- Notes, cautions, and warnings
- iDRAC9 Release Notes
- Revision History
- Product description
- New features
- Resolved Issues
- Known issues
- Limitations
- Environmental and system requirements
- Installation and upgrade considerations
- Where to get help
The Integrated Dell Remote Access Controller (iDRAC) is designed to make server administrators more productive and improve the overall availability of Dell servers. iDRAC alerts administrators to server issues, helps them perform remote server management, and reduces the need for physical access to the server. Additionally, iDRAC enables administrators to deploy, monitor, manage, configure, update, and troubleshoot Dell servers from any location without using any agents. It accomplishes this regardless of the operating system or hypervisor presence or state.
iDRAC also provides an out-of-band mechanism for configuring the platform, applying firmware updates, saving or restoring a system backup, or deploying an operating system, either by using a GUI or a remote scripting language, such as Redfish or RACADM.
December 2022
Recommended: Dell Technologies recommends applying this update during your next scheduled update cycle. The update contains feature enhancements or changes that will help keep your system software current and compatible with other system modules (firmware, BIOS, drivers, and software).
Updating iDRAC firmware from a previous version, such as 3.2x, 3.1x, 3.0x to this version is not supported. Update the firmware to version 3.30.30.30 first, and then update to this version.