1 2# OpenBMC cheatsheet 3 4This document is intended to provide a set of recipes for common OpenBMC 5customisation tasks, without having to know the full yocto build process. 6 7## Using a local kernel build 8 9The kernel recipe is in: 10 11``` 12 meta-phosphor/common/recipes-kernel/linux/linux-obmc_X.Y.bb 13``` 14 15To use a local git tree, change the `SRC_URI` to a git:// URL without 16a hostname. For example: 17 18``` 19SRC_URI = "git:///home/jk/devel/linux;protocol=git;branch=${KBRANCH}" 20``` 21 22The `SRCREV` variable can be used to set an explicit git commit. The 23default (`${AUTOREV}`) will use the latest commit in `KBRANCH`. 24 25## Building for Palmetto 26 27The Palmetto target is `palmetto`. 28 29If you are starting from scratch without a `build/conf` directory you can just: 30``` 31$ cd openbmc 32$ TEMPLATECONF=meta-ibm/meta-palmetto/conf . openbmc-env 33$ bitbake obmc-phosphor-image 34``` 35 36## Building for Zaius 37 38The Zaius target is `zaius`. 39 40If you are starting from scratch without a `build/conf` directory you can just: 41``` 42$ cd openbmc 43$ TEMPLATECONF=meta-ingrasys/meta-zaius/conf . openbmc-env 44$ bitbake obmc-phosphor-image 45``` 46 47## Building a specific machine configuration 48 49If the system you want to build contains different machine configurations: 50 51 meta-<layer>/meta-<system>/conf/machine/machineA.conf 52 meta-<layer>/meta-<system>/conf/machine/machineB.conf 53 54You can specify the machine configuration you want to build by setting the 55MACHINE environment variable. 56 57 $ cd openbmc 58 $ TEMPLATECONF=meta-<layer>/meta-<system>/conf . openbmc-env 59 $ export MACHINE="machineB" 60 $ bitbake obmc-phosphor-image 61 62## Building the OpenBMC SDK 63Looking for a way to compile your programs for 'ARM' but you happen to be running on a 'PPC' or 'x86' system? You can build the sdk receive a fakeroot environment. 64``` 65$ bitbake -c populate_sdk obmc-phosphor-image 66$ ./tmp/deploy/sdk/openbmc-phosphor-glibc-x86_64-obmc-phosphor-image-armv5e-toolchain-2.1.sh 67``` 68Follow the prompts. After it has been installed the default to setup your env will be similar to this command 69``` 70. /opt/openbmc-phosphor/2.1/environment-setup-armv5e-openbmc-linux-gnueabi 71``` 72 73## Rebuilds & Reconfiguration 74 75You can reconfigure your build by removing the build/conf dir: 76``` 77rm -rf build/conf 78``` 79and running `openbmc-env` again (possibly with `TEMPLATECONF` set). 80 81## Useful D-Bus CLI tools 82 83## `busctl` 84 85http://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/busctl.html 86 87Great tool to issue D-Bus commands via cli. That way you don't have to wait for 88the code to hit the path on the system. Great for running commands with QEMU 89too! 90 91Run as: 92 93``` 94busctl call <path> <interface> <object> <method> <parameters> 95``` 96 97* \<parameters\> example : sssay "t1" "t2" "t3" 2 2 3 98 99## Using QEMU 100 101QEMU has a palmetto-bmc machine (as of v2.6.0) which implements the core 102devices to boot a Linux kernel. OpenBMC also [maintains a 103tree](https://github.com/openbmc/qemu) with patches on their way upstream or 104temporary work-arounds that add to QEMU's capabilities where appropriate. 105 106``` 107qemu-system-arm -m 256 -M palmetto-bmc -nographic \ 108-drive file=<path>/flash-palmetto,format=raw,if=mtd \ 109-net nic \ 110-net user,hostfwd=:127.0.0.1:2222-:22,hostfwd=:127.0.0.1:2443-:443,hostname=qemu \ 111``` 112If you get an error you likely need to build QEMU (see the section in this document). If no error and QEMU starts up just change the port when interacting with the BMC... 113 114``` 115curl -c cjar -b cjar -k -H "Content-Type: application/json" \ 116-X POST https://localhost:2443/login -d "{\"data\": [ \"root\", \"0penBmc\" ] }" 117``` 118or 119 120``` 121ssh -p 2222 root@localhost 122``` 123 124To quit, type `Ctrl-a c` to switch to the QEMU monitor, and then `quit` to exit. 125 126## Building QEMU 127 128``` 129git clone https://github.com/openbmc/qemu.git 130cd qemu 131git submodule update --init dtc 132mkdir build 133cd build 134../configure --target-list=arm-softmmu 135make 136``` 137Built file will be located at: ```arm-softmmu/qemu-system-arm``` 138 139### Use a bridge device 140Using a bridge device requires a bit of root access to set it up. The benefit 141is your qemu session runs in the bridges subnet so no port forwarding is needed. 