HP Business Desktops BIOS
Monitoring BIOS Configuration Settings via HP Client Management Interface. Example VB scripts will 
be provided on hp.com in SoftPAQ SP29792.exe. 
There is also a new tool for making BIOS settings locally from a Windows OS environment: HP BIOS 
Configuration for Protect Tools. This tool is supplied as a plug-in for HP Protect Tools. 
Once the desired configuration has been established, the system administrator can enable the HP 
BIOS to store these settings as the computer default settings. With this capability, the administrator 
can establish the default settings for all HP Business Desktop computers remotely. If for some reason 
the BIOS settings are lost on a computer, these custom defaults will be restored by the BIOS instead of 
the BIOS defaults as they shipped from the factory. Factory default settings can be restored if a 
problem occurs. 
Remote problem alerts and reaction 
The HP BIOS adheres to the Alert Standard Format (see ASF standards at 
http://www.dmtf.org/standards/asf/) specification to provide advanced warning and system failure 
alerts from managed clients to remote consoles. ASF provides methods for sending failure/status 
information to remote consoles and receiving instructions from remote consoles in Pre-Boot, Boot, and 
OS unavailable states. This standard helps ensure the interoperability of HP Business Desktop 
computers with alerting and corrective-action software and devices from other vendors. The HP 
Business Desktop computer will issue heartbeat (indicates the computer is running fine), temperature 
problem, fan failure, chassis intrusion, boot failure, memory failure, and processor failure alerts. The 
BIOS will also accept remote ASF requests to restart, shutdown, or wake up the system over the 
network. The HP BIOS allows remote ASF messages to override the boot order—remote ASF 
messages can be used to force the HP Business Desktop computer to boot to PXE, CDROM, or hard 
disk ahead of the default boot order. Past remote alerting solutions have often been proprietary to the 
network controller manufacturer. With ASF support, the HP BIOS provides industry-standard alerts that 
can be monitored by any ASF-compatible software console. On new systems, starting with the HP 
Compaq dc7600 and HP xw4300 Workstation, alerts can also be received via WMI with the new 
HP CMI interface. A local alerting utility called HP Client Management Interface Monitor will be 
provided in a SoftPAQ at
.www.hp.com. 
Remote computer inventory 
The HP BIOS provides firmware support for tracking assets through the System Management BIOS 
Specification 
standard (see SMBIOS standards at http://www.dmtf.org/standards/smbios/). This 
functionality provides asset control management tracking ability with HP Systems Insight Manager or 
other management software products. Detailed computer information concerning the BIOS, processor, 
memory, communications port, and much more can be obtained remotely across the enterprise. The 
BIOS is programmed in the HP factory with a unique asset tag/serial number that can be utilized or 
updated with a customer-specific tracking number of up to 18 alphanumeric characters. With the HP 
BIOS management feature set, the HP Business Desktop computer can be integrated into the enterprise 
environment and operated with standards-based management asset tracking software. The HP BIOS 
provides rich physical asset protection features such as: chassis cover removal alerting, chassis 
locking, and configuration change alerting. Detailed information is available in the Asset Tracking 
and Security section of the 
Desktop Management Guide on the Documentation CD that shipped with the 
computer. On new systems, starting with the dc7600 and xw4300, inventory information can also be 
pulled via WMI with the new HP CMI interface. 
Remote computer control 
The HP BIOS provides wake and power-on functions to enable remote system control for management 
and software maintenance. Remote wakeup features allow the HP Business Desktop computer to be 
remotely powered on, restarted, or powered off by a system administrator. The HP BIOS also allows 
the system to be configured for regular, unattended power-up—the unit can be powered on at a 
specific time and day of the week. These features can be controlled enterprise wide and remotely 
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