1# libpldm 2 3This is a library which deals with the encoding and decoding of PLDM messages. 4It should be possible to use this library by projects other than OpenBMC, and 5hence certain constraints apply to it: 6 7- keeping it light weight 8- implementation in C 9- minimal dynamic memory allocations 10- endian-safe 11- no OpenBMC specific dependencies 12 13Source files are named according to the PLDM Type, for eg base.[h/c], fru.[h/c], 14etc. 15 16Given a PLDM command "foo", the library will provide the following API: For the 17Requester function: 18 19```c 20encode_foo_req() - encode a foo request 21decode_foo_resp() - decode a response to foo 22``` 23 24For the Responder function: 25 26```c 27decode_foo_req() - decode a foo request 28encode_foo_resp() - encode a response to foo 29``` 30 31The library also provides API to pack and unpack PLDM headers. 32 33## To Build 34 35Need `meson` and `ninja`. Alternatively, source an OpenBMC ARM/x86 SDK. 36 37```sh 38meson setup builddir && ninja -C builddir 39``` 40 41## To run unit tests 42 43The simplest way of running the tests is as described by the meson man page: 44 45```sh 46meson setup builddir && meson test -C builddir 47``` 48 49## Working with `libpldm` 50 51The ABIs (symbols, generally functions) exposed by the library are separated 52into three categories: 53 541. Stable 552. Testing 563. Deprecated 57 58Applications depending on `libpldm` should aim to only use functions from the 59stable category. However, this may not always be possible. What to do when 60required functions fall into the deprecated or testing categories is outlined 61below. 62 63### What does it mean to mark a function as stable? 64 65Marking a function as stable makes the following promise to users of the 66library: 67 68> We will not remove or change the symbol name, argument count, argument types, 69> return type, or interpretation of relevant values for the function before 70> first marking it as `LIBPLDM_ABI_DEPRECATED` and then subsequently creating a 71> tagged release 72 73Marking a function as stable does _not_ promise that it is free of 74implementation bugs. It is just a promise that the prototype won't change 75without notice. 76 77Given this, it is always okay to implement functions marked stable in terms of 78functions marked testing inside of libpldm. If we remove or change the prototype 79of a function marked testing the only impact is that we need to fix up any call 80sites of that function in the same patch. 81 82### The ABI lifecycle 83 84```mermaid 85--- 86title: libpldm symbol lifecycle 87--- 88stateDiagram-v2 89 direction LR 90 [*] --> Testing: Add 91 Testing --> Testing: Change 92 Testing --> [*]: Remove 93 Testing --> Stable: Stabilise 94 Stable --> Deprecated: Deprecate 95 Deprecated --> [*]: Remove 96``` 97 98The ABI of the library produced by the build is controlled using the `abi` meson 99option. The following use cases determine how the `abi` option should be 100specified: 101 102| Use Case | Meson Configuration | 103| ----------- | --------------------------------- | 104| Production | `-Dabi=deprecated,stable` | 105| Maintenance | `-Dabi=stable` | 106| Development | `-Dabi=deprecated,stable,testing` | 107 108### Maintenance 109 110Applications and libraries that depend on `libpldm` can identify how to migrate 111off of deprecated APIs by constraining the library ABI to the stable category. 112This will force the compiler identify any call-sites that try to link against 113deprecated symbols. 114 115### Development 116 117Applications and libraries often require functionality that doesn't yet exist in 118`libpldm`. The work is thus in two parts: 119 1201. Add the required APIs to `libpldm` 1212. Use the new APIs from `libpldm` in the dependent application or library 122 123Adding APIs to a library is a difficult task. Generally, once an API is exposed 124in the library's ABI, any changes to the API risk breaking applications already 125making use of it. To make sure we have more than one shot at getting an API 126right, all new APIs must first be exposed in the testing category. Concretely: 127 128Patches adding new APIs MUST mark them as testing and MUST NOT mark them as 129stable. 130 131### Marking functions as testing, stable or deprecated 132 133Three macros are provided through `config.h` (automatically included for all 134translation units) to mark functions as testing, stable or deprecated: 135 1361. `LIBPLDM_ABI_TESTING` 1372. `LIBPLDM_ABI_STABLE` 1383. `LIBPLDM_ABI_DEPRECATED` 139 140These annotations go immediately before your function signature: 141 142```c 143LIBPLDM_ABI_TESTING 144pldm_requester_rc_t pldm_transport_send_msg(struct pldm_transport *transport, 145 pldm_tid_t tid, 146 const void *pldm_req_msg, 147 size_t req_msg_len) 148{ 149 ... 150} 151``` 152 153### Requirements for stabilising a function 154 155As mentioned above, all new functions must first be added in the testing 156category (using the `LIBPLDM_ABI_TESTING` annotation). 157 158To move a function from the testing category to the stable category, its 159required that patches demonstrating use of the function in a dependent 160application or library be linked in the commit message of the stabilisation 161change. We require this to demonstrate that the implementer has considered its 162use in context _before_ preventing us from making changes to the API. 163 164### Building a dependent application or library against a testing ABI 165 166Meson is broadly used in the OpenBMC ecosystem, the historical home of 167`libpldm`. Meson's subprojects are a relatively painless way of managing 168dependencies for the purpose of developing complex applications and libraries. 169Use of `libpldm` as a subproject is both supported and encouraged. 170 171`libpldm`'s ABI can be controlled from a parent project through meson's 172subproject configuration syntax: 173 174```shell 175$ meson setup ... -Dlibpldm:abi=deprecated,stable,testing ... 176``` 177 178## OEM/vendor-specific functions 179 180This will support OEM or vendor-specific functions and semantic information. 181Following directory structure has to be used: 182 183```text 184 libpldm 185 |---- include/libpldm 186 | |---- oem/<oem_name>/libpldm 187 | |----<oem based .h files> 188 |---- src 189 | |---- oem/<oem_name> 190 | |----<oem based .c files> 191 |---- tests 192 | |---- oem/<oem_name> 193 | |----<oem based test files> 194 195``` 196 197<oem_name> - This folder must be created with the name of the OEM/vendor in 198lower case. 199 200Header files & source files having the oem functionality for the libpldm library 201should be placed under the respective folder hierarchy as mentioned in the above 202figure. They must be adhering to the rules mentioned under the libpldm section 203above. 204 205Once the above is done a meson option has to be created in `meson.options` with 206its mapped compiler flag to enable conditional compilation. 207 208For consistency would recommend using "oem-<oem_name>". 209 210The `meson.build` and the corresponding source file(s) will need to incorporate 211the logic of adding its mapped compiler flag to allow conditional compilation of 212the code. 213 214## Requester APIs 215 216The pldm requester API's are present in `src/requester` folder and they are 217intended to provide API's to interact with the desired underlying transport 218layer to send/receive pldm messages. 219 220**NOTE** : In the current state, the requester API's in the repository only 221works with [specific transport mechanism](https://github.com/openbmc/libmctp) & 222these are going to change in future & probably aren't appropriate to be writing 223code against. 224