Dell E600i Installation Guide - Page 45

System Boot, The E-Series System Boot Process, Booting from the BOOT_USER Prompt

Page 45 highlights

A System Boot This appendix provides instructions to boot the E-Series system from the BOOT_USER prompt. The E-Series System Boot Process When you supply power to the E-Series system, the system performs a series of power-on self-tests. RPM, and line card Status LEDs blink during initialization. No user interaction is required as long as the boot process proceeds without interruption. Observe the process on your console monitor and note the message output on the display. When the boot process is complete, the RPM and line card Status LEDs remain online (green) and the console monitor displays the command line interface (CLI) prompt, Force10>. The RPM cards in the E-Series system contain an internal flash memory card (flash:). This is the default storage area for the boot files and the startup configuration file. Upon system power up or a system reset, the boot process uses parameters stored in non-volatile random access memory (NVRAM) to boot the system. Each RPM is equipped with a slot for an external flash memory card (slot0:). You can copy the image files and configuration files to the external flash device on the primary RPM. You can also begin your boot process by accessing a remote server containing the boot image and system image files. When you configure your system to boot, you can specify the boot preference order: primary, secondary, or default in the in the BOOT_USER mode and the CLI mode. NOTE: The E-Series system supports up to a 40-character file name length, up to a 180-character local file path length, and up to a 256-character remote file path length. For information about the flash memory card, see Appendix 10, , on page 41. Booting from the BOOT_USER Prompt To get into the BOOT_USER mode, you can issue a break control sequence (CNTL+^) to interrupt the automatic boot process or if you experience boot problems. This mode allows you to modify the parameters necessary to manage the boot process. Only console port access is enabled for the BOOT_USER mode. System Boot | 45

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System Boot
|
45
A
System Boot
This appendix provides instructions to boot the E-Series system from the BOOT_USER prompt.
The E-Series System Boot Process
When you supply power to the E-Series system, the system performs a series of power-on self-tests.
RPM, and line card Status LEDs blink during initialization. No user interaction is required as long as the
boot process proceeds without interruption. Observe the process on your console monitor and note the
message output on the display. When the boot process is complete, the RPM and line card Status LEDs
remain online (green) and the console monitor displays the command line interface (CLI) prompt,
Force10>
.
The RPM cards in the E-Series system contain an internal flash memory card (flash:). This is the default
storage area for the boot files and the startup configuration file. Upon system power up or a system reset,
the boot process uses parameters stored in non-volatile random access memory (NVRAM) to boot the
system.
Each RPM is equipped with a slot for an external flash memory card (slot0:). You can copy the image
files and configuration files to the external flash device on the
primary
RPM. You can also begin your
boot process by accessing a remote server containing the boot image and system image files. When you
configure your system to boot, you can specify the boot preference order: primary, secondary, or default
in the in the
BOOT_USER
mode and the CLI mode.
NOTE:
The E-Series system supports up to a 40-character file name length, up to a 180-character local file
path length, and up to a 256-character remote file path length.
For information about the flash memory card, see
Appendix
10, , on page 41
.
Booting from the BOOT_USER Prompt
To get into the BOOT_USER mode, you can issue a break control sequence (CNTL+^) to interrupt the
automatic boot process or if you experience boot problems. This mode allows you to modify the
parameters necessary to manage the boot process. Only console port access is enabled for the
BOOT_USER mode.