
A document providing an overview of product features, specification data, and
hardware installation instructions
Rev 1.0
July 2017
Intel® Server Products and Solutions
Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
Jul 2017
1.0
Initial release
Document Revision History
Date Published Revision Revision Change Description
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
Disclaimers
Intel technologies’ features and benefits depend on system configuration and may require enabled hardware, software, or service
activation. Performance varies depending on system configuration. No computer system can be absolutely secure. Check with your
system manufacturer or retailer or learn more at Intel.com.
No license (express or implied, by estoppel or otherwise) to any intellectual property rights is granted by this document.
Intel disclaims all express and implied warranties, including without limitation, the implied warranties of merchantability, fitness for a
particular purpose, and non-infringement, as well as any warranty arising from course of performance, course of dealing, or usage in
trade.
The products and services described may contain defects or errors known as errata which may cause deviations from published
specifications. Current characterized errata are available on request.
You may not use or facilitate the use of this document in connection with any infringement or other legal analysis concerning Intel
products described herein. You agree to grant Intel a non-exclusive, royalty-free license to any patent claim thereafter drafted which
includes subject matter disclosed herein.
Intel, the Intel logo, are trademarks of Intel Corporation in the U.S. and/or other countries.
*Other names and brands may be claimed as the property of others.
Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
重要安全指导
Safety Information
Important Safety Instructions
Read all caution and safety statements in this document before performing any of the instructions. See also
Intel Server Boards and Server Chassis Safety Information at
Lesen Sie zunächst sämtliche Warnund Sicherheitshinweise in diesem Dokument, bevor Sie eine der
Anweisungen ausführen. Beachten Sie hierzu auch die Sicherheitshinweise zu Intel-Serverplatinen und
Servergehäusen auf der
Lisez attention toutes les consignes de sécurité et les mises en garde indiquées dans ce document avant de
suivre toute instruction. Consultez Intel Server Boards and Server Chassis Safety Information sur le site
Lea todas las declaraciones de seguridad y precaución de este documento antes de realizar cualquiera de las
instrucciones. Vea Intel Server Boards and Server Chassis Safety Information en
上的Intel® Server Boards and Server Chassis Safety Information(《Intel 服务器主板与服务器机箱安全信息》)。
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
Warnings
Heed safety instructions: Before working with your server product, whether you are using this guide or any
other resource as a reference, pay close attention to the safety instructions. You must adhere to the
assembly instructions in this guide to ensure and maintain compliance with existing product certifications
and approvals. Use only the described, regulated components specified in this guide. Use of other
products/components will void the UL listing and other regulatory approvals of the product and will most
likely result in noncompliance with product regulations in the region(s) in which the product is sold.
System power on/off: The power button DOES NOT turn off the system AC power. To remove all power
from the system, you must unplug the AC power cord from the wall outlet. Make sure the AC power cord is
unplugged before you open the chassis, add, or remove any components.
Hazardous conditions, devicesand cables: Hazardous electrical conditions may be present on power,
telephone, and communication cables. Turn off the server and disconnect the power cord,
telecommunications systems, networks, and modems attached to the server before opening it. Otherwise,
personal injury or equipment damage can result.
Installing or removing jumpers: A jumper is a small plastic-encased conductor that slips over two jumper
pins. Some jumpers have a small tab on top that you can grip with your fingertips or with a pair of fine needle
nosed pliers. If your jumpers do not have such a tab, take care when using needle-nosed pliers to remove or
install a jumper; grip the narrow sides of the jumper with the pliers, never the wide sides. Gripping the wide
sides can damage the contacts inside the jumper, causing intermittent problems with the function controlled
by that jumper. Take care to grip with, but not squeeze, the pliers or other tool you use to remove a jumper,
or you may bend or break the pins on the board.
Electrostatic discharge (ESD) and ESD protection: ESD can damage disk drives, boards, and other parts. We
recommend that you perform all procedures in this chapter only at an ESD workstation. If one is not
available, provide some ESD protection by wearing an anti-static wrist strap attached to chassis ground, any
unpainted metal surface on your server when handling parts.
ESD and handling boards: Always handle boards carefully. They can be extremely sensitive to ESD. Hold
boards only by their edges. After removing a board from its protective wrapper or from the server, place the
board component side up on a grounded, static-free surface. Use a conductive foam pad if available but not
the board wrapper. Do not slide board over any surface.
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
Document Title
Description
Intel® RAID Software User Guide for full
A document that provides information on RAID Card Setup and usage of supported
What to Do when Unable to Enter BIOS
Article ID: 000059999. If the Intel or OEM logo screen displays during POST, the BIOS
12 Gbps SAS or 6G SATA Data Transfer
Article ID# 000008025. A document that provides information on how and where the
1. Preface
1.1 About This Document
This document provides an overview of product features, specification data, and hardware installation
instructions for the Intel® Redundant Array of Inexpensive Disks (RAID) Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088,
RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080
1.2 Document Organization
This document includes the following:
Chapter 1 – Product Overview – Provides a product overview of the features set and support specifications.
Chapter 2 – General Feature Overview – Provides a brief description for the features that are common for the products covered by this guide.
Chapter 3 – Detailed Characteristics – Provides details on the characteristics for each of the products covered by this guide.
Chapter 4 – Connectivity and Drive Support – Provides description of what drives are supported by the
products covered by this guide and the way to connect them.
Chapter 5 – Hardware Installation - Provides support for the installation of the product on the Intel systems
where they are supported.
Chapter 6 – Safety and Regulatory
Chapter 7 – Intel® RAID Maintenance Free Backup Unit AXXRMFBU7 – Provides details of the Intel® RAID
Maintenance-Free Backup Unit AXXRMFBU7 accessory option.
Appendix A. Glossary of Terms
Reference Documents and Online Articles
The following documents are available for download and will be useful to setting up and using the Intel RAID
adapter.
featured and entry level RAID
controllers
or Intel® RAID BIOS Console During
Boot for Intel® Server Boards
entry or Intel® RAID BIOS console command prompts are not visible. To gain access to
these prompts, disable the logo screen.
controller supports 12-Gbps SAS (6G SATA) data transfers.
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
1.3 Product Support Collaterals
In addition to this user guide, Intel provides documentation, device driver updates, and utilities that may be
necessary and/or useful for operation and support of this product. Additional product support collaterals can
be downloaded from the following Intel websites:
For product documentation, go to the following Intel website:
http://www.intel.com/support/
For product device drives and other software utilities, go to the following Intel website:
https://downloadcenter.intel.com
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
Table of Contents
1. Preface .................................................................................................................................................. i
1.1 About This Document ........................................................................................................................ i
1.2 Document Organization .................................................................................................................... i
1.3 Product Support Collaterals ........................................................................................................... ii
2.2 Benefits of the SAS Interface ......................................................................................................... 8
2.3 Benefits of the NVM Express (NVMe) interface....................................................................... 8
2.4 Intel® Tri-Mode RAID Adapter Features ..................................................................................... 8
2.4.1 SAS Features ......................................................................................................................................... 8
2.4.2 SATA III Features .................................................................................................................................. 9
2.4.3 NVMe Interface Features .................................................................................................................. 9
2.4.4 Usability Features ................................................................................................................................ 9
2.4.5 Flexibility Features .............................................................................................................................. 9
5.1.2 Packing List ......................................................................................................................................... 35
5.2.2 Packing List ......................................................................................................................................... 35
Table 2- Data Protection Features ....................................................................................................................... 12
Table 3. Fault-tolerant features ............................................................................................................................ 13
Table 4. Array performance features .................................................................................................................. 13
Table 5. SAS/SATA drive support limits ............................................................................................................ 14
Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
1. Product Overview
The Intel® RAID adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 are are part of the new
family of Intel® RAID adapters. This new family of Tri-Mode RAID adapters allow for creating RAID
configurations with SAS drives, SATA drives, or NVMe drives.
The Intel® RAID adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 are high-performance,
intelligent adapters with RAID control capability. The Tri-Mode RAID Adapters provide reliability, highperformance, and fault-tolerant drive subsystem management.
