clang-error:fix clang-diagnostic-potentially-evaluated-expression error

This error is generated when expression with side effects is evaluated
despite being used as an operand to 'typeid'.

Change-Id: I72daa47f1c5b05b466e1635fe6d547db4b1da34b
Signed-off-by: Pavithra Barithaya <pavithra.b@ibm.com>
1 file changed
tree: 7c22fafa4d63aac91f62b8891c66afd74cbe6775
  1. common/
  2. configurations/
  3. fw-update/
  4. host-bmc/
  5. libpldmresponder/
  6. oem/
  7. pldmd/
  8. pldmtool/
  9. requester/
  10. softoff/
  11. subprojects/
  12. test/
  13. tools/
  14. utilities/
  15. .clang-format
  16. .eslintignore
  17. .gitignore
  18. .linter-ignore
  19. LICENSE
  20. meson.build
  21. meson_options.txt
  22. OWNERS
  23. README.md
  24. setup.cfg
README.md

To Build

Need meson and ninja. Alternatively, source an OpenBMC ARM/x86 SDK.

meson build && ninja -C build

To run unit tests

The simplest way of running the tests is as described by the meson man page:

meson builddir && meson test -C builddir

Alternatively, tests can be run in the OpenBMC CI docker container, or with an OpenBMC x86 sdk(see below for x86 steps).

meson -Doe-sdk=enabled build
ninja -C build test

To enable pldm verbosity

pldm daemon accepts a command line argument --verbose or --v or -v to enable the daemon to run in verbose mode. It can be done via adding this option to the environment file that pldm service consumes.

echo 'PLDMD_ARGS="--verbose"' > /etc/default/pldmd
systemctl restart pldmd

To disable pldm verbosity

rm /etc/default/pldmd
systemctl restart pldmd

Code Organization

At a high-level, code in this repository belongs to one of the following three components.

libpldmresponder

This library provides handlers for incoming PLDM request messages. It provides for a registration as well as a plug-in mechanism. The library is implemented in modern C++, and handles OpenBMC's platform specifics.

The handlers are of the form

Response handler(Request payload, size_t payloadLen)

Source files are named according to the PLDM Type, for eg base.[hpp/cpp], fru.[hpp/cpp], etc.

OEM/vendor-specific functions

This will support OEM or vendor-specific functions and semantic information. Following directory structure has to be used:

    pldm repo
     |---- oem
            |----<oem_name>
                      |----libpldmresponder
                            |---<oem based handler files>

<oem_name> - This folder must be created with the name of the OEM/vendor in lower case. Folders named libpldm and libpldmresponder must be created under the folder <oem_name>

Files having the oem functionality for the libpldmresponder library should be placed under the folder oem/<oem_name>/libpldmresponder. They must be adhering to the rules mentioned under the libpldmresponder section above.

Once the above is done a meson option has to be created in pldm/meson_options.txt with its mapped compiler flag to enable conditional compilation.

For consistency would recommend using "oem-<oem_name>".

The pldm/meson.build and the corresponding source file(s) will need to incorporate the logic of adding its mapped compiler flag to allow conditional compilation of the code.

libpldm

pldm daemon links against the libpldm library during compilation, For more information on libpldm please refer to libpldm

pldmtool

For more information on pldmtool please refer to plmdtool/README.md.

Flows

This section documents important code flow paths.

BMC as PLDM responder

a) PLDM daemon receives PLDM request message from underlying transport (MCTP).

b) PLDM daemon routes message to message handler, based on the PLDM command.

c) Message handler decodes request payload into various field(s) of the request message. It can make use of a decode_foo_req() API, and doesn't have to perform deserialization of the request payload by itself.

d) Message handler works with the request field(s) and generates response field(s).

e) Message handler prepares a response message. It can make use of an encode_foo_resp() API, and doesn't have to perform the serialization of the response field(s) by itself.

f) The PLDM daemon sends the response message prepared at step e) to the remote PLDM device.

BMC as PLDM requester

a) A BMC PLDM requester app prepares a PLDM request message. There would be several requester apps (based on functionality/PLDM remote device). Each of them needn't bother with the serialization of request field(s), and can instead make use of an encode_foo_req() API.

b) BMC requester app requests PLDM daemon to send the request message to remote PLDM device.

c) Once the PLDM daemon receives a corresponding response message, it notifies the requester app.

d) The requester app has to work with the response field(s). It can make use of a decode_foo_resp() API to deserialize the response message.

PDR Implementation

While PLDM Platform Descriptor Records (PDRs) are mostly static information, they can vary across platforms and systems. For this reason, platform specific PDR information is encoded in platform specific JSON files. JSON files must be named based on the PDR type number. For example a state effecter PDR JSON file will be named 11.json. The JSON files may also include information to enable additional processing (apart from PDR creation) for specific PDR types, for eg mapping an effecter id to a D-Bus object.

The PLDM responder implementation finds and parses PDR JSON files to create the PDR repository. Platform specific PDR modifications would likely just result in JSON updates. New PDR type support would require JSON updates as well as PDR generation code. The PDR generator is a map of PDR Type -> C++ lambda to create PDR entries for that type based on the JSON, and to update the central PDR repo.