NAME¶
bmc-info - display BMC information
SYNOPSIS¶
bmc-info [ 
OPTION...]
DESCRIPTION¶
Bmc-info displays BMC information, such as device version numbers, device
  support, and globally unique IDs (guids).
Listed below are general IPMI options, tool specific options, trouble shooting
  information, workaround information, examples, and known issues. For a general
  introduction to FreeIPMI please see 
freeipmi(7).
GENERAL OPTIONS¶
The following options are general options for configuring IPMI communication and
  executing general tool commands.
  - -D IPMIDRIVER,
    --driver-type=IPMIDRIVER
 
  - Specify the driver type to use instead of doing an auto
      selection. The currently available outofband drivers are LAN and LAN_2_0,
      which perform IPMI 1.5 and IPMI 2.0 respectively. The currently available
      inband drivers are KCS, SSIF, OPENIPMI, and SUNBMC.
 
  - --disable-auto-probe
 
  - Do not probe in-band IPMI devices for default
    settings.
 
  - --driver-address=DRIVER-ADDRESS
 
  - Specify the in-band driver address to be used instead of
      the probed value. DRIVER-ADDRESS should be prefixed with
      "0x" for a hex value and '0' for an octal value.
 
  - --driver-device=DEVICE
 
  - Specify the in-band driver device path to be used instead
      of the probed path.
 
  - --register-spacing=REGISTER-SPACING
 
  - Specify the in-band driver register spacing instead of the
      probed value. Argument is in bytes (i.e. 32bit register spacing = 4)
 
  - -h IPMIHOST1,IPMIHOST2,...,
    --hostname= IPMIHOST1,IPMIHOST2,...
 
  - Specify the remote host(s) to communicate with. Multiple
      hostnames may be separated by comma or may be specified in a range format;
      see HOSTRANGED SUPPORT below.
 
  - -u USERNAME,
    --username=USERNAME
 
  - Specify the username to use when authenticating with the
      remote host. If not specified, a null (i.e. anonymous) username is
      assumed. The user must have atleast USER privileges in order for this tool
      to operate fully.
 
  - -p PASSWORD,
    --password=PASSWORD
 
  - Specify the password to use when authenticationg with the
      remote host. If not specified, a null password is assumed. Maximum
      password length is 16 for IPMI 1.5 and 20 for IPMI 2.0.
 
  - -P, --password-prompt
 
  - Prompt for password to avoid possibility of listing it in
      process lists.
 
  - -k K_G, --k-g=K_G
 
  - Specify the K_g BMC key to use when authenticating with the
      remote host for IPMI 2.0. If not specified, a null key is assumed. To
      input the key in hexadecimal form, prefix the string with '0x'. E.g., the
      key 'abc' can be entered with the either the string 'abc' or the string
      '0x616263'
 
  - -K, --k-g-prompt
 
  - Prompt for k-g to avoid possibility of listing it in
      process lists.
 
  - --session-timeout=MILLISECONDS
 
  - Specify the session timeout in milliseconds. Defaults to
      20000 milliseconds (20 seconds) if not specified.
 
  - --retransmission-timeout=MILLISECONDS
 
  - Specify the packet retransmission timeout in milliseconds.
      Defaults to 1000 milliseconds (1 second) if not specified. The
      retransmission timeout cannot be larger than the session timeout.
 
  - -a AUTHENTICATION-TYPE,
    --authentication-type= AUTHENTICATION-TYPE
 
  - Specify the IPMI 1.5 authentication type to use. The
      currently available authentication types are NONE, STRAIGHT_PASSWORD_KEY,
      MD2, and MD5. Defaults to MD5 if not specified.
 
  - -I CIPHER-SUITE-ID,
    --cipher-suite-id=CIPHER-SUITE-ID
 
  - Specify the IPMI 2.0 cipher suite ID to use. The Cipher
      Suite ID identifies a set of authentication, integrity, and
      confidentiality algorithms to use for IPMI 2.0 communication. The
      authentication algorithm identifies the algorithm to use for session
      setup, the integrity algorithm identifies the algorithm to use for session
      packet signatures, and the confidentiality algorithm identifies the
      algorithm to use for payload encryption. Defaults to cipher suite ID 3 if
      not specified. The following cipher suite ids are currently supported:
    
 
    0 - Authentication Algorithm = None; Integrity Algorithm = None;
      Confidentiality Algorithm = None
     
    1 - Authentication Algorithm = HMAC-SHA1; Integrity Algorithm = None;
      Confidentiality Algorithm = None
     
