| commit | fa4d4c69b81b68ee57006c44f8f4467ea310cc69 | [log] [tgz] |
|---|---|---|
| author | Ed Tanous <etanous@nvidia.com> | Tue Sep 23 16:16:14 2025 +0530 |
| committer | Ed Tanous <etanous@nvidia.com> | Thu Oct 09 23:58:19 2025 +0000 |
| tree | 75cf11b988ccc2f0798797ef577cfb8edb582774 | |
| parent | 90db104da62241e28114575aa0519ce35e9cc030 [diff] |
Bypass resolver If we are given an ip address to the http client, there's no reason to call the dns resolver. Implement a procedure to "skip" resolution if the http client is an ip address. Tested: Using an ipv4 address from a system not running OpenBMC dbus (in this case an Ubuntu system) now can resolve an IP address. Redfish works with later patches. Change-Id: I094ec7b3015e1e31cb83f0e1c25f6c1fb6685219 Signed-off-by: Ed Tanous <etanous@nvidia.com>
This component attempts to be a "do everything" embedded webserver for OpenBMC.
The webserver implements a few distinct interfaces:
bmcweb at a protocol level supports http and https. TLS is supported through OpenSSL. Http1 and http2 are supported using ALPN registration for TLS connections and h2c upgrade header for http connections.
Bmcweb supports multiple authentication protocols:
Each of these types of authentication is able to be enabled or disabled both via runtime policy changes (through the relevant Redfish APIs) or via configure time options. All authentication mechanisms supporting username/password are routed to libpam, to allow for customization in authentication implementations.
All authorization in bmcweb is determined at routing time, and per route, and conform to the Redfish PrivilegeRegistry.
*Note: Non-Redfish functions are mapped to the closest equivalent Redfish privilege level.
bmcweb is configured per the meson build files. Available options are documented in meson_options.txt
meson setup builddir ninja -C builddir
If any of the dependencies are not found on the host system during configuration, meson will automatically download them via its wrap dependencies mentioned in bmcweb/subprojects.
bmcweb relies on some on-system data for storage of persistent data that is internal to the process. Details on the exact data stored and when it is read/written can seen from the persistent_data namespace.
When SSL support is enabled and a usable certificate is not found, bmcweb will generate a self-signed a certificate before launching the server. Please see the bmcweb source code for details on the parameters this certificate is built with.
bmcweb supports various forms of http compression, including zstd and gzip. Client headers are observed to determine whether compressed payloads are supported.
bmcweb is capable of aggregating resources from satellite BMCs. Refer to AGGREGATION.md for more information on how to enable and use this feature.