commit | 565e329809329f0bd93baafb3d8dd47d0091c525 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Matt Spinler <spinler@us.ibm.com> | Mon Apr 17 16:34:24 2017 -0500 |
committer | Patrick Williams <patrick@stwcx.xyz> | Fri May 05 23:26:24 2017 +0000 |
tree | 3f08f7bb00094129ae4d7af5e2ca01f102610f11 | |
parent | c7b071c9f765d94ef69debfbecb2ff649311dccf [diff] |
Recipes for installing fan definition yaml This provides the phosphor-fan-control-fan-config virtual to define the fans required by phosphor-fan-control. On systems with the MRW, phosphor-fan-control-fan-config-mrw-native.bb will be used and will run a perl script to generate the yaml from data in the MRW XML. On systems without the MRW, if nothing else is done a default fans.yaml file will be installed into the correct location by phosphor-fan-control-fan-config-native.bb. To install a system specific version, put it into that system's layer along with a .bbappend of this recipe. Change-Id: I36889a33e16a456a04b94aba7326dd674bfd2904 Signed-off-by: Matt Spinler <spinler@us.ibm.com>
The OpenBMC project can be described as a Linux distribution for embedded devices that have a BMC; typically, but not limited to, things like servers, top of rack switches or RAID appliances. The OpenBMC stack uses technologies such as Yocto, Open-Embedded, Systemd and DBus to allow easy customization for your server platform.
sudo apt-get install -y git build-essential libsdl1.2-dev texinfo gawk chrpath diffstat
sudo dnf install -y git patch diffstat texinfo chrpath SDL-devel bitbake sudo dnf groupinstall "C Development Tools and Libraries"
git clone git@github.com:openbmc/openbmc.git cd openbmc
Any build requires an environment variable known as TEMPLATECONF
to be set to a hardware target. OpenBMC has placed all known hardware targets in a standard directory structure meta-openbmc-machines/meta-openpower/[company]/[target]
. You can see all of the known targets with find meta-openbmc-machines -type d -name conf
. Choose the hardware target and then move to the next step. Additional examples can be found in the OpenBMC Cheatsheet
Machine | TEMPLATECONF |
---|---|
Palmetto | meta-openbmc-machines/meta-openpower/meta-ibm/meta-palmetto/conf |
Barreleye | meta-openbmc-machines/meta-openpower/meta-rackspace/meta-barreleye/conf |
Zaius | meta-openbmc-machines/meta-openpower/meta-ingrasys/meta-zaius/conf |
Witherspoon | meta-openbmc-machines/meta-openpower/meta-ibm/meta-witherspoon/conf |
As an example target Palmetto
export TEMPLATECONF=meta-openbmc-machines/meta-openpower/meta-ibm/meta-palmetto/conf
. openbmc-env bitbake obmc-phosphor-image
Additional details can be found in the docs repository.
Commits submitted by members of the OpenBMC Github community are compiled and tested via our Jenkins server. Commits are run through two levels of testing. At the repository level the makefile make check
directive is run. At the system level, the commit is built into a firmware image and run with a arm-softmmu QEMU model against a barrage of CI tests.
Commits submitted by non-members do not automatically proceed through CI testing. After visual inspection of the commit, a CI run can be manually performed by the reviewer.
Automated testing against the QEMU model along with supported systems are performed. The OpenBMC project uses the Robot Framework for all automation. Our complete test repository can be found here.
Support of additional hardware and software packages is always welcome. Please follow the contributing guidelines when making a submission. It is expected that contributions contain test cases.
Issues are managed on Github. It is recommended you search through the issues before opening a new one.
Dive deeper in to OpenBMC by opening the docs repository