| /* |
| * ipmi.h |
| * |
| * MontaVista IPMI interface |
| * |
| * Author: MontaVista Software, Inc. |
| * Corey Minyard <minyard@mvista.com> |
| * source@mvista.com |
| * |
| * Copyright 2002 MontaVista Software Inc. |
| * |
| * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it |
| * under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the |
| * Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your |
| * option) any later version. |
| * |
| * |
| * THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED ``AS IS'' AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED |
| * WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF |
| * MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. |
| * IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, |
| * INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, |
| * BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS |
| * OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND |
| * ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR |
| * TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE |
| * USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. |
| * |
| * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along |
| * with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., |
| * 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. |
| */ |
| |
| #ifndef __LINUX_IPMI_H |
| #define __LINUX_IPMI_H |
| |
| #include <linux/ipmi_msgdefs.h> |
| #include <linux/compiler.h> |
| |
| /* |
| * This file describes an interface to an IPMI driver. You have to |
| * have a fairly good understanding of IPMI to use this, so go read |
| * the specs first before actually trying to do anything. |
| * |
| * With that said, this driver provides a multi-user interface to the |
| * IPMI driver, and it allows multiple IPMI physical interfaces below |
| * the driver. The physical interfaces bind as a lower layer on the |
| * driver. They appear as interfaces to the application using this |
| * interface. |
| * |
| * Multi-user means that multiple applications may use the driver, |
| * send commands, receive responses, etc. The driver keeps track of |
| * commands the user sends and tracks the responses. The responses |
| * will go back to the application that send the command. If the |
| * response doesn't come back in time, the driver will return a |
| * timeout error response to the application. Asynchronous events |
| * from the BMC event queue will go to all users bound to the driver. |
| * The incoming event queue in the BMC will automatically be flushed |
| * if it becomes full and it is queried once a second to see if |
| * anything is in it. Incoming commands to the driver will get |
| * delivered as commands. |
| * |
| * This driver provides two main interfaces: one for in-kernel |
| * applications and another for userland applications. The |
| * capabilities are basically the same for both interface, although |
| * the interfaces are somewhat different. The stuff in the |
| * #ifdef __KERNEL__ below is the in-kernel interface. The userland |
| * interface is defined later in the file. */ |
| |
| |
| |
| /* |
| * This is an overlay for all the address types, so it's easy to |
| * determine the actual address type. This is kind of like addresses |
| * work for sockets. |
| */ |
| #define IPMI_MAX_ADDR_SIZE 32 |
| struct ipmi_addr { |
| /* Try to take these from the "Channel Medium Type" table |
| in section 6.5 of the IPMI 1.5 manual. */ |
| int addr_type; |
| short channel; |
| char data[IPMI_MAX_ADDR_SIZE]; |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| * When the address is not used, the type will be set to this value. |
| * The channel is the BMC's channel number for the channel (usually |
| * 0), or IPMC_BMC_CHANNEL if communicating directly with the BMC. |
| */ |
| #define IPMI_SYSTEM_INTERFACE_ADDR_TYPE 0x0c |
| struct ipmi_system_interface_addr { |
| int addr_type; |
| short channel; |
