x90 Series Install Maint
x90 Series Install Maint
x90 Series Install Maint
THE SPECIFICATIONS AND INFORMATION REGARDING THE PRODUCTS IN THIS MANUAL ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE. ALL
STATEMENTS, INFORMATION, AND RECOMMENDATIONS IN THIS MANUAL ARE BELIEVED TO BE ACCURATE BUT ARE PRESENTED WITHOUT
WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED. USERS MUST TAKE FULL RESPONSIBILITY FOR THEIR APPLICATION OF ANY PRODUCTS.
THE SOFTWARE LICENSE AND LIMITED WARRANTY FOR THE ACCOMPANYING PRODUCT ARE SET FORTH IN THE INFORMATION PACKET THAT
SHIPPED WITH THE PRODUCT AND ARE INCORPORATED HEREIN BY THIS REFERENCE. IF YOU ARE UNABLE TO LOCATE THE SOFTWARE LICENSE
OR LIMITED WARRANTY, CONTACT YOUR CISCO REPRESENTATIVE FOR A COPY.
The following information is for FCC compliance of Class A devices: This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class A digital device, pursuant
to part 15 of the FCC rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference when the equipment is operated in a commercial
environment. This equipment generates, uses, and can radiate radio-frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the instruction manual, may cause
harmful interference to radio communications. Operation of this equipment in a residential area is likely to cause harmful interference, in which case users will be required
to correct the interference at their own expense.
The following information is for FCC compliance of Class B devices: This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class B digital device, pursuant
to part 15 of the FCC rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference in a residential installation. This equipment generates,
uses and can radiate radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the instructions, may cause harmful interference to radio communications.
However, there is no guarantee that interference will not occur in a particular installation. If the equipment causes interference to radio or television reception, which can be
determined by turning the equipment off and on, users are encouraged to try to correct the interference by using one or more of the following measures:
Modifications to this product not authorized by Cisco could void the FCC approval and negate your authority to operate the product.
The Cisco implementation of TCP header compression is an adaptation of a program developed by the University of California, Berkeley (UCB) as part of UCBs public
domain version of the UNIX operating system. All rights reserved. Copyright 1981, Regents of the University of California.
NOTWITHSTANDING ANY OTHER WARRANTY HEREIN, ALL DOCUMENT FILES AND SOFTWARE OF THESE SUPPLIERS ARE PROVIDED AS IS WITH
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LIMITATION, THOSE OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT OR ARISING FROM A COURSE OF
DEALING, USAGE, OR TRADE PRACTICE.
IN NO EVENT SHALL CISCO OR ITS SUPPLIERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY INDIRECT, SPECIAL, CONSEQUENTIAL, OR INCIDENTAL DAMAGES, INCLUDING,
WITHOUT LIMITATION, LOST PROFITS OR LOSS OR DAMAGE TO DATA ARISING OUT OF THE USE OR INABILITY TO USE THIS MANUAL, EVEN IF CISCO
OR ITS SUPPLIERS HAVE BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.
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IronPort logo, Laser Link, LightStream, Linksys, MeetingPlace, MeetingPlace Chime Sound, MGX, Networkers, Networking Academy, PCNow, PIX, PowerKEY,
PowerPanels, PowerTV, PowerTV (Design), PowerVu, Prisma, ProConnect, ROSA, SenderBase, SMARTnet, Spectrum Expert, StackWise, WebEx, and the WebEx logo are
registered trademarks of Cisco and/or its affiliates in the United States and certain other countries.
Cisco and the Cisco Logo are trademarks of Cisco Systems, Inc. and/or its affiliates in the U.S. and other countries. A listing of Cisco's trademarks can be found at
www.cisco.com/go/trademarks. Third party trademarks mentioned are the property of their respective owners. The use of the word partner does not imply a partnership
relationship between Cisco and any other company. (1005R)
Any Internet Protocol (IP) addresses and phone numbers used in this document are not intended to be actual addresses and phone numbers. Any examples, command display
output, network topology diagrams, and other figures included in the document are shown for illustrative purposes only. Any use of actual IP addresses or phone numbers in
illustrative content is unintentional and coincidental.
Cisco x90 Series Content Security Appliances Installation and Maintenance Guide
2016 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
CONTENTS
CHAPTER
vii
1-1
1-2
1-3
CHAPTER
2-1
2-1
CHAPTER
2-2
2-5
1-5
3-1
3-1
3-2
3-5
Cisco x90 Series Content Security Appliances Installation and Maintenance Guide
iii
Contents
CHAPTER
4-1
4-1
CHAPTER
4-7
Summary of Features
6
5-5
6-1
Summary of Features
7
6-2
6-5
7-1
7-4
7-7
Cisco x90 Series Content Security Appliances Installation and Maintenance Guide
iv
6-1
6-1
CHAPTER
5-2
5-1
5-1
CHAPTER
4-4
7-1
Contents
CHAPTER
8-1
8-1
CHAPTER
8-5
9-1
9-1
CHAPTER
10
9-2
9-5
8-2
10-1
10-1
CHAPTER
11
10-4
10-8
11-1
11-1
11-2
11-3
11-9
Cisco x90 Series Content Security Appliances Installation and Maintenance Guide
Contents
APPENDIX
Appliance Specifications
Physical Specifications
A-1
A-1
Environmental Specifications
Power Specifications A-3
770 W AC Power Supply
650 W AC Power Supply
APPENDIX
11-10
A-2
A-3
A-4
B-1
Cisco x90 Series Content Security Appliances Installation and Maintenance Guide
vi
Audience
This guide is for experienced network administrators who configure and maintain Cisco Content
Security Appliances.
Conventions
This document uses the following conventions for notes, cautions, and safety warnings. Notes and
cautions contain important information that you should know.
Note
Means reader take note. Notes contain helpful suggestions or references to material that are not covered
in the publication.
Caution
Means reader be careful. Cautions contain information about something you might do that could result
in equipment damage or loss of data.
Safety warnings appear throughout this guide in procedures that, if performed incorrectly, can cause
physical injuries. A warning symbol precedes each warning statement.
Cisco x90 Series Content Security Appliances Installation and Maintenance Guide
vii
Warning
Waarschuwing
BELANGRIJKE VEILIGHEIDSINSTRUCTIES
Dit waarschuwingssymbool betekent gevaar. U verkeert in een situatie die lichamelijk letsel kan
veroorzaken. Voordat u aan enige apparatuur gaat werken, dient u zich bewust te zijn van de bij
elektrische schakelingen betrokken risico's en dient u op de hoogte te zijn van de standaard
praktijken om ongelukken te voorkomen. Gebruik het nummer van de verklaring onderaan de
waarschuwing als u een vertaling van de waarschuwing die bij het apparaat wordt geleverd, wilt
raadplegen.
BEWAAR DEZE INSTRUCTIES
Varoitus
TRKEIT TURVALLISUUSOHJEITA
Tm varoitusmerkki merkitsee vaaraa. Tilanne voi aiheuttaa ruumiillisia vammoja. Ennen kuin
ksittelet laitteistoa, huomioi shkpiirien ksittelemiseen liittyvt riskit ja tutustu
onnettomuuksien yleisiin ehkisytapoihin. Turvallisuusvaroitusten knnkset lytyvt laitteen
mukana toimitettujen knnettyjen turvallisuusvaroitusten joukosta varoitusten lopussa nkyvien
lausuntonumeroiden avulla.