    2 - Authentication Algorithm = HMAC-SHA1; Integrity Algorithm =
      HMAC-SHA1-96; Confidentiality Algorithm = None
     
    3 - Authentication Algorithm = HMAC-SHA1; Integrity Algorithm =
      HMAC-SHA1-96; Confidentiality Algorithm = AES-CBC-128
     
    6 - Authentication Algorithm = HMAC-MD5; Integrity Algorithm = None;
      Confidentiality Algorithm = None
     
    7 - Authentication Algorithm = HMAC-MD5; Integrity Algorithm = HMAC-MD5-128;
      Confidentiality Algorithm = None
     
    8 - Authentication Algorithm = HMAC-MD5; Integrity Algorithm = HMAC-MD5-128;
      Confidentiality Algorithm = AES-CBC-128
     
    11 - Authentication Algorithm = HMAC-MD5; Integrity Algorithm = MD5-128;
      Confidentiality Algorithm = None
     
    12 - Authentication Algorithm = HMAC-MD5; Integrity Algorithm = MD5-128;
      Confidentiality Algorithm = AES-CBC-128
     
    17 - Authentication Algorithm = HMAC-SHA256; Integrity Algorithm =
      HMAC_SHA256_128; Confidentiality Algorithm = AES-CBC-128 
  - -l PRIVILEGE-LEVEL,
    --privilege-level=PRIVILEGE-LEVEL
 
  - Specify the privilege level to be used. The currently
      available privilege levels are USER, OPERATOR, and ADMIN. Defaults to USER
      if not specified.
 
  - --config-file=FILE
 
  - Specify an alternate configuration file.
 
  - -W WORKAROUNDS,
    --workaround-flags=WORKAROUNDS
 
  - Specify workarounds to vendor compliance issues. Multiple
      workarounds can be specified separated by commas. A special command line
      flag of "none", will indicate no workarounds (may be useful for
      overriding configured defaults). See WORKAROUNDS below for a list of
      available workarounds.
 
  - --debug
 
  - Turn on debugging.
 
  - -?, --help
 
  - Output a help list and exit.
 
  - --usage
 
  - Output a usage message and exit.
 
  - -V, --version
 
  - Output the program version and exit.
 
BMC-INFO OPTIONS¶
The following options are specific to 
Bmc-info.
  - --get-device-id
 
  - Display only device ID information.
 
  - --get-device-guid
 
  - Display only device guid.
 
  - --get-system-info
 
  - Display only system info.
 
  - --get-channel-info
 
  - Display only channel information.
 
  - --interpret-oem-data
 
  - Attempt to interpret OEM data, such as event data, sensor
      readings, or general extra info, etc. If an OEM interpretation is not
      available, the default output will be generated. Correctness of OEM
      interpretations cannot be guaranteed due to potential changes OEM vendors
      may make in products, firmware, etc. See OEM INTERPRETATION below for
      confirmed supported motherboard interpretations.
 
HOSTRANGED OPTIONS¶
The following options manipulate hostranged output. See HOSTRANGED SUPPORT below
  for additional information on hostranges.
  - -B, --buffer-output
 
  - Buffer hostranged output. For each node, buffer standard
      output until the node has completed its IPMI operation. When specifying
      this option, data may appear to output slower to the user since the the
      entire IPMI operation must complete before any data can be output. See
      HOSTRANGED SUPPORT below for additional information.
 
  - -C, --consolidate-output
 
  - Consolidate hostranged output. The complete standard output
      from every node specified will be consolidated so that nodes with
      identical output are not output twice. A header will list those nodes with
      the consolidated output. When this option is specified, no output can be
      seen until the IPMI operations to all nodes has completed. If the user
      breaks out of the program early, all currently consolidated output will be
      dumped. See HOSTRANGED SUPPORT below for additional information.
 
  - -F NUM, --fanout=NUM
 
  - Specify multiple host fanout. A "sliding window"
      (or fanout) algorithm is used for parallel IPMI communication so that
      slower nodes or timed out nodes will not impede parallel communication.
      The maximum number of threads available at the same time is limited by the
      fanout. The default is 64.
 
  - -E, --eliminate
 
  - Eliminate hosts determined as undetected by
      ipmidetect. This attempts to remove the common issue of hostranged
      execution timing out due to several nodes being removed from service in a
      large cluster. The ipmidetectd daemon must be running on the node
      executing the command.
 