| unsigned char lun; |
| }; |
| |
| /* An IPMB Address. */ |
| #define IPMI_IPMB_ADDR_TYPE 0x01 |
| /* Used for broadcast get device id as described in section 17.9 of the |
| IPMI 1.5 manual. */ |
| #define IPMI_IPMB_BROADCAST_ADDR_TYPE 0x41 |
| struct ipmi_ipmb_addr { |
| int addr_type; |
| short channel; |
| unsigned char slave_addr; |
| unsigned char lun; |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| * A LAN Address. This is an address to/from a LAN interface bridged |
| * by the BMC, not an address actually out on the LAN. |
| * |
| * A conscious decision was made here to deviate slightly from the IPMI |
| * spec. We do not use rqSWID and rsSWID like it shows in the |
| * message. Instead, we use remote_SWID and local_SWID. This means |
| * that any message (a request or response) from another device will |
| * always have exactly the same address. If you didn't do this, |
| * requests and responses from the same device would have different |
| * addresses, and that's not too cool. |
| * |
| * In this address, the remote_SWID is always the SWID the remote |
| * message came from, or the SWID we are sending the message to. |
| * local_SWID is always our SWID. Note that having our SWID in the |
| * message is a little weird, but this is required. |
| */ |
| #define IPMI_LAN_ADDR_TYPE 0x04 |
| struct ipmi_lan_addr { |
| int addr_type; |
| short channel; |
| unsigned char privilege; |
| unsigned char session_handle; |
| unsigned char remote_SWID; |
| unsigned char local_SWID; |
| unsigned char lun; |
| }; |
| |
| |
| /* |
| * Channel for talking directly with the BMC. When using this |
| * channel, This is for the system interface address type only. FIXME |
| * - is this right, or should we use -1? |
| */ |
| #define IPMI_BMC_CHANNEL 0xf |
| #define IPMI_NUM_CHANNELS 0x10 |
| |
| /* |
| * Used to signify an "all channel" bitmask. This is more than the |
| * actual number of channels because this is used in userland and |
| * will cover us if the number of channels is extended. |
| */ |
| #define IPMI_CHAN_ALL (~0) |
| |
| |
| /* |
| * A raw IPMI message without any addressing. This covers both |
| * commands and responses. The completion code is always the first |
| * byte of data in the response (as the spec shows the messages laid |
| * out). |
| */ |
| struct ipmi_msg { |
| unsigned char netfn; |
| unsigned char cmd; |
| unsigned short data_len; |
| unsigned char __user *data; |
| }; |
| |
| struct kernel_ipmi_msg { |
| unsigned char netfn; |
| unsigned char cmd; |
| unsigned short data_len; |
| unsigned char *data; |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| * Various defines that are useful for IPMI applications. |
| */ |
| #define IPMI_INVALID_CMD_COMPLETION_CODE 0xC1 |
| #define IPMI_TIMEOUT_COMPLETION_CODE 0xC3 |
| #define IPMI_UNKNOWN_ERR_COMPLETION_CODE 0xff |
| |
| |
| /* |
| * Receive types for messages coming from the receive interface. This |
| * is used for the receive in-kernel interface and in the receive |
| * IOCTL. |
| * |
| * The "IPMI_RESPONSE_RESPNOSE_TYPE" is a little strange sounding, but |
| * it allows you to get the message results when you send a response |
| * message. |
| */ |
| #define IPMI_RESPONSE_RECV_TYPE 1 /* A response to a command */ |
| #define IPMI_ASYNC_EVENT_RECV_TYPE 2 /* Something from the event queue */ |
| #define IPMI_CMD_RECV_TYPE 3 /* A command from somewhere else */ |
| #define IPMI_RESPONSE_RESPONSE_TYPE 4 /* The response for |
| a sent response, giving any |
| error status for sending the |
| response. When you send a |
| response message, this will |
| be returned. */ |
| #define IPMI_OEM_RECV_TYPE 5 /* The response for OEM Channels */ |
| |
| /* Note that async events and received commands do not have a completion |
| code as the first byte of the incoming data, unlike a response. */ |
| |
| |
| /* |
| * Modes for ipmi_set_maint_mode() and the userland IOCTL. The AUTO |
