These guidelines ensure that your system and its cables
have optimal clearance for maintenance and other operations. The guidelines
also provide guidance in correctly cabling your system and using the
appropriate cables.
The following guidelines provide cabling information for installing,
migrating, relocating, or upgrading your system:
- Position drawers in racks to allow enough space, where possible,
for cable routing on the bottom and top of the rack, and between drawers.
- Shorter drawers should not be placed between longer drawers in
the rack (for example, placing a 19-inch drawer between two 24-inch
drawers).
- When a specific cable plugging sequence is required, for example,
for concurrent maintenance (symmetric multiprocessing cables), label
the cables appropriately and note the sequence order.
- To facilitate cable routing, install cables in the following order:
- System power control network (SPCN) cables
- Power cables
- Communications (serial attached SCSI, InfiniBand, remote input/output,
and peripheral component interconnect express) cables
Note: Install
and route the communications cables, starting with the smallest diameter
first and then progressing to the largest diameter. This applies to
installing them into the cable management arm and retaining them to
the rack, brackets, and other features that may be provided for cable
management.
- Install and route the communications cables, starting with smallest
diameter first and then progressing to the largest diameter.
- Use the innermost cable-management bridge lances for SPCN cables.
- Use the middle cable-management bridge lances for power and communications
cables.
- The outermost row of cable-management bridge lances are available
for use when routing cables.
- Use the cable raceways on the sides of the rack to manage excess
SPCN and power cables.
- There are four cable-management bridge lances on the top of the
rack. Use these bridge lances to route the cables from one side of
the rack to the other, by routing to the top of the rack, where possible.
This routing helps to avoid having a cable bundle that blocks the
cable exit opening at the bottom of the rack.
- Use the cable management brackets provided with the system to
maintain concurrent maintenance routing.
- Maintain a minimum bend diameter of 101.6 mm (4 in.) for communications
(SAS, IB, RIO, and PCIe) cables.
- Maintain a minimum bend diameter of 50.8 mm (2 in.) for power
cables.
- Maintain a minimum bend diameter of 25.4 mm (1 in.) for SPCN cables.
- Use the shortest-length cable available for each point-to-point
connection.
- If cables have to be routed across the rear of a drawer, leave
enough slack to reduce the tension on the cables for maintenance of
the drawer.
- When routing cables, leave enough slack around the power connection
on the power distribution unit (PDU) so that the wall-to-PDU line
cord can be attached to the PDU.
- Use hook-and-loop fasteners where necessary.
Figure 1. Cable management bridge lances
Figure 2. Cable bend radius