  - --always-prefix
 
  - Always prefix output, even if only one host is specified or
      communicating in-band. This option is primarily useful for scripting
      purposes. Option will be ignored if specified with the -C
    option.
 
HOSTRANGED SUPPORT¶
Multiple hosts can be input either as an explicit comma separated lists of hosts
  or a range of hostnames in the general form: prefix[n-m,l-k,...], where n <
  m and l < k, etc. The later form should not be confused with regular
  expression character classes (also denoted by []). For example, foo[19] does
  not represent foo1 or foo9, but rather represents a degenerate range: foo19.
This range syntax is meant only as a convenience on clusters with a prefixNN
  naming convention and specification of ranges should not be considered
  necessary -- the list foo1,foo9 could be specified as such, or by the range
  foo[1,9].
Some examples of range usage follow:
    foo[01-05] instead of foo01,foo02,foo03,foo04,foo05
    foo[7,9-10] instead of foo7,foo9,foo10
    foo[0-3] instead of foo0,foo1,foo2,foo3
As a reminder to the reader, some shells will interpret brackets ([ and ]) for
  pattern matching. Depending on your shell, it may be necessary to enclose
  ranged lists within quotes.
When multiple hosts are specified by the user, a thread will be executed for
  each host in parallel up to the configured fanout (which can be adjusted via
  the 
-F option). This will allow communication to large numbers of nodes
  far more quickly than if done in serial.
By default, standard output from each node specified will be output with the
  hostname prepended to each line. Although this output is readable in many
  situations, it may be difficult to read in other situations. For example,
  output from multiple nodes may be mixed together. The 
-B and 
-C
  options can be used to change this default.
In-band IPMI Communication will be used when the host "localhost" is
  specified. This allows the user to add the localhost into the hostranged
  output.
GENERAL TROUBLESHOOTING¶
Most often, IPMI problems are due to configuration problems.
IPMI over LAN problems involve a misconfiguration of the remote machine's BMC.
  Double check to make sure the following are configured properly in the remote
  machine's BMC: IP address, MAC address, subnet mask, username, user
  enablement, user privilege, password, LAN privilege, LAN enablement, and
  allowed authentication type(s). For IPMI 2.0 connections, double check to make
  sure the cipher suite privilege(s) and K_g key are configured properly. The
  
