Users Guide

Table Of Contents
Managing and Monitoring Power
The Dell PowerEdge M1000e server enclosure is the most power-efficient modular server enclosure. It is designed to include
highly-efficient power supplies and fans, has an optimized layout for the air to flow more easily through the system, and
contains power-optimized components throughout the enclosure. The optimized hardware design is coupled with sophisticated
power management capabilities built into the Chassis Management Controller (CMC), power supplies, and iDRAC to allow you to
further enhance power efficiency and to have full control over your power environment.
The Power Management features of the M1000e help administrators configure the enclosure to reduce power consumption and
to adjust the power as required specific to the environment.
The PowerEdge M1000e modular enclosure consumes power and distributes the load across all active internal power supply
units (PSUs). The system can deliver up to 16685 Watts of input power that is allocated to server modules and the associated
enclosure infrastructure.
The PowerEdge M1000e enclosure can be configured for any of three redundancy policies that affect PSU behavior and
determine how chassis Redundancy state is reported to administrators.
You can also control power management through the Dell OpenManage Power Center. When the Dell OpenManage Power
Center controls power externally, CMC continues to maintain:
Redundancy policy
Remote power logging
Server performance over power redundancy
Dynamic Power Supply Engagement (DPSE)
110 VAC Operation This is supported for only AC PSUs.
Dell OpenManage Power Center then manages:
Server power
Server priority
System Input Power Capacity
Maximum Power Conservation Mode
NOTE: Actual power delivery is based on configuration and workload.
You can use the CMC Web interface or RACADM to manage and configure power controls on CMC:
View power allocations, consumption, and status for the chassis, servers, and PSUs.
Configure power budget and redundancy policy for the chassis.
Execute power control operations (power-on, power-off, system reset, power-cycle) for the chassis.
Related concepts
Redundancy Policies on page 199
Dynamic Power Supply Engagement on page 202
Default Redundancy Configuration on page 202
Power Budgeting For Hardware Modules on page 203
Viewing Power Consumption Status on page 205
Viewing Power Budget Status on page 206
Redundancy Status and Overall Power Health on page 206
Configuring power budget and redundancy on page 209
Executing Power Control Operations on page 213
Topics:
Redundancy Policies
Extended Power Performance
Dynamic Power Supply Engagement
Default Redundancy Configuration
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