The Tri-Mode RAID adapters are based on the LSI SAS IC technology and proven MegaRAID technology.
Intel offers a family of Tri-Mode RAID adapters that address the needs for internal connectivity solutions as well
as low and high port count:
• RSP3TD160F – Full featured tri-mode RAID adapter with 16 internal ports
• RSP3MD088F– Full featured tri-mode RAID adapter with 8 internal and 8 external ports
• RSP3DD080F– Full featured tri-mode RAID adapter with 8 internal ports
NOTE: The Intel Tri-Mode adapters are designed to work on systems configured for optimized UEFI boot
mode. There is no built-in configuration utility for these adapters when the system is configured for legacy
boot mode. Some adapters like RSP3WD080E will not work when the system they are installed on is
configured for legacy boot mode.
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
2. Intel® Tri-Mode RAID adapters General Features
2.1 Overview
The Intel® Tri-Mode adapters include a SAS interface and an NVMe interface. Both share the same
connectors by multiplexing the data and sideband signals. As compared with the previous generation of Intel
RAID adapters, the new Tri-Mode family offers increased performance by reducing latency, increasing IOPS,
increasing queue depth and increasing cache memory. They also offer NVMe drive support to allow doing
hardware RAID using these new technology drives.
2.2 Benefits of the SAS Interface
SAS is a serial, point-to-point, enterprise-level device interface that leverages the proven SCSI protocol set.
SAS is a convergence of the advantages of SATA, SCSI, and Fiber Channel and the mainstay of the enterprise
and high-end workstation storage markets.
The SAS interface uses the SCSI command set to ensure reliable data transfers while providing the connectivity
and flexibility of point-to-point serial data transfers. The serial transmission of SCSI commands eliminates
clock-skew challenges. The SAS interface provides improved performance, simplified cabling, smaller
connectors, and lower pin count and power requirements when compared to the original parallel SCSI.
SAS adapters leverage a common electrical and physical connection interface that is compatible with Serial
ATA (SATA) technology. The SAS protocols and the SATA III protocols use a common thin, 7-wire connector.
The SAS/SATA III connector and cable are easier to manipulate, allow connections to smaller devices, and do
not inhibit airflow. The point-to-point SATA III architecture eliminates inherent difficulties created by the legacy
ATA master-slave architecture while maintaining compatibility with existing ATA firmware.
2.3 Benefits of the NVM Express (NVMe) interface
NVMe (non-volatile memory express) is a storage protocol created to accelerate the transfer of data with
solid-state drives (SSDs) by utilizing multiple PCIe connections. Benefits are increased bandwidth (up to
8Gb/s per lane), lower latency, increased efficiency, lower CPU utilization with multiple long command
queues and lower power.
2.4 Intel® Tri-Mode RAID Adapter Features
Next is an explanation of the features of the Intel® Tri-Mode RAID Adapters.
2.4.1 SAS Features
Characteristics of the SAS interface.
• Supports the following:
o 12 Gb/s, 6Gb/s, and 3Gb/s SAS data transfers per PHY.
o SMP communicating topology management information.
o SSP enabling communication with other SAS devices.
o STP enabling communication with SATA devices through an attached expander.
• Provides a serial, point-to-point, enterprise-level storage interface.
• Simplifies cabling between devices.
• Provides a scalable interface that supports up to 240 devices through the use of expanders.
• Supports x2 through x8 wide ports that consist of two (2), four (4), or eight(8) PHYs within a
single port.
• Supports narrow ports consisting of a single PHY.
• Transfers data by using SCSI information units.
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
2.4.2 SATA III Features
The SAS interface is compatible with SATA and it has the following characteristics.
• Supports the following:
o SATA III data transfers up to 6Gb/s.
o STP data transfers up to 6Gb/s.
• Provides a serial, point-to-point storage interface.
• Simplifies cabling between devices.
• Eliminates the master-slave construction used in parallel ATA.
• Permits addressing of multiple SATA targets through an expander.
2.4.3 NVMe Interface Features
The new NVMe interface has the following characteristics.
• Supports the following:
o Data transfers of 8Gb/s per lane (32 Gb/s when 4 PCIe lanes are being used).
o PCI Bus Power Management Interface Specification,Revision 1.2.
o Active State Power Management, states, by placing links in a power-saving mode
during times of no link activity.
• Supports PCIe Hot Plug.
• Supports error handling.
• Provides high bandwidth per pin with low overhead and low latency.
• Supports lane reversal and polarity inversion.
2.4.4 Usability Features
The Tri-Mode RAID adapters have the next usability characteristics.
• Drives spin-up sequencing control.
• Provides one (1) LED signal to indicate link activity for all PHYs for the the drive activity LED on
the chassis.
• Supports the internal SAS sideband signal SFF-8485 (SGPIO) interface.
Note: LED signals indicate an error condition or drive activity. RAID adapters support several blink patterns for
these LEDs, depending on the user configuration and storage enclosure. For information about the LED blink
patterns, contact the storage enclosure manufacturer.
2.4.5 Flexibility Features
The Tri-Mode RAID adapters have the next flexibility characteristics.
• Flash ROM interface, a non-volatile static RAM (NVSRAM) interface.
• Flexible programming interface to tune I/O performance.
• Permit mixed connections to SAS targets or SATA III targets.
• Leverage-compatible connectors for SAS connections and SATA III connections.
• Permit grouping of up to eight (8) PHYs into a single SAS-wide port.
• Permit programming of the World Wide Name.
2.4.6 Drive Roaming
Drive roaming occurs when once a VD is already set up, some or all of the drives that are part of this VD are
manually changed to different ports on the same adapter. When this happens, the adapter detects the RAID
configuration from the configuration data on the drives.
Configuration data is saved in both the NVRAM on the RAID adapter and on the drives attached to the adapter.
This feature maintains the integrity of the data on each drive, even if the drives have changed their physical
device ID. More information on how to use the drive roaming feature can be found on the Intel® RAID Software
User Guide for full featured and entry level RAID adapters.
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
2.4.7 Drive Migration
The Intel® Tri-Mode RAID adapters allow to move one VD from one adapter to another, this is called Drive
Migration. In other words, Drive Migration is the transfer of a set of drives in an existing configuration from one
adapter to another. In order to achieve this, there are some conditions: 1) The drives must remain on the same
channel. 2) The drives must be reinstalled in the same order as in the original configuration. 3) The adapter to
which the drives are migrated cannot have an existing configuration.
Note: When drives are migrated, move only the drives that make up the virtual drive (not all of the drives in a
drive group), so that an NVRAM mismatch error does not occur (provided a configuration is on the destination
adapter). The NVRAM mismatch error appears only when all of the drives are moved to the other adapter.
Note: Drive roaming and drive migration cannot be supported at the same time.
More information on how to use the drive migration feature can be found on the Intel® RAID Software User
Guide for full featured and entry level RAID adapters.
2.4.8 Safety Characteristics
All the Intel® Tri-Mode RAID adapters meet or exceed the requirements of UL flammability rating 94 V0. Each
bare board is also marked with the supplier name or trademark, type, and UL flammability rating.
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
Feature
RSP3TD160F
RSP3MD088F
RSP3DD080F
RSP3WD080E
Broadcom* SAS3516
Broadcom* SAS3516
Broadcom* SAS3508
Broadcom* SAS3408
RAID Levels
0,1,5,6,10, 50, 60
0,1,5,6,10, 50, 60
0,1,5,6,10, 50, 60
0,1,5,10
JBOD Mode or Pass4 GB DDR4 at 2133
4 GB DDR4 at 2133
4 GB DDR4 at 2133
N/A
Form Factor
MD2 (PCIe card)
MD2 (PCIe card)
MD2 (PCIe card)
MD2 (PCIe card)
Drive Interface
x8 PCI Express* 3.0.
x8 PCI Express* 3.0.
x8 PCI Express* 3.0.
x8 PCI Express* 3.0.
