IBM Power Systems Scale-out LC Server Firmware
Applies to: S821LC (8001-12C) and S822LC (8001-22C)
This document provides information about the installation of Licensed Machine or Licensed Internal Code, which is sometimes referred to generically as microcode or firmware.
This package provides firmware for Power Systems Scale-out LC S821LC (8001-21C) and S822LC(8001-22C) servers only.
The firmware level in this package is:
•V2.00
There are three images included:
.pnor (Host image)
.bin (BMC image)
pUpdate (tool binary)
Details on the package binaries are included in section 3.1
This section specifies the "Minimum ipmitool Code Level" required by the System Firmware to perform firmware installations and managing the system. Open Power requires ipmitool level v1.8.15 to execute correctly on the V1.00 firmware.
Verify your ipmitool level on your linux workstation using the following commands:
bash-4.1$ ipmitool -V
ipmitool version 1.8.15
If you need to update or add impitool to your Linux workstation , you can compile ipmitool (current level 1.8.15) for Linux as follows from the Sourceforge:
1.1.1 Download impitool tar from http://sourceforge.net/projects/ipmitool/ to your linux system
1.1.2 Extract tarball on linux system
1.1.3 cd to top-level directory
1.1.4 ./configure
1.1.5 make
1.1.6 ipmitool will be under src/ipmitool
You may also get the ipmitool package directly from your workstation linux packages such as Ubuntu 14.04.3:
sudo apt-get install ipmitool
The BMC Web GUI is a web-based application that works within a browser. Supported browser levels are shown below with Chrome being the preferred browser:
•Google Chrome Version 46.0.2490.71 m
•Mozilla Firefox version 41.0.3
For specific fix level information on key components of IBM Power Systems LC and Linux operating systems, please refer to the documentation in the IBM Knowledge Center for the LC 8001 servers:
http://www.ibm.com/support/knowledgecenter/POWER8/p8hdx/8001_12c_landing.htm
http://www.ibm.com/support/knowledgecenter/POWER8/p8hdx/8001_22c_landing.htm
Downgrading firmware from any given release level to an earlier release level is not recommended.
If you feel that it is necessary to downgrade the firmware on your system to an earlier release level, please contact your next level of support.
Concurrent Firmware Updates not available for LC servers.
Concurrent system firmware update is not supported on LC 8001 servers.
Use the following examples as a reference to determine whether your installation will be concurrent or disruptive.
For the LC 8001 server systems, the installation of system firmware is always disruptive.
The xxx.pnor file updates the primary side of the PNOR. The yyy.bin updates the primary side of the BMC only. The golden sides are unchanged.
Filename |
Size |
Checksum |
P8DTU20161202_IBM_prod_sign.pnor |
33554560
|
8afcdd52ada73152ebb6913452fde146
|
SMT_P8_121.bin | 33554432
|
3526734e5635d03596740a1a1629e769
|
pUpdate |
1058520
|
1ee81d8bdc4fd17339b4a85003ac2009
|
Note: The Checksum can be found by running the Linux/Unix/AIX md5sum command against the file (all 32 characters of the checksum are listed), ie: md5sum xxx.pnor.
After a successful update to the firmware level V2.00, the PNOR components and BMC should be at the following levels. The ipmitool "fru" command can be used to display FRU ID 47 and the ipmitool "mc info" command can be used to display the BMC level.
Note: FRU information for the PNOR level does not show the updated levels via the fru command until the system has been booted once at the updated level.
PNOR firmware levels from FRU ID 47 inventory list for driver:
FRU Device Description : System Firmware (ID 47)
Product Name : OpenPOWER Firmware
Product Version : open-power-SUPERMICRO-P8DTU-V2.00.GA2-20161202-prod
Product Extra : op-build-9d7cc68
Product Extra : hostboot-7fdfb37
Product Extra : occ-e6e194f
Product Extra : skiboot-5.4.2
Product Extra : linux-4.4.24-openpower1-3bccb53
Product Extra : petitboot-v1.3.2-4d189b0
Product Extra : p8dtu-xml-4f2d920
BMC Level:
Display BMC firmware level using the "ipmitool mc info | grep Firmware" command:
Firmware Revision : 1.21
V2 | |
V2.00 |
Impact: New Severity: Available New features and functions: Support for the Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7.3 OS as a OPAL bare-metal install. For more information on the features delivered with RHEL7.3, see the Red Hat information portal: https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en/red-hat-enterprise-linux/.