SILYT NM OHJEET
Attention
Warnung
WICHTIGE SICHERHEITSHINWEISE
Dieses Warnsymbol bedeutet Gefahr. Sie befinden sich in einer Situation, die zu Verletzungen fhren
kann. Machen Sie sich vor der Arbeit mit Gerten mit den Gefahren elektrischer Schaltungen und
den blichen Verfahren zur Vorbeugung vor Unfllen vertraut. Suchen Sie mit der am Ende jeder
Warnung angegebenen Anweisungsnummer nach der jeweiligen bersetzung in den bersetzten
Sicherheitshinweisen, die zusammen mit diesem Gert ausgeliefert wurden.
BEWAHREN SIE DIESE HINWEISE GUT AUF.
Cisco x90 Series Content Security Appliances Installation and Maintenance Guide
viii
Avvertenza
Advarsel
VIKTIGE SIKKERHETSINSTRUKSJONER
Dette advarselssymbolet betyr fare. Du er i en situasjon som kan fre til skade p person. Fr du
begynner arbeide med noe av utstyret, m du vre oppmerksom p farene forbundet med
elektriske kretser, og kjenne til standardprosedyrer for forhindre ulykker. Bruk nummeret i slutten
av hver advarsel for finne oversettelsen i de oversatte sikkerhetsadvarslene som fulgte med denne
enheten.
TA VARE P DISSE INSTRUKSJONENE
Aviso
Advertencia!
Varning!
VIKTIGA SKERHETSANVISNINGAR
Denna varningssignal signalerar fara. Du befinner dig i en situation som kan leda till personskada.
Innan du utfr arbete p ngon utrustning mste du vara medveten om farorna med elkretsar och
knna till vanliga frfaranden fr att frebygga olyckor. Anvnd det nummer som finns i slutet av
varje varning fr att hitta dess versttning i de versatta skerhetsvarningar som medfljer denna
anordning.
SPARA DESSA ANVISNINGAR
Cisco x90 Series Content Security Appliances Installation and Maintenance Guide
ix
Cisco x90 Series Content Security Appliances Installation and Maintenance Guide
Aviso
Advarsel
VIGTIGE SIKKERHEDSANVISNINGER
Dette advarselssymbol betyder fare. Du befinder dig i en situation med risiko for
legemesbeskadigelse. Fr du begynder arbejde p udstyr, skal du vre opmrksom p de
involverede risici, der er ved elektriske kredslb, og du skal stte dig ind i standardprocedurer til
undgelse af ulykker. Brug erklringsnummeret efter hver advarsel for at finde oversttelsen i de
oversatte advarsler, der fulgte med denne enhed.
GEM DISSE ANVISNINGER
Cisco x90 Series Content Security Appliances Installation and Maintenance Guide
xi
Cisco x90 Series Content Security Appliances Installation and Maintenance Guide
xii
Warning
When installing the product, please use the provided or designated connection cables/power
cables/AC adaptors. Using any other cables/adaptors could cause a malfunction or a fire. Electrical
Appliance and Material Safety Law prohibits the use of UL-certified cables (that have the UL shown
on the code) for any other electrical devices than products designated by CISCO. The use of cables
that are certified by Electrical Appliance and Material Safety Law (that have PSE shown on the
code) is not limited to CISCO-designated products. Statement 371
Warning
Read the installation instructions before connecting the system to the power source. Statement 1004
Warning
Ultimate disposal of this product should be handled according to all national laws and regulations.
Statement 1040
Warning
Class 1M laser radiation when open. Do not view directly with optical instruments. Statement 1053
Warning
Warning
Cisco x90 Series Content Security Appliances Installation and Maintenance Guide
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Cisco x90 Series Content Security Appliances Installation and Maintenance Guide
xiv
CH A P T E R
Caution
Warning
Unpacking and Inspecting Cisco x90 Series Content Security Appliances, page 1-2
Preparing for Cisco x90 Series Content Security Appliances Installation, page 1-3
Installing Cisco x90 Series Content Security Appliances In a Rack, page 1-5
Before you install, operate, or service an appliance, review the Regulatory Compliance and Safety
Information for 90-Series Cisco Content Security Appliances for important safety information.
Statement 1071
Cisco x90 Series Content Security Appliances Installation and Maintenance Guide
1-1
Chapter 1
When handling internal appliance components, wear an ESD strap and handle modules by the carrier
edges only.
Tip
Keep the shipping container in case the appliance requires shipping in the future.
Note
The chassis is thoroughly inspected before shipment. If any damage occurred during transportation or
any items are missing, contact your customer service representative immediately.
Step 1
Remove the appliance from its cardboard container and save all packaging material.
Step 2
Compare the shipment to the equipment list provided by your customer service representative. Verify
that you have all items.
Step 3
Check for damage and report any discrepancies or damage to your customer service representative. Have
the following information ready:
Description of damage
Cisco x90 Series Content Security Appliances Installation and Maintenance Guide
1-2
Chapter 1
Installation Guidelines
Warning
To prevent the system from overheating, do not operate it in an area that exceeds the maximum
recommended ambient temperature of: 35 C (95 F).
Statement 1047
Warning
The plug-socket combination must be accessible at all times, because it serves as the main
disconnecting device.
Statement 1019
Warning
This product relies on the buildings installation for short-circuit (overcurrent) protection. Ensure that
the protective device is rated not greater than: 250 V, 15 A.
Statement 1005
Warning
Installation of the equipment must comply with local and national electrical codes.
Statement 1074
Caution
To ensure proper airflow it is necessary to rack Content Security Appliances using rail kits. Physically
placing the units on top of one another or stacking without the use of the rail kits blocks the air vents
on top of the appliances, which could result in overheating, higher fan speeds, and higher power
consumption. We recommend that you mount your appliances on rail kits when you are installing them
into the rack because these rails provide the minimal spacing required between the appliances. No
additional spacing between the appliances is required when you mount the units using rail kits.
Caution
Avoid UPS types that use ferroresonant technology. These UPS types can become unstable with systems
such as the Cisco Content Security Appliances, which can have substantial current draw fluctuations
from fluctuating data traffic patterns.
Cisco x90 Series Content Security Appliances Installation and Maintenance Guide
1-3
Chapter 1
Plan your site configuration and prepare the site before installing the appliance. See the Quick Start
Guides for the Cisco x90 Series Content Security Appliances for the recommended site planning
tasks.
Ensure that there is adequate space around the appliance to allow for servicing the appliance and for
adequate airflow. The airflow in the appliance is from front to back.
Ensure that the air-conditioning meets the thermal requirements listed in the Appliance
Specifications, page A-1.
Ensure that the cabinet or rack meets the requirements listed in the Rack Requirements section on
page 1-4.
Ensure that the site power meets the power requirements listed in the Appliance Specifications,
page A-1. If available, you can use an uninterruptible power supply (UPS) to protect against power
failures.
Rack Requirements
This section provides the requirements for the standard open racks.
The rack must be of the following type:
A standard 19-in. (48.3-cm) wide, four-post EIA rack, with mounting posts that conform to English
universal hole spacing, per section 1 of ANSI/EIA-310-D-1992.
The rack post holes can be square 0.38-inch (9.6 mm), round 0.28-inch (7.1 mm), #12-24 UNC, or
#10-32 UNC when you use the supplied slide rails.
For the Cisco C190, M190, S190, C390, M390, and S390 appliances, the minimum vertical rack
space per appliance must be one RU, equal to 1.75 in. (44.45 mm).