12, 6, & 3 Gbps per
12, 6, & 3 Gbps per
12, 6, & 3 Gbps per
12, 6, & 3 Gbps per
Operating
Maximum ambient:
Maximum ambient:
Maximum ambient:
Maximum ambient:
Microsoft Window*,
Microsoft Window*,
Microsoft Window*,
Microsoft Window*,
Drive Types
SAS, SATA, NVMe
SAS, SATA, NVMe
SAS, SATA, NVMe
SAS, SATA, NVMe
Maximum NVMe
Maximum SAS/SATA
utilities
spares
KB
management
2.5 Intel® Tri-Mode RAID adapters Feature Set.
The following table describes the feature set of the Intel Tri-Mode adapters
Table 1. Intel® Tri-Mode RAID adapter comparative feature set
Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
utilities offer these
• Media scan
to 100 percent)
easy upgrade.
Support for RAID
Self-Encrypting Drive
SSD Cache Support
No
No
No
No
Snapshot Recovery
No
No
No
No
MTBF(hours)
Standard Warranty
3 years, AWR options
3 years, AWR options
3 years, AWR options
3 years, AWR options
Feature
RSP3TD160F
RSP3MD088F
RSP3DD080F
RSP3WD080E
On-line Capacity Extension
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Distributed Sparing
Yes
Yes
Yes
No
capabilities:
• Online
capacity
expansion
• Online RAID
level migration
• Drive migration
• Drive roaming
• No reboot
necessary
after
expansion
User-specified
rebuild rate
(specifying the
percentage of
system
resources to use
from 0 percent
Nonvolatile
random access
memory (NVRAM)
of 32 KB for storing
RAID system
configuration
information; the
MegaRAID SAS
firmware is stored
in flash ROM for
Yes Yes Yes No
Yes Yes Yes Yes
Maintenance Free
Backup Unit
(RMFBU). Used to
save RAID Cache in
event of unexpected
power loss
Support
** This setting is firmware dependent.
*** Devices include drives and expanders. Drives on Dual-ported backplanes count twice.
2.6 Data Protection Features
The next table describes the Data protection features of the Intel® Tri-Mode RAID adapters.
Yes
Intel accessory
AXXRMFBU7 –
(Option)
Yes (SAS and SATA)
TCG Enterprise only
Table 2- Data Protection Features
Yes
Intel accessory
AXXRMFBU7 –
(Option)
Yes (SAS and SATA)
TCG Enterprise only)
Yes
Intel accessory
AXXRMFBU7 –
(Option)
Yes (SAS and SATA)
TCG Enterprise only
No
No
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
Background Consistency Checking
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Patrol Read for Media Functionality
S.M.A.R.T Support
Yes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Enclosure Management
RAID Support Before Operating
Write Back Cache with optional
Intel® RAID Management Software
Hot-Spare Support, Global &
Specification
RSP3TD160F
RSP3MD088
RSP3DD080F
RSP3WD080E
Specification
RSP3TD160F
RSP3MD088F
RSP3DD080F
RSP3WD080E
lane
KB
KB
can accept
many as the
drive can
drive can accept
drive can accept
KB, 128 KB, 256 KB,
KB, 64 KB, 128
KB, 64 KB, 128
Yes Yes Yes Yes
Yes Yes Yes Yes
System Loaded
Protection
Dedicated
Yes Yes Yes Yes
Yes Yes Yes No
Yes Yes Yes Yes
Yes Yes Yes Only Global
2.7 Fault Tolerance Features
The next table describes the Fault-tolerant features of the Intel® Tri-Mode RAID adapters
Drive rebuild using hot spares Automatic Automatic Automatic Automatic
Parity generation and checking Yes Yes Yes Yes
1
The Self-Monitoring Analysis and Reporting Technology (SMART) detects up to 70 percent of all
predictable drive failures. In addition, SMART monitors the internal performance of all motors,
heads, and drive electronics.
A
Yes Yes Yes Yes
2.8 Array Performance Features
The next table describes the Array performance features of the Intel® Tri-Mode RAID adapters
Table 4. Array performance features
PCI Express host data transfer rate 8GT/s per lane 8GT/s per lane 8GT/s per lane 8GT/s per lane
Drive data transfer rate 12Gb/s per lane 12Gb/s per
Maximum scatter/gather I/O 80 elements 80 elements 80 elements 80 elements
Maximum size of I/O requests 6.4 MB in 64-KB strips 6.4 MB in 64-
KB strips
Maximum queue tags per drive As many as the drive
Strip sizes 8 KB, 16 KB, 32 KB, 64
Maximum number of concurrent
commands
255 255 255 ?
As
8 KB, 16 KB, 32
12Gb/s per lane 12Gb/s per lane
6.4 MB in 64strips
As many as the
8 KB, 16 KB, 32
6.4 MB in 64strips
As many as the
64K
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
Specification
RSP3TD160F
RSP3MD088F
RSP3DD080F
RSP3WD080E
Maximum virtual drives per adapter
64
64
64
32
Maximum drive groups per adapter
64
64
64
32
Maximum virtual drives per drive group
16
16
16
16
Maximum drives per drive group
32
32
32
32
Maximum physical devices per adapter
64
64
64
64
Maximum hot spares per adapter
64
64
64
63
Maximum spans per virtual drive
8 8 8
8
Maximum enclosures
3**
3**
3**
2**
1
UART_TX
2
Gnd 3
UART_RX
4
1.8 V
2.9 Drive Support Limits
The next table describes the SAS/SATA drive support limits of the Intel® Tri-Mode RAID adapterts
Table 5. SAS/SATA drive support limits
** This setting is firmware dependent.
2.10 Over temperature protection
The Intel® Tri-Mode RAID adapters are designed to operate at a maximum 55 degrees Celsius with a
minimum of 200 LFM air flow, this ensures the internal ROC IC will operate at less than 105 Celsius. If for any
reason there’s an overheating, the internal ROC over temperature protection circuitry will operate like this:
- If the ROC reaches 110 degrees Celsius, the over temperature LED is turned on, I/O is throttled and the
event “MR_EVT_CTRL_TEMP_ABOVE_OPTIMAL_RANGE” is be registered in the adapter’s log.
- if the ROC temperature goes down below 105 degrees Celsius (mostly due to I/O throttling), the over
temperature LED is turned off, the event “MR_EVT_CTRL_TEMP_WITHIN_OPTIMAL_RANGE” is registered in
the adapter’s log and I/O throttling is turned off.
- If the ROC reaches 116 degrees Celsius, the over temperature LED continues to lit, I/O continues to throttle,
the event “MR_EVT_CTRL_TEMP_CRITICAL ” is registered in the adapter’s log, then after 10 seconds of
operation the cache is flushed, pending I/Os are completed and the ROC enters into the “Montask” state, in
which state all I/Os stop except through the UART debugging interface.
2.11 UART Interface
The Intel® Tri-Mode RAID adapters include a UART interface for special debugging purposes.
connector debug port requires a special cable and Intel support to gather detailed ROC/IOC status. The
UART connector uses the layout shown in the following table.
The default communication parameters are 115,200 b/s, 8-bit characters, no parity bit, one stop bit, and no
Table 6- UART Connector Pinout
Pin
Function
The UART
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
XON/XOFF flow control.
2.12 Optional Intel® RAID Maintenance Free Backup Unit (RMFBU)
To protect the integrity of cached data on the Intel® RAID Module during a power loss event, the Intel Tri-Mode
Adapter RMSP3TD160F and RMSP3DD080F provide support for the Intel® Maintenance Free Backup Unit
(RMFBU – Intel Accessory Kit AXXRMFBU7). During a power loss event, this optional accessory provides
back-up power to the RAID Module, allowing the adapter to offload the data stored in the its onboard cache
to its on-board non-volatile NAND flash.
Benefits of the RMFBU option include:
• Capacitor technology has a longer usable life span than batteries, and reduces maintenance and
replacement costs
• Capacitors do not have the chemical volatility of batteries which carry a risk of exothermic events
• RMFBU options do not require the comprehensive certifications required of batteries in order to import and
export them
• The RMFBU can constantly maintain the RAID volume in write back mode even when doing learn cycles
• The recharge rate of the super-capacitor is minutes as compared to hours for a battery
See Chapter 7 for additional RMFBU information.