| * setting is the default and means it will be set on certain |
| * commands. Hard setting it on and off will override automatic |
| * operation. |
| */ |
| #define IPMI_MAINTENANCE_MODE_AUTO 0 |
| #define IPMI_MAINTENANCE_MODE_OFF 1 |
| #define IPMI_MAINTENANCE_MODE_ON 2 |
| |
| #ifdef __KERNEL__ |
| |
| /* |
| * The in-kernel interface. |
| */ |
| #include <linux/list.h> |
| #include <linux/device.h> |
| #include <linux/proc_fs.h> |
| |
| struct module; |
| |
| /* Opaque type for a IPMI message user. One of these is needed to |
| send and receive messages. */ |
| typedef struct ipmi_user *ipmi_user_t; |
| |
| /* |
| * Stuff coming from the receive interface comes as one of these. |
| * They are allocated, the receiver must free them with |
| * ipmi_free_recv_msg() when done with the message. The link is not |
| * used after the message is delivered, so the upper layer may use the |
| * link to build a linked list, if it likes. |
| */ |
| 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 kernel_ipmi_msg msg; |
| |
| /* The user_msg_data is the data supplied when a message was |
| sent, if this is a response to a sent message. If this is |
| not a response to a sent message, then user_msg_data will |
| be NULL. If the user above is NULL, then this will be the |
| intf. */ |
| void *user_msg_data; |
| |
| /* 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]; |
| }; |
| |
| /* Allocate and free the receive message. */ |
| void ipmi_free_recv_msg(struct ipmi_recv_msg *msg); |
| |
| struct ipmi_user_hndl { |
| /* Routine type to call when a message needs to be routed to |
| the upper layer. This will be called with some locks held, |
| the only IPMI routines that can be called are ipmi_request |
| and the alloc/free operations. The handler_data is the |
| variable supplied when the receive handler was registered. */ |
| void (*ipmi_recv_hndl)(struct ipmi_recv_msg *msg, |
| void *user_msg_data); |
| |
| /* Called when the interface detects a watchdog pre-timeout. If |
| this is NULL, it will be ignored for the user. */ |
| void (*ipmi_watchdog_pretimeout)(void *handler_data); |
| }; |
| |
| /* Create a new user of the IPMI layer on the given interface number. */ |
| int ipmi_create_user(unsigned int if_num, |
| struct ipmi_user_hndl *handler, |
| void *handler_data, |
| ipmi_user_t *user); |
| |
| /* Destroy the given user of the IPMI layer. Note that after this |
| function returns, the system is guaranteed to not call any |
| callbacks for the user. Thus as long as you destroy all the users |
| before you unload a module, you will be safe. And if you destroy |
| the users before you destroy the callback structures, it should be |
| safe, too. */ |
| int ipmi_destroy_user(ipmi_user_t user); |
| |
| /* Get the IPMI version of the BMC we are talking to. */ |
| void ipmi_get_version(ipmi_user_t user, |
| unsigned char *major, |
| unsigned char *minor); |
| |
| /* Set and get the slave address and LUN that we will use for our |
| source messages. Note that this affects the interface, not just |
| this user, so it will affect all users of this interface. This is |
| so some initialization code can come in and do the OEM-specific |
| things it takes to determine your address (if not the BMC) and set |
| it for everyone else. Note that each channel can have its own address. */ |
| int ipmi_set_my_address(ipmi_user_t user, |
| unsigned int channel, |
| unsigned char address); |
| int ipmi_get_my_address(ipmi_user_t user, |
| unsigned int channel, |
| unsigned char *address); |
| int ipmi_set_my_LUN(ipmi_user_t user, |
| unsigned int channel, |
| unsigned char LUN); |
| int ipmi_get_my_LUN(ipmi_user_t user, |
| unsigned int channel, |
| unsigned char *LUN); |
| |
| /* |
| * Like ipmi_request, but lets you specify the number of retries and |
| * the retry time. The retries is the number of times the message |
| * will be resent if no reply is received. If set to -1, the default |
