| |
| The Linux IPMI Driver |
| --------------------- |
| Corey Minyard |
| <minyard@mvista.com> |
| <minyard@acm.org> |
| |
| The Intelligent Platform Management Interface, or IPMI, is a |
| standard for controlling intelligent devices that monitor a system. |
| It provides for dynamic discovery of sensors in the system and the |
| ability to monitor the sensors and be informed when the sensor's |
| values change or go outside certain boundaries. It also has a |
| standardized database for field-replacable units (FRUs) and a watchdog |
| timer. |
| |
| To use this, you need an interface to an IPMI controller in your |
| system (called a Baseboard Management Controller, or BMC) and |
| management software that can use the IPMI system. |
| |
| This document describes how to use the IPMI driver for Linux. If you |
| are not familiar with IPMI itself, see the web site at |
| http://www.intel.com/design/servers/ipmi/index.htm. IPMI is a big |
| subject and I can't cover it all here! |
| |
| Configuration |
| ------------- |
| |
| The LinuxIPMI driver is modular, which means you have to pick several |
| things to have it work right depending on your hardware. Most of |
| these are available in the 'Character Devices' menu. |
| |
| No matter what, you must pick 'IPMI top-level message handler' to use |
| IPMI. What you do beyond that depends on your needs and hardware. |
| |
| The message handler does not provide any user-level interfaces. |
| Kernel code (like the watchdog) can still use it. If you need access |
| from userland, you need to select 'Device interface for IPMI' if you |
| want access through a device driver. Another interface is also |
| available, you may select 'IPMI sockets' in the 'Networking Support' |
| main menu. This provides a socket interface to IPMI. You may select |
| both of these at the same time, they will both work together. |
| |
| The driver interface depends on your hardware. If you have a board |
| with a standard interface (These will generally be either "KCS", |
| "SMIC", or "BT", consult your hardware manual), choose the 'IPMI SI |
| handler' option. A driver also exists for direct I2C access to the |
| IPMI management controller. Some boards support this, but it is |
| unknown if it will work on every board. For this, choose 'IPMI SMBus |
| handler', but be ready to try to do some figuring to see if it will |
| work. |
| |
| There is also a KCS-only driver interface supplied, but it is |
| depracated in favor of the SI interface. |
| |
| You should generally enable ACPI on your system, as systems with IPMI |
| should have ACPI tables describing them. |
| |
| If you have a standard interface and the board manufacturer has done |
| their job correctly, the IPMI controller should be automatically |
| detect (via ACPI or SMBIOS tables) and should just work. Sadly, many |
| boards do not have this information. The driver attempts standard |
| defaults, but they may not work. If you fall into this situation, you |
| need to read the section below named 'The SI Driver' on how to |
| hand-configure your system. |
| |
| IPMI defines a standard watchdog timer. You can enable this with the |
| 'IPMI Watchdog Timer' config option. If you compile the driver into |
| the kernel, then via a kernel command-line option you can have the |
| watchdog timer start as soon as it intitializes. It also have a lot |
| of other options, see the 'Watchdog' section below for more details. |
| Note that you can also have the watchdog continue to run if it is |
| closed (by default it is disabled on close). Go into the 'Watchdog |
| Cards' menu, enable 'Watchdog Timer Support', and enable the option |
| 'Disable watchdog shutdown on close'. |
| |
| |
| Basic Design |
| ------------ |
| |
| The Linux IPMI driver is designed to be very modular and flexible, you |
| only need to take the pieces you need and you can use it in many |
| different ways. Because of that, it's broken into many chunks of |
| code. These chunks are: |
| |
| ipmi_msghandler - This is the central piece of software for the IPMI |
| system. It handles all messages, message timing, and responses. The |
| IPMI users tie into this, and the IPMI physical interfaces (called |
| System Management Interfaces, or SMIs) also tie in here. This |
| provides the kernelland interface for IPMI, but does not provide an |
| interface for use by application processes. |
| |
| ipmi_devintf - This provides a userland IOCTL interface for the IPMI |
| driver, each open file for this device ties in to the message handler |
| as an IPMI user. |
