User Manual
Table Of Contents
- HP ProLiant SL210t Gen8 Server User Guide
- Abstract
- Notice
- Contents
- Component identification
- Operations
- Power up the nodes
- Power down the node
- Remove the node from the chassis
- Remove the 1U cable guard
- Install the 1U cable guard
- Remove the PCI riser cage
- Install the PCI riser cage
- Remove the 2U adapter board bracket
- Install the 2U adapter board bracket
- Remove the Mini-SAS cable
- Connect the Mini-SAS cable
- Remove the 2U air baffle
- Install the 2U air baffle
- Remove the 1U air baffle
- Install the 1U air baffle
- Setup
- Hardware options installation
- Introduction
- Processor option
- Memory options
- Expansion board options
- GPU power cable option
- Smart Array controller cable options
- Installing the Mini-SAS P222 cable in a 1U node
- Installing the Mini-SAS P222 cable in a 2U node
- Installing the Mini-SAS P430 cable in a 1U node
- Installing the Mini-SAS P430 cable in a 2U node
- Installing the Mini-SAS P420 SFF cable in a 1U node
- Installing the Mini-SAS P420 SFF cable in a 2U node
- Installing the Mini-SAS P420 LFF cable in a 1U node
- Installing the Mini-SAS P420 LFF cable in a 2U node
- Installing the Mini-SAS P830 cable in a 2U node
- Controller options
- HP Trusted Platform Module option
- Cabling
- Software and configuration utilities
- Troubleshooting
- System battery
- Regulatory information
- Electrostatic discharge
- Specifications
- Support and other resources
- Acronyms and abbreviations
- Documentation feedback
- Index

Component identification 13
The HP ProLiant SL210t Gen8 Server supports 2DPC using 1600 MHz DIMMs.
The HP ProLiant SL210t Gen8 Server supports 1DPC using 1866 MHz DIMMs.
NMI functionality
An NMI crash dump creates a crash dump log before resetting a system which is not responding.
Crash dump log analysis is an essential part of diagnosing reliability problems, such as failures of operating
systems, device drivers, and applications. Many crashes freeze a system, and the only available action for
administrators is to restart the system. Resetting the system erases any information which could support
problem analysis, but the NMI feature preserves that information by performing a memory dump before a
system reset.
To force the system to invoke the NMI handler and generate a crash dump log, do one of the following:
• Use the iLO Virtual NMI feature.
• Short the NMI header ("System board components" on page 12).