Support for a OPAL raw console to receive output from the PowerPC boot EPAPR (Embedded Power Architecture Platform Requirements) wrapper. This allows decompression failures inside the wrapper caused by data corruption to be reported to the user.
Support for logging the following user activities on the BMC:
Support for BMC password management for password expiration date and user password lockout with the following variable controls:
Support for power-saving nap mode while in Skiboot, reducing power consumption during the bot.
Support for filtering the OCC Active Device Disabled Asserted SELs asserted during power off and OCC Active Device Enabled SELs asserted during power on as these do not represent a problem in the system but are part of normal operations.
Support for a new parameter in the pUpdate procedure to specify that SDR settings should be preserved on the PNOR firmware update. The default for the preservation of SDR settings in pUpdate was also changed to "not preserve" from "preserve" as this value is needed for the firmware update to V2.0 to work correctly.
System firmware changes that affect all systems: A problem was fixed for a critical hardware guard causing an infinite reboot loop and a flood of SELs. With the fix, the number of reboot attempts in the retry loop is limited to 10, assuring that the failing SELs are available for debugging the boot problem.
A problem was fixed for the IPMI Serial Over LAN (SOL) console to the Petitboot user interface for the left and right arrow movements. When editing the command line for the kernel, the user could not go to the start of the line and then go forward one character at a time.
A problem was fixed for a kexec-hardboot reboot of the system that caused USB devices to be lost. A system power cycle is needed to recover the USB devices when this error occurs.
A problem was fixed for the shutdown of PCI devices that was causing spurious reboots of the system for a power off. The logical PCI devices are now removed during the shutdown.
A problem was fixed for failures that happen when multiple Hypervisor Virtual Console (HVC) are active at the same time. On machines with more than one HVC console, any console after the first failed to register an interrupt handler since all consoles shared the same IRQ number.
A problem was fixed for fundamental PCI resets at boot time causing the PCI adapters to not be usable in the Linux OS. No errors occur in the skiboot but the adapters are configurable once the OS is reached.
A problem was fixed for time-out errors during the power off of PCI slots with " Timeout powering off slot ... FIRENZE-PCI: Wrong state 00000000 on slot" error message during a power off of the system.
A problem was fixed for the system remaining in "safe" mode after an On-Chip Controller (OCC) reset. In "safe" mode, the system is running at reduced processor frequencies, affecting system performance. The OCC reset is an error recovery command that can be requested by the BMC or OPAL for certain OCC errors.
A problem was fixed for the error recovery on a DIMM fault occurring newly installed DIMMs that can cause unnecessary DIIMM callouts and deconfiguration during the IPL or cause a IPL hang loop at step 13.10 with no bad DIMMs identified. With the fix, only the bad DIMM is called out and the IPL is successful.
A problem was fixed for a Non-recoverable processor error on the I2C master with SEL "Processor #0x0e | Transition to Non-recoverable | Asserted" during the IPL.
A problem was fixed for a security vulnerability in the DropBear SSH server on the BMC to prevent an unauthenticated remote user from executing arbitrary code with root privileges. This was done by exploiting improper handling of string format specifiers in user names and host arguments. This Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVE) number is CVE-2016-7406.
A problem was fixed for a security vulnerability in the DropBear SSH server on the BMC for an improper handling of a OpenSSH key file that could allow an unauthorized to execute arbitrary code with root privileges. This Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVE) number is CVE-2016-7407.
A problem was fixed for a security vulnerability in the DropBear SSH dbclient on the BBC when handling the "-m" or "-c" arguments in scripts. An unauthenticated, remote user can exploit this, via a specially crafted script, to execute arbitrary code with root privileges. This Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVE) number is CVE-2016-7408.
A problem was fixed for a security vulnerability in the DropBear SSH server on the BMC when compiled with the DEBUG_TRACE option and then run with the -v switch. A local user can exploit this to disclose process memory. This Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVE) number is CVE-2016-7409.
|
V1.10 |
Impact: New Severity: Available New features and functions: Support for populating the host device tree with tracking information from the VPD. This includes, but is not limited to: system serial/part/manufacturer number, processor serial/part/manufacturer number, and DIMM serial/part/manufacturer number. This feature also populates the location code set in the system XML. System firmware changes that affect all systems A problem was fixed for the reporting of DIMM failures when two DIMMs have failed. With the fix, the second DIMM is able to be called out along with the first DIMM failure, instead of just the first DIMM failure.