| * value will be used. The retry time is the time in milliseconds |
| * between retries. If set to zero, the default value will be |
| * used. |
| * |
| * Don't use this unless you *really* have to. It's primarily for the |
| * IPMI over LAN converter; since the LAN stuff does its own retries, |
| * it makes no sense to do it here. However, this can be used if you |
| * have unusual requirements. |
| */ |
| int ipmi_request_settime(ipmi_user_t user, |
| struct ipmi_addr *addr, |
| long msgid, |
| struct kernel_ipmi_msg *msg, |
| void *user_msg_data, |
| int priority, |
| int max_retries, |
| unsigned int retry_time_ms); |
| |
| /* |
| * Like ipmi_request, but with messages supplied. This will not |
| * allocate any memory, and the messages may be statically allocated |
| * (just make sure to do the "done" handling on them). Note that this |
| * is primarily for the watchdog timer, since it should be able to |
| * send messages even if no memory is available. This is subject to |
| * change as the system changes, so don't use it unless you REALLY |
| * have to. |
| */ |
| int ipmi_request_supply_msgs(ipmi_user_t user, |
| struct ipmi_addr *addr, |
| long msgid, |
| struct kernel_ipmi_msg *msg, |
| void *user_msg_data, |
| void *supplied_smi, |
| struct ipmi_recv_msg *supplied_recv, |
| int priority); |
| |
| /* |
| * Poll the IPMI interface for the user. This causes the IPMI code to |
| * do an immediate check for information from the driver and handle |
| * anything that is immediately pending. This will not block in any |
| * way. This is useful if you need to spin waiting for something to |
| * happen in the IPMI driver. |
| */ |
| void ipmi_poll_interface(ipmi_user_t user); |
| |
| /* |
| * When commands come in to the SMS, the user can register to receive |
| * them. Only one user can be listening on a specific netfn/cmd/chan tuple |
| * at a time, you will get an EBUSY error if the command is already |
| * registered. If a command is received that does not have a user |
| * registered, the driver will automatically return the proper |
| * error. Channels are specified as a bitfield, use IPMI_CHAN_ALL to |
| * mean all channels. |
| */ |
| int ipmi_register_for_cmd(ipmi_user_t user, |
| unsigned char netfn, |
| unsigned char cmd, |
| unsigned int chans); |
| int ipmi_unregister_for_cmd(ipmi_user_t user, |
| unsigned char netfn, |
| unsigned char cmd, |
| unsigned int chans); |
| |
| /* |
| * Go into a mode where the driver will not autonomously attempt to do |
| * things with the interface. It will still respond to attentions and |
| * interrupts, and it will expect that commands will complete. It |
| * will not automatcially check for flags, events, or things of that |
| * nature. |
| * |
| * This is primarily used for firmware upgrades. The idea is that |
| * when you go into firmware upgrade mode, you do this operation |
| * and the driver will not attempt to do anything but what you tell |
| * it or what the BMC asks for. |
| * |
| * Note that if you send a command that resets the BMC, the driver |
| * will still expect a response from that command. So the BMC should |
| * reset itself *after* the response is sent. Resetting before the |
| * response is just silly. |
| * |
| * If in auto maintenance mode, the driver will automatically go into |
| * maintenance mode for 30 seconds if it sees a cold reset, a warm |
| * reset, or a firmware NetFN. This means that code that uses only |
| * firmware NetFN commands to do upgrades will work automatically |
| * without change, assuming it sends a message every 30 seconds or |
| * less. |
| * |
| * See the IPMI_MAINTENANCE_MODE_xxx defines for what the mode means. |
| */ |
| int ipmi_get_maintenance_mode(ipmi_user_t user); |
| int ipmi_set_maintenance_mode(ipmi_user_t user, int mode); |
| |
| /* |
| * When the user is created, it will not receive IPMI events by |
| * default. The user must set this to TRUE to get incoming events. |
