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Book Contents Book ContentsGUI Configuration Guide for Cisco UCS E-Series M6 Servers, Release 4.11.1
This chapter includes the following sections:
The Cisco UCS E-Series M6 Servers are size-,weight-, and power-efficient blade servers that are housed within the Cisco Catalyst 8300 Series Edge platforms. These servers provide a general-purpose compute platform for branch-office applications deployed either as bare-metal on operating systems, such as Linux, or as virtual machines on hypervisors, such as VMware vSphere Hypervisor.
The UCS E-Series M6 Server is purpose-built with powerful Intel IceLake-D processors for general purpose compute. It comes in the double-wide form factor, that fits into two SM slots.
For information about the E-Series M6 Servers, and the maximum number of servers that can be installed per router, see the "Hardware Requirements" section in the Hardware Installation Guide for Cisco UCS E-Series M6 Servers.
The UCS E-Series M6 Servers require three major software systems:
Cisco Integrated Management Controller (CIMC) is a management module built into the motherboard of the UCS E-Series M6 Servers. A dedicated processor, separate from the main server CPU, runs the CIMC firmware. CIMC is the management service for the E-Series M6 Servers. You can use a web-based GUI or SSH-based CLI to access, configure, administer, and monitor the server.
The system ships with a running version of the CIMC firmware. You can update the CIMC firmware, but no initial installation is required.
BIOS initializes the hardware in the system, discovers bootable devices, and boots them in the provided sequence. It boots the operating system and configures the hardware for the operating system to use. BIOS manageabilityfeatures allow you to interact with the hardware and use it. In addition, BIOS provides options to configure the system, manage firmware, and create BIOS error reports.
The system ships with a running version of the BIOS firmware. You can update the BIOS firmware, but no initial installation is required.
The main server CPU runs on an operating system, such as Linux; or on a hypervisor. You can purchase the E-Series M6 Servers with a preinstalled operating system or hypervisor.
For information about the operating systems and hypervisors that are available for the E-Series M6 Servers, see the "Software Requirements" section in the Release Notes for Cisco UCS E-Series M6 Servers.
The Cisco Integrated Management Controller (CIMC) is the management service for the E-Series M6 Servers. CIMC runs within the server. You can use a web-based GUI or the SSH-based CLI to access, configure, administer, and monitor the server.
You can use CIMC to perform the following server management tasks:
Most tasks can be performed in either the GUI interface or CLI interface, and the results of tasks performed in one interface are displayed in another. However, you cannot:
The CIMC exists below the operating system on a server. Therefore, you cannot use it to provision or manage operating systems or applications on servers. For example, you cannot do the following:
The CIMC user interface is a web-based management interface for the Cisco UCS E-Series M6 servers. You can launch the user interface and manage the server from a remote host. Supported browsers are:
In case you lose or forget the password that you use to log in to Cisco IMC, see the password recovery instructions in the Hardware Installation Guide for Cisco UCS E-Series Servers.
In your web browser, type or choose the web link for the CIMC.
If a security dialog box displays, do the following:
In the log in window, enter your username and password.
When logging in for the first time to an unconfigured system, use admin as the username and password as the password.
The following situations occur when you login to the Web UI for the first time:
The Change Password dialog box appears.
The Change Password dialog box only appears the first time you log into CIMC. It does not appear for subsequent reboots.
In the New Password field, enter your new password.
In the Confirm Password field, enter the password again to confirm it.
Click Save Changes .
The Chassis Summary page appears, which is the CIMC home page.
The toolbar displays above the Work pane.
Button Name
Description
Refreshes the current page.
Displays the drop-down menu for you to choose power options.
Displays the drop-down menu to launch the virtual KVM console.
Launches the Ping Details pop-up window.
Enables you to reboot Cisco IMC.
The CIMC GUI comprises the Navigation pane on the left-hand side of the screen and the Work pane on the right hand side of the screen. Clicking links on the Chassis , Compute , or Admin menu in the Navigation pane displays the associated tabs in the Work pane on the right.
The Navigation pane header displays action buttons that allow you to view the navigation map of the entire GUI, view the index, or choose a favorite work pane to go to, directly. The Pin icon prevents the Navigation pane from sliding in once the Work pane displays.
The Favorite icon is a star shaped button which allows you to make any specific work pane in the application as your favorite. To do this, navigate to the work pane of your choice and click the Favorite icon. To access this work pane directly from anywhere else in the application, click the Favorite icon again.
The GUI header displays information about the overall status of the chassis and user login information.
The GUI header also displays the total number of faults (indicated in green or red), with a Bell icon next to it. However, clicking this icon displays the summary of only the critical and major faults of various components. To view all the faults, click the View All button to display the Fault Summary pane.
The Navigation pane has the following menus:
Each node in the Chassis menu leads to one or more tabs that display in the Work pane. These tabs provides access to the following information:
Server Properties, Cisco Integrated Management Controller (Cisco IMC) Information, Router Information, Chassis Status.
CPUs, Memory, Power Supplies, Network Adapters, Storage Management, and Trusted Platform Module (TPM) information.
Power Supply, Fan, Temperature, Voltage, Current, LEDs, and Storage sensor readings.
Faults and Logs
Fault Summary, Fault History, System Event Log, Cisco IMC Logs, and Logging Controls.
Each node in the Compute menu leads to one or more tabs that display in the Work pane. These tabs provides access to the following information:
Configure BIOS, Configure Boot Order.
Virtual KVM, Virtual Media, And Serial Over LAN settings.
Bootstrap Process Recording, and Crash Recording information.
Power Restore Policy settings.
Host Image Mapping
Host Image Mapping information.
Each node in the Admin menu leads to one or more tabs that display in the Work pane. These tabs provides access to the following information:
Local User Management, Lightweight Active Directory Protocol (LDAP), TACACS, and Session Management information.
NIC, IPv4, IPv6, VLAN, and Port properties, along with Network Security and NTP settings.
HTTP, XML API, SSH, Redfish, TLS, IPMI over LAN, and SNMP settings.
Certificate Management, Secure Key Management, and Security Configuration.
Platform Event management.
CIMC and BIOS firmware information and management.
Technical support data collection and export, system configuration import and export options, hardware inventory data collection and export, and smart access USB settings.
The GUI for the CIMC software is divided into two main sections, a Navigation pane on the left and a Work pane on the right.
The CIMC online help describes the fields on each CIMC GUI page and in each dialog box. To access the CIMC online help, do one of the following:
In the upper right pane of CIMC, click Gear icon, and choose Log Out from the drop-down menu.
Logging out returns you to the CIMC log in page.
(Optional) Log back in or close your web browser.