1============================== 2IPMB Driver for a Satellite MC 3============================== 4 5The Intelligent Platform Management Bus or IPMB, is an 6I2C bus that provides a standardized interconnection between 7different boards within a chassis. This interconnection is 8between the baseboard management (BMC) and chassis electronics. 9IPMB is also associated with the messaging protocol through the 10IPMB bus. 11 12The devices using the IPMB are usually management 13controllers that perform management functions such as servicing 14the front panel interface, monitoring the baseboard, 15hot-swapping disk drivers in the system chassis, etc... 16 17When an IPMB is implemented in the system, the BMC serves as 18a controller to give system software access to the IPMB. The BMC 19sends IPMI requests to a device (usually a Satellite Management 20Controller or Satellite MC) via IPMB and the device 21sends a response back to the BMC. 22 23For more information on IPMB and the format of an IPMB message, 24refer to the IPMB and IPMI specifications. 25 26IPMB driver for Satellite MC 27---------------------------- 28 29ipmb-dev-int - This is the driver needed on a Satellite MC to 30receive IPMB messages from a BMC and send a response back. 31This driver works with the I2C driver and a userspace 32program such as OpenIPMI: 33 341) It is an I2C slave backend driver. So, it defines a callback 35 function to set the Satellite MC as an I2C slave. 36 This callback function handles the received IPMI requests. 37 382) It defines the read and write functions to enable a user 39 space program (such as OpenIPMI) to communicate with the kernel. 40 41 42Load the IPMB driver 43-------------------- 44 45The driver needs to be loaded at boot time or manually first. 46First, make sure you have the following in your config file: 47CONFIG_IPMB_DEVICE_INTERFACE=y 48 491) If you want the driver to be loaded at boot time: 50 51a) Add this entry to your ACPI table, under the appropriate SMBus:: 52 53 Device (SMB0) // Example SMBus host controller 54 { 55 Name (_HID, "<Vendor-Specific HID>") // Vendor-Specific HID 56 Name (_UID, 0) // Unique ID of particular host controller 57 : 58 : 59 Device (IPMB) 60 { 61 Name (_HID, "IPMB0001") // IPMB device interface 62 Name (_UID, 0) // Unique device identifier 63 } 64 } 65 66b) Example for device tree:: 67 68 &i2c2 { 69 status = "okay"; 70 71 ipmb@10 { 72 compatible = "ipmb-dev"; 73 reg = <0x10>; 74 }; 75 }; 76 772) Manually from Linux:: 78 79 modprobe ipmb-dev-int 80 81 82Instantiate the device 83---------------------- 84 85After loading the driver, you can instantiate the device as 86described in 'Documentation/i2c/instantiating-devices'. 87If you have multiple BMCs, each connected to your Satellite MC via 88a different I2C bus, you can instantiate a device for each of 89those BMCs. 90 91The name of the instantiated device contains the I2C bus number 92associated with it as follows:: 93 94 BMC1 ------ IPMB/I2C bus 1 ---------| /dev/ipmb-1 95 Satellite MC 96 BMC1 ------ IPMB/I2C bus 2 ---------| /dev/ipmb-2 97 98For instance, you can instantiate the ipmb-dev-int device from 99user space at the 7 bit address 0x10 on bus 2:: 100 101 # echo ipmb-dev 0x1010 > /sys/bus/i2c/devices/i2c-2/new_device 102 103This will create the device file /dev/ipmb-2, which can be accessed 104by the user space program. The device needs to be instantiated 105before running the user space program. 106