Embedded nics/lan on motherboard (lom), Overview, 10 embedded nics/lan on motherboard (lom) – Dell PowerEdge M610x User Manual

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Dell

Dell PowerEdge M610x Technical Guide

23

10 Embedded NICs/LAN on Motherboard (LOM)

10.1 Overview

Two embedded Broadcom

®

5709S dual-port LAN controllers are on the M610x planar as independent

Gigabit Ethernet interface devices. The following information details the features of the LAN
devices:

x4 PCI Express Gen2 capable interface

The M610 operates this controller at Gen1 speed

Integrated MAC and PHY

3072x18 Byte context memory

64 KB receive buffer

TOE (TCP Offload Engine)

NC-SI (Network Controller-Sideband Interface) connection for manageability

Wake-On-LAN (WOL)

PXE 2.0 remote boot

iSCSI boot

IPv4 and IPv6 support

Bare metal deployment support

ISCSI offload accelerator: used for offloading ISCSI traffic as an ISCSI accelerator/HBA –
Optionally enabled through a hardware key

The embedded NICs are not sharable with iDRAC since the blade iDRAC has a dedicated 100Mbps link
(Fabric D).

10.2 Platform Networking LAN on Motherboard (LOM) Technology

Overview

The PowerEdge M610x has two Ethernet ports because they include two built-in dual-port 1GbE
converged networking (CNIC) LOMs based on Broadcom 5709 controllers. The M610x supports multiple
functions over a unified fabric to help manage Ethernet, iSCSI and remote management traffic on
each port simultaneously.
Enterprise networks that use multiple protocols and multiple network fabrics benefit from the
Broadcom C-NICs LOMs’ ability to combine network traffic, storage, and clustering over a single
Ethernet fabric by boosting server CPU processing performance and memory utilization while
alleviating I/O bottlenecks.
Each BCM5709S LOM provides dual 10/100/1000BASE-T Gigabit Ethernet functions, an IEEE802.3-
compliant media access controller (MAC), and a UTP copper physical layer transceiver solution for
high-performance network applications. It enables simultaneous convergence of all networked
communications possible in a server, such as data network (LAN), storage network (e.g., block, iSCSI,
or file [e.g., CIFS/NFS]), and clustering (e.g., High-Performance Computing [HPC]).

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