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
The Intel® RAID adapter RMSP3TD160F is a full featured tri-mode RAID adapter with 16 internal ports based
on the Avago® SAS3516 RAID-On-Chip (ROC). It supports RAID levels 0, 1, 5,6,10, 50, 60 and includes 4 GB
of 72-bit cache memory DDR4 at 2133 MHz. It has an x8 PCI Express* 3.0. PCIe interface and it supports up
to 64 physical SAS.SATA devices** and up to 64 virtual drives. It also supports up to 4 direct attach NVMe
drives. This adapter has a connector to install the Drive Encryption Premium Key. The next figures describe
the connectors for this adapter.
** Physical devices include expanders and if dual-ported back planes are being used, each drive counts twice.
Front side
Figure 1 -
Back side
Intel SAS RMSP3TD160F RAID adapter Layou
t
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
3.2 Intel RAID Module RMSP3TD160F Dimensions
The next figure show the dimensions for the Intel RAID module RMSP3TD160F.
17
Figure 2 -
Intel RMSP3TD160F RAID adapter Dimensions
Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
Typical
Typical
RMFBU learn
3.3V Supply
0.24W
0.28W
+ 12 Supply
16.4W
16.7W
6W
3.3V Auxillary Supply
0.03W
0.08W
Total Power
16.64W
17.02W
6W
3.2.1 Intel RAID Adapter RMSP3TD160F Electrical, Thermal and Atmospheric Requirements.
List of operating conditions for the Intel® RAID adapter RMSP3TD160F:
• Power Supply voltage at the 12V rail (from PCI edge connector): 12V ± 8 percent.
• Power Supply voltage at the 3.3V rail (from PCI edge connector): 13.3V ± 9 percent.
• Relative humidity range is 20 percent to 80 percent non-condensing
• Temperature range: 10 °C to +55 °C (with or without the RMFBU module attached)
List of non-operating conditions (while in storage or in transit) for the Intel® RAID adapter
RMSP3AD160F:
• Relative humidity range is 5 percent to 90 percent non-condensing.
• Temperature range: –40°C to +70°C without battery backup unit
• Temperature range: 0°C to +45°C with battery backup unit
3.2.2 Intel RAID Adapter RMSP3TD160F Power Consumption.
The following table describes the power consumption of the Intel® RAID adapter
RMSP3AD160Funder the following states:
State 1: While sitting idle at the DOS prompt or the EFI shell.
State 2: During a drive stress test; average over 20 minutes of sustained operation
Power Mode State 1 State 2
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
3.3 Intel RAID Adapter RMSP3DD080F
The Intel® RAID module RMSP3DD080F is a full featured tri-mode RAID adapter with 8 internal ports based
on the Avago® SAS3508 RAID-On-Chip (ROC). It supports RAID levels 0, 1, 5,6,10, 50, 60 and includes 4 GB
of 72-bit cache memory DDR4 at 2133 MHz. It has an x8 PCI Express* 3.0. PCIe interface and it supports up
to 64 physical SAS/SATA devices*, 2 direct attach NVMe drives and up to 64 virtual drives**. This adapter
has a connector to install the Drive Encryption Premium Key. The next figure describes the connectors for
this adapter.
** Physical devices include expanders and if dual-ported back planes are being used, each drive counts twice.
Front side
Back side
Figure 3 -
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Intel SAS RMSP3DD080F RAID adapter Layout
Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
3.4 Intel RAID Module RMSP3DD080F Dimensions
The next figure show the dimensions for the Intel RAID module RMSP3DD080F.
Figure 4 -
Intel RMSP3DD080F RAID adapter Dimensions
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
Typical
Typical
RMFBU learn
3.3V Supply
+ 12 Supply
6W
3.3V Auxillary Supply
Total Power
6W
3.4.1 Intel RAID Adapter RMSP3DD080F Electrical, Thermal and Atmospheric Requirements.
List of operating conditions for the Intel® RAID adapter RMSP3DD080F:
• Power Supply voltage at the 12V rail (from PCI edge connector): 12V ± 8 percent.
• Power Supply voltage at the 3.3V rail (from PCI edge connector): 13.3V ± 9 percent.
• Relative humidity range is 20 percent to 80 percent non-condensing
• Temperature range: 10 °C to +55 °C (with or without the RMFBU module attached)
List of non-operating conditions (while in storage or in transit) for the Intel® RAID adapter
RMSP3DD080F:
• Relative humidity range is 5 percent to 90 percent non-condensing.
• Temperature range: –40°C to +70°C without battery backup unit
• Temperature range: 0°C to +45°C with battery backup unit
3.4.2 Intel RAID Adapter RMSP3DD080F Power Consumption.
The following table describes the power consumption of the Intel® RAID adapter RMSP3DD080F
under the following states:
State 1: While sitting idle at the DOS prompt or the EFI shell.
State 2: During a drive stress test; average over 20 minutes of sustained operation
Power Mode State 1 State 2
0.24W 0.28W
13.56W 13.80W
0.03W 0.08W
13.83W 14.16W
3.5 Intel RAID Adapter RMSP3MD088F
The Intel® RAID module RMSP3MD088Fis an entry level tri-mode RAID adapter with 8 internal ports based
on the Avago® SAS3508 SAS I/O controller (IOC). It supports RAID levels 0, 1,5 and 10. It has an x8 PCI
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
Express* 3.0. PCIe interface and it supports up to 64 physical devices* and up to 32 virtual drives**. The
next figure describes the connectors for this adapter.
** Physical devices include expanders and if dual-ported back planes are being used, each drive counts twice.
Top side
Figure 5 -
Bottom side
Intel SAS RMSP3MD088F RAID adapter Layout
3.6 Intel RAID Module RMSP3MD088F Dimensions
The next figure show the dimensions for the Intel RAID module RMSP3HD160F.
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
Figure 6 -
Intel RMSP3MD088F RAID adapter Dimensions
3.6.1 Intel RAID Adapter RMSP3MD088F Electrical, Thermal and Atmospheric Requirements.
List of operating conditions for the Intel® RAID adapter RMSP3HD080E:
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
Typical
Typical
RMFBU learn
3.3V Supply
0.23W
0.20W
+ 12 Supply
16.40W
17.48W
N/A
3.3V Auxillary Supply
0.07W
0.03W
Total Power
16.70W
17.71W
N/A
• Power Supply voltage at the 12V rail (from PCI edge connector): 12V ± 8 percent.
• Power Supply voltage at the 3.3V rail (from PCI edge connector): 13.3V ± 9 percent.
• Relative humidity range is 20 percent to 80 percent non-condensing
• Temperature range: 10 °C to +55 °C (with or without the RMFBU module attached)
List of non-operating conditions (while in storage or in transit) for the Intel® RAID adapter
RMSP3HD080E:
• Relative humidity range is 5 percent to 90 percent non-condensing.
• Temperature range: –40°C to +70°C without battery backup unit
3.6.2 Intel RAID Adapter RMSP3MD088F Consumption.
The following table describes the power consumption of the Intel® RAID adapter RSP3TD160F
under the following states:
State 1: While sitting idle at the DOS prompt or the EFI shell.
State 2: During a drive stress test; average over 20 minutes of sustained operation
Power Mode State 1 State 2
3.7 Intel RAID Adapter RMSP3WD080E
The Intel® RAID module RMSP3WD080E an entry level tri-mode RAID adapter with 8 internal ports based on
the Avago® SAS3408 SAS I/O Controller (IOC). It supports RAID levels 0, 1,10 and hybrid 5. It has an x8 PCI
Express* 3.0. PCIe interface and it supports up to 64 physical devices* and up to 32 virtual drives**. The
next figure describes the connectors for this adapter.
** Physical devices include expanders and if dual-ported back planes are being used, each drive counts twice.
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
Top side
Bottom side
Figure 7 -
Intel SAS RMSP3WD080E RAID adapter Layout
3.8 Intel RAID Module RMSP3WD080E Dimensions
The next figure show the dimensions for the Intel RAID module RMSP3HD160F.
