SuperMicro have a nice little utility called ipmicfg, which can be used to interact with the IPMI BMC from within your operating system. This can do all sorts of. All of our Supermicro boards have a dedicated IPMI port. Windows embedded posready 2009 download. It appears that they default to 'Failover', in which they use the dedicated port, and if that goes offline or isn't available at boot, it'll piggyback on LAN1.
How to reset a Supermicro IPMICFG password from inside WindowsYou may encounter a situation where you need to reset the admin password associated with your Supermicro IPMI interface.In my circumstance I had just picked up a 6028TR-HTFR off of eBay for a good deal and all four nodes had unknown passwords.This method will require physical access to the server and this How To will cover how to accomplish the reset leveraging a Windows OS. At the bottom of this article I have linked to additional reading which contains methods for Linux as well as resetting via USB boot.
We signed up without difficulty, and moments later were scrolling through a forum-like view of the latest downloads.This opening interface is text-heavy and rather dull, with no graphics beyond a tiny website logo on the toolbar. NZB.su didn't impress us with its deobfuscation abilities, either – more than half the file names we saw on the opening page were along the lines of 'XvickMbTIm3lzohJqJPkpChPdvI'.Fortunately, you don't have to live with this default view.