Reducing Dell PowerEdge (PE) 2950/2900/2800 II/III fan noise – Fan mod + BMC firmware mod (Noob friendly guide)

Dell 2950 III is one of the best bang for the buck servers you can find on Ebaym but there is one problem this server runs very loud by design.

Example (video Credit David Lohle)
 



 
I have my lab setup in my room so I had to do something about this.

After wondering around in the OSMA, DRAC and BIOS with no luck, I turned to almighty Google for help.

Turns out Dell decided not to expose the BMC’s fan controller settings to the users. It’s baked in to the firmware.

Reducing the noise involves two mods, hardware and firmware. 

  1. Fan MOD – Lower the Fan speeds to reduce the noise
  2. Firmware mod – Lowering the BMC fan rpm thresholds  


Update: 

I stress tested the server after the mod, check here for details – Dell PE 2950 Stress test

01. Fan MOD – Lower the Fan speeds to reduce the noise

I stumbled upon this post on the “Blind Caveman’s blog”. – http://blindcaveman.wordpress.com/2013/08/23/problem-dell-poweredge-2950-iii-jet-engine-fan-noise/

Apparently he had success with adding a 47ohm resistor in line to all 4 intake fans, he has a very comprehensive guide on the mod.

I’m just going to put the summery of what I did. (Props to Caveman for coming up with this solution)


Items you need

  • 4pc of 47ohm ½ watt resistors. (Radio shack $1.49)
  • Heat Shrink. (Radio shack $4.59)
  • Soldering iron.
Note : You can drop the resistor value to increase the fan voltage

10v = 12 ohms
9v = 2020 ohms
8v = 3030 ohms
7v = 42
42 ohms

Fan Mod – Steps

01. Remove the cover.

02. Remove the fan by pulling the orange tabs and gently lifting up.

     

 03. Remove the wire clip cut the “Red” wire and solder the resistor in line with the wire.

     

    Red Wire


04. Re-seat the fans back on the server. (be careful not to let it touch the heat sink right next to it)

     

    Watch out for the Heat-sink

Note:
I just modded the intake fans, OP suggest to mod the PSU fans but I don’t think you need to mess with the power supply fans for 3 reasons. 

        • It’s not going to make a huge difference. (my PE is running below 52db with just the intake fans modded)
        • PSU is Expensive to replace. (on Ebay PSU is around $100 but four Dell 2950 Fans cost less than $10)
        • I believe the PSU units should run very cool and efficient as much as possible.

      —————————————————————————————————————————

      So after the mod, I booted up the server, it was running significantly quieter. BUT… yes there’s a huge but….

      Issue 01 – OSMA Errors and fan speed issues

      The fan speeds were ramping up and down every few minutes. 
      When i monitored the fan speeds via DRAC and it showed an error with the fans failing since the idle rpm is lower than the minimum rpm threshold.


      What is  happening

      the BMC lower the fan RPM after the initial boot, since the resistor is in place the lowest RPM is around 1800 and the default minimum RPM error threshold is 2250rpm so the BMC panics, spins the fans back up to 100%, lower them again since the error is cleared. So on. it was going on in a never ending cycle of annoyingness.

      So after some more google fu. I found a post written by a German “Artificial intelligence researcher” who faced the same issue after he swapped out the dell fans with lower RPM ones and since dell refused to help him fix it, he engineered his own fix for this by modifying the BMC firmware to reduce the minimum rpm threshold (how cool is that).

      His name is Arnuschky – Link | Post link

      His post is well written to the point (Kudos to you sir) but its not very noob friendly. 🙁
      So I’m going to make a step by step guide using his post as reference with few more additions, for anyone who is new to open source and messing with dell firmwares.

      02. Firmware mod – Lowering the BMC fan rpm thresholds



      The solution explained-

      Arnuschky figured out the exact setting in the BMC’s firmware, the check-sums etc to modify the fan rpm thresholds and wrote a very nifty script to help us modify the values on a downloaded firmware file.

      What is BMC (board management controller)

      • Among many other things, fans are controlled by the BMC and the fan curve and all the values are baked in to the firmware.

      • BMC (board management controller) by design will ramp up the RPM of the fans every time you add more hardware to the system such as – Add-on cards, RAM, HDD’s, etc


      What is IPMI

      • Intelligent Platform Management Interface, this tool set can be easily installed on any linux distribution and after you enable IPMI in the BIOS (DRAC interface) you can query sensory data from BMC and configure parameters on the BMC.