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
Figure 8 -
Intel RMSP3WD080E RAID adapter Dimensions
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
Typical
Typical
RMFBU learn
3.3V Supply
1.6W
1.6W
+ 12 Supply
8.26W
8.42W
N/A
3.3V Auxillary Supply
0.03W
0.03W
Total Power
9.89W
10.05W
N/A
3.8.1 Intel RAID Adapter RMSP3WD080E Electrical, Thermal and Atmospheric
Requirements.
List of operating conditions for the Intel® RAID adapter RMSP3HD080E:
• Power Supply voltage at the 12V rail (from PCI edge connector): 12V ± 8 percent.
• Power Supply voltage at the 3.3V rail (from PCI edge connector): 13.3V ± 9 percent.
• Relative humidity range is 20 percent to 80 percent non-condensing
• Temperature range: 10 °C to +55 °C (with or without the RMFBU module attached)
List of non-operating conditions (while in storage or in transit) for the Intel® RAID adapter
RMSP3HD080E:
• Relative humidity range is 5 percent to 90 percent non-condensing.
• Temperature range: –40°C to +70°C without battery backup unit
3.8.2 Intel RAID Adapter RMSP3WD080E Consumption.
The following table describes the power consumption of the Intel® RAID adapter RSP3TD160F
under the following states:
State 1: While sitting idle at the DOS prompt or the EFI shell.
State 2: During a drive stress test; average over 20 minutes of sustained operation
Power Mode State 1 State 2
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
4. Conectivity and Drive Support
4.1 Connectivity and Drive Support
The Intel® Tri- Mode RAID Adapters have standard female SFF-8643 (Mini-SAS High-Density) connectors to
connect the drives and are designed for the Intel® Server Boards and Systems for the next-generation Intel®
Xeon® processor product family. Those systems have the appropriate backplane capable of supporting SAS,
SATA and NVMe drives.
4.2 Connector Pinout
The Intel® Tri- Mode RAID Adapters have standard female SFF-8643 (Mini-SAS High-Density) connectors to
connect to drives. The connector pinout follows the SFF-9402 specification. SFF-9402 defines how to share
sideband signals between SAS and PCI Express (NVMe).
When SAS/SATA drives are connected either as a direct attach through an SFF-8680 bay or through an
enclosure, existing 12Gb/s SAS cables and mid-plane connector designs are supported by the RAID module .
The next figure shows the pinout for the female SFF-8643 connectors on the adapter cards.
Figure 9. Intel®
RMSP3TD160F RAID Adapter SFF-8643 connector
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
Pin#
Signal
Name
Pin#
Signal
Name
Pin#
Signal
Name
Pin#
Signal
Name
A1
SB7
B1
SB3 GND
C1
SB4
D1
SB5
A2
SB0
B2
SB1
C2
SB2
D2
SB6
A3
GND
B3
GND
C3
GND
D3
GND
A4
RX1+
B4
RX0+
C4
TX1+
D4
TX0+
A5
RX1-
B5
RX0-
C5
TX1-
D5
TX0-
A6
GND
B6
GND
C6
GND
D6
GND
A7
RX3+
B7
RX2+
C7
TX3+
D7
TX2+
A8
RX3-
B8
RX2-
C8
TX3-
D8
TX2-
A9
GND
B9
GND
C9
GND
D9
GND
Table 7. SFF-8643 connector pinout
Signals on Pins A1, A2, B1, B2, C1, C2, D1 and D2 are the shared sideband signals.
4.3 SAS/SATA Drive Support
The Intel® Tri-Mode RAID Adapters are designed to support SAS, SATA and NVMe drives; however, if desired,
they can be used to connect only SAS and SATA drives. In this case, standard SAS cables and backplanes can
be used (make sure to use only those backplanes which have been tested and listed as compatible hardware).
The Intel® Tri-Mode RAID Adapters support the ANSISerial Attached SCSI standard, version 3.0. In addition,
the adapters support the SATA III protocol defined by the Serial ATA specification (SAS), version 3.0. Supporting
both the SAS interface and the SATA interface, the SAS adapter is a versatile adapter that provides the
backbone of both server and high-end workstation environments.
Each port on the RAID Module supports SAS devices, SATA devices, or both, through these protocols:
• SAS Serial SCSI Protocol (SSP), which enables communication with other SAS devices
• SATA, which enables communication with other SATA devices
• Serial Management Protocol (SMP), which communicates topology management information
directly with an attached SAS expander device, and
•Serial Tunneling Protocol (STP), which enables communication with SATA devices through an
attached expander.
SAS technology brings a wealth of options and flexibility with the use of SAS devices and SATA devices within
the same storage infrastructure. However, SAS devices and SATA devices bring individual characteristics that
make each one a more suitable choice depending on the requirements of the given operating environment
and storage needs. The Intel® Tri-Mode Adapters provides the flexibility to combine these two (2) storage
technologies on the same adapter and within the same enclosure.
Note: combining SAS drives and SATA drives within the same virtual drive is allowed on some adapters but
Intel discourages this practice.
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
4.4 Intel® 12 Gb/s SAS 3.0 Expander Support
For system configurations that require more physical SAS/SATA drives then the adapter’s number of ports,
the Intel® Tri-Mode RAID Adapters can support the following Intel® RAID Expanders:
Intel Product Code Product Description
SAS 3.0 12 Gb/s expander
iPC – RES3FV288
®
SAS Expander RES3FV288
Intel
• Featuring 6Gbps data aggregation for 12Gbps data transfer with 6Gb/s devices
• Low Profile MD2 PCIe* add-in card form factor
• 28 internal ports and 8 external ports
• Power from PCIe x1
• HD Mini-SAS 8643 Connectors
Kit includes: (1) SAS Expander card, (2) HD-HD 250mm Expander-to-RAID card cables, and
PCI brackets for low profile and full height.
iPC – RES3TV360
Intel® SAS Expander RES3TV360
• Featuring 6Gbps data aggregation for 12Gbps data transferwith 6Gb/s devices
• Internal mount mid-plane form factor
• 36 internal ports supporting point-to-pont 12, 6, and 3 Gb/s data transfer rates
• RA 4-pin power connector
• HD Mini-SAS 8643 connectors
Kit includes: (1) SAS expander card; (1) 130mm power cable; (1 set) Expander-to-backplane
cables: (4) HD-HD 165mm, (1) HD-HD 300mm, (1) HD-HD 250mm, (3) Rubber Pads, and
mounting screws.
SAS 3.0 12 Gb/s expander
Figure 10. Supported Intel® SAS expander options
4.4.1 SAS Expander Configuration for the Intel® RMSP3TD160F RAID Module
The SAS ports of the Intel® RMSP3TD160F RAID Module are driven by two (2) SAS cores and therefore, are
divided into two (2) separate SAS domains: Domain 1 and Domain 2. One or two SAS connectors within a
common domain can be cabled to a single SAS Expander Card when cabling the RAID Adapter to a SAS
Expander.
Note: Mixing SAS ports from different domains to a single SAS expander card is not supported.
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
Figure 11. RAID module RMS3PTD160 SAS port domain identification
Supported Intel SAS Expanders include several multiport mini-SAS HD (8643) connectors. Some are used as
output connectors to a backplane while others are used as input connectors from the RAID Module. The
following diagrams identify the connector types for each supported SAS expander card.
Figure12. SAS ports for the RES3FV288
Figure13. SAS ports for the RES3TV360
Input Cable Configuration NOTES:
The SAS Expander cards identified above can support one (1) or two (2) Input SAS port cables.
When routing two (2) input SAS port cables from the RAID Module, use cables from the same SAS domain, as
illustrated on the previous page.
Important notice:
Be careful not to connect a SAS expander to a RAID module port configured for NVMe use.
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
4.5 NVMe Drive Support
The Intel® Tri-Mode RAID adapters are designed to support SAS, SATA and NVMe drives; however, if desired,
they can be used to connect only NVMe drives.
Note1: At launch time no mixed mode is allowed, this means that either SAS/SATA or NVMe drives can be
used but not the combination of the two. The mixed mode will be supported at a later firmware version.