A problem was fixed for a system IPL failure due to DRAM training issues for a faulty DIMM that does not log any SEL or eSEL records for the failure. The only signature of the fault is that it fails at ISTEP 13.10. A problem was fixed for Petitboot adding unwanted kernel command-line options if no kernel arguments are provided on the OS boot. The unwanted options added were "console=hvc0 console=tty1" which breaks a SOL boot of the OS installer images. A problem was fixed in the BMC login for a possible security issue. Security problems were fixed in the BMC web interface for OWASP ZAP reported problems in the X-FRAME-OPTIONS; the X-CONTENT-TYPE_OPTIONS; and in the Cache control for the HTTP header.
|
V1.00 |
Impact: New Severity: New New features and functions for MTM 8001-12C and 8001-22C: GA Level |
OS levels supported by the LC 8001 servers:
–RHEL 7.3
–RHEL 7.3 / RHEV
–RHEL 7.2
–RHEL 7.2 / RHEV
–Ubuntu 14.04.04
–Ubuntu 16.04
–Ubuntu 16.04 / KVM
–Cent OS
IBM Power LC 8001 servers supports Linux which provides a UNIX like implementation across many computer architectures. Linux supports almost all of the Power System I/O and the configurator verifies support on order. For more information about the software that is available on IBM Power Systems, see the Linux on IBM Power Systems website:
http://www.ibm.com/systems/power/software/linux/index.html
The Linux operating system is an open source, cross-platform OS. It is supported on every Power Systems server IBM sells. Linux on Power Systems is the only Linux infrastructure that offers both scale-out and scale-up choices. One supported version of Linux on the IBM Power LC 8001 servers is Ubuntu Server 16.04 for IBM POWER8. For more information about Ubuntu Server for Ubuntu for POWER8 see the following website:
http://www.ubuntu.com/download/server/power8
Another supported version of Linux on the Power LC 8001 servers is Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7.2 and later releases, in the LE mode. For additional questions about the availability of this release and supported Power servers, consult the Red Hat Hardware Catalog at https://hardware.redhat.com.
For information about the PowerLinux Community, see the following website:
https://www.ibm.com/developerworks/group/tpl
For information about the features and external devices that are supported by Linux, see this website:
http://www.ibm.com/systems/power/software/linux/index.html
Use one of the following commands at the Linux command prompt to determine the current Linux level:
•cat /proc/version
•uname -a
The output string from the command will provide the Linux version level.
The opal-prd package on the Linux system collects the OPAL Processor Recovery Diagnostics messages to log file /var/log/syslog. It is recommended that this package be installed if it is not already present as it will help with maintaining the system processors by alerting the users to processor maintenance when needed.
On Ubuntu Linux, perform command dpkg -l "opal-prd". The output shows whether the package is installed on your system by marking it with ii (installed) and un (not installed).
This package provides a daemon to load and run the OpenPower firmware's Processor Recovery Diagnostics binary. This is responsible for run-time maintenance of Power hardware.
If the package is not installed on your system, the following command can be run on Ubuntu to install it:
sudo apt-get install opal-prd
On Red Hat Linux, perform command "rpm -qa | grep -i opal-prd ". The command output indicates the package is installed on your system if the rpm for opal-prd is found and displayed. This package provides a daemon to load and run the OpenPower firmware's Processor Recovery Diagnostics binary. This is responsible for run-time maintenance of Power hardware. If the package is not installed on your system, the following command can be run on Red Hat to install it:
sudo yum update opal-prd
Use the ipmtool "fru" command or the BMC Web GUI FRU option to look at product details of FRU 47.
ipmitool -I lanplus -H <bmc host IP address> -P admin -U ADMIN fru print 47
Follow the instructions on Fix Central. You must read and agree to the license agreement to obtain the firmware packages.
The updating and upgrading of system firmware depends on several factors, such as the current firmware that is installed, and what operating systems is running on the system.
