A system needs two groups of configurations: zones and sensors.
The json object should be a dictionary with two keys, sensors
and zones
. sensors
is a list of the sensor dictionaries, whereas zones
is a list of zones.
"sensors" : [ { "name": "fan1", "type": "fan", "readPath": "/xyz/openbmc_project/sensors/fan_tach/fan1", "writePath": "/sys/devices/platform/ahb/ahb:apb/1e786000.pwm-tacho-controller/hwmon/**/pwm1", "min": 0, "max": 255, "ignoreDbusMinMax": true }, { "name": "fan2", "type": "fan", "readPath": "/xyz/openbmc_project/sensors/fan_tach/fan2", "writePath": "/sys/devices/platform/ahb/ahb:apb/1e786000.pwm-tacho-controller/hwmon/**/pwm2", "min": 0, "max": 255, "timeout": 4, }, ...
A sensor has a name
, a type
, a readPath
, a writePath
, a minimum
value, a maximum
value, a timeout
, and a ignoreDbusMinMax
value.
The name
is used to reference the sensor in the zone portion of the configuration.
The type
is the type of sensor it is. This influences how its value is treated. Supports values are: fan
, temp
, and margin
.
TODO: Add further details on what the types mean.
The readPath
is the path that tells the daemon how to read the value from this sensor. It is optional, allowing for write-only sensors. If the value is absent or None
it'll be treated as a write-only sensor.
If the readPath
value contains: /xyz/openbmc_project/extsensors/
it'll be treated as a sensor hosted by the daemon itself whose value is provided externally. The daemon will own the sensor and publish it to dbus. This is currently only supported for temp
and margin
sensor types.
If the readPath
value contains: /xyz/openbmc_project/
(this is checked after external), then it's treated as a passive dbus sensor. A passive dbus sensor is one that listens for property updates to receive its value instead of actively reading the Value
property.
If the readPath
value contains: /sys/
this is treated as a directly read sysfs path. There are two supported paths:
/sys/class/hwmon/hwmon0/pwm1
/sys/devices/platform/ahb/1e786000.pwm-tacho-controller/hwmon/<asterisk asterisk>/pwm1
The writePath
is the path to set the value for the sensor. This is only valid for a sensor of type fan
. The path is optional. If can be empty or None
. It then only supports two options.
If the writePath
value contains: /sys/
this is treated as a directory written sysfs path. There are two support paths:
/sys/class/hwmon/hwmon0/pwm1
/sys/devices/platform/ahb/1e786000.pwm-tacho-controller/hwmon/<asterisk asterisk>/pwm1
If the writePath
value contains: /xyz/openbmc_project/sensors/fan_tach/fan{N}
it sets of a sensor object that writes over dbus to the xyz.openbmc_project.Control.FanPwm
interface. The writePath
should be the full object path.
busctl introspect xyz.openbmc_project.Hwmon-1644477290.Hwmon1 /xyz/openbmc_project/sensors/fan_tach/fan1 --no-pager NAME TYPE SIGNATURE RESULT/VALUE FLAGS org.freedesktop.DBus.Introspectable interface - - - .Introspect method - s - org.freedesktop.DBus.Peer interface - - - .GetMachineId method - s - .Ping method - - - org.freedesktop.DBus.Properties interface - - - .Get method ss v - .GetAll method s a{sv} - .Set method ssv - - .PropertiesChanged signal sa{sv}as - - xyz.openbmc_project.Control.FanPwm interface - - - .Target property t 255 emits-change writable xyz.openbmc_project.Sensor.Value interface - - - .MaxValue property x 0 emits-change writable .MinValue property x 0 emits-change writable .Scale property x 0 emits-change writable .Unit property s "xyz.openbmc_project.Sensor.Value.Uni... emits-change writable .Value property x 2823 emits-change writable
The minimum
and maximum
values are optional. When maximum
is non-zero it expects to write a percentage value converted to a value between the minimum and maximum.
The timeout
value is optional and controls the sensor failure behavior. If a sensor is a fan the default value is 2 seconds, otherwise it's 0. When a sensor's timeout is 0 it isn't checked against a read timeout failure case. If a sensor fails to be read within the timeout period, the zone goes into failsafe to handle the case where it doesn't know what to do -- as it doesn't have all its inputs.