The support for NVMe drives is limited to the U.2 (SFF-8639) form factor, connected through a supported
backplane using a specially designed Tri-Mode cable. This cable has one (1) dual SF- SFF-8643 (Mini-SAS
High-Density) on one end and two (2) OCuLink connectors on the other end to connect to the backplane (the
backplane too has both, SF- SFF-8643 and OCuLink connectors). The Intel Part Number for this cable is
AXXCBL700HDCV and it connects up to two NVMe drives.
Note2: Previous generation servers like the R2000WT family or the S2600CW family provide support for
NVME drives using a special NVMe kit which includes a backplane. This backplane only has SFF-8643 (MiniSAS HD) connectors and is NOT compatible with the Tri-Mode RAID Adapters.
Note 3: Using the cable AXXCBL700HDCV on a RAID adapter other than the Tri-Mode RAID adapters can
damage your equipment. Only use the cables intended for those adapters.
The next figures show how to connect the AXXCBL700HDCV cable
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
Figure 14. Connecting the AXXCBL700HDCV to the backplane
Figure 15. Connecting the AXXCBL700HDCV cable to the RAID adapter
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
5. Hardware Installation
Warnings
Heed safety instructions: Before working with your server product, whether you are using this guide or any
other resource as a reference, pay close attention to the safety instructions. You must adhere to the
assembly instructions in this guide to ensure and maintain compliance with existing product certifications
and approvals. Use only the described, regulated components specified in this guide. Use of other
products/components will void the UL listing and other regulatory approvals of the product and will most
likely result in noncompliance with product regulations in the region(s) in which the product is sold.
System power on/off: The power button DOES NOT turn off the system AC power. To remove power from
the system, you must unplug all AC power cords from the server system before you open the chassis, add, or
remove any components.
Hazardous conditions, devices and cables: Hazardous electrical conditions may be present on power,
telephone, and communication cables. Turn off the server and disconnect the power cord,
telecommunications systems, networks, and modems attached to the server before opening it. Otherwise,
personal injury or equipment damage can result.
Installing or removing jumpers: A jumper is a small plastic encased conductor that slips over two jumper
pins. Some jumpers have a small tab on top that you can grip with your fingertips or with a pair of fine needle
nosed pliers. If your jumpers do not have such a tab, take care when using needle nosed pliers to remove or
install a jumper; grip the narrow sides of the jumper with the pliers, never the wide sides. Gripping the wide
sides can damage the contacts inside the jumper, causing intermittent problems with the function controlled
by that jumper. Take care to grip with, but not squeeze, the pliers or other tool you use to remove a jumper,
or you may bend or break the pins on the board.
Electrostatic Discharge (ESD)
Electrostatic discharge can cause damage to your computer or the components within it. ESD can occur
without the user feeling a shock while working inside the system chassis or while improperly handling
electronic devices like processors, memory or other storage devices, and add-in cards.
Intel recommends the following steps be taken when performing any procedures described within this
document or while performing service to any computer system.
• Where available, all system integration and/or service should be performed at a properly equipped ESD
workstation
• Wear ESD protective gear like a grounded antistatic wrist strap, sole grounders, and/or conductive shoes
• Wear an anti-static smock or gown to cover any clothing that may generate an electrostatic charge
• Remove all jewelry
• Disconnect all cables and cords attached to the server before performing any integration or service
• Touch any unpainted metal surface of the chassis before performing any integration or service
• Hold all circuit boards and other electronic components by their edges only
• After removing electronic devices from the system or from their protective packaging, place them
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
component side up on to a grounded anti-static surface or conductive foam pad. Do not place electronic
devices on to the outside of any protective packaging.
5.1 RAID Adapter Installation
5.1.1 Requirements
The following items are required to install an Intel® RAID Adapter:
• Intel® RAID Adapter
• Intel server board based server system with an empty PCIe slot and a Supported Backplane
• Internal Tri-Mode data cables. These cables have one dual SF- SFF-8643 on one end and two oculink
connectors on the other end.
• SAS, SATA or NVMe drives
5.1.2 Packing List
1 – Intel RAID Module w/snap-on bumper (Pre-Installed)
4 – White Plastic Barrel Stand-offs
4 – White Plastic Locking Pins with pull-tab
Note: Intel RAID Products do not include data cables. Appropriate Tri-Mode data cables may be included
with your server system or must be purchased separately.
5.2 RAID Adapter Installation
5.2.1 Requirements
The following items are required to install an Intel® RAID Adapter:
• Intel® RAID Adapter
• Intel server board based server system with support for an Intel Integrated RAID Adapter
Note: Intel RAID Products do not include SAS / SATA data cables. Appropriate SAS / SATA data cables may
be included with your server system or must be purchased separately.
5.2.3 Installation Instructions
1. Unpack the Intel® RAID Adapter.
Unpack your RAID Adapter. Inspect it for damage. If it appears damaged, contact your Intel Customer and
Technical Support representative.
2. Turn off the power to the computer, and disconnect the AC power cord.
3. Remove the computer cover. Refer to the system documentation for instructions.
4. Install the RAID Adapter.
a) Remove the riser card (the adapter can be installed on any riser card)
b) Remove the filler panel
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
c) Insert the adapter in the desired slot. Press down gently, but firmly to make sure that the card is
seated correctly in the slot. Secure the bracket with the bracket screw.
Figure 16 RAID Adapter Installation (insert adapter in slot)
d) Insert back the riser card, press down gently, but firmly.
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
5. Install SAS and / or SATA drives in the host computer case. Refer to the documentation for the devices
for any pre-installation configuration requirements.
6. Connect internal SAS / SATA data cables to appropriate Drives or Backplane
7. Carefully route SAS / SATA data cables back to the Intel RAID Adapter
8. Attach SAS / SATA data cables to the Intel RAID Adapter
9. Reinstall the computer cover, and reconnect the AC power cords to the system
The hardware installation is now complete and the Intel RAID Adapter is ready to be configured. For
complete Intel RAID Adapter configuration information, refer to the Intel® RAID Software User Guide for full featured and entry level RAID controllers available to download from the Intel Support Site:
http://support.intel.com
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
6. Safety and Regulatory (Class A)
Intel RAID products typically have a variety of individual component level certifications; however final
regulatory compliance is based on the combination of the RAID card being within an Intel Server System.
Intended Application – The RAID products are evaluated as Information Technology Equipment (ITE) as part
of Intel’s server chassis systems. These products are intended to be into Intel server systems that will be
installed in offices, schools, computer rooms, and similar commercial type locations. The suitability of this
product for other product categories and environments (such as: medical, industrial, telecommunications,
NEBS, residential, alarm systems, test equipment, etc.), other than an ITE application, may require further
evaluation. Product Safety and EMC Compliance noted below is based on the RAID product into an Intel
server.
6.1 Product Safety Compliance
• UL60950 – CSA 60950(USA / Canada)
• EN60950 (Europe)
• IEC60950 (International)
• CB Certificate & Report, IEC60950 (report to include all country national deviations)
Intel has a system in place to restrict the use of banned substances in accordance with worldwide regulatory
requirements. A Material Declaration Data Sheet is available for Intel products. For more reference on
material restrictions and compliance you can view Intel’s Environmental Product Content Specification at
http://supplier.intel.com/ehs/environmental.htm.
• Europe - European Directive 2002/95/EC
o Restriction of Hazardous Substances (RoHS)
Threshold limits and banned substances are noted below.
Quantity limit of 0.1% by mass (1000 PPM) for:
Lead, Mercury, Hexavalent Chromium,
Polybrominated Biphenyls Diphenyl Ethers (PBB/PBDE)
Quantity limit of 0.01% by mass (100 PPM) for:
Cadmium
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
• California Code of Regulations, Title 22, Division 4.5, Chapter 33:
Best Management Practices for Perchlorate Materials
• China – Restriction of Hazardous Substances (China RoHS)
• WEEE Directive (Europe)
• Packaging Directive (Europe)
• REACH Directive (Europe)
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
7. Intel® RAID Maintenance Free Backup Unit AXXRMFBU7
7.1 Intel® RAID Maintenance Free Backup Unit AXXRMFBU7
Intel® RAID Adapters provide reliability, high performance, and fault-tolerant disk subsystem management. A
complete fault-tolerant strategy requires protection of all data, including the unwritten cached data in the
RAID card’s RAM cache. If power is lost, the data in the RAM cache is lost. To avoid losing this data, a RAID
Maintenance Free Backup Unit (RMFBU) can be added to the configuration.
