I have a pair of Broadcom NetXtreme 57711 10GbE cards. I put one in a Dell R710; it boots with the card fine, the OS (CentOS 7) recognizes it, and all seems well. However, when I put the other card in an R730xd (also running CentOS), something unexpected happens: the R730xd's fans kick into high speed as soon as the system starts to boot the OS, and run continuously at high speed no matter what is happening. The fans do not run at full speed when interacting with the Lifecycle Controller or the BIOS screens. They only start spinning at full speed when the computer starts to boot the OS and before the OS comes up, so it doesn't seem to be a function of the OS.
I've updated the R730xd's firmware to the latest versions available, I've tried setting the CPU performance profiles in the BIOS, and I've tried setting the thermal profile in the iDRAC, but nothing seems to change the behavior; the system always goes into full-on jet-engine mode. Googling reveals at least one other person encountering similar fan behavior related to adding a PCI card to an R730xd (though it's unclear whether it's the same card – it doesn't appear to be).
What am I doing wrong? More importantly, can this behavior be changed, so that the fans do not stay stuck at full speed?
After tearing my hair out on newly arrived lovely R730xd with 16 3.5" disk slots spinning fans at 15k RPM when Intel X520-DA2 10G card is in any PCI slot, I've found following solution for CentOS 6.7 to quiesce fans in jet mode, although it is brute force, not taking into account 10G card's temperature probe - may result it card burnout from overheating, but I believe it is unlikely. Probably there's a way to monitor X520's thermal metrics.
** Description: The default automatic cooling response on PowerEdge 13G server for third-party PCIe cards provisions airflow based on common industry card requirements. Our thermal algorithm targets delivery of maximum 55C inlet air to the PCIe card region based on that industry standard.
For some cards may not need additional cooling above the baseline (such as ones that have their own fan), Dell has enabled an OEM IPMI based command to disable this default fan response to the new PCIe card.
To remediate:
1. Install IPMI tools:
2. Query Dell's Third-Party PCIe card based default system fan response:
3. Jets off or Set Third-Party PCIe Card Default Cooling Response Logic To Disabled:
4. Jets on or Set Third-Party PCIe Card Default Cooling Response Logic To Enabled:
References: Windows utility (link) Spiceworks post for Windows and 3rd party GPU card causing Gen13 Dell to spin fans (link)
Other findings: Dell's X520-2 firmware pack (here) doesn't recognize Amazon-sourced new in-box $188 vs Dell branded $586
So after the chat in the comments I have some probably bad news.
Dell hardware that ships with a server as a configured item - which IIRC those broadcoms where - is almost never comparable between generations. Dell tends to put custom firmware that hooks into all their management systems on these things.
So the short of it is the part is probably not comparable, won't be supported, and will cause weird issues like what you are seeing.
Note: this doesn't apply to parts sold through their accessories catalog, on parts shipped as part of a dell server build.
for windows and servers users there is a solution same as this one for linux first download this tool for ps manipulation https://www.dell.com/support/home/en-us/drivers/driversdetails?driverid=9ngfj then get the same HEXA for turn off the default cooling for passive cards
https://www.dell.com/support/kbdoc/en-us/000135682/how-to-disable-the-third-party-pcie-card-default-cooling-response-on-poweredge-13g-servers then get