      Procedure

      Things you should know –

      • This worked for many people including me. Myself nor anyone involved will not be held responsible for any damages caused by proceeding with the firmware mod.

      • You cannot perform this mod on ESXI. But if you are running a base OS like Redhat/CentOS/Ubuntu you should be good to go.

      • You cannot flash the firmware using a VM (If you know a way please let us know)

      • To modify the firmware you have to be on a Linux server, you can technically flash the modified firmware from windows server. I will add the details later in the post


      Packages required

      • BMC Firmware file – Dell Drivers and support
      • IPMI tools
      • glibc.i686 (If you are on a 64bit OS)

      I have Esxi 5.5 installed on the Dell server so I used a Cent OS 6.4 installation running off a USB stick to do the modifications and flashing



      Enable IPMI on the DRAC interface

      • You can do this by logging in to the DRAC web interface or though the bios screen
      • Press ctrl+E during the post screen to access the DRAC card configuration screen and Enable IPMI

      Setting up IPMI Tools

      yum install OpenIPMI OpenIPMI-tools

      StartEnable the Service

      chkconfig ipmi on
      service ipmi start

      Run the following commands to see if IPMI is working

      ipmitool sdr type Temperature
      Temp             | 01h | ok  |  3.1 | -48 degrees C
      Temp | 02h | ok | 3.2 | -42 degrees C
      Temp | 05h | ok | 10.1 | 40 degrees C
      Temp | 06h | ok | 10.2 | 40 degrees C
      Ambient Temp | 08h | ok | 7.1 | 27 degrees C
      CPU Temp Interf | 76h | ns | 7.1 | Disabled
      ipmitool sdr type Fan
      FAN 1 RPM        | 30h | ok  |  7.1 | 4200 RPM
      FAN 2 RPM | 31h | ok | 7.1 | 4200 RPM
      FAN 3 RPM | 32h | ok | 7.1 | 4200 RPM
      FAN 4 RPM | 33h | ok | 7.1 | 4200 RPM
      FAN 5 RPM | 34h | ok | 7.1 | 4200 RPM
      FAN 6 RPM | 35h | ok | 7.1 | 4200 RPM
      Fan Redundancy | 75h | ok | 7.1 | Fully Redundant

      Install glibc.i686

      yum install glibc.i686

      note:
      Firmware Flash program is 32bit and it will fail with the following warning on 64bit OS

      /lib/ld-linux.so.2: bad ELF interpreter: No such file or directory

      Download the relevant firmware file

      • Visit – http://www.dell.com/support/

      • Enter your service tag 

      • Select OS version – Redhat or any other linux flavor (This will allow you to download the .bin file containing the firmware, this is what we need to modify the values)

      To save you time here’s the link for the Dell PE 2950 II, BMC firmware V2.50 – direct link

      mkdir bmcfwmod 
      cd bmcfwmod #create project directory
      wget "http://downloads.dell.com/FOLDER00928606M/1/2950_ESM_Firmware_4NNNG_LN32_2.50_A00.BIN"

      Set permissions and extract the firmware .bin file

      chmod 755 BMC_FRMW_LX_R223079.BIN                              # make executable
      sudo mkdir bmc_firmware # create dir as root
      sudo ./BMC_FRMW_LX_R223079.BIN --extract bmc_firmware # yes, you have to do this as root! :(
      cd bmc_firmware


      Note : You have to extract the bin file in-order to proceed..
      Above commands will extract the firmware bin file, in to the bmc_firmware folder. 
      Check inside the folder to see if you have a file called /payload/bmcflsh.dat.
      If not that means your system is not compatible with this mod. If yes, please continue.