For the Cisco C690, M690, and S690 appliances, the minimum vertical rack space per appliance
must be two RUs, equal to 3.5 in. (88.9 mm).
Equipment Requirements
The slide rails supplied by Cisco Systems for the appliance do not require tools for installation if you
install them in a rack that has square 0.38-inch (9.6 mm), round 0.28-inch (7.1 mm), or #12-24 UNC
threaded holes.
Cisco x90 Series Content Security Appliances Installation and Maintenance Guide
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Chapter 1
Using the Rack Kit to Install Cisco x90 Series Content Security Appliances, page 1-5
Using the Rack Kit to Install Cisco x90 Series Content Security Appliances
This section describes how to install Cisco x90 Series Content Security Appliances in a rack using the
rack kits that are sold by Cisco.
Warning
To prevent bodily injury when mounting or servicing this unit in a rack, you must take special
precautions to ensure that the system remains stable. The following guidelines are provided to ensure
your safety:
This unit should be mounted at the bottom of the rack if it is the only unit in the rack.
When mounting this unit in a partially filled rack, load the rack from the bottom to the top with the heaviest component
at the bottom of the rack.
If the rack is provided with stabilizing devices, install the stabilizers before mounting or servicing the unit in the rack.
Statement 1006
Align an inner rail with one side of the appliance so that the three keyed slots in the rail align with
the three pegs on the side of the appliance (see Figure 1-1 and Figure 1-2).
b.
Set the keyed slots over the pegs, and then slide the rail toward the front to lock it in place on the
pegs. The front slot has a metal clip that locks over the front peg.
c.
Install the second inner rail to the opposite side of the appliance.
Figure 1-1
353363
Step 1
Front of appliance
Cisco x90 Series Content Security Appliances Installation and Maintenance Guide
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Chapter 1
353365
Figure 1-2
1
1
Step 2
2
Front of appliance
Open the front securing plate on both slide-rail assemblies. The front end of the slide-rail assembly has
a spring-loaded securing plate that must be open before you can insert the mounting pegs into the
rack-post holes (see Figure 1-3).
On the outside of the assembly, push the green arrow button toward the rear to open the securing plate.
Figure 1-3
Step 3
Rack post
Align one slide-rail assembly front end with the front rack-post holes that you want to use.
The slide rail front-end wraps around the outside of the rack post and the mounting pegs enter the
rack-post holes from the outside-front (see Figure 1-3).
Note
b.
The rack post must be between the mounting pegs and the open securing plate.
Push the mounting pegs into the rack-post holes from the outside-front.
Cisco x90 Series Content Security Appliances Installation and Maintenance Guide
1-6
c.
Press the securing plate release button, marked PUSH. The spring-loaded securing plate closes to
lock the pegs in place.
d.
Adjust the slide-rail length, and then push the rear mounting pegs into the corresponding rear
rack-post holes. The slide rail must be level front-to-rear.
The rear mounting pegs enter the rear rack-post holes from the inside of the rack post.
Caution
Attach the second slide-rail assembly to the opposite side of the rack. Ensure that the two slide-rail
assemblies are at the same height with each other and are level front-to-back.
f.
Pull the inner slide rails on each assembly out toward the rack front until they hit the internal stops
and lock in place.
The appliance can weigh up to 67 pounds (59 kilograms) when fully loaded with components. We
recommend that you use a minimum of two people or a mechanical lift when lifting the appliance.
Attempting this procedure alone could result in personal injury or equipment damage.
a.
Align the rear of the inner rails that are attached to the appliance sides with the front ends of the
empty slide rails on the rack.
b.
Push the inner rails into the slide rails on the rack until they stop at the internal stops.
c.
Slide the release clip toward the rear on both inner rails (Figure 1-4 and Figure 1-5), and then
continue pushing the appliance into the rack until its front slam latches engage with the rack posts.
Figure 1-4
Step 4
e.
Figure 1-5
353366
Chapter 1
3
3
Cisco x90 Series Content Security Appliances Installation and Maintenance Guide
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Chapter 1
Step 5
(Optional) Secure the appliance in the rack more permanently by using the two screws that are provided
with the slide rails. Perform this step if you plan to move the rack with appliances installed.
With the appliance fully pushed into the slide rails, open a hinged slam latch lever on the front of the
appliance and insert the screw through the hole that is under the lever. The screw threads into the static
part of the rail on the rack post and prevents the appliance from being pulled out. Repeat for the opposite
slam latch.
The Cable Management Arm (CMA) is reversible left to right. To reverse the CMA, see
Reversing the Cable Management Arm (Optional), page 1-9 before installation.
Step 1
With the appliance pushed fully into the rack, slide the CMA tab of the CMA arm that is farthest from
the appliance onto the end of the stationary slide rail that is attached to the rack post (see Figure 1-6).
Slide the tab over the end of the rail until it clicks and locks.
Step 2
Slide the CMA tab that is closest to the appliance over the end of the inner rail that is attached to the
appliance (see Figure 1-6). Slide the tab over the end of the rail until it clicks and locks.
Step 3
Pull out the width-adjustment slider that is at the opposite end of the CMA assembly until it matches the
width of your rack (see Figure 1-6).
Step 4
Slide the CMA tab that is at the end of the width-adjustment slider onto the end of the stationary slide
rail that is attached to the rack post (see Figure 1-6). Slide the tab over the end of the rail until it clicks
and locks.
Step 5
Open the hinged flap at the top of each plastic cable guide and route your cables through the cable guides
as desired.
Cisco x90 Series Content Security Appliances Installation and Maintenance Guide
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Chapter 1
Figure 1-6
Attaching the Cable Management Arm to the Rear of the Slide Rails
352584
Rotate the entire CMA assembly 180 degrees. The plastic cable guides must remain pointing upward.
Step 2
Flip the tabs at the end of each CMA arm so that they point toward the rear of the appliance.
Step 3
Pivot the tab that is at the end of the width-adjustment slider. Depress and hold the metal button on the
outside of the tab and pivot the tab 180 degrees so that it points toward the rear of the appliance.
Cisco x90 Series Content Security Appliances Installation and Maintenance Guide
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Chapter 1
Figure 1-7
352585
PUSH
2
1
1
2
Cisco x90 Series Content Security Appliances Installation and Maintenance Guide
1-10
CH A P T E R
Item
Port
Description
Remote
The port that is used for Remote Power Cycle
Power Cycle (RPC).
Console
Data 1
Data 2
Cisco x90 Series Content Security Appliances Installation and Maintenance Guide
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Chapter 2
Identification button/LED
Cisco x90 Series Content Security Appliances Installation and Maintenance Guide
2-2
Chapter 2
Table 2-1
LED Name
1
4
5
Power button/LED
Unit identification
System status
State
OffThere is no hard drive in the hard drive tray (no access, no fault).
Fan status
Temperature status
Cisco x90 Series Content Security Appliances Installation and Maintenance Guide
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Chapter 2
Table 2-1
LED Name
8
State
Green, blinkingOne or more Ethernet LOM ports are link-active, with activity.
Power supply fault LED - Located on the top left of each power supply.
Power supply AC status LED - Located on the bottom left of each power supply.
Data/Management port link speed LED - Located to the left of each Data or Management port.
Data/Management port link status LED - Located to the right of each Data or Management port.
Unit Identification button/LED - Located to the right of the VGA video port (DB-15).
LED Name
State
Amber, blinkingAn event warning threshold has been reached, but the power
supply continues to operate.
Amber, solidA critical fault threshold has been reached, causing the power
supply to shut down (for example, a fan failure or an over-temperature
condition).