The ignoreDbusMinMax
value is optional and defaults to false. The dbus passive sensors check for a MinValue
and MaxValue
and scale the incoming values via these. Setting this property to true will ignore MinValue
and MaxValue
from dbus and therefore won't call any passive value scaling.
"zones" : [ { "id": 1, "minThermalOutput": 3000.0, "failsafePercent": 75.0, "pids": [], ...
Each zone has its own fields, and a list of PIDs.
field | type | meaning |
---|---|---|
id | int64_t | This is a unique identifier for the zone. |
minThermalOutput | double | This is the minimum value that should be considered from the thermal outputs. Commonly used as the minimum fan RPM. |
failsafePercent | double | If there is a fan PID, it will use this value if the zone goes into fail-safe as the output value written to the fan's sensors. |
The id
field here is used in the d-bus path to talk to the xyz.openbmc_project.Control.Mode
interface.
TODO: Examine how the fan controller always treating its output as a percentage works for future cases.
There are a few PID types: fan
, temp
, margin
, and stepwise
.
The fan
PID is meant to drive fans. It's expecting to get the maximum RPM setpoint value from the owning zone and then drive the fans to that value.
A temp
PID is meant to drive the RPM setpoint given an absolute temperature value (higher value indicates a warmer temperature).
A margin
PID is meant to drive the RPM setpoint given a margin value (lower value indicates a warmer temperature).
The setpoint output from the thermal controllers is called RPMSetpoint()
However, it doesn't need to be an RPM value.
TODO: Rename this method and others to not say necessarily RPM.
Some PID configurations have fields in common, but may be interpreted differently.
If the PID type
is not stepwise
then the PID field is defined as follows:
field | type | meaning |
---|---|---|
samplePeriod | double | How frequently the value is sampled. 0.1 for fans, 1.0 for temperatures. |
proportionalCoeff | double | The proportional coefficient. |
integralCoeff | double | The integral coefficient. |
feedFwdOffsetCoeff | double | The feed forward offset coefficient. |
feedFwdGainCoeff | double | The feed forward gain coefficient. |
integralLimit_min | double | The integral minimum clamp value. |
integralLimit_max | double | The integral maximum clamp value. |
outLim_min | double | The output minimum clamp value. |
outLim_max | double | The output maximum clamp value. |
slewNeg | double | Negative slew value to dampen output. |
slewPos | double | Positive slew value to accelerate output. |
The units for the coefficients depend on the configuration of the PIDs.
If the PID is a margin
controller and its setpoint
is in centigrade and output in RPM: proportionalCoeff is your p value in units: RPM/C and integral coefficient: RPM/C sec
If the PID is a fan controller whose output is pwm: proportionalCoeff is %/RPM and integralCoeff is %/RPM sec.
NOTE: The sample periods are specified in the configuration as they are used in the PID computations, however, they are not truly configurable as they are used for the update periods for the fan and thermal sensors.
"name": "fan1-5", "type": "fan", "inputs": ["fan1", "fan5"], "setpoint": 90.0, "pid": { ... }
The type fan
builds a FanController
PID.
field | type | meaning |
---|---|---|
name | string | The name of the PID. This is just for humans and logging. |
type | string | fan |
inputs | list of strings | The names of the sensor(s) that are used as input and output for the PID loop. |
setpoint | double | Presently UNUSED |
pid | dictionary | A PID dictionary detailed above. |
TODO: Add notes for temperature configuration.
"name": "fleetingpid0", "type": "margin", "inputs": ["fleeting0"], "setpoint": 10, "pid": { ... }
The type margin
builds a ThermalController
PID.
field | type | meaning |
---|---|---|
name | string | The name of the PID. This is just for humans and logging. |
type | string | margin |
inputs | list of strings | The names of the sensor(s) that are used as input for the PID loop. |
setpoint | double | The setpoint value for the thermal PID. The setpoint for the margin sensors. |
pid | dictionary | A PID dictionary detailed above. |
The output of a margin
PID loop is that it sets the setpoint value for the zone. It does this by adding the value to a list of values. The value chosen by the fan PIDs (in this cascade configuration) is the maximum value.
TODO: Write up stepwise
details.