bmc-config(8) tool can be used to check and/or change these
  configuration settings.
Inband IPMI problems are typically caused by improperly configured drivers or
  non-standard BMCs.
In addition to the troubleshooting tips below, please see WORKAROUNDS below to
  also if there are any vendor specific bugs that have been discovered and
  worked around.
Listed below are many of the common issues for error messages. For additional
  support, please e-mail the <freeipmi-users@gnu.org> mailing list.
"username invalid" - The username entered (or a NULL username if none
  was entered) is not available on the remote machine. It may also be possible
  the remote BMC's username configuration is incorrect.
"password invalid" - The password entered (or a NULL password if none
  was entered) is not correct. It may also be possible the password for the user
  is not correctly configured on the remote BMC.
"password verification timeout" - Password verification has timed out.
  A "password invalid" error (described above) or a generic
  "session timeout" (described below) occurred. During this point in
  the protocol it cannot be differentiated which occurred.
"k_g invalid" - The K_g key entered (or a NULL K_g key if none was
  entered) is not correct. It may also be possible the K_g key is not correctly
  configured on the remote BMC.
"privilege level insufficient" - An IPMI command requires a higher
  user privilege than the one authenticated with. Please try to authenticate
  with a higher privilege. This may require authenticating to a different user
  which has a higher maximum privilege.
"privilege level cannot be obtained for this user" - The privilege
  level you are attempting to authenticate with is higher than the maximum
  allowed for this user. Please try again with a lower privilege. It may also be
  possible the maximum privilege level allowed for a user is not configured
  properly on the remote BMC.
"authentication type unavailable for attempted privilege level" - The
  authentication type you wish to authenticate with is not available for this
  privilege level. Please try again with an alternate authentication type or
  alternate privilege level. It may also be possible the available
  authentication types you can authenticate with are not correctly configured on
  the remote BMC.
"cipher suite id unavailable" - The cipher suite id you wish to
  authenticate with is not available on the remote BMC. Please try again with an
  alternate cipher suite id. It may also be possible the available cipher suite
  ids are not correctly configured on the remote BMC.
"ipmi 2.0 unavailable" - IPMI 2.0 was not discovered on the remote
  machine. Please try to use IPMI 1.5 instead.
"connection timeout" - Initial IPMI communication failed. A number of
  potential errors are possible, including an invalid hostname specified, an
  IPMI IP address cannot be resolved, IPMI is not enabled on the remote server,
  the network connection is bad, etc. Please verify configuration and
  connectivity.
"session timeout" - The IPMI session has timed out. Please reconnect.
  If this error occurs often, you may wish to increase the retransmission
  timeout. Some remote BMCs are considerably slower than others.
"device not found" - The specified device could not be found. Please
  check configuration or inputs and try again.
"driver timeout" - Communication with the driver or device has timed
  out. Please try again.
"message timeout" - Communication with the driver or device has timed
  out. Please try again.
"BMC busy" - The BMC is currently busy. It may be processing
  information or have too many simultaneous sessions to manage. Please wait and
  try again.
"could not find inband device" - An inband device could not be found.
  Please check configuration or specify specific device or driver on the command
  line.
"driver timeout" - The inband driver has timed out communicating to
  the local BMC or service processor. The BMC or service processor may be busy
  or (worst case) possibly non-functioning.
WORKAROUNDS¶
With so many different vendors implementing their own IPMI solutions, different
  vendors may implement their IPMI protocols incorrectly. The following
  describes a number of workarounds currently available to handle discovered
  compliance issues. When possible, workarounds have been implemented so they
  will be transparent to the user. However, some will require the user to
  specify a workaround be used via the -W option.
The hardware listed below may only indicate the hardware that a problem was
  discovered on. Newer versions of hardware may fix the problems indicated
  below. Similar machines from vendors may or may not exhibit the same problems.
  Different vendors may license their firmware from the same IPMI firmware
  developer, so it may be worthwhile to try workarounds listed below even if
  your motherboard is not listed.
If you believe your hardware has an additional compliance issue that needs a
  workaround to be implemented, please contact the FreeIPMI maintainers on
  <freeipmi-users@gnu.org> or <freeipmi-devel@gnu.org>.
assumeio - This workaround flag will assume inband interfaces communicate
  with system I/O rather than being memory-mapped. This will work around systems
  that report invalid base addresses. Those hitting this issue may see
  "device not supported" or "could not find inband device"
  errors. Issue observed on HP ProLiant DL145 G1.
spinpoll - This workaround flag will inform some inband drivers (most
  notably the KCS driver) to spin while polling rather than putting the process
  to sleep. This may significantly improve the wall clock running time of tools
  because an operating system scheduler's granularity may be much larger than
  the time it takes to perform a single IPMI message transaction. However, by
  spinning, your system may be performing less useful work by not contexting out
  the tool for a more useful task.
authcap - This workaround flag will skip early checks for username
  capabilities, authentication capabilities, and K_g support and allow IPMI
  authentication to succeed. It works around multiple issues in which the remote
  system does not properly report username capabilities, authentication
  capabilities, or K_g status. Those hitting this issue may see "username
  invalid", "authentication type unavailable for attempted privilege
  level", or "k_g invalid" errors. Issue observed on Asus
  P5M2/P5MT-R/RS162-E4/RX4, Intel SR1520ML/X38ML, and Sun Fire 2200/4150/4450
  with ELOM.
idzero - This workaround flag will allow empty session IDs to be accepted
  by the client. It works around IPMI sessions that report empty session IDs to
  the client. Those hitting this issue may see "session timeout"
  errors. Issue observed on Tyan S2882 with M3289 BMC.
unexpectedauth - This workaround flag will allow unexpected non-null
  authcodes to be checked as though they were expected. It works around an issue
  when packets contain non-null authentication data when they should be null due
  to disabled per-message authentication. Those hitting this issue may see
  "session timeout" errors. Issue observed on Dell PowerEdge
  2850,SC1425. Confirmed fixed on newer firmware.
forcepermsg - This workaround flag will force per-message authentication
  to be used no matter what is advertised by the remote system. It works around
  an issue when per-message authentication is advertised as disabled on the
  remote system, but it is actually required for the protocol. Those hitting
  this issue may see "session timeout" errors. Issue observed on IBM
  eServer 325.
endianseq - This workaround flag will flip the endian of the session
  sequence numbers to allow the session to continue properly. It works around
  IPMI 1.5 session sequence numbers that are the wrong endian. Those hitting
  this issue may see "session timeout" errors. Issue observed on some
  Sun ILOM 1.0/2.0 (depends on service processor endian).
intel20 - This workaround flag will work around several Intel IPMI 2.0
  authentication issues. The issues covered include padding of usernames, and
  password truncation if the authentication algorithm is HMAC-MD5-128. Those
  hitting this issue may see "username invalid", "password
  invalid", or "k_g invalid" errors. Issue observed on Intel
  SE7520AF2 with Intel Server Management Module (Professional Edition).
supermicro20 - This workaround flag will work around several Supermicro
  IPMI 2.0 authentication issues on motherboards w/ Peppercon IPMI firmware. The
  issues covered include handling invalid length authentication codes. Those
  hitting this issue may see "password invalid" errors. Issue observed
  on Supermicro H8QME with SIMSO daughter card. Confirmed fixed on newerver
  firmware.
sun20 - This workaround flag will work work around several Sun IPMI 2.0
  authentication issues. The issues covered include invalid lengthed hash keys,
  improperly hashed keys, and invalid cipher suite records. Those hitting this
  issue may see "password invalid" or "bmc error" errors.
  Issue observed on Sun Fire 4100/4200/4500 with ILOM. This workaround
  automatically includes the "opensesspriv" workaround.
opensesspriv - This workaround flag will slightly alter FreeIPMI's IPMI
  2.0 connection protocol to workaround an invalid hashing algorithm used by the
  remote system. The privilege level sent during the Open Session stage of an
  IPMI 2.0 connection is used for hashing keys instead of the privilege level
  sent during the RAKP1 connection stage. Those hitting this issue may see
  "password invalid", "k_g invalid", or "bad rmcpplus
  status code" errors. Issue observed on Sun Fire 4100/4200/4500 with ILOM,
  Inventec 5441/Dell Xanadu II, Supermicro X8DTH, Supermicro X8DTG, Intel
  S5500WBV/Penguin Relion 700, Intel S2600JF/Appro 512X, and Quanta
  QSSC-S4R//Appro GB812X-CN. This workaround is automatically triggered with the
  "sun20" workaround.
integritycheckvalue - This workaround flag will work around an invalid
  integrity check value during an IPMI 2.0 session establishment when using
  Cipher Suite ID 0. The integrity check value should be 0 length, however the
  remote motherboard responds with a non-empty field. Those hitting this issue
  may see "k_g invalid" errors. Issue observed on Supermicro X8DTG,
  Supermicro X8DTU, and Intel S5500WBV/Penguin Relion 700, and Intel
  S2600JF/Appro 512X.
No IPMI 1.5 Support - Some motherboards that support IPMI 2.0 have been found to
  not support IPMI 1.5. Those hitting this issue may see "ipmi 2.0
  unavailable" or "connection timeout" errors. This issue can be
  worked around by using IPMI 2.0 instead of IPMI 1.5 by specifying
  