| |
| ipmi_si - A driver for various system interfaces. This supports |
| KCS, SMIC, and may support BT in the future. Unless you have your own |
| custom interface, you probably need to use this. |
| |
| ipmi_smb - A driver for accessing BMCs on the SMBus. It uses the |
| I2C kernel driver's SMBus interfaces to send and receive IPMI messages |
| over the SMBus. |
| |
| af_ipmi - A network socket interface to IPMI. This doesn't take up |
| a character device in your system. |
| |
| Note that the KCS-only interface ahs been removed. |
| |
| Much documentation for the interface is in the include files. The |
| IPMI include files are: |
| |
| net/af_ipmi.h - Contains the socket interface. |
| |
| linux/ipmi.h - Contains the user interface and IOCTL interface for IPMI. |
| |
| linux/ipmi_smi.h - Contains the interface for system management interfaces |
| (things that interface to IPMI controllers) to use. |
| |
| linux/ipmi_msgdefs.h - General definitions for base IPMI messaging. |
| |
| |
| Addressing |
| ---------- |
| |
| The IPMI addressing works much like IP addresses, you have an overlay |
| to handle the different address types. The overlay is: |
| |
| struct ipmi_addr |
| { |
| int addr_type; |
| short channel; |
| char data[IPMI_MAX_ADDR_SIZE]; |
| }; |
| |
| The addr_type determines what the address really is. The driver |
| currently understands two different types of addresses. |
| |
| "System Interface" addresses are defined as: |
| |
| struct ipmi_system_interface_addr |
| { |
| int addr_type; |
| short channel; |
| }; |
| |
| and the type is IPMI_SYSTEM_INTERFACE_ADDR_TYPE. This is used for talking |
| straight to the BMC on the current card. The channel must be |
| IPMI_BMC_CHANNEL. |
| |
| Messages that are destined to go out on the IPMB bus use the |
| IPMI_IPMB_ADDR_TYPE address type. The format is |
| |
| struct ipmi_ipmb_addr |
| { |
| int addr_type; |
| short channel; |
| unsigned char slave_addr; |
| unsigned char lun; |
| }; |
| |
| The "channel" here is generally zero, but some devices support more |
| than one channel, it corresponds to the channel as defined in the IPMI |
| spec. |
| |
| |
| Messages |
| -------- |
| |
| Messages are defined as: |
| |
| struct ipmi_msg |
| { |
| unsigned char netfn; |
| unsigned char lun; |
| unsigned char cmd; |
| unsigned char *data; |
| int data_len; |
| }; |
| |
| The driver takes care of adding/stripping the header information. The |
| data portion is just the data to be send (do NOT put addressing info |
| here) or the response. Note that the completion code of a response is |
| the first item in "data", it is not stripped out because that is how |
| all the messages are defined in the spec (and thus makes counting the |
| offsets a little easier :-). |
| |
| When using the IOCTL interface from userland, you must provide a block |
| of data for "data", fill it, and set data_len to the length of the |
| block of data, even when receiving messages. Otherwise the driver |
| will have no place to put the message. |
| |
| Messages coming up from the message handler in kernelland will come in |
| as: |
| |
| struct ipmi_recv_msg |
| { |
| struct list_head link; |
| |
| /* The type of message as defined in the "Receive Types" |
| defines above. */ |
| int recv_type; |
| |
| ipmi_user_t *user; |
| struct ipmi_addr addr; |
| long msgid; |
| struct ipmi_msg msg; |
| |
| /* Call this when done with the message. It will presumably free |
| the message and do any other necessary cleanup. */ |
| void (*done)(struct ipmi_recv_msg *msg); |
| |
| /* Place-holder for the data, don't make any assumptions about |
| the size or existence of this, since it may change. */ |
| unsigned char msg_data[IPMI_MAX_MSG_LENGTH]; |
| }; |
| |
| You should look at the receive type and handle the message |
| appropriately. |
| |
| |
| The Upper Layer Interface (Message Handler) |
| ------------------------------------------- |
| |
| The upper layer of the interface provides the users with a consistent |
| view of the IPMI interfaces. It allows multiple SMI interfaces to be |
| addressed (because some boards actually have multiple BMCs on them) |
| and the user should not have to care what type of SMI is below them. |
| |
| |
| Creating the User |
| |
| To user the message handler, you must first create a user using |
| ipmi_create_user. The interface number specifies which SMI you want |
| to connect to, and you must supply callback functions to be called |
| when data comes in. The callback function can run at interrupt level, |
