Dell Precision R7610 (Mid 2013) User Manual

Page 2

Advertising
background image

However, the user should note that under some circumstances (for example, cold temperatures) the
DDR3 DIMMs may retain their data for a significant amount of time – up to several minutes. That may
potentially allow the DIMMs to be removed from one system and installed in another without loss of
the data contained in them.

Secondary power loss (removing the on board coin- cell battery) will destroy system data in the PCH
(platform controller hub), including time- of- day information.

There are other volatile and non- volatile components on the devices or peripherals attached to the
motherboard:

The Video Card contains volatile and non- volatile memory components. The volatile frame
buffer memory will lose data once power is removed. The non- volatile memory (Video BIOS)
stores only video card setup information. The video BIOS is not accessible by the user.

The CD- RW/Diskette Drives/DVD- R/W/Blu Ray DVD- R/W are input/output devices, whereas the
DVD- ROM is an input device only. All data is processed through cache (volatile) memory. Any
associated internal NVRAM is factory programmed, does not contain any user data, and is not
accessible by the user.

The SAS and/or SATA Hard Drives and optional storage controller cards store non- volatile data.
All data is processed through cache (volatile) memory. Any associated internal NVRAM is factory
programmed, does not contain any user data, and is not accessible by the user. These devices
may be removed.

The Monitor may retain “Burn- In” images after long periods of displaying static data. If any burn-
in images exist, they can readily be seen using simple procedures. NV memory components are
used for storing monitor calibration/configuration data & are not accessible by the user.

To help clarify memory volatility and data retention in situations where the system is put in different
ACPI power states, the following information is provided regarding ACPI power states S0, S1, S3, S4 and
S5:

S0 state is the working state where the dynamic RAM is maintained and is read/write by

the processor.

S1 state is a low wake-up latency sleeping state. In this state, no system context is lost

(CPU or chip set) and hardware maintains all system contexts.

S3 is called “suspend to RAM” state or stand-by mode. In this state the dynamic RAM is

maintained. Dell systems will be able to go to S3 if the OS and the peripherals used in
the system supports S3 state. Windows XP, Windows Vista and Windows 7 all support S3
state.

S4 is called “suspend to disk” state or “hibernate” mode. There is no power. In this state,

the dynamic RAM is not maintained. If the system has been commanded to enter S4, the
OS will write the system context to a non- volatile storage file and leave appropriate
context markers. When the system is coming back to the working state, a restore file
from the non- volatile storage can occur. The restore file has to be valid. Dell systems
will be able to go to S4 if the OS and the peripherals support S4 state. Windows XP,
Windows Vista and Windows 7 all support S4 state.

S5 is the “soft” off state. There is no power. The OS does not save any context to wake

up the system. No data will remain in any component on the system board, i.e. cache or
memory. The system will require a complete boot when awakened. Since S5 is the shut
off state, coming out of S5 requires power on which clears all registers.

The Precision workstation R7610 supports all of the above states, except S1.

Advertising