1# OpenBMC Development Environment
2
3**Document Purpose:** How to set up an OpenBMC development environment
4
5**Audience:** Programmer familiar with Linux and BMCs
6
7**Prerequisites:** Current Linux, Mac, or Windows system
8
9## Overview
10
11OpenBMC uses the [Yocto](https://www.yoctoproject.org/) Project as its
12underlying building and distribution generation framework. The main
13OpenBMC [README](https://github.com/openbmc/openbmc/blob/master/README.md)
14provides information on getting up and going with Yocto and OpenBMC.
15There are mechanisms to use this process to build your changes but it can be
16slow and cumbersome for initial debug and validation of your software. This
17guide focuses on how to test new changes quickly using the OpenBMC Software
18Development Kit (SDK) and [QEMU](https://www.qemu.org/).
19
20The SDK is a group of packages that are built during a BitBake operation.
21BitBake is the tool used to build Yocto based distributions. The SDK provides
22all required libraries and cross compilers to build OpenBMC applications. The
23SDK is not used to build entire OpenBMC flash images, it provides a mechanism to
24compile OpenBMC applications and libraries that you can then copy onto a running
25system for testing.
26
27QEMU is a software emulator that can be used to run OpenBMC images.
28
29This doc walks through the recommended steps for setting up an OpenBMC
30development environment and installing the needed SDK.
31
32For testing purposes, this guide uses the Romulus system as the default because
33this is the system tested for each CI job, which means it's the most stable.
34
35## Install Linux Environment
36
37If you are running Linux, and are ok with installing some additional packages,
38then you can skip to step 3.
39
40The recommended OpenBMC development environment is the latest Ubuntu LTS
41release. Other versions of Linux may work but you are using that at your own
42risk. If you have Windows or Mac OS then VirtualBox is the recommended
43virtualization tool to run the development environment.
44
451. Install either [VirtualBox](https://www.virtualbox.org/wiki/Downloads) or
46[VMware](https://www.vmware.com/products/workstation-player/workstation-player-evaluation.html)
47onto your computer (Mac, Windows, Linux)
48
49  Both have free versions available for what you need. VirtualBox is what the
50  majority of core OpenBMC development is using. **Note:** If you want to use
51  this VM to BitBake a full OpenBMC image, you'll want to allocate as many
52  resources as possible. Ideal minimum resources are 8 threads, 16GB memory,
53  200GB hard drive. Just using for SDK builds and QEMU should work fine with the
54  normal defaults on a VM.
55
562. Install the latest Ubuntu LTS release
57
58  The majority of OpenBMC development community uses Ubuntu.  The qemu below
59  is built on [18.04](http://releases.ubuntu.com/18.04/) but whatever is most
60  recent *should* work. The same goes for other Linux distributions like
61  Fedora but again, these are not tested nearly as much by the core OpenBMC
62  team as Ubuntu.
63
64  **VirtualBox Tips** - You'll want copy/paste working between your VM and Host.
65  To do that, once you have your VM up and running:
66  - Devices -> Insert Guest Additions CD Image (install)
67  - Devices -> Shared Clipboard -> Bidirectional
68  - reboot (the VM)
69
703. Install required packages
71
72  Refer to
73  [Prerequisite](https://github.com/openbmc/openbmc/blob/master/README.md#1-prerequisite)
74  link.
75
76  **Note** - In Ubuntu, a "sudo apt-get update" will probably be needed before
77  installing the packages.
78
79## Download and Install SDK
80
81The OpenBMC Software Development Kit (SDK) contains a cross-toolchain and a set
82libraries for working on OpenBMC applications. The SDK is installed on the
83machine you will use to develop applications for OpenBMC and not on the BMC
84itself.
85
86Generally, SDKs for one BMC cannot be used for developing software for other
87BMCs. This can be due to platform ABI, libc or kernel differences, or any other
88number of choices made in the configuration of the firmware.
89
90Romulus is the BMC platform used for the purpose of this walk-through.
91
92To begin working with the SDK:
93
941. Download the latest SDK to your system. It's recommended that you create a
95  directory to store your SDK scripts and installation directories to keep your
96  workspace organised.
97
98  ```
99  mkdir -p ~/sdk
100  cd ~/sdk
101
102  wget https://jenkins.openbmc.org/job/latest-master-sdk/label=docker-builder,target=romulus/lastSuccessfulBuild/artifact/deploy/sdk/oecore-x86_64-arm1176jzs-toolchain-nodistro.0.sh
103  chmod u+x oecore-x86_64-arm1176jzs-toolchain-nodistro.0.sh
104  ```
105
1062. Install the SDK
107
108  Choose an appropriate location and name. It's a good idea to include the date
109  and system supported by that SDK in the directory name. For example:
110
111  ```
112  mkdir -p ~/sdk/romulus-`date +%F`
113  ```
114
115  Run the following command to install the SDK.  When command  asks you to
116  "Enter target directory for SDK", enter the directory you created in the
117  previous step.
