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HP ProLiant ML110 G6 reboot loop
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HP ProLiant ML110 G6 reboot loop

Hi. I have a ML110 G6 from a client that after some time on starts a reboot loop.

After the first boot attempt it reboots every 4-5 seconds.

What can it be?

Comments

  • Any one of about a thousand different things.

    More detail.

  • juan_144juan_144 Member
    edited September 2013

    Single power supply. Single HDD. Single NIC. Single Optital drive. Centos 5. Mini tower form factor. First boot almost complete. At a high HDD i/o activity it shuts down and start again only to keep looping on off.

  • overheating?

  • All fans work well. CPU+case+power supply.

  • HP Live Chat agent says the systemboard may be faulty.

    Open to suggestions to drop that machine.

  • Do you have physical access to the server? if so, remove, all un-essential components, (PCIE cards etc..) remove all but 1 ram stick. they try to boot it... try booting off an Boot-CD...

  • The server has no un-essential components. Only a HDD and the DVD drive. Anyway I removed it to see.

    I think my client needs a new server. Any suggestions?

  • Can you boot from a boot cd without a problem or it loops if you try to boot from a CD also?

  • Sometimes it boots but after some use restarts. HP told me that the systemboard may be the problem. $456 direct price. Enough money to build a budget custom system to make the job.

  • My suggestion is remove everything that isn't needed to be plugged into the main board. This includes multiple CPUs in case you have more then 1. Leave only 1 stick of ram and one processor. Unplug everything else that you can see (hdd, PCI cards, etc.)

    Then try and boot. If it still fails you have 4 parts that can be bad. (CPU, RAM, PS, Mobo) or a config in the setup.

    Mun

  • pcanpcan Member
    edited September 2013

    Have you tried to reload BIOS default parameters? A CMOS corruption on hidden parameters could be the cause of instable behaviour. Before clearing the CMOS, enter in the system BIOS page and check the error log; you may find clues about the faulty component. As example, if the log lists ECC errors, the issue could be a faulty RAM stick. According to your description, the reboot seems to be related to the temperature. Remove and reseat the processor cooler; you may need to change the thermal grease.

  • Faulthy memory supposedy.

  • Check your PSU if you have a power supply tester,

    Run memcheck on the ram.

    Reset BIOS?

    When it reboots does windows (if your running it) have an error log?

  • The RAM was changed. It was the problem*.

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