Cisco x90 Series Content Security Appliances Installation and Maintenance Guide
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Chapter 2
Table 2-2
LED Name
State
GreenLink is active.
Summary of Features
Table 2-3 lists the features of the C190 Email Security Appliance.
.
Table 2-3
Feature
Description
Chassis
Processors
Memory
Remote Power
Cycle
Data Ports
Two 1-GB BASE-T Ethernet LAN ports. Can also be used as Management ports.
Management I/O
Supported connectors:
One 1-Gb BASE-T Ethernet LAN ports
One RS-232 serial port
Power
Cooling
Storage
Two 600 GB hard disk drives (2.5 10K SAS 4Kn) are installed into front-panel
drive bays that provide hot-swappable access for SAS drives.
Disk
Management
(RAID)
The appliance has a dedicated internal riser for a PCIe-style Cisco modular RAID
controller card.
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Chapter 2
Summary of Features
Cisco x90 Series Content Security Appliances Installation and Maintenance Guide
2-6
CH A P T E R
Item
Port
Description
Data 1
Data 2
Data 3
Data 4
Remote
Power Cycle
Console
Data 5
Cisco x90 Series Content Security Appliances Installation and Maintenance Guide
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Chapter 3
Identification button/LED
Cisco x90 Series Content Security Appliances Installation and Maintenance Guide
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Chapter 3
Table 3-1
LED Name
1
4
5
Power button/LED
Unit identification
System status
State
OffThere is no hard drive in the hard drive tray (no access, no fault).
Fan status
Temperature status
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Chapter 3
Table 3-1
LED Name
8
State
GreenOne or more Ethernet LOM ports are link-active, but there is no activity.
Green, blinkingOne or more Ethernet LOM ports are link-active, with activity.
Power supply fault LED - Located on the top left of each power supply.
Power supply AC status LED - Located on the bottom left of each power supply.
Data/Management port link speed LED - Located to the left of each Data or Management port.
Data/Management port link status LED - Located to the right of each Data or Management port.
Unit Identification button/LED - Located to the right of the VGA video port (DB-15).
LED Name
State
Amber, blinkingAn event warning threshold has been reached, but the power
supply continues to operate.
Amber, solidA critical fault threshold has been reached, causing the power
supply to shut down (for example, a fan failure or an over-temperature
condition).
GreenLink is active.
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Chapter 3
Table 3-2
LED Name
State
Summary of Features
Table 3-3 lists the features of the C390 Email Security Appliance.
.
Table 3-3
Feature
Description
Chassis
Processors
Memory
Remote Power
Cycle
Data Ports
Management I/O
Supported connectors:
One 1-Gb BASE-T Ethernet LAN ports
One RS-232 serial port
Power
Cooling
Storage
Two 600 GB hard disk drives (2.5 10K SAS 4Kn) are installed into front-panel
drive bays that provide hot-swappable access for SAS drives.
Disk
Management
(RAID)
The appliance has a dedicated internal riser for a PCIe-style Cisco modular RAID
controller card.
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Chapter 3
Summary of Features
Cisco x90 Series Content Security Appliances Installation and Maintenance Guide
3-6
CH A P T E R
Available Models
The Cisco C690 Email Security Appliance is available in the following models:
Note
C690 - Has Ethernet data ports and four small form-factor (SFF) drives, with a 4-drive backplane.
C690X - Has Ethernet data ports and eight SFF drives, with 8-drive direct-connect backplane.
C690-1G - Has two 1-Gigabit Fiber Optic data ports and eight small form-factor (SFF) drives.
C690-10G - Has two 10-Gigabit Fiber Optic data ports and eight small form-factor (SFF) drives.
You cannot change the panel/backplane type after-factory. If you want a different front panel/backplane
configuration, you must order a another model.
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Chapter 4
Rear Panel Ports of the C690 and C690X Email Security Appliances
Item
Port
Description
Data 1
Data 2
Data 3
Data 4
Remote Power
Cycle
Console
Data 5
Management
interface
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4-2
Chapter 4
Rear Panel Ports of the C690-1G and C690-10G Email Security Appliances
Item
Port
Description
Data 2
Data 3
Remote Power
Cycle
Console
Data 1
Management
interface
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Identification button/LED
Cisco x90 Series Content Security Appliances Installation and Maintenance Guide
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Chapter 4
Table 4-1
LED Name
1
4
5
Power button/LED
Unit Identification
System status
State
OffThere is no hard drive in the hard drive tray (no access, no fault).
Fan status
Temperature status
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Chapter 4
Table 4-1
LED Name
8
State
GreenOne or more Ethernet LOM ports are link-active, but there is no activity.
Green, blinkingOne or more Ethernet LOM ports are link-active, with activity.
Power supply fault LED - Located on the top left of each power supply.
Power supply AC status LED - Located on the bottom left of each power supply.
Data/Management port link speed LED - Located to the left of each Data or Management port.
Data/Management port link status LED - Located to the right of each Data or Management port.
Unit Identification button/LED - Located to the right of the VGA video port (DB-15).
LED Name
State
Amber, blinkingAn event warning threshold has been reached, but the power
supply continues to operate.
Amber, solidA critical fault threshold has been reached, causing the power
supply to shut down (for example, a fan failure or an over-temperature
condition).
AC power supplies:
DC power supplies:
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Chapter 4
Table 4-2
LED Name
State
Unit Identification
GreenLink is active.
In Table 4-3, read the status and fault LED states together in each row to determine the event that cause
this combination.
Table 4-3
Green PSU Status LED State Amber PSU Fault LED State Event
Solid on
Off
Blinking
Off
Off
Off
Off
On
Blinking
Solid on
Blinking
Solid on
Blinking
Solid on
Blinking
Solid on
Solid on
Solid on
Blinking
Solid on
Blinking
Solid on
Solid on
Blinking
OTP warning
Solid on
Blinking
OCP warning
Blinking
Off
Summary of Features
Table 4-4 lists a summary of appliance features.
.
Table 4-4
Chassis
Processors
Memory
Remote Power
Cycle
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Summary of Features
Table 4-4
Data Ports
Management I/O
Supported connectors:
Power
Cooling
Storage
Four or eight 600 GB hard disk drives (2.5 10K SAS 4Kn) are installed into
front-panel drive bays that provide hot-swappable access for SAS drives.
Disk
Management
(RAID)
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CH A P T E R
Item
Port
Description
Remote
The port that is used for Remote Power Cycle
Power Cycle (RPC).
Console
Data 1
Data 2
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Identification button/LED
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Chapter 5
Table 5-1
LED Name
1
4
5
Power button/LED
Unit identification
System status
State
OffThere is no hard drive in the hard drive tray (no access, no fault).
Fan status
Temperature status
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Chapter 5
Table 5-1
LED Name
8
State
GreenOne or more Ethernet LOM ports are link-active, but there is no activity.
Green, blinkingOne or more Ethernet LOM ports are link-active, with activity.
Power supply fault LED - Located on the top left of each power supply.
Power supply AC status LED - Located on the bottom left of each power supply.
Data/Management port link speed LED - Located to the left of each Data or Management port.
Data/Management port link status LED - Located to the right of each Data or Management port.
Unit Identification button/LED - Located to the right of the VGA video port (DB-15).
LED Name
State
Amber, blinkingAn event warning threshold has been reached, but the power
supply continues to operate.
Amber, solidA critical fault threshold has been reached, causing the power
supply to shut down (for example, a fan failure or an over-temperature
condition).
