commit | ba27e59e5049d4ae12baf6dfd84d3045dd1e55c9 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Ed Tanous <edtanous@google.com> | Mon Feb 07 09:31:08 2022 -0800 |
committer | Ed Tanous <ed@tanous.net> | Tue Feb 08 19:11:45 2022 +0000 |
tree | d45b2bb25f37d653baa185f5096080a5a36e36aa | |
parent | dcf2ebc020257bc298d948fcb4da761c284e84d7 [diff] |
Rerun parse_registries.py After the last string wrapping rule change, we never re-ran the script to regenerate, which puts all of these strings on their own line. While this is non-ideal for reading comprehension, it's the rule we have at the moment, so we should be consistent. 12778e61c281b8f8c0f976dec225fb0c30edcb47 appears to have incorrectly checked in a bad version of the privilege registry, which this commit diffs out again. I have inspected https://redfish.dmtf.org/registries/Redfish_1.2.0_PrivilegeRegistry.json by hand, and verified that those overrides are not present. Tested: Whitespace changes only Signed-off-by: Ed Tanous <edtanous@google.com> Change-Id: I517a7cf13eba2dfd3211491c08ecce69ee68257f
This component attempts to be a "do everything" embedded webserver for openbmc.
At this time, the webserver implements a few interfaces:
BMCWeb is configured by setting -D
flags that correspond to options in bmcweb/meson_options.txt
and then compiling. For example, meson <builddir> -Dkvm=disabled ...
followed by ninja
in build directory. The option names become C++ preprocessor symbols that control which code is compiled into the program.
meson builddir ninja -C builddir
meson builddir -Dbuildtype=minsize -Db_lto=true -Dtests=disabled ninja -C buildir
If any of the dependencies are not found on the host system during configuration, meson automatically gets them via its wrap dependencies mentioned in bmcweb/subprojects
.
meson builddir -Dwrap_mode=nofallback ninja -C builddir
meson builddir -Dbuildtype=debug ninja -C builddir
meson builddir -Db_coverage=true -Dtests=enabled ninja coverage -C builddir test
When BMCWeb starts running, it reads persistent configuration data (such as UUID and session data) from a local file. If this is not usable, it generates a new configuration.
When BMCWeb SSL support is enabled and a usable certificate is not found, it will generate a self-sign a certificate before launching the server. The keys are generated by the secp384r1
algorithm. The certificate
C=US, O=OpenBMC, CN=testhost
,SHA-256
algorithm.