Users Guide

Table Of Contents
Rollback firmware using RACADM
1. Check the rollback status and the FQDD using the swinventory command:
racadm swinventory
For the device for which you want to rollback the firmware, the Rollback Version must be Available. Also, note the
FQDD.
2. Rollback the device firmware using:
racadm rollback <FQDD>
For more information, see iDRAC RACADM Command Line Interface Reference Guide available at dell.com/idracmanuals.
Rollback firmware using Lifecycle Controller
For information, see Lifecycle Controller Users Guide available at dell.com/idracmanuals.
Rollback firmware using Lifecycle Controller-Remote Services
For information, see Lifecycle Controller Remote Services Quick Start Guide available at dell.com/idracmanuals.
Recovering iDRAC
iDRAC supports two operating system images to make sure a bootable iDRAC. In the event of an unforeseen catastrophic error
and you lose both boot paths:
iDRAC bootloader detects that there is no bootable image.
System Health and Identify LED is flashed at ~1/2 second rate. (LED is located on the back of a rack and tower servers and
on the front of a blade server.)
Bootloader is now polling the SD card slot.
Format an SD card with FAT using a Windows operating system, or EXT3 using a Linux operating system.
Copy firmimg.d7 to the SD card.
Insert the SD card into the server.
Bootloader detects the SD card, turns the flashing LED to solid amber, reads the firmimg.d7, reprograms iDRAC, and then
reboots iDRAC.
Using TFTP server
You can use Trivial File Transfer Protocol (TFTP) server to upgrade or downgrade iDRAC firmware or install certificates. It
is used in SM-CLP and RACADM command-line interfaces to transfer files to and from iDRAC. The TFTP server must be
accessible using an iDRAC IP address or DNS name.
NOTE: If you use iDRAC web interface to transfer certificates and update firmware, TFTP server is not required.
You can use the netstat -a command on Windows or Linux operating systems to see if a TFTP server is running. The default
port for TFTP is 69. If TFTP server is not running, do one of the following:
Find another computer on the network running a TFTP service.
Install a TFTP server on the operating system.
Backing up server profile
You can back up the system configuration, including the installed firmware images on various components such as BIOS, RAID,
NIC, iDRAC, Lifecycle Controller, and Network Daughter Cards (NDCs) and the configuration settings of those components. The
backup operation also includes the hard disk configuration data, motherboard, and replaced parts. The backup creates a single
file that you can save to a vFlash SD card or network share (CIFS or NFS).
Setting up managed system and management station
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