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Chapter 5
Table 5-2
LED Name
State
GreenLink is active.
Summary of Features
Table 5-3 lists the features of the M190 Content Security Management Appliance.
.
Table 5-3
Feature
Description
Chassis
Processors
Memory
Remote Power
Cycle
Data Ports
Two 1-Gb BASE-T Ethernet LAN ports. Can also be used as Management ports.
Management I/O
Supported connectors:
One 1-Gb BASE-T Ethernet LAN ports
One RS-232 serial port
Power
Cooling
Storage
Two 600 GB hard disk drives (2.5 10K SAS 4Kn) are installed into front-panel
drive bays that provide hot-swappable access for SAS drives.
Disk
Management
(RAID)
The appliance has a dedicated internal riser for a PCIe-style Cisco modular RAID
controller card.
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Summary of Features
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CH A P T E R
Available Models
The M390 SMA is available in the following models:
Item
Port
Description
Data 1
Data 2
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Chapter 6
Item
Port
Description
Data 3
Data 4
Remote
Power Cycle
Console
Data 5
4
5
HDD 01
HDD 02
HDD 03
HDD 04
HDD 05
HDD 06
HDD 07
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HDD 08
Chapter 6
Table 6-1
Identification button/LED
LED Name
1
4
5
Power button/LED
Unit identification
System status
State
OffThere is no hard drive in the hard drive tray (no access, no fault).
Fan status
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Chapter 6
Table 6-1
LED Name
7
State
Temperature status
GreenOne or more Ethernet LOM ports are link-active, but there is no activity.
Green, blinkingOne or more Ethernet LOM ports are link-active, with activity.
Power supply fault LED - Located on the top left of each power supply.
Power supply AC status LED - Located on the bottom left of each power supply.
Data/Management port link speed LED - Located to the left of each Data or Management port.
Data/Management port link status LED - Located to the right of each Data or Management port.
Unit Identification button/LED - Located to the right of the VGA video port (DB-15).
LED Name
State
Amber, blinkingAn event warning threshold has been reached, but the power
supply continues to operate.
Amber, solidA critical fault threshold has been reached, causing the power
supply to shut down (for example, a fan failure or an over-temperature
condition).
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Chapter 6
Table 6-2
LED Name
State
GreenLink is active.
Summary of Features
Table 6-3 lists the features of the M390 Content Security Management Appliance.
.
Table 6-3
Feature
Description
Chassis
Processors
Memory
Remote Power
Cycle
Data Ports
Management I/O
Supported connectors:
One 1-Gb BASE-T Ethernet LAN ports
One RS-232 serial port
Power
Cooling
Storage
Six or eight 600 GB hard disk drives (2.5 10K SAS 4Kn) are installed into
front-panel drive bays that provide hot-swappable access for SAS drives.
Disk
Management
(RAID)
The appliance has a dedicated internal riser for a PCIe-style Cisco modular RAID
controller card.
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Summary of Features
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CH A P T E R
Available Models
The Cisco M690 Content Security Management Appliance is available in the following models:
Note
M690 - Has Ethernet data ports and ten small form-factor (SFF) drives, with a ten-drive backplane.
M690X - Has Ethernet data ports and sixteen SFF drives, with a sixteen-drive direct-connect
backplane.
M690-1G - Has two 1-Gigabit Fiber Optic ports and sixteen small form-factor (SFF) drives.
M690-10G - Has two 10-Gigabit Fiber Optic ports and sixteen small form-factor (SFF) drives.
You cannot change the panel/backplane type after-factory. If you want a different front panel/backplane
configuration, you must order a another model.
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Chapter 7
Rear Panel Ports of the M690 and M690X Content Security Management Appliances
Item
Port
Description
Data 1
Data 2
Data 3
Data 4
Remote Power
Cycle
Console
Data 5
Management
interface
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Chapter 7
Rear Panel Ports of the M690-1G and M690-10G Models of Cisco 90-Series Content
Security Management Appliances
Item
Port
Description
Data 2
Data 3
Remote Power
Cycle
Console
Data 1
Management
interface
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Identification button/LED
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Chapter 7
Table 7-1
LED Name
1
4
5
Power button/LED
Unit Identification
System status
State
OffThere is no hard drive in the hard drive tray (no access, no fault).
Fan status
Temperature status
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Table 7-1
LED Name
8
State
GreenOne or more Ethernet LOM ports are link-active, but there is no activity.
Green, blinkingOne or more Ethernet LOM ports are link-active, with activity.
Power supply fault LED - Located on the top left of each power supply.
Power supply AC status LED - Located on the bottom left of each power supply.
Data/Management port link speed LED - Located to the left of each Data or Management port.
Data/Management port link status LED - Located to the right of each Data or Management port.
Unit Identification button/LED - Located to the right of the VGA video port (DB-15).
LED Name
State
Amber, blinkingAn event warning threshold has been reached, but the power
supply continues to operate.
Amber, solidA critical fault threshold has been reached, causing the power
supply to shut down (for example, a fan failure or an over-temperature
condition).
AC power supplies:
DC power supplies:
Cisco x90 Series Content Security Appliances Installation and Maintenance Guide
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Chapter 7
Table 7-2
LED Name
State
Unit Identification
GreenLink is active.
In Table 7-3, read the status and fault LED states together in each row to determine the event that causes
this combination.
Table 7-3
Green PSU Status LED State Amber PSU Fault LED State Event
Solid on
Off
Blinking
Off
Off
Off
Off
On
Blinking
Solid on
Blinking
Solid on
Blinking
Solid on
Blinking
Solid on
Solid on
Solid on
Blinking
Solid on
Blinking
Solid on
Solid on
Blinking
OTP warning
Solid on
Blinking
OCP warning
Blinking
Off
Summary of Features
Table 7-4 lists a summary of appliance features.
.
Table 7-4
Chassis
Processors
Memory
Remote Power
Cycle
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Chapter 7
Summary of Features
Table 7-4
Data Ports
Management I/O
Supported connectors:
Power
Cooling
Storage
Ten or sixteen 600 GB hard disk drives (2.5 10K SAS 4Kn) are installed into
front-panel drive bays that provide hot-swappable access for SAS drives.
Disk
Management
(RAID)
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CH A P T E R
Item
Port
Description
Proxy port 1
Proxy port 2
Remote Power
Cycle
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Chapter 8
Item
Port
Description
Console
Management
interface 1
Management
interface 2
Identification button/LED
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Chapter 8
Table 8-1
LED Name
1
4
5
Power button/LED
Unit identification
System status
State
OffThere is no hard drive in the hard drive tray (no access, no fault).
Fan status
Temperature status
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Chapter 8
Table 8-1
LED Name
8
State
GreenOne or more Ethernet LOM ports are link-active, but there is no activity.
Green, blinkingOne or more Ethernet LOM ports are link-active, with activity.
Power supply fault LED - Located on the top left of each power supply.
Power supply AC status LED - Located on the bottom left of each power supply.
Data/Management port link speed LED - Located to the left of each Data or Management port.
Data/Management port link status LED - Located to the right of each Data or Management port.
Unit Identification button/LED - Located to the right of the VGA video port (DB-15).
LED Name
State
Amber, blinkingAn event warning threshold has been reached, but the power
supply continues to operate.
Amber, solidA critical fault threshold has been reached, causing the power
supply to shut down (for example, a fan failure or an over-temperature
condition).
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Chapter 8
Table 8-2
LED Name
State
GreenLink is active.