| so be careful using the callbacks. This also allows to you pass in a |
| piece of data, the handler_data, that will be passed back to you on |
| all calls. |
| |
| Once you are done, call ipmi_destroy_user() to get rid of the user. |
| |
| From userland, opening the device automatically creates a user, and |
| closing the device automatically destroys the user. |
| |
| |
| Messaging |
| |
| To send a message from kernel-land, the ipmi_request() call does |
| pretty much all message handling. Most of the parameter are |
| self-explanatory. However, it takes a "msgid" parameter. This is NOT |
| the sequence number of messages. It is simply a long value that is |
| passed back when the response for the message is returned. You may |
| use it for anything you like. |
| |
| Responses come back in the function pointed to by the ipmi_recv_hndl |
| field of the "handler" that you passed in to ipmi_create_user(). |
| Remember again, these may be running at interrupt level. Remember to |
| look at the receive type, too. |
| |
| From userland, you fill out an ipmi_req_t structure and use the |
| IPMICTL_SEND_COMMAND ioctl. For incoming stuff, you can use select() |
| or poll() to wait for messages to come in. However, you cannot use |
| read() to get them, you must call the IPMICTL_RECEIVE_MSG with the |
| ipmi_recv_t structure to actually get the message. Remember that you |
| must supply a pointer to a block of data in the msg.data field, and |
| you must fill in the msg.data_len field with the size of the data. |
| This gives the receiver a place to actually put the message. |
| |
| If the message cannot fit into the data you provide, you will get an |
| EMSGSIZE error and the driver will leave the data in the receive |
| queue. If you want to get it and have it truncate the message, us |
| the IPMICTL_RECEIVE_MSG_TRUNC ioctl. |
| |
| When you send a command (which is defined by the lowest-order bit of |
| the netfn per the IPMI spec) on the IPMB bus, the driver will |
| automatically assign the sequence number to the command and save the |
| command. If the response is not receive in the IPMI-specified 5 |
| seconds, it will generate a response automatically saying the command |
| timed out. If an unsolicited response comes in (if it was after 5 |
| seconds, for instance), that response will be ignored. |
| |
| In kernelland, after you receive a message and are done with it, you |
| MUST call ipmi_free_recv_msg() on it, or you will leak messages. Note |
| that you should NEVER mess with the "done" field of a message, that is |
| required to properly clean up the message. |
| |
| Note that when sending, there is an ipmi_request_supply_msgs() call |
| that lets you supply the smi and receive message. This is useful for |
| pieces of code that need to work even if the system is out of buffers |
| (the watchdog timer uses this, for instance). You supply your own |
| buffer and own free routines. This is not recommended for normal use, |
| though, since it is tricky to manage your own buffers. |
| |
| |
| Events and Incoming Commands |
| |
| The driver takes care of polling for IPMI events and receiving |
| commands (commands are messages that are not responses, they are |
| commands that other things on the IPMB bus have sent you). To receive |
| these, you must register for them, they will not automatically be sent |
| to you. |
| |
| To receive events, you must call ipmi_set_gets_events() and set the |
| "val" to non-zero. Any events that have been received by the driver |
| since startup will immediately be delivered to the first user that |
| registers for events. After that, if multiple users are registered |
| for events, they will all receive all events that come in. |
| |
| For receiving commands, you have to individually register commands you |
| want to receive. Call ipmi_register_for_cmd() and supply the netfn |
| and command name for each command you want to receive. Only one user |
| may be registered for each netfn/cmd, but different users may register |
| for different commands. |
| |
| From userland, equivalent IOCTLs are provided to do these functions. |
| |
| |
| The Lower Layer (SMI) Interface |
| ------------------------------- |
| |
| As mentioned before, multiple SMI interfaces may be registered to the |
| message handler, each of these is assigned an interface number when |
| they register with the message handler. They are generally assigned |
| in the order they register, although if an SMI unregisters and then |
| another one registers, all bets are off. |
| |