142There are packages needed to yourself a virbr0 such as... 143 144``` 145apt-get install libvirt libvirt-bin bridge-utils uml-utilities qemu-system-common 146 147qemu-system-arm -m 256 -M palmetto-bmc -nographic \ 148-drive file=<path>/flash-palmetto,format=raw,if=mtd \ 149-net nic,macaddr=C0:FF:EE:00:00:02,model=ftgmac100 \ 150-net bridge,id=net0,helper=/usr/lib/qemu-bridge-helper,br=virbr0 151``` 152 153There are some other useful parms like that can redirect the console to another 154window. This results in having an easily accessible qemu command session. 155```-monitor stdio -serial pty -nodefaults``` 156 157 158## Booting the host 159 160Login: 161``` 162curl -c cjar -k -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/json" -d '{"data": [ "root", "0penBmc" ] }' https://${bmc}/login 163``` 164 165Connect to host console: 166``` 167ssh -p 2200 root@bmc 168``` 169 170Power on: 171``` 172curl -c cjar -b cjar -k -H "Content-Type: application/json" -X PUT \ 173 -d '{"data": "xyz.openbmc_project.State.Host.Transition.On"}' \ 174 https://${bmc}/xyz/openbmc_project/state/host0/attr/RequestedHostTransition 175``` 176 177## GDB 178 179[SDK build](#building-the-openbmc-sdk) provides GDB and debug symbols: 180 181* `$GDB` is available to use once SDK environment is setup 182* Debug symbols are located in `.debug/` directory of each executable 183 184To use GDB: 185 1861. Setup SDK environment; 1872. Run below GDB commands: 188 ``` 189 cd <sysroot_of_sdk_build> 190 $GDB <relative_path_to_exeutable> <path_to_core_file> 191 ``` 192 193## Coredump 194 195By default coredump is disabled in OpenBMC. To enable coredump: 196``` 197echo '/tmp/core_%e.%p' | tee /proc/sys/kernel/core_pattern 198ulimit -c unlimited 199``` 200 201## Cleaning up read-write file system changes 202 203You may want to investigate which file(s) are persisting through the overlay 204rwfs. To do this, you can list this path and then remove those files which 205you'd prefer the originals or remove the deletion overlay to restore files. 206 207``` 208/run/initramfs/rw/cow/ 209``` 210 211## Building 212 213### Share downloads directory 214It takes a long time for the first build of OpenBMC. It downloads various repos 215from the internet. 216 217Check `build/downloads` to see all the downloaded repos. 218 219* If a repo is a single archive, it usually looks like this: 220 * `zlib-1.2.11.tar.xz` - The repo itself 221 * `zlib-1.2.11.tar.xz.done` - A flag indicating the repo is downloaded 222* If a repo is managed by git, it usually looks like this: 223 * `git2/github.com.openbmc.linux` - The git bare clone 224 * `git2/github.com.openbmc.linux.done` - A flag indicating the repo is downloaded 225 226Bitbake will extract the code to the working directory during build, so the 227`downloads` directory could be shared by different builds on a system: 228 229* Set `DL_DIR` Bitbake environment variable to the location of your shared 230 downloads directory by editing the `build/conf/local.conf` file: 231 ``` 232 DL_DIR ?= "<path>/<to>/<existing>/downloads" 233 ``` 234* Or create a symbol link: 235 ``` 236 ln -sf <path>/<to>/<existing>/downloads build/downloads 237 ``` 238Then do the build. It will save a lot of time from downloading codes. 239 240## Using git proxy 241If you experience extremely slow download speed during code fetch (e.g. if you 242are in China), it is possible to use a git proxy to speed up the code fetch. 243 244Google `git-proxy-wrapper` will find various ways to setup the proxy for the 245git protocol. 246 247Below is an example wrapper in `~/bin` assuming a socks5 proxy at port 9054: 248``` 249#!/bin/sh 250## Use connect-proxy as git proxy wrapper which supports SOCKS5 251## Install with `apt-get install connect-proxy` 252## Use with `export GIT_PROXY_COMMAND=~/bin/git-proxy-wrapper` 253/usr/bin/connect -S localhost:9054 "$@" 254``` 255Then you can run `export GIT_PROXY_COMMAND=~/bin/git-proxy-wrapper` and you are 256now downloading git code through your proxy. 257 258## devtool 259 260`devtool` is a convenient utility in Yocto to make changes in the local 261directory. 262Typical usage is: 263``` 264# To create a local copy of recipe's code and build with it: 265devtool modify <recipe> 266cd build/workspace/sources/<recipe> # And make changes 267bitbake obmc-phosphor-image # Build with local changes 268 269# After you have finished, reset the recipe to ignore local changes: 270devtool reset <recipe> 271``` 272 273To use this tool, you need the build environment, e.g. `. oe-init-build-env`. 