I/o connectors, Serial connector, Serial connector autoconfiguration – Dell PowerEdge 1850 User Manual

Page 7

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I/O Connectors

Dell™ PowerEdge™ 1850 Systems Installation and Troubleshooting Guide 

  

Serial Connector

  

PS/2-Compatible Keyboard and Mouse Connectors

  

Video Connector

  

USB Connectors

  

Integrated NIC Connectors

  

Network Cable Requirements

I/O connectors are the gateways that the system uses to communicate with external devices, such as a keyboard, mouse, printer, or monitor. This section
describes the various connectors on your system. If you reconfigure the hardware connected to the system, you may also need the pin number and signal
information for these connectors.

Figure B

-1

illustrates the connectors on the system.

 

Figure B-1. I/O Connectors

Table B

-1

shows the icons used to label the connectors on the system.

 

Table B-1. I/O Connector Icons

 

Serial Connector

Serial connectors support devices such as external modems, printers, and mice that require serial data transmission. The serial connector is also used by the
BMC to provide remote access to the system. The serial connector uses a 9-pin D-subminiature connector.

 

Serial Connector Autoconfiguration

The default designation of the integrated serial connector is COM1. When you add an expansion card containing a serial connector that has the same
designation as the integrated connector, the system's autoconfiguration feature remaps (reassigns) the integrated serial connector to the next available
designation. Both the new and the remapped COM connectors share the same IRQ setting. COM1 and COM3 share IRQ4, while COM2 and COM4 share IRQ3.

Before adding a card that remaps the COM connectors, check the documentation that came with the software to make sure that the software can
accommodate the new COM connector designation.

Figure B

-2

illustrates the pin numbers for the serial connector and

Table B

-2

defines the pin assignments for the connector.

 

Icon

 

Connector

Serial connector

Mouse connector

Keyboard connector

Video connector

USB connector

NIC connector

NOTE:

If two COM connectors share an IRQ setting, you may not be able to use them both at the same time. In addition, if you install one or more

expansion cards with serial connectors designated as COM1 and COM3, the integrated serial connector is disabled.

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