Summary of Features
Table 8-3 lists the features of the Cisco S190 Web Security Appliance.
.
Table 8-3
Feature
Description
Chassis
Processors
Memory
Multi-bit error
protection
Remote Power
Cycle
Proxy Ports
Traffic
Monitoring Ports
Management I/O
Supported connectors:
One 1-Gb BASE-T Ethernet LAN ports
One RS-232 serial port
Power
Cooling
Storage
Two 600 GB hard disk drives (2.5 10K SAS 4Kn) are installed into front-panel
drive bays that provide hot-swappable access for SAS drives.
Disk
Management
(RAID)
The appliance has a dedicated internal riser for a PCIe-style Cisco modular RAID
controller card.
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Summary of Features
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CH A P T E R
Item
Port
Description
Proxy port 1
Proxy port 2
Remote Power
Cycle
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Chapter 9
Item
Port
Description
Console
Management
interface 1
Management
interface 2
Identification button/LED
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Chapter 9
Table 9-1
LED Name
1
4
5
Power button/LED
Unit identification
System status
State
OffThere is no hard drive in the hard drive tray (no access, no fault).
Fan status
Temperature status
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Chapter 9
Table 9-1
LED Name
8
State
GreenOne or more Ethernet LOM ports are link-active, but there is no activity.
Green, blinkingOne or more Ethernet LOM ports are link-active, with activity.
Power supply fault LED - Located on the top left of each power supply.
Power supply AC status LED - Located on the bottom left of each power supply.
Data/Management port link speed LED - Located to the left of each Data or Management port.
Data/Management port link status LED - Located to the right of each Data or Management port.
Unit Identification button/LED - Located to the right of the VGA video port (DB-15).
LED Name
State
Amber, blinkingAn event warning threshold has been reached, but the power
supply continues to operate.
Amber, solidA critical fault threshold has been reached, causing the power
supply to shut down (for example, a fan failure or an over-temperature
condition).
GreenLink is active.
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Chapter 9
Summary of Features
Table 9-3 lists the features of the S390 Web Security Appliance.
.
Table 9-3
Feature
Description
Chassis
Processors
Memory
Remote Power
Control
Proxy Ports
Traffic
Monitoring Ports
Management I/O
Supported connectors:
One 1-Gb BASE-T Ethernet LAN ports
One RS-232 serial port
Power
Cooling
Storage
Four 600 GB hard disk drives (2.5 10K SAS 4Kn) are installed into front-panel
drive bays that provide hot-swappable access for SAS drives.
Disk
Management
(RAID)
The appliance has a dedicated internal riser for a PCIe-style Cisco modular RAID
controller card.
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Chapter 9
Summary of Features
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CH A P T E R
10
Available Models
The Cisco S690 Web Security Appliance is available in the following models:
Note
S690 - Has Ethernet data ports and eight small form-factor (SFF) drives, with an eight-drive
backplane.
S690X - Has Ethernet data ports and sixteen SFF drives, with a sixteen-drive direct-connect
backplane.
S690-1G - Has six 1-Gigabit Fiber Optic Ethernet ports and sixteen small form-factor (SFF) drives.
S690-10G - Has six 10-Gigabit Fiber Optic Ethernet ports and sixteen small form-factor (SFF)
drives.
You cannot change the panel/backplane type after-factory. If you want a different front panel/backplane
configuration, you must order a another model.
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Chapter 10
Item
Port
Description
Proxy port 1
Proxy port 2
Remote Power
Cycle
Console
Management
interface 1
Management
interface 2
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Chapter 10
Rear Panel Ports of the S690-1G and S690-10G Web Security Appliances
Item
Port
Description
Management
interface 1
Management
interface 2
Proxy port 1
Proxy port 2
Remote Power
Cycle
Console
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Chapter 10
Item
Port
Description
Data
10
Management
interface 3
Identification button/LED
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Chapter 10
Table 10-1
LED Name
1
4
5
Power button/LED
Unit Identification
System status
State
OffThere is no hard drive in the hard drive tray (no access, no fault).
Fan status
Temperature status
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Chapter 10
Table 10-1
LED Name
8
State
GreenOne or more Ethernet LOM ports are link-active, but there is no activity.
Green, blinkingOne or more Ethernet LOM ports are link-active, with activity.
Power supply fault LED - Located on the top left of each power supply.
Power supply AC status LED - Located on the bottom left of each power supply.
Data/Management port link speed LED - Located to the left of each Data or Management port.
Data/Management port link status LED - Located to the right of each Data or Management port.
Unit Identification button/LED - Located to the right of the VGA video port (DB-15).
LED Name
State
Amber, blinkingAn event warning threshold has been reached, but the power
supply continues to operate.
Amber, solidA critical fault threshold has been reached, causing the power
supply to shut down (for example, a fan failure or an over-temperature
condition).
AC power supplies:
DC power supplies:
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Chapter 10
Table 10-2
LED Name
State
Unit Identification
GreenLink is active.
In Table 10-3, read the status and fault LED states together in each row to determine the event that cause
this combination.
Table 10-3
Green PSU Status LED State Amber PSU Fault LED State Event
Solid on
Off
Blinking
Off
Off
Off
Off
On
Blinking
Solid on
Blinking
Solid on
Blinking
Solid on
Blinking
Solid on
Solid on
Solid on
Blinking
Solid on
Blinking
Solid on
Solid on
Blinking
OTP warning
Solid on
Blinking
OCP warning
Blinking
Off
Summary of Features
Table 10-4 lists a summary of appliance features.
.
Table 10-4
Chassis
Processors
Memory
Remote Power
Cycle
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Summary of Features
Table 10-4
Data Ports
Management I/O
Supported connectors:
Power
Cooling
Storage
Eight or sixteen 600 GB hard disk drives (2.5 10K SAS 4Kn) are installed into
front-panel drive bays that provide hot-swappable access for SAS drives.
Disk
Management
(RAID)
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CH A P T E R
11
Preparing for Cisco Content Security Appliance Component Replacement, page 11-2
http://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/support/security/email-security-appliance/products-user-guide-list.htm
l
http://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/support/security/content-security-management-appliance/products-use
r-guide-list.html
http://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/support/security/web-security-appliance/products-user-guide-list.html
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Chapter 11
Required Equipment
The following equipment is used to perform the procedures in this chapter:
Electrostatic discharge (ESD) strap or other grounding equipment such as a grounded mat
Main power modePower is supplied to all appliance components and the operating system.
Standby power modePower is supplied only to the service processor and the cooling fans and it
is safe to power off the appliance from this mode.
You can gracefully shut down the appliance by using the shutdown command or the Power button on the
appliance front panel, as described in the following steps:
Step 1
Step 2
Caution
Check the color of the Power Status LED (see the Front Panel LEDs section on page 3-2).
GreenThe appliance is in main power mode and must be shut down before it can be safely powered
off. Go to Step 2.
AmberThe appliance is already in standby mode and can be safely powered off. Go to Step 3.
Use one the following methods to shut down the appliance. If possible, invoke a graceful shutdown.
Otherwise invoke a hard shutdown:
To avoid data loss or damage to your operating system, you should always invoke a graceful shutdown
of the operating system.
Graceful shutdown using the CLIEnter the shutdown command. The operating system performs a
graceful shutdown and the appliance goes to standby mode, which is indicated by an amber Power
Status LED.
Graceful shutdown using the front panelPress and release the Power button. The operating system
performs a graceful shutdown and the appliance goes to standby mode, which is indicated by an
amber Power Status LED.