274The above script will add `<WORKDIR>/scripts/` to your `PATH` env and 275`devtool` is in the path. 276 277Below are real examples. 278 279 280### devtool on ipmi 281 282If you want to debug or add a new function in ipmi, you probably need to 283change the code in [phosphor-host-ipmid][1]. 284Checking the recipes, you know this repo is in [phosphor-ipmi-host.bb][2]. 285Below are the steps to use devtool to modify the code locally, build and test 286it. 2871. Use devtool to create a local repo: 288 ``` 289 devtool modify phosphor-ipmi-host 290 ``` 291 devtool clones the repo into `build/workspace/sources/phosphor-ipmi-host`, 292 creates and checkout branch `devtool`. 2932. Make changes in the repo, e.g. adding code to handle new ipmi commands or 294 simply adding trace logs. 2953. Now you can build the whole image or the ipmi recipe itself: 296 ``` 297 bitbake obmc-phosphor-image # Build the whole image 298 bitbake phosphor-ipmi-host # Build the recipe 299 ``` 3004. To test your change, either flash the whole image or replace the changed 301 binary. Note that the changed code is built into `libapphandler.so` and it 302 is used by both host and net ipmi daemon. 303 It is recommended that you copy the changed binary to BMC because it is 304 easier to test: 305 ``` 306 # Replace libapphandler.so.0.0.0 307 scp build/workspace/sources/phosphor-ipmi-host/oe-workdir/package/usr/lib/ipmid-providers/libapphandler.so.0.0.0 root@bmc:/usr/lib/ipmid-providers/ 308 systemctl restart phosphor-ipmi-host.service # Restart the inband ipmi daemon 309 # Or restart phosphor-ipmi-net.service if you want to test net ipmi. 310 ``` 3115. Now you can test your changes. 312 313 314## Develop linux kernel 315 316### devtool on linux kernel 317If you want to work on linux kernel, you can use devtool as well, with some 318differences from regular repos. 319 320**Note**: As of [ac72846][3] the linux kernel recipe name is changed to 321`linux-aspeed` for Aspeed based OpenBMC builds. 322In the following examples, replace `linux-obmc` with `linux-aspeed` if you are 323on a revision later than [ac72846][3]. 324 3251. devtool does not create the 'devtool' branch. Instead, it checkout the 326 branch specified in the recipe. 327 For example, on the OpenBMC v2.2 tag, `linux-obmc_4.13.bb` specifies 328 `dev-4.13` branch. 3292. If there are patches, `devtool` applies them directly on the branch. 3303. devtool copies the defconfig and machine-specific config into `oe-workdir`. 3314. devtool generates the `.config` file based on the above configs. 332 333You can modify the code and build the kernel as usual as follows: 334``` 335bitbake linux-obmc -c build 336``` 337 338### Modify config 339If you need to change the config and save it as defconfig for further use: 340``` 341bitbake linux-obmc -c menuconfig 342# Edit the configs and after save it generates 343# .config.new as the new kernel config 344 345bitbake linux-obmc -c savedefconfig 346# It will save the new defconfig at oe-workdir/linux-obmc-<version>/defconfig 347``` 348 349### Test linux kernel 350After build, you can flash the image to test the new kernel. 351However, it is always slow to flash an image to the chip. 352 353There is a faster way to load the kernel via network so you can easily test 354kernel builds. 355 356OpenBMC kernel build generates `fit` image, including `kernel`, `dtb` and 357`initramfs`. 358Typically we can load it via tftp, taking Romulus as an example: 3591. Put `build/tmp/deploy/images/romulus/fitImage-obmc-phosphor-initramfs-romulus.bin` 360 to a tftp server, name it to `fitImage` 3612. Reboot BMC and press keys to enter uboot shell; 3623. In uboot: 363 ``` 364 setenv ethaddr <mac:addr> # Set mac address if there it is unavailable 365 setenv ipaddr 192.168.0.80 # Set BMC IP 366 setenv serverip 192.168.0.11 # Set tftp server IP 367 tftp 0x83000000 fitImage # Load fit image to ram. Use 0x43000000 on AST2400 368 bootm 0x83000000 # Boot from fit image 369 ``` 370Then you are running an OpenBMC with your updated kernel. 371 372 373[1]: https://github.com/openbmc/phosphor-host-ipmid 374[2]: https://github.com/openbmc/openbmc/blob/c53f375a0f92f847d2aa50e19de54840e8472c8e/meta-phosphor/recipes-phosphor/ipmi/phosphor-ipmi-host_git.bb 375[3]: https://github.com/openbmc/openbmc/commit/ac7284629ea572cf27d69949dc4014b3b226f14f 376