Document Purpose: Walk through compiling and running an OpenBMC application in QEMU.
Prerequisites: Completed Development Environment Setup Document
This lesson uses openbmc/phosphor-state-manager repo. To keep your repos organized, it's a good idea to keep them all under some common directory like ~/Code/.
git clone https://github.com/openbmc/phosphor-state-manager.git
cd phosphor-state-manager vi bmc_state_manager_main.cpp
Your diff should look something like this:
+#include <iostream> int main(int argc, char**) { @@ -17,6 +18,8 @@ int main(int argc, char**) bus.request_name(BMC_BUSNAME); + std::cout<<"Hello World" <<std::endl; + while (true) {
This is a meson based repository
meson build ninja -C build
OpenBMC is an embedded environment so always best to load on the smallest size application/library
arm-openbmc-linux-gnueabi-strip phosphor-bmc-state-manager
Now is time to load your Hello World application in to QEMU virtual hardware. The OpenBMC overrides the PATH variable to always look in /usr/local/bin/ first so you could simply scp your application in to /usr/local/bin, run it and be done. That works fine for command line tests, but when you start launching your applications via systemd services you will hit problems since application paths are hardcoded in the service files. Let's start our journey doing what the professionals do and create an overlay file system. Overlays will save you time and grief. No more renaming and recovering original files, no more forgetting which files you messed with during debug, and of course, no more bricking the system. Log in to the QEMU instance and run these commands.
mkdir -p /tmp/persist/usr mkdir -p /tmp/persist/work/usr mount -t overlay -o lowerdir=/usr,upperdir=/tmp/persist/usr,workdir=/tmp/persist/work/usr overlay /usr
If you used the default ports when starting QEMU then here is the scp command to run from your phosphor-state-manager directory. If you chose your own port then substitute that here for the 2222.
scp -P 2222 phosphor-bmc-state-manager root@127.0.0.1:/usr/bin/
systemctl stop xyz.openbmc_project.State.BMC.service
phosphor-bmc-state-manager
You'll see your "Hello World" message displayed. Ctrl^C to end that application. In general, this is not how you will test new applications. Instead, you'll be using systemd services.
OpenBMC uses systemd to manage its applications. There will be later tutorials on this, but for now just run the following to restart the BMC state service and have it pick up your new application:
systemctl restart xyz.openbmc_project.State.BMC.service
Since systemd started your service, the "Hello World" will not be output to the console, but it will be in the journal. Later tutorials will discuss the journal but for now just run:
journalctl | tail
You should see something like this in one of the journal entries:
<date> romulus phosphor-bmc-state-manager[1089]: Hello World
That's it! You customized an existing BMC application, built it using the SDK, and ran it within QEMU!