| * The first user that sets this to TRUE will receive all events that |
| * have been queued while no one was waiting for events. |
| */ |
| int ipmi_set_gets_events(ipmi_user_t user, int val); |
| |
| /* |
| * Called when a new SMI is registered. This will also be called on |
| * every existing interface when a new watcher is registered with |
| * ipmi_smi_watcher_register(). |
| */ |
| struct ipmi_smi_watcher { |
| struct list_head link; |
| |
| /* You must set the owner to the current module, if you are in |
| a module (generally just set it to "THIS_MODULE"). */ |
| struct module *owner; |
| |
| /* These two are called with read locks held for the interface |
| the watcher list. So you can add and remove users from the |
| IPMI interface, send messages, etc., but you cannot add |
| or remove SMI watchers or SMI interfaces. */ |
| void (*new_smi)(int if_num, struct device *dev); |
| void (*smi_gone)(int if_num); |
| }; |
| |
| int ipmi_smi_watcher_register(struct ipmi_smi_watcher *watcher); |
| int ipmi_smi_watcher_unregister(struct ipmi_smi_watcher *watcher); |
| |
| /* The following are various helper functions for dealing with IPMI |
| addresses. */ |
| |
| /* Return the maximum length of an IPMI address given it's type. */ |
| unsigned int ipmi_addr_length(int addr_type); |
| |
| /* Validate that the given IPMI address is valid. */ |
| int ipmi_validate_addr(struct ipmi_addr *addr, int len); |
| |
| /* |
| * How did the IPMI driver find out about the device? |
| */ |
| enum ipmi_addr_src { |
| SI_INVALID = 0, SI_HOTMOD, SI_HARDCODED, SI_SPMI, SI_ACPI, SI_SMBIOS, |
| SI_PCI, SI_DEVICETREE, SI_DEFAULT |
| }; |
| |
| union ipmi_smi_info_union { |
| /* |
| * the acpi_info element is defined for the SI_ACPI |
| * address type |
| */ |
| struct { |
| void *acpi_handle; |
| } acpi_info; |
| }; |
| |
| struct ipmi_smi_info { |
| enum ipmi_addr_src addr_src; |
| |
| /* |
| * Base device for the interface. Don't forget to put this when |
| * you are done. |
| */ |
| struct device *dev; |
| |
| /* |
| * The addr_info provides more detailed info for some IPMI |
| * devices, depending on the addr_src. Currently only SI_ACPI |
| * info is provided. |
| */ |
| union ipmi_smi_info_union addr_info; |
| }; |
| |
| /* This is to get the private info of ipmi_smi_t */ |
| extern int ipmi_get_smi_info(int if_num, struct ipmi_smi_info *data); |
| |
| #endif /* __KERNEL__ */ |
| |
| |
| /* |
| * The userland interface |
| */ |
| |
| /* |
| * The userland interface for the IPMI driver is a standard character |
| * device, with each instance of an interface registered as a minor |
| * number under the major character device. |
| * |
| * The read and write calls do not work, to get messages in and out |
| * requires ioctl calls because of the complexity of the data. select |
| * and poll do work, so you can wait for input using the file |
| * descriptor, you just can use read to get it. |
| * |
| * In general, you send a command down to the interface and receive |
| * responses back. You can use the msgid value to correlate commands |
| * and responses, the driver will take care of figuring out which |
| * incoming messages are for which command and find the proper msgid |
| * value to report. You will only receive reponses for commands you |
| * send. Asynchronous events, however, go to all open users, so you |
| * must be ready to handle these (or ignore them if you don't care). |
| * |
| * The address type depends upon the channel type. When talking |
| * directly to the BMC (IPMC_BMC_CHANNEL), the address is ignored |
| * (IPMI_UNUSED_ADDR_TYPE). When talking to an IPMB channel, you must |
| * supply a valid IPMB address with the addr_type set properly. |
| * |
| * When talking to normal channels, the driver takes care of the |
| * details of formatting and sending messages on that channel. You do |
| * not, for instance, have to format a send command, you just send |
