On Wed, Feb 15, 2017 at 7:09 AM, Rick Altherr wrote:
> Port D and port E GPIO loopback modes are commonly enabled via hardware
> straps for use with front-panel buttons. When the BMC is powered
> off or fails to boot, the front-panel buttons are directly connected to
> the host chipset via the l
On Tue, 2017-02-14 at 22:55 -0800, Rick Altherr wrote:
> Port D and port E GPIO loopback modes are commonly enabled via hardware
> straps for use with front-panel buttons. When the BMC is powered
> off or fails to boot, the front-panel buttons are directly connected to
> the host chipset via the l
On Wed, Feb 15, 2017 at 5:25 PM, Rick Altherr wrote:
> Port D and port E GPIO loopback modes are commonly enabled via hardware
> straps for use with front-panel buttons. When the BMC is powered
> off or fails to boot, the front-panel buttons are directly connected to
> the host chipset via the lo
Port D and port E GPIO loopback modes are commonly enabled via hardware
straps for use with front-panel buttons. When the BMC is powered
off or fails to boot, the front-panel buttons are directly connected to
the host chipset via the loopback to allow direct power-on and reset
control. Once the BM
Port D and port E GPIO loopback modes are commonly enabled via hardware
straps for use with front-panel buttons. When the BMC is powered
off or fails to boot, the front-panel buttons are directly connected to
the host chipset via the loopback to allow direct power-on and reset
control. Once the BM
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