Emergency shutdownPress and hold the Power button for 4 seconds to force the main power off
and immediately enter standby mode.
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Step 3
Disconnect the power cords from the power supplies in your appliance to completely power off the
appliance.
Hot-Swap Replacement
Some components can be removed and replaced without powering off and removing AC power from the
appliance.
Hot-swap replacementYou do not have to precondition or shut down the component using the GUI
or CLI before you remove it for the following components:
SAS drives
Power supplies (when 1+1 redundant)
Caution
Tip
Blank faceplates and cover panels serve three important functions: they prevent exposure to
hazardous voltages and currents inside the chassis; they contain electromagnetic interference (EMI)
that might disrupt other equipment; and they direct the flow of cooling air through the chassis. Do not
operate the system unless all cards, faceplates, front covers, and rear covers are in place.
Statement 1029
You can press the Unit Identification button on the front panel or rear panel to turn on a flashing Unit
Identification LED on the front and rear panels of the appliance. This button allows you to locate the
specific appliance that you are servicing when you go to the opposite side of the rack. See the Preparing
for Cisco Content Security Appliance Component Replacement section on page 11-2 for locations of
these LEDs.
This section describes how to replace appliance components, and it includes the following topics:
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Chapter 11
Note
Cisco C190, M190, S190, and C390 Have two small form-factor (SFF) drives.
Cisco S390 and C690 Have four small form-factor (SFF) drives.
Cisco M390X, C690X, C690-1G, and C690-10G Have eight small form-factor (SFF) drives.
Cisco M690X, M690-1G, M690-10G, S690X, S690-1G, and S690-10GHave sixteen small
form-factor (SFF) drives.
You cannot change the backplane type after-factory. To change a front panel/backplane configuration, a
chassis replacement is required.
The drive-bay numbering for all versions is shown in Figure 11-1 and Figure 11-2.
Figure 11-1
Figure 11-2
When populating drives, add drives in the lowest numbered bays first.
Keep an empty drive blanking tray in any unused bays to ensure optimal airflow and cooling.
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Step 1
Step 2
You do not have to shut down or power off the appliance to replace SAS hard drives because they are
hot-swappable.
Remove the drive that you are replacing or remove a blank drive tray from an empty bay:
a.
Press the release button on the face of the drive tray. See Figure 11-3.
b.
Grasp and open the ejector lever and then pull the drive tray out of the slot.
c.
If you are replacing an existing drive, remove the four drive-tray screws that secure the drive to the
tray and then lift the drive out of the tray.
Place a new drive in the empty drive tray and replace the four drive-tray screws.
b.
With the ejector lever on the drive tray open, insert the drive tray into the empty drive bay.
c.
Push the tray into the slot until it touches the backplane, and then close the ejector lever to lock the
drive in place.
Figure 11-3
Release button
Ejector lever
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See Environmental Specifications, page A-2 for more information about the supported power
supplies.
See Rear Panel LEDs and Buttons, page 3-5 for information about the power supply LEDs.
See Installing a DC Power Supply, page 11-7 for information about wiring a DC power supply.
Note
If you have ordered an appliance with power supply redundancy (two power supplies), you do not have
to power off the appliance to replace power supplies because they are redundant as 1+1 and
hot-swappable.
Note
Do not mix power supply types in the appliance. Both power supplies must be the same wattage and
Cisco product ID (PID).
Step 1
Remove the power supply that you are replacing or a blank panel from an empty bay:
a.
described in Shutting Down and Powering Off the Appliance, page 11-2.
If your appliance has two power supplies, you do not have to shut down the appliance.
b.
Remove the power cord from the power supply that you are replacing.
For a DC power supply, release the electrical connector block from the power supply by pushing the
orange plastic button on the top of the connector inward toward the power supply (see Figure 11-4).
Pull the connector block from the power supply.
Step 2
c.
Grasp the power supply handle while pinching the green release lever towards the handle (see
Figure 11-5).
d.
Grasp the power supply handle and insert the new power supply into the empty bay.
b.
Push the power supply into the bay until the release lever locks.
c.
d.
If you shut down the appliance, press the Power button to return the appliance to main power mode.
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Figure 11-4
Figure 11-5
Warning
A readily accessible two-poled disconnect device must be incorporated in the fixed wiring.
Statement 1022
Warning
This product requires short-circuit (overcurrent) protection, to be provided as part of the building
installation. Install only in accordance with national and local wiring regulations. Statement 1045
Warning
When installing or replacing the unit, the ground connection must always be made first and
disconnected last. Statement 1046
Warning
Installation of the equipment must comply with local and national electrical codes. Statement 1074
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Chapter 11
Warning
Hazardous voltage or energy may be present on DC power terminals. Always replace cover when
terminals are not in service. Be sure uninsulated conductors are not accessible when cover is in
place. Statement 1075
If you are using the Version 2 930W DC power supply, you connect power using a supplied 3-wire cable
with a keyed connector that plugs into a fixed power input socket on the power supply.
Warning
Before beginning this wiring procedure, turn off the DC power source from your facilitys circuit
breaker to avoid electric shock hazard.
Step 1
Turn off the DC power source from your facilitys circuit breaker to avoid electric shock hazard.
Step 2
Wire the supplied 3-wire connector cable to your facilitys DC power source. Attach the red wire to the
negative lead of your facilitys DC power source.
Note
Step 3
The supplied connector cable contains 8 AWG gauge wires. The recommended facility wire gauge is
8 AWG. The minimum facility wire gauge is 10 AWG.
Plug the supplied connector cable into the power input socket on the power supply. Figure 11-6 shows
that the connector is keyed to the socket so that the polarity is aligned correctly.
Figure 11-6
2
930W DC
V2
305170
Step 4
Return power from your facilitys DC power source at the circuit breaker.
Step 5
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Chapter 11
Cable the dedicated Remote Power Cycle (RPC) port directly to a secure network.
Ensure that the appliance is accessible remotely; for example, open any necessary ports through the
firewall.
This feature requires a unique IPv4 address for the dedicated Remote Power Cycle interface. This
interface is configurable only via the procedure described in this section; it cannot be configured
using the ipconfig command.
In order to cycle appliance power, you will need a third-party tool that can manage devices that
support the Intelligent Platform Management Interface (IPMI) version 2.0. Ensure that you are
prepared to use such a tool.
For more information about accessing the command-line interface, see the CLI reference guide.
Procedure
Step 1
Use SSH or the serial console port to access the command-line interface.
Step 2
Step 3
Step 4
The dedicated IP address for this feature, plus netmask and gateway.
Step 5
Step 6
Test your configuration to be sure that you can remotely manage appliance power.
Step 7
Ensure that the credentials that you entered will be available to you in the indefinite future. For example,
store this information in a safe place and ensure that administrators who may need to perform this task
have access to the required credentials.
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Chapter 11
If you want be able to use this feature, you must enable it in advance, before you need to use it.
For details, see Enabling Remote Power Cycling, page 11-9.
Obtain and set up a utility that can manage devices using IPMI version 2.0.
Understand how to use the supported IPMI commands. See the documentation for your IPMI tool.
Procedure
Step 1
Use IPMI to issue a supported power-cycling command to the IP address assigned to the Remote Power
Cycle port, which you configured earlier, along with the required credentials.