These scenarios and the associated installation instructions are comprehensively outlined in the firmware section of Fix Central, found at the following website:
http://www.ibm.com/support/fixcentral/
Any hardware failures should be resolved before proceeding with the firmware updates to help insure the system will not be running degraded after the updates.
The pUpdate utility is provided with the firmware update files from IBM Fix Central. It can be used to perform in-band (from the host OS), in-band update recovery, and out-of-band updates by selecting either the "-i usb" , "-i bt" or "-i lan" parameters, respectively on the command invocation. The code update needs to be done in two steps: 1) Update the BMC firmware and 2) Update the CEC PNOR for the hostboot and the OPAL components. It is recommended that the BMC be updated first unless otherwise specified in the firmware install instructions.
Before using the pUpdate command on the host, make sure that the ipmi driver is loaded in the kernel and the ipmi service is started.
Note: For updates that use the "usb" or "bt" pUpdate option, you must use the root user ID and password to log in to the host operating system. After you log in to the host operating system, ensure that the IPMI service is activated.
# chkconfig ipmi on
# service ipmi start
For more information about activating the IPMI service, see the OpenIPMI Driver: https://www.ibm.com/support/knowledgecenter/POWER8/p8eih/p8eih_ipmi_open_driver.htm
For in-band update, use the following "-i usb" invocation of pUpdate:
BMC update: "pUpdate -f bmc.bin -i usb", where bmc.bin is the name and location of the BMC image file.
PNOR update: "pUpdate -pnor pnor.bin -i usb", where pnor.bin is the name and location of the PNOR image file.
If the in-band update fails on the BMC, use the recovery option with the Block Transfer (bt) invocation of pUpdate:
BMC update: "pUpdate -f bmc.bin -i bt -r y" where bmc.bin is the name and location of the BMC image file.
PNOR update:" pUpdate -pnor pnor.bin -i bt " where pnor.bin is the name and location of the PNOR image file.
For more information on BMC recovery steps, refer to the following link in the IBM Knowledge Center:
https://www.ibm.com/support/knowledgecenter/POWER8/p8eis/p8eis_console_problem.htm
If the host is not booted, a network connection can be made to the BMC and an out-of-band update done with the following LAN invocation from a Linux companion system:
BMC update: " pUpdate -f bmc.bin -i lan -h xx.xx.xx.xx yyy -u ADMIN -p ADMIN -r y" where bmc.bin is the name and location of the BMC image file, xx.xx.xx.xx is the IP address of the BMC, and yyy is the port number of the BMC.
PNOR update: "pUpdate -pnor pnor.bin -i lan -h xx.xx.xx.xx -u ADMIN -p ADMIN " where pnor.bin is the name and location of the PNOR image file and xx.xx.xx.xx is the IP address of the BMC.
For more details on how to use the pUpdate utility, refer to the following link:
https://www.ibm.com/support/knowledgecenter/POWER8/p8eit/p8eit_update_firmware_pupdate.htm
You can use diagnostic utilities to diagnose adapter problems.
For more details on how to use the diagnostic utilities, refer to the following link:
https://www.ibm.com/support/knowledgecenter/POWER8/p8eit/p8eit_diags_kickoff.htm
Open Power requires Source Forge ipmitool level v1.8.15 to execute correctly on the V1.00, V2.00 and later firmware.
Another method to update the system firmware is by using the baseboard management controller (BMC).
The system firmware is a combination of the BMC firmware and the PNOR firmware. To update the system firmware, update both the BMC firmware and the PNOR firmware by using the BMC.
Note: System firmware update from the BMC Web GUI is only supported on Google Chrome and Mozilla Firefox browsers.
Complete the following steps to update the BMC firmware:
1. Log in to the BMC by entering the user name and password. Then, press Enter.
2. From the Maintenance list on the BMC dashboard, select Firmware Update.
3. In the Firmware Update window, select Enter Update Mode. Click OK.
4. In the Firmware Upload window, choose the .bin file from your local system folder and click Upload Firmware. Wait for the file to be uploaded. Then, click OK.
5. The existing and new versions of the BMC firmware are displayed. Ensure that the Preserve Configuration check box and the Preserve SDR check box are selected. Click Start Upgrade.
Note: You cannot perform other activities by using the BMC interface until the firmware update is complete.
