Important Note:
The host code update can be found here: host-code-update.md
After building OpenBMC, you will end up with a set of image files in tmp/deploy/images/<platform>/
. The image-*
symlinks correspond to components that can be updated on the BMC:
image-bmc
→ obmc-phosphor-image-<platform>-<timestamp>.static.mtd
The complete flash image for the BMC
image-kernel
→ fitImage-obmc-phosphor-initramfs-<platform>.bin
The OpenBMC kernel FIT image (including the kernel, device tree, and initramfs)
image-rofs
→ obmc-phosphor-image-<platform>.squashfs-xz
The read-only OpenBMC filesystem
image-rwfs
→ rwfs.jffs2
The read-write filesystem for persistent changes to the OpenBMC filesystem
image-u-boot
→ u-boot.bin
The OpenBMC bootloader
Additionally, there are two tarballs created that can be deployed and unpacked by REST:
<platform>-<timestamp>.all.tar
The complete BMC flash content: A single file (image-bmc
) wrapped in a tar archive.
<platform>-<timestamp>.tar
Partitioned BMC flash content: Multiple files wrapped in a tar archive, one for each of the u-boot, kernel, ro and rw partitions.
The BMC normally runs with the read-write and read-only file systems mounted, which means these images may be read (and written, for the read-write filesystem) at any time. Because the updates are distributed as complete file system images, these filesystems have to be unmounted to replace them with new images. To unmount these file systems all applications must be stopped.
By default, an orderly reboot
will stop all applications and unmount the root filesystem, and the images copied into the /run/initramfs
directory will be applied at that point before restarting. This also applied to the shutdown
and halt
commands -- they will write the flash before stopping.
As an alternative, an option can be parsed by the init
script in the initramfs to copy the required contents of these filesystems into RAM so the images can be applied while the rest of the application stack is running and progress can be monitored over the network. The update
script can then be called to write the images while the system is operational and its progress output monitored.
To update from the OpenBMC shell, follow the steps in this section.
It is recommended that the BMC be prepared for update (note that the environment variable needs to be set twice for initramfs be able to read it due to the U-Boot redundant environments):
fw_setenv openbmconce copy-files-to-ram copy-base-filesystem-to-ram fw_setenv openbmconce copy-files-to-ram copy-base-filesystem-to-ram reboot
Copy one or more of these image-*
files to the directory:
/run/initramfs/
(preserving the filename), then run the update
script to apply the images:
/run/initramfs/update
then reboot to finish applying:
reboot
During the reboot process, the update
script will be invoked after the file systems are unmounted to complete the update process.
Some optional features are available, see the help for more details:
/run/initramfs/update --help
An OpenBMC system can download an update image from a TFTP server, and apply updates, controlled via REST. The general procedure is:
Perform a POST to invoke the PrepareForUpdate
method of the /flash/bmc
object:
curl -b cjar -k -H "Content-Type: application/json" -X POST \ -d '{"data": []}' \ https://${bmc}/org/openbmc/control/flash/bmc/action/prepareForUpdate
This will setup the u-boot environment and reboot the BMC. If no other images were pending the BMC should return in about 2 minutes.
There are a few settings available to control the update process:
preserve_network_settings
: Preserve network settings, only needed if updating the whole flashrestore_application_defaults
: update (clear) the read-write file systemupdate_kernel_and_apps
: update kernel and initramfs. If the partitioned tarball will be used for update then this option must be set. Otherwise, if the complete tarball will be used then this option must not be set.clear_persistent_files
: ignore the persistent file list when resetting applications defaultsauto_apply
: Attempt to write the images by invoking the Apply
method after the images are unpacked.To configure the update settings, perform a REST PUT to /control/flash/bmc/attr/<setting>
. For example:
curl -b cjar -k -H "Content-Type: application/json" -X PUT \ -d '{"data": 1}' \ https://${bmc}/org/openbmc/control/flash/bmc/attr/preserve_network_settings
Perform a POST to invoke the updateViaTftp
method of the /flash/bmc
object:
curl -b cjar -k -H "Content-Type: application/json" -X POST \ -d '{"data": ["<TFTP server IP address>", "<filename>"]}' \ https://${bmc}/org/openbmc/control/flash/bmc/action/updateViaTftp
Note the <filename>
shall be a tarball.
You can query the progress of the download and image verification with a simple GET request:
curl -b cjar -k https://${bmc}/org/openbmc/control/flash/bmc
Or perform a POST to invoke the GetUpdateProgress
method of the /flash/bmc
object:
curl -b cjar -k -H "Content-Type: application/json" -X POST \ -d '{"data": []}' \ https://${bmc}/org/openbmc/control/flash/bmc/action/GetUpdateProgress
Note:
Downloading
Image ready to apply
.If the status is Image ready to apply.
then you can either initiate a reboot or call the Apply method to start the process of writing the flash:
curl -b cjar -k -H "Content-Type: application/json" -X POST \ -d '{"data": []}' \ https://${bmc}/org/openbmc/control/flash/bmc/action/Apply
Now the image is being flashed, you can check the progress with above steps command as well.
Writing images to flash
Apply Complete. Reboot to take effect.
To start using the new images, reboot the BMC using the warmReset method of the BMC control object:
curl -b cjar -k -H "Content-Type: application/json" -X POST \ -d '{"data": []}' \ https://${bmc}/org/openbmc/control/bmc0/action/warmReset