commit | fe04d49cb52d8989818561c71bdbd6ba676058a5 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Nan Zhou <nanzhoumails@gmail.com> | Wed Jun 22 17:10:41 2022 +0000 |
committer | Ed Tanous <ed@tanous.net> | Wed Jun 22 22:28:21 2022 +0000 |
tree | 0a44d65cda97e8dbcfeea770bf9a8b7ea0ff442f | |
parent | 8bb5fbcb2275a1c739c6c44a58a1528c804aeb3b [diff] |
sensors: use std set and map This change fixed the HEAD where clang-tidy complains about exceptions. It's a subset of this transition in the whole code base: https://gerrit.openbmc.org/c/openbmc/bmcweb/+/54811 This commit leaves changing from ordered containers to unordered ones as future improvements. I tested this commit on real hardware with 300+ sensors. No big difference on performance. ``` # before time wget -qO- 'http://localhost/redfish/v1/Chassis/abc/Sensors?$expand=.' > /dev/null real 0m0.778s user 0m0.000s sys 0m0.000s # after time wget -qO- 'http://localhost:18080/redfish/v1/Chassis/abc/Sensors?$expand=.' > /dev/nul real 0m0.728s user 0m0.000s sys 0m0.030s ``` Tested: 1. code compiles; 2. Tested service validator. No errors in Sensor collections. Signed-off-by: Nan Zhou <nanzhoumails@gmail.com> Change-Id: I75e377d38f20340b4f2fa01041f1f3ebf679e411
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 -C builddir test ninja -C builddir coverage
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.