6. The upgrade progress of the firmware update is displayed. After the firmware update is complete, the system is restarted.
7. After the restart of the system is complete, verify the firmware revision level in the System menu of the BMC dashboard.
Complete the following steps to update the PNOR firmware:
1. Log in to the BMC by entering the user name and password. Then, press Enter.
2. From the Maintenance list on the dashboard, select PNOR Update.
3. In the PNOR Upload window, choose the .pnor file from your local system folder and click Upload PNOR. Wait for the file to be uploaded. Then, click OK.
4. The existing and new dates of the PNOR firmware are displayed. Click Start Upgrade.
Note: You cannot perform other activities by using the BMC interface until the PNOR update is complete.
5. The progress of the PNOR update is displayed. After the PNOR update is completed, the system is restarted.
For more information on updating the firmware using the BMC, refer to the following link:
https://www.ibm.com/support/knowledgecenter/POWER8/p8eit/p8eit_update_firmware_bmc.htm
System I/O devices have firmware that can be updated. Please see the table below for minimum level of firmware.
Updated firmware, when released, will include firmware update instructions.
Details regarding the I/O levels for the 8001-12C and 8001-22C IBM Power systems can be found in the link below:
Here are OS related dependencies, limitations, and usage notes for the LC servers and I/O devices:
The latest firmware, tools and how-to notes are available here:
ftp://ftp.supermicro.com/driver/P8DTU/
Firmware level for these devices can be checked using OS (Linux) utility “ethtool” as follows:
ethtool -i <device>
System |
Part# |
Description |
Minimum FW level |
8001-12C |
AOC-UR-i4XTF |
Intel x710/XL710 quad port 10G ( Riser card in system) |
5.03 |
8001-22C |
AOC-2UR66-i4XTF |
Intel x710/XL710 quad port 10G ( Riser card in system) |
5.03 |
To check the firmware version on this device, use the Linux mvcli tool. The command, "mvcli info -o hba", will show information on all 9230 adapters present on the machine. Examine the "Firmware version" information to see the current level on the desired adapter.
System |
Part# |
Description |
Minimum FW level |
8001-12C |
Marvell 88SE9230 |
On-board 8P SATA3 Controller (88SE9230) |
2.3.12.1074 |
8001-22C |
Marvell 88SE9230 |
On-board 8P SATA3 Controller (88SE9230) |
2.3.12.1074 |
The service processor, or baseboard management controller (BMC), provides a hypervisor and operating system-independent layer that uses the robust error detection and self-healing functions that are built into the POWER8 processor and memory buffer modules. Open power application layer (OPAL) is the system firmware in the stack of POWER8 processor-based Linux-only servers.
The service processor, or baseboard management controller (BMC), is the primary control for autonomous sensor monitoring and event logging features on the LC server.
The BMC supports the Intelligent Platform Management Interface (IPMI) for system monitoring and management. The BMC monitors the operation of the firmware during the boot process and also monitors the OPAL hypervisor for termination. The firmware code update is supported through the BMC and Intelligent Platform Monitoring Interface (IPMI) and the BMC Web GUI The GUI console is accessed using a web browser with a "http:" connection to port. See section 1.2 for the supported browsers that can be used with BMC Web GUI.
The Open Power Abstraction Layer (OPAL) provides hardware abstraction and run time services to the running host Operating System.
For the 8001 servers, only the OPAL bare-metal installs can be used. A KVM can be used on top of the installed OS to run Linux virtual guest OS machines.
Find out more about OPAL skiboot here:
https://github.com/open-power/skiboot
The Intelligent Platform Management Interface (IPMI) is an open standard for monitoring, logging, recovery, inventory, and control of hardware that is implemented independent of the main CPU, BIOS, and OS. It is the default console to use when you configure PowerKVM. The LC server provides one 10M/100M baseT IPMI port.
The ipmitool is a utility for managing and configuring devices that support IPMI. It provides a simple command-line interface to the service processor. You can install the ipmitool from the Linux distribution packages in your workstation, sourceforge.net, or another server (preferably on the same network as the installed server). For example, in Ubuntu, use this command:
$ sudo apt-get install ipmitool
For installing ipmitool from sourceforge, please see section 1.1 "Minimum ipmitool Code Level".