For example, from a UNIX-type machine with IPMI support, you might issue the command:
ipmitool -I lan -H 192.0.2.1 -U remoteresetuser -P password chassis power reset
where 192.0.2.1 is the IP address assigned to the Remote Power Cycle port and remoteresetuser and
password are the credentials that you entered while enabling this feature.
Step 2
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A P P E N D I X
Appliance Specifications
This appendix includes the following sections and lists the technical specifications for the x90 Series
Cisco Email Security Appliances (ESAs), Cisco Content Security Management Appliances (SMAs), and
Cisco Web Security Appliances (WSAs):
Physical Specifications
Table A-1 lists the physical specifications for the following Cisco Content Security Appliances:
Table A-1
Description
Specification
Height
Width
Depth
Cisco x90 Series Content Security Appliances Installation and Maintenance Guide
A-1
Appendix A
Appliance Specifications
Environmental Specifications
Table A-2 lists the physical specifications for the following Cisco Content Security Appliances:
Table A-2
Description
Specification
Height
Width
Depth
Environmental Specifications
Table A-3 lists the environmental specifications for x90 series Cisco Content Security Appliances with
both 1 RU and 2 RU chassis.
Table A-3
Environmental Specifications
Description
Specification
Temperature, operating
41 to 95F (5 to 35C)
Derate the maximum temperature by 1C per every
305 meters of altitude above sea level.
Temperature, non-operating
(when the appliance is stored or transported)
10 to 90%
Altitude, operating
0 to 10,000 feet
Altitude, non-operating
(when the appliance is stored or transported)
0 to 40,000 feet
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Appendix A
Appliance Specifications
Power Specifications
Table A-3
Environmental Specifications
Description
Specification
37
Sound pressure level for x90 series Cisco
Content Security Appliances with a 1 RU
chassis.
Measure A-weighted per ISO7779 LpAm (dBA)
Operation at 73F (23C)
43
Sound pressure level for x90 series Cisco
Content Security Appliances with a 2 RU
chassis.
Measure A-weighted per ISO7779 LpAm (dBA)
Operation at 73F (23C)
Power Specifications
The power specifications for the power supply options are listed in the following sections:
Note
Do not mix power supply types in the appliance. Both power supplies must be identical.
Description
Specification
90 to 264 VAC
(self-ranging, 100 to 264 VAC nominal)
AC input frequency
Range: 47 to 63 Hz
(single phase, 50 to 60Hz nominal)
770 W
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Appendix A
Appliance Specifications
Power Specifications
Description
Specification
90 to 264 VAC
(self-ranging, 180 to 264 VAC nominal)
AC input frequency
Range: 47 to 63 Hz
(single phase, 50 to 60Hz nominal)
650 W
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A P P E N D I X
Note
Only the approved power cords or jumper power cords provided with the appliance are supported.
Table B-1 lists the power cords for the appliance power supplies.
Table B-1
Length
Description
Feet
Meters
Power Cord
Reference Illustration
SFS-250V-10A-AR
Power Cord, 250 VAC 10 A IRAM 2073 Plug
Argentina
8.2
2.5
Figure B-1
CAB-9K10A-AU
250 VAC 10 A 3112 Plug,
Australia
8.2
2.5
Figure B-2
SFS-250V-10A-CN
Power Cord, 250 VAC 10 A GB 2009 Plug
China
8.2
2.5
Figure B-3
CAB-9K10A-EU
Power Cord, 250 VAC 10 A M 2511 Plug
Europe
8.2
2.5
Figure B-4
SFS-250V-10A-ID
Power Cord, 250 VAC 16A EL-208 Plug
South Africa, United Arab Emirates, India
8.2
2.5
Figure B-5
SFS-250V-10A-IS
Power Cord, 250 VAC 10 A SI32 Plug
Israel
8.2
2.5
Figure B-6
Cisco x90 Series Content Security Appliances Installation and Maintenance Guide
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Appendix B
Table B-1
Length
Description
Feet
Meters
Power Cord
Reference Illustration
CAB-9K10A-IT
Power Cord, 250 VAC 10 A CEI 23-16 Plug
Italy
8.2
2.5
Figure B-7
CAB-9K10A-SW
Power Cord, 250 VAC 10 A MP232 Plug
Switzerland
8.2
2.5
Figure B-8
CAB-9K10A-UK
Power Cord, 250 VAC 10 A BS1363 Plug (13 A
fuse)
United Kingdom
8.2
2.5
Figure B-9
CAB-AC-250V/13A
Power Cord, 250 VAC 13 A IEC60320 Plug
North America
6.6
2.0
Figure B-10
CAB-N5K6A-NA
Power Cord, 250 VAC 13 A NEMA 6-15 Plug,
North America
8.2
2.5
Figure B-11
CAB-9K12A-NA
Power cord, 125 VAC, 13 A, NEMA 5-15 Plug
North America
8.2
2.5
Figure B-12
CAB-C13-CBN
Cabinet Jumper Power Cord, 250 VAC 10 A,
C13-C14 Connectors
2.2
0.68
Figure B-13
CAB-C13-C14-2M
Cabinet Jumper Power Cord, 250 VAC 10 A,
C13-C14 Connectors
6.6
2.0
Figure B-14
CAB-C13-C14-AC
Cabinet Jumper Power Cord, 250 VAC 10 A,
C13-C14 Connectors
9.8
3.0
Figure B-15
Cisco x90 Series Content Security Appliances Installation and Maintenance Guide
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Appendix B
SFS-250V-10A-AR
2500 mm
Figure B-2
186571
Connector:
EL 701
(IEC60320/C13)
CAB-9K10A-AU
Connector:
EL 701C
(IEC 60320/C15)
Plug:
EL 206
A.S. 3112-2000)
SFS-250V-10A-CN
Plug:
EL 218
(CCEE GB2009)
Connector:
EL 701
(IEC60320/C13)
186573
Figure B-3
186581
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Appendix B
CAB-9K10A-EU
Plug:
M2511
Figure B-5
SFS-250V-10A-ID
OVE
Plug:
EL 208
187490
Connector:
EL 701
Figure B-6
SFS-250V-10A-IS
EL-212
16A
250V
Cisco x90 Series Content Security Appliances Installation and Maintenance Guide
B-4
186574
Plug:
EL 212
(SI-32)
Connector:
EL 701B
(IEC60320/C13)
186576
Figure B-4
Figure B-7
CAB-9K10A-IT
Connector
C15M
(EN60320/C15 )
186575
Plug:
I/3G
(CEI 23-16)
Figure B-8
CAB-9K10A-SW
Plug:
MP232-R
186578
Connector:
IEC 60320 C15
Figure B-9
CAB-9K10A-UK
Plug:
EL 210
(BS 1363A) 13 AMP fuse
Connector:
EL 701C
(EN 60320/C15)
186580
Appendix B
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Appendix B
Figure B-10
CAB-AC-250V/13A
Connector:
EL 701
(IEC60320/C13)
Plug:
EL312MoldedTwistlock
(NEMA L6-20)
CAB-N5K6A-NA
Connector:
IEC60320/C13
Figure B-12
186570
Figure B-11
186568
CAB-9K12A-NA
Plug:
NEMA 5-15P
Cisco x90 Series Content Security Appliances Installation and Maintenance Guide
B-6
Connector:
IEC60320/C15
192260
Figure B-13
Connector:
HS10S
Plug:
SS10A
Figure B-14
186569
Connector:
HS10S
Plug:
SS10A
Figure B-15
336014
Plug:
SS10A
Connector:
HS10S
336013
Appendix B
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Appendix B
Supported Power Cords and Plugs
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