During normal system operation, the RMFBU monitors the voltage level of the DRAM of the Intel® RAID Adapter
or Intel® RAID Module. If the voltage drops below a predefined level due to an AC power failure or brief power
outage, the RMFBU protects the integrity of the cached data by providing sufficient back-up power to offload
the data from the RAID RAM to the NAND flash. When the voltage level returns to an acceptable level, the RAID
RAM is recovered from flash, and all pending writes to storage devices are completed without losing any data.
The cache memory available on Intel® RAID Adapters and Intel® RAID Modules can improve the overall system
performance. Writing data to the adapter’s cache memory is much faster than writing data to a storage device.
Write operations appear to complete very quickly at the software application level. The Intel® RAID Module
writes the cached data to the storage device when system activity is low or when the cache is getting full. The
risk of using write-back cache is that the cached data can be lost if the AC power fails before it is written to the
storage device. This risk factor is eliminated when the Intel® RAID Module has an RMFBU installed. In addition,
the RMFBU provides an alternative to using an Uninterruptible Power Supply (UPS) or can act as a second level
of fault tolerance when used with a UPS. Furthermore, it eliminates the need for lithium ion (Li-ion) batteries
traditionally used to protect DRAM cache memory on PCI RAID adapters. Therefore this is a greener and lower
total cost cache protection solution.
The RMFBU has built-in functionality to charge the capacitor module automatically and to communicate status
information such as voltage, temperature, and current to the host server system.
The AXXRMFBU7 RMFBU is a kit consisting of a FBU345 super capacitor bank, a plastic bracket to attach the
super capacitor bank to the chassis, and two (2) extender cables, one 605 mm long and the other 930 mm
long. The FBU345 consists of a bank of Electric Double-Layer Capacitors (EDLC) or super capacitors capable
of storing a high amount of electric energy while active. In the event of a power failure, the FBU345 provides
the power needed for the data offload. It also has an over-temperature detection circuitry and a discharge
circuitry that discharges the capacitors while disconnected from the RAID adapter or when the system on
which it is installed is turned off.
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
7.2 FBU345 Specifications and Layout
The Table 8. FBU345 specifications shows the specifications for the FBU 345 Supercap. The Figure 19.
FBU345 layoutsame device followed by its dimensions and pin description.
Item Value
Super Capacitor Module Operating Temperature 0°C to 55°C
Super Capacitor Module Storage Temperature 0°C to 70°C
Rated Voltage 13.5 VDC
Surge Voltage 14.25 VDC
Super Capacitor Module Capacity 7.6 F
Capacity Tolerance 65 mm x 52 mm
RMFBU5 Cache Off-load Module Mechanical -0%, +30%
Rated Energy 0.04 Wh
Super Capacitor Module Charge Time Approximately 2 minutes
Super Capacitor Module Shelf Life 3 years
Super Capacitor Module Operational Life
Maximum Equivalent Series Resistance (ESR) 190 mOhm
Weight 46 g
Intel provides a three-year warranty on the Intel®
RMFBU AXXRMFBU7.
Table 8. FBU345 specifications
The FBU345 is very sensitive to the high operating temperature, and excessive heat may shorten its life. The
over temperature detection circuitry sends an event to the RAID adapter when the operating temperature is
over 55 degrees Celsius, which gets registered in the adapter’s log file.
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
Width (D)
51.0 +/- 1.0 mm
Length (L)
64.0 +/- 1.0 mm
Height T
13.1 +/- 0.4 mm
Pin #
Signal
Color
1
EDLC GND
Black
2
GND_ 3.3V
Black
3
P3V3_VDD
Red 4 +EDLC
Red 5 SWBDA_P3V3
Yellow
6
SWBCL_P3V3
Blue
7
/Event
White
8
NC
Empty
Figure 19. FBU345 layout
FBU 345 Dimensions
Pin Description
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
7.2.1 Extender Cable
The extender cable has an 8-pin Molex 43020-0601 connector on one end and a 9-pin Molex 501330-0900
connector on the other end. Two (2) versions of the cable are included in the kit, one 605 mm long and the
other 930 mm long. The routing of the cable is shown in Figure 20. Extender cable pinout
Figure 20. Extender cable pinout
7.3 Intel® RAID Maintenance Free Backup Unit Installation
The mounting hardware included with Intel® Accessory Kit AXXRMFBU7 is designed to be compatible for
installation in to a supported Intel pedestal and rack mount server system. An alternate attachment method
may be needed when installing this accessory into a non-Intel chassis. Intel recommends using industrialgrade Velcro* or other industrial adhesive material as an acceptable option. Refer to the server chassis
documentation or discuss an appropriate attachment method with the server chassis manufacturer to ensure
the attachment mechanism complies with the chassis requirements.
1. Place the Super Capacitor Module and the plastic holder front-side-up on a flat, clean, static-
free surface.
2. Press the Super Capacitor Module into the plastic holder until the module clicks firmly into
place, as shown in the following figure (note that the actual shape of the product may vary).
Figure 21 - AXXRMFBU7 Mounting Assembly
3. Identify the mounting location for the RMFBU Assembly
a) In a compatible Intel Server system, align the tabs on the holder with the holes on the mounting plate
and slide the holder until it clicks and locks into place.
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
2U System – Air Duct RMFBU Mounting Plate
b) In a non-Intel chassis, apply adhesive material to the RMFBU assembly and affix to desired
mounting location within the chassis.
Figure 22 - RMFBU Assembly Installation
4. Carefully route the extender cable to the Intel RAID Module and attach the cable to the matching
connector. Use the appropriate cable (605 mm or 930 mm long) that best fits.
Figure 23 - Connecting the RMFBU7 to the RAID adapter
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
7.4 Monitoring the Intel® RAID Maintenance Free Backup Unit
Three different utilities can be used to monitor the RMFBU: StorCli, RAID Web Console 3 and HII. This section
only describes how to use HII for this purpose. For details on how to monitor using the other utilities,
consult the Intel® RAID Utilities User Guide.
7.4.1 Monitoring the RMFBU with the Human Interface Infrastructure.
The Human Interface Infrastructure (HII) can be used to configure disk arrays and logical drives. It is
independent of the operating system and can be accessed at server start-up through the Setup BIOS. The HII
can only be accessed when the system is configured for UEFI boot mode. The HII can also be used to monitor
the MFBU.
Note: Refer to the Intel® RAID Software User Guide for full featured and entry level RAID controllers for more
information on the Human Interface Infrastructure.
To view the RMFBU information, do the following:
1. At boot, press the <F2> key when prompted and enter the Setup BIOS.
2. Navigate to Main, Advanced, PCI Configuration, and then UEFI Option ROM Control.
3. Look for the RAID card under the Storage Controller list.
4. Press Enter to get into the Main Menu for the HII Configuration Utility.
Figure 24. HII Dashboard view screen
5.Enter the Main Menu and select Hardware Components to go to the Hardware Component
Screen.
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
Battery Type
A string that identifies the RMFBU type.
Figure 25. HII Hardware Components screen
6. The Hardware Component Screen shows the Battery Status. Select the Battery Management
option.
7. The Battery Management screen contains the following information:
Figure 26. HII Battery Management screen
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
Battery Status
The current status of the RMFBU, normally it should be optimal.
Temperature
The current temperature of the battery pack or supercap
With time, the capacitance decreases, this field shows the current capacitance of the
Manufacturer
The manufacturer of the RMFBU unit.
Serial Number
The serial number of the RMFBU unit.
Date of Manufacture
The date of manufacture of the RMFBU unit.
