Author: Andrew Geissler (geissonator)
Other contributors: Jason Bills (jmbills)
Created: Jan 22, 2020
As OpenBMC moves to fully supporting the Redfish protocol, it's important to have the appropriate support within OpenBMC for the ResetType within the Resource schema. OpenBMC currently has limited support and the goal with this design is to get that support more complete.
Please note that the focus of this document is on the following ResetType
instance: redfish/v1/Systems/system/Actions/ComputerSystem.Reset
This support will also map to the existing IPMI Chassis Control command.
phoshor-state-manager implements the xyz.openbmc_project.State.* interfaces. These interfaces control and track the state of the BMC, Chassis, and Host within an OpenBMC managed system. The README within the repository can provide some further background information. bmcweb, OpenBMC's web server and front end Redfish interface, then maps commands to the ResetType object to the appropriate xyz.openbmc_project.State.* D-Bus interface.
The goal with this design is to enhance the xyz.openbmc_project.State.* interfaces to support more of the Redfish ResetType. Specifically this design is looking to support the capability to reboot an operating system on a system without cycling power to the chassis.
Currently phosphor-state-manager supports the following:
The Reboot
to the host currently causes a power cycle to the chassis.
The Redfish ResetType has the following operations associated with it:
"ResetType": { "enum": [ "On", "ForceOff", "GracefulShutdown", "GracefulRestart", "ForceRestart", "Nmi", "ForceOn", "PushPowerButton", "PowerCycle" ], "enumDescriptions": { "ForceOff": "Turn off the unit immediately (non-graceful shutdown).", "ForceOn": "Turn on the unit immediately.", "ForceRestart": "Shut down immediately and non-gracefully and restart the system.", "GracefulRestart": "Shut down gracefully and restart the system.", "GracefulShutdown": "Shut down gracefully and power off.", "Nmi": "Generate a diagnostic interrupt, which is usually an NMI on x86 systems, to stop normal operations, complete diagnostic actions, and, typically, halt the system.", "On": "Turn on the unit.", "PowerCycle": "Power cycle the unit.", "PushPowerButton": "Simulate the pressing of the physical power button on this unit." }, "type": "string" },
The IPMI specification defines a Chassis Control Command with a chassis control parameter as follows:
Option | Description |
---|---|
power down | Force system into soft off (S4/S45) state. This is for ‘emergency’ management power down actions. The command does not initiate a clean shut-down of the operating system prior to powering down the system. |
power up | |
power cycle | This command provides a power off interval of at least 1 second following the deassertion of the system’s POWERGOOD status from the main power subsystem. It is recommended that no action occur if system power is off (S4/S5) when this action is selected, and that a D5h “Request parameter(s) not supported in present state.” error completion code be returned. |
hard reset | In some implementations, the BMC may not know whether a reset will cause any particular effect and will pulse the system reset signal regardless of power state. |
pulse Diagnostic Interrupt | Pulse a version of a diagnostic interrupt that goes directly to the processor(s). This is typically used to cause the operating system to do a diagnostic dump (OS dependent). |
Initiate a soft-shutdown of OS |
xyz.openbmc_project.State.Host.Transition.Reboot
causes a graceful shutdown of the host, a power cycle of the chassis, and a starting of the host.GracefulRestart
(where the host is notified of the reboot)ForceRestart
(where the host is not notified of the reboot)PowerCycle
to a host or chassis operation depending on the current state of the system.PowerCycle
should cycle power to the chassis and boot the host.PowerCycle
should only cycle power to the chassis.Create two new xyz.openbmc_project.State.Host.Transition
options:
ForceWarmReboot
, GracefulWarmReboot
Create a new xyz.openbmc_project.State.Chassis.Transition
option:
PowerCycle
The existing bmcweb code uses some additional xyz.openbmc_project.State.* interfaces that are not defined within phosphor-dbus-interfaces. These are implemented within the x86-power-control repository which is an alternate implementation to phosphor-state-manager. It has the following mapping for these non-phosphor-dbus-interfaces
ForceRestart
-> xyz.openbmc_project.State.Chassis.Transition.Reset
PowerCycle
-> xyz.openbmc_project.State.Chassis.Transition.PowerCycle
A ForceRestart
should restart the host, not the chassis. The proposal is to change the current bmcweb mapping for ForceRestart
to a new host transition: xyz.openbmc_project.State.Host.Transition.ForceWarmReboot
A GracefulRestart
will map to our new host transition: xyz.openbmc_project.State.Host.Transition.GracefulWarmReboot
The PowerCycle
operation is dependent on the current state of the host. If host is on, it will map to xyz.openbmc_project.State.Host.Transition.Reboot
otherwise it will map to xyz.openbmc_project.State.Chassis.Transition.PowerCycle
To summarize the new Redfish to xyz.openbmc_project.State.* mappings:
ForceRestart
-> xyz.openbmc_project.State.Host.Transition.ForceWarmReboot
GracefulRestart
-> xyz.openbmc_project.State.Host.Transition.GracefulWarmReboot
PowerCycle
:xyz.openbmc_project.State.Host.Transition.Reboot
xyz.openbmc_project.State.Chassis.Transition.PowerCycle
The full mapping of Redfish and IPMI to xyz.openbmc_project.State.* is as follows:
Redfish | IPMI | xyz.openbmc_project.State.Transition |
---|---|---|
ForceOff | power down | Chassis.Off |
ForceOn | power up | Host.On |
ForceRestart | hard reset | Host.ForceWarmReboot |
GracefulRestart | Host.GracefulWarmReboot | |
GracefulShutdown | soft off | Host.Off |
On | power up | Host.On |
PowerCycle (host on) | power cycle | Host.Reboot |
PowerCycle (host off) | Chassis.PowerCycle |
No other alternatives considered.
Existing interfaces will be kept the same. Some changes in x86-power-control would be needed to ensure the bmcweb mappings work as expected with the new interfaces.
Some changes in phosphor-host-ipmid would be needed to support the new state transitions.
These new state transitions will be backed by systemd targets. These targets will be thoroughly tested. OpenBMC test team will be approached to ensure these are tested in automation.