Reference Guide
NOTE: There is a 100 percent fan request when the command is run against the
servers.
Synopsis
racadm racreset soft
racadm racreset hard
racadm racreset soft -f
racadm recreset hard -f
racadm racreset [-m <module> [-f]]
Input
• -f — This option is used to force the reset.
• -m — The values must be one of the following:
– server–<n> — where n=1–16
– server–<nx> — where n=1–8; x = a, b, c, d (lower case)
NOTE:
– Multiple modules may be specified, such as -m <module1> -m <module
2>.
– -f option is used to force the reset and is available only with an -m option.
Output
racadm racreset
RAC reset operation initiated successfully. It may take up to a
minute for the RAC to come online again.
Example
• iDRAC reset
racadm racreset
• To reset CMC.
racadm racreset
• To reset server 1
racadm racreset -m server-1
• To reset servers 1 and 3
racadm racreset -m server-1 -m server-3
racresetcfg
Description
Deletes your current iDRAC configuration and resets iDRAC to the factory default
settings. After reset, the default name and password are root and calvin, respectively,
and the IP address is 192.168.0.120. Only for iDRAC Enterprise on Blade servers, IP
address and the number of the slot the server inhabits in the chassis.
Deletes your current CMC configuration and resets CMC to the factory default settings.
After reset, the default name and password are root and calvin, respectively, and the IP
address is 192.168.0.120.
If you run racresetcfg from a network client (for example, a supported web browser,
Telnet or SSH, or Remote RACADM), use the default IP address. The racresetcfg
subcommand does not reset the cfgDNSRacName object.
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