For more information about ipmitool, there are several good references for ipmitool commands:
1.The man page
2.The built-in command line help provides a list of IPMItool commands:
# ipmitool help
3.You can also get help for many specific IPMItool commands by adding the word help after the command:
# ipmitool channel help
4.
For a list of common ipmitool commands and help on each, you may use the following link:
www.ibm.com/support/knowledgecenter/linuxonibm/liabp/liabpcommonipmi.htm
To connect to your host system with IPMI, you need to know the IP address of the server and have
a valid password. To power on the server with the ipmitool, follow these steps:
1. Open a terminal program.
2. Power on your server with the ipmitool:
ipmitool -I lanplus -H fsp_ip_address -P ipmi_password power on
3. Activate your IPMI console:
ipmitool -I lanplus -H fsp_ip_address -P ipmi_password sol activate
Petitboot is a kexec based bootloader used by IBM POWER8 systems for doing the bare-metal installs on the 8001 servers.
After the POWER8 system powers on, the petitboot bootloader scans local boot devices and network interfaces to find boot options that are available to the system. Petitboot returns a list of boot options that are available to the system. If you are using a static IP or if you did not provide boot arguments in your network boot server, you must provide the details to petitboot. You can configure petitboot to find your boot with the following instructions:
https://www.ibm.com/support/knowledgecenter/linuxonibm/liabp/liabppetitbootadvanced.htm
You can edit petitboot configuration options, change the amount of time before Petitboot
automatically boots, etc. with these instructions:
https://www.ibm.com/support/knowledgecenter/linuxonibm/liabp/liabppetitbootconfig.htm
After you select to boot the ISO media for the Linux distribution of your choice, the installer wizard for that Linux distribution walks you through the steps to set up disk options, your root password, time zones, and so on.
You can read more about the petitboot bootloader program here:
https://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/people/geoff/petitboot/petitboot.html
Kernel-based Virtual Machine (KVM) is a cross-platform, open source hypervisor that provides enterprise-class performance, scalability and security to run Linux and other
workloads on a range of processor architectures. For the 8001 servers, Ubuntu KVM or Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization (RHEV) may be installed on top of a bare-metal install of Ubuntu or RHEL, respectively.
Red Hat Enterprise Virtualization (RHEV) for IBM Power is an enterprise virtualization product produced by Red Hat, based on the KVM hypervisor. For more information, go to this link on the Red Hat portal: https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-US/Red_Hat_Enterprise_Virtualization/3.6/html/Release_Notes/chap-RHEV_for_IBM_Power.html
Ubuntu KVM is configured by installing the missing virtualization packages (qemu-user qemu-utils cloud-image-utils qemu-system-ppc qemu-slof libvirt-bin numactl); adding users in a KVM group; disabling the SMT mode of the cpu using the ppc64_cpu tool; and enabling the KVM module in the kernel. For more information on how to complete these steps, refer to this link in the Ubuntu wiki: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/ppc64el/CommonQuestions#How_to_use_Ubuntu_as_a_hypervisor.3F
IBM PowerKVM is not supported on the 8001 servers.
Note: Power S821LC and S822LC 8001 servers and their KVM options do not support AIX or IBM i guest VMs and cannot be managed by a HMC
For additional questions about the availability of this release and supported Power servers, consult the Red Hat Hardware Catalog at
https://hardware.redhat.com.
This guide helps you install Ubuntu on a Linux on a Power Systems server.
Overview
Use the information found in http://www.ibm.com/support/knowledgecenter/linuxonibm/liabw/liabwkickoff.htm to install Linux, in this case Ubuntu, on a non-virtualized (bare metal) IBM Power LC server. Note that the choice of PowerKVM is offered in the link but that is not a supported OS for the 8001 servers.
The Ubuntu installer is available for download for specific Linux levels on Power Systems. For information about which systems support Ubuntu, see Supported Linux distributions for POWER8 Linux on Power systems at https://ibm.biz/BdEH5t.
Date |
Description |
05/25/2017 |
V2.00 release - updated the readme ONLY. No changes to delivered binaries. |
12/16/2016 |
V2.00 release |
10/04/2016 |
V1.10 release |
09/09/2016 |
New for LC server 8001-12C and 8001-22C |
|
|