Dell PowerEdge 4300 Dell PowerEdge 4300 Systems User's Guide - Page 106

Deutsche, Industrie Norm

Page 106 highlights

The system uses a Personal System/2 (PS/2)-style keyboard and supports a PS/2compatible mouse. Cables from both devices attach to 6-pin, miniature Deutsche Industrie Norm (DIN) connectors on the back panel of your system. A PS/2-compatible mouse works identically to an industry-standard serial mouse or bus mouse except that it has its own dedicated connector, which frees up both serial ports and does not require an expansion card. Circuitry inside the mouse detects the movement of a small ball and relays the direction to the system. Mouse driver software can give the mouse priority with the microprocessor by issuing IRQ12 whenever new mouse movement is detected. The driver software also passes along the mouse data to the application that is in control. If you reconfigure your hardware, you may need pin number and signal information for the keyboard connector. Figure B-4 illustrates the pin numbers for the keyboard connector, and Table B-3 lists and defines the pin assignments and interface signals for the keyboard connector. 3 shell 5 1 6 2 4 1 KBDATA I/O 2 NC - 3 GND - 4 FVcc - 5 KBCLK I/O 6 NC - Shell - - Keyboard data No connection Signal ground Fused supply voltage Keyboard clock No connection Chassis ground B-6 Dell PowerEdge 4300 Systems User's Guide

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B-6
Dell PowerEdge 4300 Systems User’s Guide
.H\ERDUG±DQG±0RXVH±&RQQHFWRUV
The system uses a Personal System/2 (PS/2)-style keyboard and supports a PS/2-
compatible mouse. Cables from both devices attach to 6-pin, miniature
Deutsche
Industrie Norm
(DIN) connectors on the back panel of your system.
A PS/2-compatible mouse works identically to an industry-standard serial mouse or
bus mouse except that it has its own dedicated connector, which frees up both serial
ports and does not require an expansion card. Circuitry inside the mouse detects the
movement of a small ball and relays the direction to the system.
Mouse driver software can give the mouse priority with the microprocessor by issu-
ing IRQ12 whenever new mouse movement is detected. The driver software also
passes along the mouse data to the application that is in control.
.H\ERDUG±&RQQHFWRU
If you reconfigure your hardware, you may need pin number and signal information for
the keyboard connector. Figure B-4 illustrates the pin numbers for the keyboard con-
nector, and Table B-3 lists and defines the pin assignments and interface signals for
the keyboard connector.
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7DEOH±%¶¸µ±±3LQ±$VVLJQPHQWV±IRU±WKH±.H\ERDUG±&RQQHFWRU
3LQ
6LJQDO
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1
KBDATA
I/O
Keyboard data
2
NC
No connection
3
GND
Signal ground
4
FVcc
Fused supply voltage
5
KBCLK
I/O
Keyboard clock
6
NC
No connection
Shell
Chassis ground
shell
1
3
4
5
6
2