commit | 9f80622dc9ea83a55c703a36a99e45b3ca5a62b7 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Suryakanth Sekar <suryakanth.sekar@linux.intel.com> | Tue Mar 26 10:37:35 2019 +0530 |
committer | Gunnar Mills <gmills@us.ibm.com> | Mon Apr 22 14:56:15 2019 +0000 |
tree | da20ba60bcfac87f41bedbeb4b18b36ae2b4fe88 | |
parent | 9e0cdb809d0e297b81e54cfccf9fedbf705fe3ca [diff] |
Update the session/SOL mgmt section in ipmi doc phosphor-ipmi-net manages session(RMCP+) & SOL commands directly and responses to those commands. As these commands can also be requested through host (KCS) interface, phosphor-ipmi-host daemon must also need details about session & SOL. In order to maintain sync between phosphor-ipmi-net & phosphor-ipmi-host daemon, session & SOL are exposed in D-Bus, which phosphor-ipmi-host can query and respond to commands issued through host interface(KCS). Signed-off-by: Suryakanth Sekar <suryakanth.sekar@linux.intel.com> Change-Id: I629c35b20ee225972be6c2588514281cafa40157
This repository contains documentation for OpenBMC as a whole. There may be component-specific documentation in the repository for each component.
The features document lists the project's major features with links to more information.
These documents describe how to use OpenBMC, including using the programmatic interfaces to an OpenBMC system.
rest-api.md: Introduction to using the OpenBMC REST API
console.md: Using the host console
host-management.md: Performing host management tasks with OpenBMC
code-update: Updating OpenBMC and host platform firmware
These documents contain details on developing OpenBMC code itself
cheatsheet.md: Quick reference for some common development tasks
CONTRIBUTING.md: Guidelines for contributing to OpenBMC
kernel-development.md: Reference for common kernel development tasks
REST-cheatsheet.md: Quick reference for some common curl commands usage.
The OpenBMC project's aim is to create a highly extensible framework for BMC software and implement for data-center computer systems.
We have a few high-level objectives:
The OpenBMC framework must be extensible, easy to learn, and usable in a variety of programming languages.
Provide a REST API for external management, and allow for "pluggable" interfaces for other types of management interactions.
Provide a remote host console, accessible over the network
Persist network configuration settable from REST interface and host
Provide a robust solution for RTC management, exposed to the host.
Compatible with host firmware implementations for basic IPMI communication between host and BMC
Provide a flexible and hierarchical inventory tracking component
Maintain a sensor database and track thresholds