| * whatever command you want to the channel, the driver will create |
| * the send command, automatically issue receive command and get even |
| * commands, and pass those up to the proper user. |
| */ |
| |
| |
| /* The magic IOCTL value for this interface. */ |
| #define IPMI_IOC_MAGIC 'i' |
| |
| |
| /* Messages sent to the interface are this format. */ |
| struct ipmi_req { |
| unsigned char __user *addr; /* Address to send the message to. */ |
| unsigned int addr_len; |
| |
| long msgid; /* The sequence number for the message. This |
| exact value will be reported back in the |
| response to this request if it is a command. |
| If it is a response, this will be used as |
| the sequence value for the response. */ |
| |
| struct ipmi_msg msg; |
| }; |
| /* |
| * Send a message to the interfaces. error values are: |
| * - EFAULT - an address supplied was invalid. |
| * - EINVAL - The address supplied was not valid, or the command |
| * was not allowed. |
| * - EMSGSIZE - The message to was too large. |
| * - ENOMEM - Buffers could not be allocated for the command. |
| */ |
| #define IPMICTL_SEND_COMMAND _IOR(IPMI_IOC_MAGIC, 13, \ |
| struct ipmi_req) |
| |
| /* Messages sent to the interface with timing parameters are this |
| format. */ |
| struct ipmi_req_settime { |
| struct ipmi_req req; |
| |
| /* See ipmi_request_settime() above for details on these |
| values. */ |
| int retries; |
| unsigned int retry_time_ms; |
| }; |
| /* |
| * Send a message to the interfaces with timing parameters. error values |
| * are: |
| * - EFAULT - an address supplied was invalid. |
| * - EINVAL - The address supplied was not valid, or the command |
| * was not allowed. |
| * - EMSGSIZE - The message to was too large. |
| * - ENOMEM - Buffers could not be allocated for the command. |
| */ |
| #define IPMICTL_SEND_COMMAND_SETTIME _IOR(IPMI_IOC_MAGIC, 21, \ |
| struct ipmi_req_settime) |
| |
| /* Messages received from the interface are this format. */ |
| struct ipmi_recv { |
| int recv_type; /* Is this a command, response or an |
| asyncronous event. */ |
| |
| unsigned char __user *addr; /* Address the message was from is put |
| here. The caller must supply the |
| memory. */ |
| unsigned int addr_len; /* The size of the address buffer. |
| The caller supplies the full buffer |
| length, this value is updated to |
| the actual message length when the |
| message is received. */ |
| |
| long msgid; /* The sequence number specified in the request |
| if this is a response. If this is a command, |
| this will be the sequence number from the |
| command. */ |
| |
| struct ipmi_msg msg; /* The data field must point to a buffer. |
| The data_size field must be set to the |
| size of the message buffer. The |
| caller supplies the full buffer |
| length, this value is updated to the |
| actual message length when the message |
| is received. */ |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| * Receive a message. error values: |
| * - EAGAIN - no messages in the queue. |
| * - EFAULT - an address supplied was invalid. |
| * - EINVAL - The address supplied was not valid. |
| * - EMSGSIZE - The message to was too large to fit into the message buffer, |
| * the message will be left in the buffer. */ |
| #define IPMICTL_RECEIVE_MSG _IOWR(IPMI_IOC_MAGIC, 12, \ |
| struct ipmi_recv) |
| |
| /* |
| * Like RECEIVE_MSG, but if the message won't fit in the buffer, it |
| * will truncate the contents instead of leaving the data in the |
| * buffer. |
| */ |
| #define IPMICTL_RECEIVE_MSG_TRUNC _IOWR(IPMI_IOC_MAGIC, 11, \ |
| struct ipmi_recv) |
| |
| /* Register to get commands from other entities on this interface. */ |
| struct ipmi_cmdspec { |
| unsigned char netfn; |
| unsigned char cmd; |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| * Register to receive a specific command. error values: |
| * - EFAULT - an address supplied was invalid. |
| * - EBUSY - The netfn/cmd supplied was already in use. |
