commit | 92409d0e6bd0e5839836ae92b4a74f4dee603074 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Ed Tanous <edtanous@google.com> | Wed Sep 29 15:17:24 2021 -0700 |
committer | Ed Tanous <ed@tanous.net> | Wed Oct 27 16:52:10 2021 +0000 |
tree | cfafd4bba79425b71dc48de8c74ed62c929d5ace | |
parent | 39b129f519caec29c6a8cb2f891ab788f4bf2951 [diff] |
Sort collections by human sort Today, collections of dimms have a weird issue where they sort by lexicographical sort, not numeric sort, so systems with >10 dimms show up in the order: Dimm1 Dimm10 Dimm11 Dimm2 While these collections are supposed to be sets, and the order doesn't matter in the spec, there are a number of humans that look at these, and doing something obvious is good for people. Tested: Tested on a CI system with 16 dimms here: https://gist.github.com/geissonator/53a94f124c3501691a7870fb80c60c80 Which responded with dimms 1 and 11 being in the correct order. Signed-off-by: Ed Tanous <edtanous@google.com> Change-Id: I0c8b28fd169c5a957fb4d36a7c6771473b06fc0c
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.