118
119  ```
120  ./oecore-x86_64-arm1176jzs-toolchain-nodistro.0.sh
121  ```
122
123  The installation script will indicate progress and give completion messages
124  like this:
125  ```
126  SDK has been successfully set up and is ready to be used.
127  Each time you wish to use the SDK in a new shell session, you need to source
128  the environment setup script e.g. $ . /...path-to-sdk.../environment-setup-arm1176jzs-openbmc-linux-gnueabi
129  ```
130
1313. Source yourself into the SDK
132
133  Ensure no errors. The command to do this will be provided at the end of
134  installation. To make your shell use the new SDK environment, you must source
135  its `environment-setup` script which was created in the previous step.  You
136  may wish to save the required command, for example, cut/paste the text above
137  into a README.
138
139That's it, you now have a working development environment for OpenBMC!
140
141## Download and Start QEMU Session
142
1431. Download latest openbmc/qemu fork of QEMU application
144
145  ```
146  wget https://jenkins.openbmc.org/job/latest-qemu-x86/lastSuccessfulBuild/artifact/qemu/build/qemu-system-arm
147
148  chmod u+x qemu-system-arm
149  ```
150
1512. Download the Romulus image.
152
153  ```
154  wget https://jenkins.openbmc.org/job/latest-master/label=docker-builder,target=romulus/lastSuccessfulBuild/artifact/openbmc/build/tmp/deploy/images/romulus/obmc-phosphor-image-romulus.static.mtd
155  ```
156
1573. Start QEMU with downloaded Romulus image
158
159  **Note** - For REST, SSH and IPMI to work into your QEMU session, you must connect
160  up some host ports to the REST, SSH and IPMI ports in your QEMU session. In this
161  example, it just uses 2222, 2443, 2623. You can use whatever you prefer.
162  ```
163  ./qemu-system-arm -m 256 -M romulus-bmc -nographic \
164      -drive file=./obmc-phosphor-image-romulus.static.mtd,format=raw,if=mtd \
165      -net nic \
166      -net user,hostfwd=:127.0.0.1:2222-:22,hostfwd=:127.0.0.1:2443-:443,hostfwd=udp:127.0.0.1:2623-:623,hostname=qemu
167  ```
168
169   **Note** - By default, Jenkins and openbmc-test-automation use SSH and HTTPS
170   ports 22 and 443, respectively. For the IPMI port 623 is used. SSH connection
171   to use a user-defined port 2222 might not be successful. To use SSH port 22,
172   HTTPS port 443 and IPMI port 623:
173   ```
174   ./qemu-system-arm -m 256 -machine romulus-bmc -nographic \
175       -drive file=./obmc-phosphor-image-romulus.static.mtd,format=raw,if=mtd \
176       -net nic \
177       -net user,hostfwd=:127.0.0.1:22-:22,hostfwd=:127.0.0.1:443-:443,hostfwd=tcp:127.0.0.1:80-:80,hostfwd=tcp:127.0.0.1:2200-:2200,hostfwd=udp:127.0.0.1:623-:623,hostfwd=udp:127.0.0.1:664-:664,hostname=qemu
178   ```
179
1804. Wait for your QEMU-based BMC to boot
181
182  Login using default root/0penBmc login (Note the 0 is a zero).
183
1845. Check the system state
185
186  You'll see a lot of services starting in the console, you can start running
187  the obmcutil tool to check the state of the OpenBMC state services. When you
188  see the following then you have successfully booted to "Ready" state.
189
190  ```
191  root@openbmc:~# obmcutil state
192  CurrentBMCState     : xyz.openbmc_project.State.BMC.BMCState.Ready
193  CurrentPowerState   : xyz.openbmc_project.State.Chassis.PowerState.Off
194  CurrentHostState    : xyz.openbmc_project.State.Host.HostState.Off
195  ```
196
197  **Note** To exit (and kill) your QEMU session run: `ctrl+a x`
198
199## Alternative yocto QEMU
200
201  yocto has tools for building and running qemu. These tools avoid some of the
202  configuration issues that come from downloading a prebuilt image, and
203  modifying binaries. Using yocto qemu also uses the [TAP
204  interface](https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/networking/tuntap.txt)
205  which some find be more stable. This is particularly useful when debugging
206  at the application level.
207
208  - set up a bmc build environment
209  ```
210  source setup romulus myBuild/build
211  ```
212  - add the qemu x86 open embedded machine for testing
213  ```
214  MACHINE ??= "qemux86"
215  ```
216  - Make the changes to the build (ie devtool modify bmcweb, devtool add gdb)
217  ```
218  devtool modify bmcweb myNewLocalbmcweb/
219  ```
220  - build open bmc for the qemu x86 machine
221  ```
222  MACHINE=qemux86 bitbake obmc-phosphor-image
223  ```
224  - run qemu they way yocto provides
225  ```
226  runqemu myBuild/build/tmp/deploy/images/qemux86/ nographic \
227      qemuparams="-m 2048"
228  ```
229  - after that the all the a TAP network interface is added, and protocol like
230  ssh, scp, http work well.
231
232
233