      Patching the firmware file

      Note:
      You should be in the bmc_firmware directory created above

      Download and run the script

      –no-check-certificate switch is used to get around the cert issue due to the github domain name mismatch

      wget "https://raw.github.com/arnuschky/dell-bmc-firmware/master/adjust-fan-thresholds/dell-adjust-fan-thresholds.py --no-check-certificate"
      chmod 755 dell-adjust-fan-thresholds.py # set permissions
      ./dell-adjust-fan-thresholds.py payload/bmcflsh.dat #execute the py script on the bmcflsh.dat file


      The script will prompt you with the following screen

      Select your server model in this case I selected Dell PowerEdge 2950 = number 3

      Then it will prompt you to select the fans and adjust the threshold.
      On the DRAC interface the intake fans shows up numbered 1-4,
      I edited the values for the fans 1 thorough 4 (Only the intake fans will be effected)

      Setting the value

      When you select the fan number it will ask you to enter the value for the new threshold
      This should be entered in multiples of 75 for example the default value is 2025 which is a 27×75 so the default value is 27
      So to reduce the threshold value you need to enter something lower than 27
      I choose 18 as the value, this will drop my threshold to 1350rpm (18×75=1350)

      Saving the changes

      After editing the appropriate values, enter “W” to write the changes to the firmware as prompted.
      This will update the bmcflsh.dat with the modified values

      Flashing the modified firmware

      If you are on a 64bit OS make sure you have the glibc.i686 package installed

      LD_LIBRARY_PATH=./hapi/opt/dell/dup/lib:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH ./bmcfl32l -i=payload/bmcflsh.dat –f


      This will map the necessary Shared Libraries and execute the bmcfl32l to flash the firmware file

      Fans will rev up and stop for a brief moment during the update, don’t worry it will spool up again in a second.
      You do not need to reboot to see the changes, but do a reboot just in case.
      So there you go, your Dell 2950 should be purring away on the shelf silently.

      Note:
      You should disable the IPMI on DRAC since it is a big security risk.

      Tested for more 24 hours

      Update: Dell PE 2950 Stress test after the mod

      • No noticeable temperature difference with the components 
      • No post errors 
      • No OMSA or DRAC errors 

      Noise Level comparison

      Before the mod

      After the mod

      Its a very long post and its almost morning. so forgive me for any grammar, spelling or formatting mistakes.

      Until next time…….

      Managing calendar permissions in Exchange Server 2010

      Admin may get asked to set and add / Edit permissions for shared Calendars.
      these Sharing options are not available in EMC, so we have to use exchange power shell on the server to manipulate them.
      View existing Calendar permissions
      Get-MailboxFolderPermission -identity "Networking Calendar:Calendar"
      There are 4 MailboxFolderPermission cmdlets in Exchange Server 2010:
      Each cmdlet have different syntax, follow the links for more information..
      In this scenario we need to set following permissions to the Calendar Resource named “Networking Calendar.

      user – “Nyckie” – full permissions

      all users – permissions to add events without the delete permission

      • To assign calendar permissions to new users  “Add-MailboxFolderPermission”
      Add-MailboxFolderPermission -Identity "Networking Calendar:Calendar" -User [email protected] -AccessRights Owner
       
      • To Change existing calendar permissions  “set-MailboxFolderPermission”
      set-MailboxFolderPermission -Identity "Networking Calendar:Calendar" -User default -AccessRights NonEditingAuthor
       
      This assigns the owner righs to the user “nyckig” for the calendar of the “Networking Calendar” resource.and sets NonEditingAuthor permissions as the default permission for the calendar for all other users
      __________________________________________
      Here are the other permission levels you can assign:-
      None – FolderVisible
      Owner – CreateItems, ReadItems, CreateSubfolders, FolderOwner, FolderContact, FolderVisible, EditOwnedItems, EditAllItems, DeleteOwnedItems, DeleteAllItems
      PublishingEditor – CreateItems, ReadItems, CreateSubfolders, FolderVisible, EditOwnedItems, EditAllItems, DeleteOwnedItems, DeleteAllItems
      Editor – CreateItems, ReadItems, FolderVisible, EditOwnedItems, EditAllItems, DeleteOwnedItems, DeleteAllItems
      PublishingAuthor – CreateItems, ReadItems, CreateSubfolders, FolderVisible, EditOwnedItems, DeleteOwnedItems
      Author – CreateItems, ReadItems, FolderVisible, EditOwnedItems, DeleteOwnedItems NonEditingAuthor – CreateItems, ReadItems, FolderVisible
      Reviewer – ReadItems, FolderVisible
      Contributor – CreateItems, FolderVisible
      The following roles apply specifically to calendar folders:
      AvailabilityOnly – View only availability data

      LimitedDetails – View availability data with subject and location

      source –

      technet.microsoft.com

      http://blog.powershell.no/2010/09/20/managing-calendar-permissions-in-exchange-server-2010/