| * - ENOMEM - could not allocate memory for the entry. |
| */ |
| #define IPMICTL_REGISTER_FOR_CMD _IOR(IPMI_IOC_MAGIC, 14, \ |
| struct ipmi_cmdspec) |
| /* |
| * Unregister a regsitered command. error values: |
| * - EFAULT - an address supplied was invalid. |
| * - ENOENT - The netfn/cmd was not found registered for this user. |
| */ |
| #define IPMICTL_UNREGISTER_FOR_CMD _IOR(IPMI_IOC_MAGIC, 15, \ |
| struct ipmi_cmdspec) |
| |
| /* |
| * Register to get commands from other entities on specific channels. |
| * This way, you can only listen on specific channels, or have messages |
| * from some channels go to one place and other channels to someplace |
| * else. The chans field is a bitmask, (1 << channel) for each channel. |
| * It may be IPMI_CHAN_ALL for all channels. |
| */ |
| struct ipmi_cmdspec_chans { |
| unsigned int netfn; |
| unsigned int cmd; |
| unsigned int chans; |
| }; |
| |
| /* |
| * Register to receive a specific command on specific channels. error values: |
| * - EFAULT - an address supplied was invalid. |
| * - EBUSY - One of the netfn/cmd/chans supplied was already in use. |
| * - ENOMEM - could not allocate memory for the entry. |
| */ |
| #define IPMICTL_REGISTER_FOR_CMD_CHANS _IOR(IPMI_IOC_MAGIC, 28, \ |
| struct ipmi_cmdspec_chans) |
| /* |
| * Unregister some netfn/cmd/chans. error values: |
| * - EFAULT - an address supplied was invalid. |
| * - ENOENT - None of the netfn/cmd/chans were found registered for this user. |
| */ |
| #define IPMICTL_UNREGISTER_FOR_CMD_CHANS _IOR(IPMI_IOC_MAGIC, 29, \ |
| struct ipmi_cmdspec_chans) |
| |
| /* |
| * Set whether this interface receives events. Note that the first |
| * user registered for events will get all pending events for the |
| * interface. error values: |
| * - EFAULT - an address supplied was invalid. |
| */ |
| #define IPMICTL_SET_GETS_EVENTS_CMD _IOR(IPMI_IOC_MAGIC, 16, int) |
| |
| /* |
| * Set and get the slave address and LUN that we will use for our |
| * source messages. Note that this affects the interface, not just |
| * this user, so it will affect all users of this interface. This is |
| * so some initialization code can come in and do the OEM-specific |
| * things it takes to determine your address (if not the BMC) and set |
| * it for everyone else. You should probably leave the LUN alone. |
| */ |
| struct ipmi_channel_lun_address_set { |
| unsigned short channel; |
| unsigned char value; |
| }; |
| #define IPMICTL_SET_MY_CHANNEL_ADDRESS_CMD \ |
| _IOR(IPMI_IOC_MAGIC, 24, struct ipmi_channel_lun_address_set) |
| #define IPMICTL_GET_MY_CHANNEL_ADDRESS_CMD \ |
| _IOR(IPMI_IOC_MAGIC, 25, struct ipmi_channel_lun_address_set) |
| #define IPMICTL_SET_MY_CHANNEL_LUN_CMD \ |
| _IOR(IPMI_IOC_MAGIC, 26, struct ipmi_channel_lun_address_set) |
| #define IPMICTL_GET_MY_CHANNEL_LUN_CMD \ |
| _IOR(IPMI_IOC_MAGIC, 27, struct ipmi_channel_lun_address_set) |
| /* Legacy interfaces, these only set IPMB 0. */ |
| #define IPMICTL_SET_MY_ADDRESS_CMD _IOR(IPMI_IOC_MAGIC, 17, unsigned int) |
| #define IPMICTL_GET_MY_ADDRESS_CMD _IOR(IPMI_IOC_MAGIC, 18, unsigned int) |
| #define IPMICTL_SET_MY_LUN_CMD _IOR(IPMI_IOC_MAGIC, 19, unsigned int) |
| #define IPMICTL_GET_MY_LUN_CMD _IOR(IPMI_IOC_MAGIC, 20, unsigned int) |
| |
| /* |
| * Get/set the default timing values for an interface. You shouldn't |
| * generally mess with these. |
| */ |
| struct ipmi_timing_parms { |
| int retries; |
| unsigned int retry_time_ms; |
| }; |
| #define IPMICTL_SET_TIMING_PARMS_CMD _IOR(IPMI_IOC_MAGIC, 22, \ |
| struct ipmi_timing_parms) |
| #define IPMICTL_GET_TIMING_PARMS_CMD _IOR(IPMI_IOC_MAGIC, 23, \ |
| struct ipmi_timing_parms) |
| |
| /* |
| * Set the maintenance mode. See ipmi_set_maintenance_mode() above |
| * for a description of what this does. |
| */ |
| #define IPMICTL_GET_MAINTENANCE_MODE_CMD _IOR(IPMI_IOC_MAGIC, 30, int) |
| #define IPMICTL_SET_MAINTENANCE_MODE_CMD _IOW(IPMI_IOC_MAGIC, 31, int) |
| |
| #endif /* __LINUX_IPMI_H */ |