Users Guide

Table Of Contents
NOTE: The lower bound is the minimum power needed to operate the chassis given the current configuration. The upper
bound reflects the maximum power available in the current redundancy policy.
NOTE: If the Maximum Power Conversation Mode (MPCM) is enabled on the chassis, all power requests from a blade
server are denied. The blade server is not powered on if there is any action in the iDRAC or blade server requiring the host
to start the power cycle.
Viewing power consumption status
CMC provides the actual input power consumption for the entire system.
Viewing power consumption status using CMC web interface
In the left pane, click Chassis Overview > Power > Power Monitoring. The Power Monitoring page displays the power
health, system power status, real-time power statistics, and real-time energy statistics. For more information, see the Online
Help.
NOTE: You can also view the power redundancy status under Power Supplies.
Viewing power consumption status using RACADM
To view power consumption status using RACADM:
Open a serial/Telnet/SSH text console to CMC, log in, and type:
racadm getpminfo
Viewing power budget status using CMC web
interface
To view power budget status using CMC web interface, in the left pane go to Chassis Overview and click Power > Budget
Status. The Power Budget Status page displays the system power policy configuration with the attributes System Input
Power cap, Redundancy Policy, power budget details with the attributes System Input Max Power Capacity, Input
Redundancy Reserve, Power Available for Server Power-on, and chassis power supply with the power supply unit details.
For more information, see the CMC for Dell PowerEdge FX2/FX2s Online Help.
Viewing power budget status using RACADM
Open a serial/Telnet/SSH text console to CMC, log in, and type:
racadm getpbinfo
For more information about getpbinfo, including output details, see the getpbinfo command section in the Dell Chassis
Management Controller for PowerEdge FX2/FX2s RACADM Command Line Reference Guide.
Redundancy status and overall power health
The redundancy status is a factor in determining the overall power health. When the power redundancy policy is set, for
example, to grid redundancy and the redundancy status indicates that the system is operating with redundancy, the overall
power health is typically OK. If the PSU installed on a chassis fails owing to some reason, the overall power health status
of the chassis is displayed as Non-Critical. However, if the conditions for operating with grid redundancy cannot be met,
Managing and monitoring power
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