OpenBMC makes it easy to add sensors for your hardware and is compliant with the traditional Linux HWMon sensor format. The architecture of OpenBMC sensors is to map sensors to D-Bus objects. The D-Bus object will broadcast the PropertiesChanged
signal when either the sensor or threshold value changes. It is the responsibility of other applications to determine the effect of the signal on the system.
Service xyz.openbmc_project.Hwmon.Hwmon[x] Path /xyz/openbmc_project/Sensors/<type>/<label> Interfaces xyz.openbmc_project.Sensor.[*] Signals: All properties for an interface will broadcast signal changed
Path definitions
<type> : The HWMon class name in lower case. Examples include temperature, fan, voltage
.
<label> : User defined name of the sensor. Examples include ambient, cpu0, fan5
Note: The label shall comply with "Valid Object Paths" of D-Bus Spec, that shall only contain the ASCII characters "[A-Z][a-z][0-9]_".
Sensor properties are standardized based on the type of sensor. A Threshold sensor contains specific properties associated with the rise and fall of a sensor value. The Sensor Interfaces are described in their respective YAML files. The path location in the source tree is identical to the interface being described below the phosphor-dbus-interfaces parent directory.
example: openbmc/phosphor-dbus-interfaces/xyz/openbmc_project/Sensor/Threshold/Warning.yaml
Maps to D-Bus interface xyz.openbmc_project.Sensor.Threshold.Warning
Each 'name' property in the YAML file maps directly to D-Bus properties.
example:
properties: - name: WarningHigh type: int64 - name: WarningLow type: int64 - name: WarningAlarmHigh type: boolean - name: WarningAlarmLow type: boolean
Maps to
busctl --system introspect xyz.openbmc_project.Hwmon.hwmon1 \ /xyz/openbmc_project/Sensors/temperature/ambient \ xyz.openbmc_project.Sensor.Threshold.Warning | grep property .WarningAlarmHigh property b false emits-change writable .WarningAlarmLow property b false emits-change writable .WarningHigh property x 40000 emits-change writable .WarningLow property x 10000 emits-change writable
"/xyz/openbmc_project/Sensors/temperature/ambient": { "Scale": -3, "Unit": "xyz.openbmc_project.Sensor.Value.Unit.DegreesC", "Value": 30125, "WarningAlarmHigh": 0, "WarningAlarmLow": 0, "WarningHigh": 40000, "WarningLow": 10000 }
Any property value change broadcasts a signal on D-Bus. When a value trips past a threshold, an additional D-Bus signal is sent.
Example, if the value of WarningLow is 5...
From | To | propertyChanged Signals |
---|---|---|
1 | 5 | "xyz.org.openbmc_project.Sensor.Value" : value = 5 |
1 | 6 | "xyz.org.openbmc_project.Sensor.Value" : value = 6 , "xyz.org.openbmc_project.Sensor.Threshold.Warning" : WarningAlarmLow = 0 |
5 | 6 | "xyz.org.openbmc_project.Sensor.Value" : value = 6 |
6 | 1 | "xyz.org.openbmc_project.Sensor.Value" : value = 1 , "xyz.org.openbmc_project.Sensor.Threshold.Warning" : WarningAlarmLow = 1 |
On the BMC each sensor's configuration is located in a file. These files can be found as a child of the /etc/default/obmc/hwmon
path.
There are two techniques to add a sensor to your system and which to use depends on if your system defines sensors via an MRW (Machine Readable Workbook) or not.
HWMon sensors are defined in the recipes-phosphor/sensor/phosphor-hwmon%
path within the machine configuration. The children of the obmc/hwmon
directory should follow the children of the devicetree/base
directory path on the system as defined by the kernel.
As an example, the Palmetto configuration file for the ambient temperature sensor.
recipes-phosphor/sensors/phosphor-hwmon%/obmc/hwmon/ahb/apb/i2c@1e78a000/i2c-bus@c0/tmp423@4c.conf
which maps to this specific sensor and conf file on the system...
/sys/firmware/devicetree/base/ahb/apb/i2c@1e78a000/i2c-bus@c0/tmp423@4c /etc/default/obmc/hwmon/ahb/apb/i2c@1e78a000/i2c-bus@c0/tmp423@4c.conf
In order for the sensor to be exposed to D-Bus, the configuration file must describe the sensor attributes. Attributes follow a format.
xxx_yyy#=value xxx = Attribute # = Association number (i.e. 1-n) yyy = HWMon sensor type (i.e. temp, pwm)
Attribute | Interfaces Added |
---|---|
LABEL | xyz.org.openbmc_project.Sensor.Value |
WARNHI, WARNLO | xyz.org.openbmc_project.Threshold.Warning |
CRITHI, CRITLO | xyz.org.openbmc_project.Threshold.Critical |
The HWMon sensor type
HWMon sensor type | type |
---|---|
temp | temperature |
in | voltage |
* | All other names map directly |
See the HWMon interface definitions for more definitions and keyword details
In this conf example the tmp423 chip is wired to two temperature sensors. The values must be described in 10-3 degrees Celsius.
LABEL_temp1=ambient WARNLO_temp1=10000 WARNHI_temp1=40000 LABEL_temp2=cpu WARNLO_temp2=10000 WARNHI_temp2=80000
With that level of system information, the sensor infrastructure code can provide all needed D-Bus properties.
Optionally you can provide an interval value in microseconds for a sensor configuration file:
INTERVAL=1000000
This configures how often the sensors listed in this configuration should be read.
Setting up sensor support with an MRW is done by adding a unit-hwmon-feature unit, for each hwmon feature needing to be monitored and then filling in the HWMON_FEATURE attribute. The XML field is required however a D-Bus interface will only be generated when the value property is not null. Values for Thresholds follow the HWMon format of no decimals. Temperature values must be described in 10-3 degrees Celsius. The HWMON_NAME will be used to derive the <type> while the DESCRIPTIVE_NAME creates the <label> for the instance path.
Field id | Value Required | Interfaces Added |
---|---|---|
HWMON_NAME | Y | xyz.org.openbmc_project.Sensor.Value |
WARN_LOW, WARN_HIGH | N | xyz.org.openbmc_project.Threshold.Warning |
CRIT_LOW, CRIT_HIGH | N | xyz.org.openbmc_project.Threshold.Critical |
Here is an example of a Fan sensor. If the RPMs go above 80000 or below 1000 addition signals will be sent over D-Bus. Note that neither CRIT_LOW or CRIT_HIGH is set so xyz.org.openbmc_project.Threshold.Critical
will not be added. The instance path will be /xyz/openbmc_project/Sensors/fan/fan0
.
<targetInstance> <id>MAX31785.hwmon2</id> <type>unit-hwmon-feature</type> ... <attribute> <id>HWMON_FEATURE</id> <default> <field><id>HWMON_NAME</id><value>fan1</value></field> <field><id>DESCRIPTIVE_NAME</id><value>fan0</value></field> <field><id>WARN_LOW</id><value>1000</value></field> <field><id>WARN_HIGH</id><value>80000</value></field> <field><id>CRIT_LOW</id><value></value></field> <field><id>CRIT_HIGH</id><value></value></field> </default> </attribute>
Mailing List Comments on Sensor design