Module Version
The identifier of the version of the firmware that controls the RMFBU.
Status
The current status of the RMFBU, normally it should be optimal.
Voltage
The current voltage of the RMFBU unit.
Current
The amount of current being delivered by the RMFBU.
Design Capacity
The original capacitance that was intended for the Supercap.
Remaining Capacity
The capacitance left in the Supercap.
Auto-learn Mode
The learning mode currently set for the RMFBU.
Capacitance
battery pack or supercap.
8. Select the Advanced field at the bottom of the of the Battery Management Screen.
9. The Battery Management Screen contains the following information:
Next Learn Cycle Time The time and date for the next learn cycle.
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
EDLC
Electric Double-Layer Capacitors
Appendix A. Glossary
Term Description
Acronym for Basic Input/Output System. Software that provides basic read/write capability.
BIOS
configuration
Usually kept as firmware (ROM-based).
The system BIOS on the motherboard of a computer boots and controls the system. The BIOS on
your host adapter acts as an extension of the system BIOS.
Refers to the way a computer is set up, the combined hardware components (computer, monitor,
keyboard, and peripheral devices) that make up a computer system, or the software settings that
allow the hardware components to communicate with each other.
device driver
domain validation
DRAM cache memory
drive group
EEPROM
external SAS device
Fusion-MPT architecture
A program that permits a microprocessor (through the operating system) to direct the operation
of a peripheral device.
A software procedure in which a host queries a device to determine its ability to communicate at
the negotiated data rate.
Dynamic random access memory (DRAM) is a type of memory typically used for data or program
code that a computer processor needs to function. DRAM is a common type of random access
memory (RAM) used in personal computers (PCs), workstations, and servers.
A group of physical drives that combines the storage space on the drives into a single segment of
storage space. A hot spare drive does not actively participate in a drive group.
Acronym for Electronically Erasable Programmable Read-Only Memory. It is a memory chip that
typically stores configuration information, as it provides stable storage for long periods without
electricity and can be reprogrammed. See NVRAM.
A SAS device installed outside the computer cabinet. These devices are connected using specific
types of shielded cables.
Acronym for Fusion-Message Passing Technology architecture. Fusion-MPT consists of several
main elements: Fusion-MPT firmware, the Fiber Channel and SCSI hardware, and the operating
system-level drivers that support these architectures. Fusion-MPT architecture offers a single
binary, operating system driver that supports both Fiber Channel and SCSI devices.
host
host adapter board A circuit board or circuit that provides a device connection to the computer system.
hot spare
internal SAS device
main memory
The computer system in which a RAID controller is installed. It uses the RAID controller to transfer
information to and from devices attached to the SCSI bus.
An idle, powered on, standby drive that is ready for immediate use in case of drive failure. A hot
spare does not contain any user data. A hot spare can be dedicated to a single redundant array or
it can be part of the global hot-spare pool for all arrays managed by the controller.
When a drive fails, the controller firmware automatically replaces and rebuilds the data from the
failed drive to the hot spare. Data can be rebuilt only from virtual drives with redundancy (RAID
levels 1, 5, 6, 10, 50, and 60; not RAID level 0), and the hot spare must have sufficient capacity.
A SAS device installed inside the computer cabinet. These devices are connected by using a
shielded cable.
The part of computer memory that is directly accessible by the CPU (usually synonymous with
RAM).
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
Acronym for peripheral component interconnect Express. A high-performance, local bus
devices.
Acronym for Redundant Array of Independent Disks (originally Redundant Array of Inexpensive
protection.
Term Description
NVRAM
PCI
PCI Express
peripheral devices
PHY
Acronym for nonvolatile random access memory. An EEPROM (electronically erasable read-only
memory) chip that stores configuration information. See EEPROM.
Acronym for peripheral component interconnect. A high-performance, local bus specification that
allows the connection of devices directly to computer memory. The PCI Local Bus allows
transparent upgrades from 32-bit data path at 33 MHz to 64-bit data path at 33 MHz, and from
32-bit data path at 66 MHz to 64-bit data path at 66 MHz.
specification that allows the connection of devices directly to computer memory. PCI Express is a
two-way, serial connection that transfers data on two pairs of point- to-point data lines. PCI
Express goes beyond the PCI specification in that it is intended as a unifying I/O architecture for
various systems: desktops, workstations, mobile, server, communications, and embedded
A piece of hardware (such as a video monitor, drive, printer, or CD-ROM) used with a computer and
under the control of the computer. SCSI peripherals are controlled through an Intel® RAID
Controller (host adapter).
The interface required to transmit and receive data packets transferred across the serial bus.
Each PHY can form one side of the physical link in a connection with a PHY on a different SAS
device. The physical link contains four wires that form two differential signal pairs. One differential
pair transmits signals, while the other differential pair receives signals. Both differential pairs
operate simultaneously and allow concurrent data transmission in both, thereceive and the
transmit directions.
RAID
RAID levels
SAS
SAS device
SATA
Disks). An array (group) of multiple independent drives managed together to yield higher
reliability, performance, or both exceeding that of a single drive. The RAID array appears to the
controller as a single storage unit. I/O is expedited because several drives can be accessed
simultaneously. Redundant RAID levels (RAID levels 1, 5, 6, 10, 50, and 60) provide data
A set of techniques applied to drive groups to deliver higher data availability, performance
characteristics, or both to host environments. Each virtual drive must have a RAID level assigned
to it.
Acronym for Serial Attached SCSI. A serial, point-to-point, enterprise-level device interface that
leverages the proven SCSI protocol set. The SAS interface provides improved performance,
simplified cabling, smaller connections, lower pin count, and lower power requirements when
compared to parallel SCSI. SAS controllers leverage a common electrical and physical connection
interface that is compatible with Serial ATA.
The SAS controllers support the ANSI Serial Attached SCSI Standard, Version 2.0. In addition, the
controller supports the Serial ATA III (SATA III) protocol defined by the Serial ATA Specification, Version 3.0. Supporting both the SAS interface and the SATA III interface, the SAS controller is a
versatile controller that provides the backbone of both server and high-end workstation
environments. Each port on the SAS RAID controller supports SAS devices, SATA devices, or both.
Any device that conforms to the SAS standard and is attached to the SAS bus by a SAS cable. This
includes SAS RAID controllers (host adapters) and SAS peripherals.
Acronym for Serial Advanced Technology Attachment. A physical storage interface standard, SATA
is a serial link that provides point-to-point connections between devices. The thinner serial cables
allow for better airflow within the system and permit smaller chassis designs.
SSP
stripe The portion of a stripe that resides on a single drive.
Acronym for Serial SCSI Protocol. SSP enables communication with other SAS devices. Each
PHY on the SAS controller can function as an SSP initiator.
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Intel® RAID Adapters RSP3TD160, RSP3MD088, RSP3DD080 and RSP3WD080 Hardware User Guide
Drive striping writes data across two or more drives. Each stripe spans two or more drives but
data redundancy.
Term Description
The total drive space consumed by a stripe not including a parity drive. For example, if a stripe
contains 64 KB of drive space and has 16 KB of data residing on each drive, the stripe size is 64
stripe size
striping
strip size
KB and the strip size is 16 KB.
A larger stripe size produces improved read performance, especially if most of the reads are
sequential. For mostly random reads, select a smaller stripe size.
consumes only a portion of each drive. Each drive, therefore, may have several stripes. The
amount of space consumed by a stripe is the same on each drive that is included in the stripe.
The portion of a stripe that resides on a single drive is a strip, also known as a stripe element.
Striping by itself does not provide data redundancy; striping in combination with parity provides
The drive space consumed by a strip. For example, if a stripe contains 64 KB of drive space and
has 16 KB of data residing on each drive, the stripe size is 64 KB and the strip size is 16 KB. The
stripe depth is four (four drives in the stripe). You can specify strip sizes of 8 KB, 16 KB, 32 KB, 64
KB, 128 KB, 256 KB, 512 KB, or 1 MB.
UPS
Uninterruptible Power Supply. An electrical device that provides power off of a battery when
the input power source (AC) fails.
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