A complete remote management system allows remote reboot, shutdown, powering on; hardware sensor monitoring (fan speed, power voltages, chassis intrusion, etc.); broadcasting of video output to remote terminals and receiving of input from remote keyboard and mouse (
KVM over IP). It also can access local media like a DVD drive, or
disk images, from the remote machine. If necessary, this allows one to perform remote installation of the operating system. Remote management can be used to adjust BIOS settings that may not be accessible after the operating system has already booted. Settings for hardware
RAID or
RAM timings can also be adjusted as the management card needs no hard drives or main memory to operate. As management via
serial port has traditionally been important on servers, a complete remote management system also allows interfacing with the server through a serial over LAN cable. As sending monitor output through the network is bandwidth intensive, cards like AMI's
MegaRAC use built-in video compression. Versions of
VNC are often used in implementing this. Devices like
Dell DRAC also have a slot for a memory card where an administrator may keep server-related information independently from the main hard drive. The remote system can be accessed either through an
SSH command-line interface, specialized client software, or through various web-browser-based solutions. Client software is usually optimized to manage multiple systems easily. There are also various scaled-down versions, up to devices that only allow remote reboot by
power cycling the server. This helps if the operating system hangs, but only needs a reboot to recover. An older version of out-of-band management is a layout involving the availability of a separate network that allows network administrators to get command-line interface access over the
console ports of
network equipment, even when those devices are not forwarding any payload traffic. If a location has several network devices, a
terminal server can provide access to different console ports for direct CLI access. In case there is only one or just a few network devices, some of them provide AUX ports making it possible to connect a dial-in modem for direct CLI access. The mentioned terminal server can often be accessed via a separate network that does not use managed switches and routers for a connection to the central site, or it has a modem connected via dial-in access through
POTS or
ISDN. == Implementation ==