| The ipmi_smi.h defines the interface for management interfaces, see |
| that for more details. |
| |
| |
| The SI Driver |
| ------------- |
| |
| The SI driver allows up to 4 KCS or SMIC interfaces to be configured |
| in the system. By default, scan the ACPI tables for interfaces, and |
| if it doesn't find any the driver will attempt to register one KCS |
| interface at the spec-specified I/O port 0xca2 without interrupts. |
| You can change this at module load time (for a module) with: |
| |
| modprobe ipmi_si.o type=<type1>,<type2>.... |
| ports=<port1>,<port2>... addrs=<addr1>,<addr2>... |
| irqs=<irq1>,<irq2>... trydefaults=[0|1] |
| regspacings=<sp1>,<sp2>,... regsizes=<size1>,<size2>,... |
| regshifts=<shift1>,<shift2>,... |
| slave_addrs=<addr1>,<addr2>,... |
| |
| Each of these except si_trydefaults is a list, the first item for the |
| first interface, second item for the second interface, etc. |
| |
| The si_type may be either "kcs", "smic", or "bt". If you leave it blank, it |
| defaults to "kcs". |
| |
| If you specify si_addrs as non-zero for an interface, the driver will |
| use the memory address given as the address of the device. This |
| overrides si_ports. |
| |
| If you specify si_ports as non-zero for an interface, the driver will |
| use the I/O port given as the device address. |
| |
| If you specify si_irqs as non-zero for an interface, the driver will |
| attempt to use the given interrupt for the device. |
| |
| si_trydefaults sets whether the standard IPMI interface at 0xca2 and |
| any interfaces specified by ACPE are tried. By default, the driver |
| tries it, set this value to zero to turn this off. |
| |
| The next three parameters have to do with register layout. The |
| registers used by the interfaces may not appear at successive |
| locations and they may not be in 8-bit registers. These parameters |
| allow the layout of the data in the registers to be more precisely |
| specified. |
| |
| The regspacings parameter give the number of bytes between successive |
| register start addresses. For instance, if the regspacing is set to 4 |
| and the start address is 0xca2, then the address for the second |
| register would be 0xca6. This defaults to 1. |
| |
| The regsizes parameter gives the size of a register, in bytes. The |
| data used by IPMI is 8-bits wide, but it may be inside a larger |
| register. This parameter allows the read and write type to specified. |
| It may be 1, 2, 4, or 8. The default is 1. |
| |
| Since the register size may be larger than 32 bits, the IPMI data may not |
| be in the lower 8 bits. The regshifts parameter give the amount to shift |
| the data to get to the actual IPMI data. |
| |
| The slave_addrs specifies the IPMI address of the local BMC. This is |
| usually 0x20 and the driver defaults to that, but in case it's not, it |
| can be specified when the driver starts up. |
| |
| When compiled into the kernel, the addresses can be specified on the |
| kernel command line as: |
| |
| ipmi_si.type=<type1>,<type2>... |
| ipmi_si.ports=<port1>,<port2>... ipmi_si.addrs=<addr1>,<addr2>... |
| ipmi_si.irqs=<irq1>,<irq2>... ipmi_si.trydefaults=[0|1] |
| ipmi_si.regspacings=<sp1>,<sp2>,... |
| ipmi_si.regsizes=<size1>,<size2>,... |
| ipmi_si.regshifts=<shift1>,<shift2>,... |
| ipmi_si.slave_addrs=<addr1>,<addr2>,... |
| |
| It works the same as the module parameters of the same names. |
| |
| By default, the driver will attempt to detect any device specified by |
| ACPI, and if none of those then a KCS device at the spec-specified |
| 0xca2. If you want to turn this off, set the "trydefaults" option to |
| false. |
| |
| If you have high-res timers compiled into the kernel, the driver will |
| use them to provide much better performance. Note that if you do not |
| have high-res timers enabled in the kernel and you don't have |
| interrupts enabled, the driver will run VERY slowly. Don't blame me, |
| these interfaces suck. |
| |
| |
| The SMBus Driver |
| ---------------- |
| |
| The SMBus driver allows up to 4 SMBus devices to be configured in the |
| system. By default, the driver will register any SMBus interfaces it finds |
| in the I2C address range of 0x20 to 0x4f on any adapter. You can change this |
| at module load time (for a module) with: |
| |
| modprobe ipmi_smb.o |
| addr=<adapter1>,<i2caddr1>[,<adapter2>,<i2caddr2>[,...]] |
| dbg=<flags1>,<flags2>... |
| [defaultprobe=0] [dbg_probe=1] |
| |
| The addresses are specified in pairs, the first is the adapter ID and the |
| second is the I2C address on that adapter. |
| |
