commit | 9aa46454877beb1c85a17c14d97eb7595ac28861 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Agnieszka Szlendak <Agnieszka.Szlendak@intel.com> | Wed May 06 14:35:05 2020 +0200 |
committer | Agnieszka Szlendak <Agnieszka.Szlendak@intel.com> | Mon Jun 22 09:11:14 2020 +0000 |
tree | 65ba6e8eadfbb823ca5660a45ebac6376af50b1b | |
parent | 239c4b88e53fc39f1e3ac9597acfcd8378bdfc4e [diff] |
Dictionary translating ME Health to Redfish Events This change follows commit intel-ipmi-oem/31645. Following code adds ME-specific event definitions to OpenBMC Message Registry. Testing: - injected all possible events with busctl call (faking ME) - tested on actual platform with manually triggered events by actual ME Signed-off-by: Agnieszka Szlendak <Agnieszka.Szlendak@intel.com> Change-Id: I36e26fc940d7fd279870504a19c3b37dd64d115e
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/CMakeLists.txt
and then compiling. For example, cmake -DBMCWEB_ENABLE_KVM=NO ...
followed by make
. The option names become C++ preprocessor symbols that control which code is compiled into the program.
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.