Just a follow-up on the problem of a Supermicro P6DGE taking forever to
boot up.
I tried several versions of the BIOS with pretty much the same result.
Since each reset the configuration (CMOS) memory, there was little issue
of an overlooked setting contributing to the slow boot.
I tested
Supermicros (and to a similar degree Tyan) are mostly in the server class
of motherboards. That apparently means they put a *lot* of self-test code
in there somewhere. I've had literally thousands of Supermicro machines of
a dozen different types at various times, and they all took an inordinate
It probably is not this, but maybe you can try it.
For a while HP servers had the extremely annoying property of the
boot being rate-limited by the serial console speed if you had been
unfortunate enough to enable it by default. You would not notice
anything other than the slowness on a video
On 07/08/15 04:56, Chuck Guzis wrote:
On 08/06/2015 08:20 PM, Josh Dersch wrote:
You might check whether the BIOS config is set to autodetect drives
at startup; in many BIOSes each IDE channel can be set to Auto/None
or a specific config. Try setting all installed drives to a specific
On 08/06/2015 08:20 PM, Josh Dersch wrote:
You might check whether the BIOS config is set to autodetect drives
at startup; in many BIOSes each IDE channel can be set to Auto/None
or a specific config. Try setting all installed drives to a specific
configuration, and any unused channels to None.
On 08/06/2015 06:24 PM, Jay Jaeger wrote:
Aside from memory tests, in my experience, sometimes slowness can be
caused by a disk controller ROM (often on a SCSI controller) that
gets invoked during the POST that slows things down - particularly if
it also enumerates what is on the SCSI bus.
On Thu, 6 Aug 2015, Chuck Guzis wrote:
The problem is, that even with the Fast boot BIOS setting, it takes well
over a minute to get to the point where it tries to boot.
Does anyone have a clue on why it's so slow? Even getting the POST down to
15-20 seconds would be wonderful.
Slow boot can
On the subject of slow booting, perhaps someone can help me with a very
annoying case of the slowboots.
I've got a dual slot-1 P3 system here--a Supermicro P6DGE, which uses a
440GX chipset and 2GB of registered SDRAM with two 900MHz CPUs. When it
finally get around to s booting, it's a
Aside from memory tests, in my experience, sometimes slowness can be
caused by a disk controller ROM (often on a SCSI controller) that gets
invoked during the POST that slows things down - particularly if it also
enumerates what is on the SCSI bus.
On 8/6/2015 7:35 PM, Chuck Guzis wrote:
On the