| The debug flags are bit flags for each BMC found, they are: |
| IPMI messages: 1, driver state: 2, timing: 4, I2C probe: 8 |
| |
| Setting smb_defaultprobe to zero disabled the default probing of SMBus |
| interfaces at address range 0x20 to 0x4f. This means that only the |
| BMCs specified on the smb_addr line will be detected. |
| |
| Setting smb_dbg_probe to 1 will enable debugging of the probing and |
| detection process for BMCs on the SMBusses. |
| |
| Discovering the IPMI compilant BMC on the SMBus can cause devices |
| on the I2C bus to fail. The SMBus driver writes a "Get Device ID" IPMI |
| message as a block write to the I2C bus and waits for a response. |
| This action can be detrimental to some I2C devices. It is highly recommended |
| that the known I2c address be given to the SMBus driver in the smb_addr |
| parameter. The default adrress range will not be used when a smb_addr |
| parameter is provided. |
| |
| When compiled into the kernel, the addresses can be specified on the |
| kernel command line as: |
| |
| ipmb_smb.addr=<adapter1>,<i2caddr1>[,<adapter2>,<i2caddr2>[,...]] |
| ipmi_smb.dbg=<flags1>,<flags2>... |
| ipmi_smb.defaultprobe=0 ipmi_smb.dbg_probe=1 |
| |
| These are the same options as on the module command line. |
| |
| Note that you might need some I2C changes if CONFIG_IPMI_PANIC_EVENT |
| is enabled along with this, so the I2C driver knows to run to |
| completion during sending a panic event. |
| |
| |
| Other Pieces |
| ------------ |
| |
| Watchdog |
| -------- |
| |
| A watchdog timer is provided that implements the Linux-standard |
| watchdog timer interface. It has three module parameters that can be |
| used to control it: |
| |
| modprobe ipmi_watchdog timeout=<t> pretimeout=<t> action=<action type> |
| preaction=<preaction type> preop=<preop type> start_now=x |
| nowayout=x |
| |
| The timeout is the number of seconds to the action, and the pretimeout |
| is the amount of seconds before the reset that the pre-timeout panic will |
| occur (if pretimeout is zero, then pretimeout will not be enabled). Note |
| that the pretimeout is the time before the final timeout. So if the |
| timeout is 50 seconds and the pretimeout is 10 seconds, then the pretimeout |
| will occur in 40 second (10 seconds before the timeout). |
| |
| The action may be "reset", "power_cycle", or "power_off", and |
| specifies what to do when the timer times out, and defaults to |
| "reset". |
| |
| The preaction may be "pre_smi" for an indication through the SMI |
| interface, "pre_int" for an indication through the SMI with an |
| interrupts, and "pre_nmi" for a NMI on a preaction. This is how |
| the driver is informed of the pretimeout. |
| |
| The preop may be set to "preop_none" for no operation on a pretimeout, |
| "preop_panic" to set the preoperation to panic, or "preop_give_data" |
| to provide data to read from the watchdog device when the pretimeout |
| occurs. A "pre_nmi" setting CANNOT be used with "preop_give_data" |
| because you can't do data operations from an NMI. |
| |
| When preop is set to "preop_give_data", one byte comes ready to read |
| on the device when the pretimeout occurs. Select and fasync work on |
| the device, as well. |
| |
| If start_now is set to 1, the watchdog timer will start running as |
| soon as the driver is loaded. |
| |
| If nowayout is set to 1, the watchdog timer will not stop when the |
| watchdog device is closed. The default value of nowayout is true |
| if the CONFIG_WATCHDOG_NOWAYOUT option is enabled, or false if not. |
| |
| When compiled into the kernel, the kernel command line is available |
| for configuring the watchdog: |
| |
| ipmi_watchdog.timeout=<t> ipmi_watchdog.pretimeout=<t> |
| ipmi_watchdog.action=<action type> |
| ipmi_watchdog.preaction=<preaction type> |
| ipmi_watchdog.preop=<preop type> |
| ipmi_watchdog.start_now=x |
| ipmi_watchdog.nowayout=x |
| |
| The options are the same as the module parameter options. |
| |
| The watchdog will panic and start a 120 second reset timeout if it |
| gets a pre-action. During a panic or a reboot, the watchdog will |
| start a 120 timer if it is running to make sure the reboot occurs. |
| |
| Note that if you use the NMI preaction for the watchdog, you MUST |
| NOT use nmi watchdog mode 1. If you use the NMI watchdog, you |
| must use mode 2. |
| |
| Once you open the watchdog timer, you must write a 'V' character to the |
| device to close it, or the timer will not stop. This is a new semantic |
| for the driver, but makes it consistent with the rest of the watchdog |
| drivers in Linux. |