--driver-address= 
LAN_2_0. Issue observed on HP Proliant DL 145.
OEM INTERPRETATION¶
The following motherboards are confirmed to have atleast some support by the
  
--interpret-oem-data option. While highly probable the OEM data
  interpretations would work across other motherboards by the same manufacturer,
  there are no guarantees. Some of the motherboards below may be rebranded by
  vendors/distributors.
Dell Poweredge R610, Dell Poweredge R710, Intel SR870BN4/Tiger4
EXAMPLES¶
# bmc-info
Get BMC information of the local machine.
# bmc-info -h ahost -u myusername -p mypassword
Get BMC information of a remote machine using IPMI over LAN.
# bmc-info -h mycluster[0-127] -u myusername -p mypassword
Get BMC information across a cluster using IPMI over LAN.
KNOWN ISSUES¶
On older operating systems, if you input your username, password, and other
  potentially security relevant information on the command line, this
  information may be discovered by other users when using tools like the
  
ps(1) command or looking in the /proc file system. It is generally more
  secure to input password information with options like the -P or -K options.
  Configuring security relevant information in the FreeIPMI configuration file
  would also be an appropriate way to hide this information.
In order to prevent brute force attacks, some BMCs will temporarily "lock
  up" after a number of remote authentication errors. You may need to wait
  awhile in order to this temporary "lock up" to pass before you may
  authenticate again.
REPORTING BUGS¶
Report bugs to <freeipmi-users@gnu.org> or <freeipmi-devel@gnu.org>.
COPYRIGHT¶
Copyright © 2003-2012 FreeIPMI Core Team.
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 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later
  version.
SEE ALSO¶
freeipmi.conf(5), 
freeipmi(7), 
bmc-config(8)
http://www.gnu.org/software/freeipmi/