Provided by: openipmi_2.0.33-1.1build3_amd64 bug

NAME

       ipmi_ui - Crude interface to an IPMI system

SYNOPSIS

       ipmiui [-dmsg] [-dmem] [-c] connection-1[connection-2]

       The connections are specified as either:

       smi smi-num

       or

       lan IP-addr port [IP-addr-2 port-2] auth privilege username password

DESCRIPTION

       The  ipmi_ui  program  connects  to  an  IPMI  system, and allows access to IPMI entities and sensors and
       OpenIPMI controls.  It's rather crude, and primarily for testing OpenIPMI, but it  has  some  use  beyond
       that so it is provided.

       Normally,  ipmi_ui  starts up in a full-screen format.  The left window shows the output of commands, the
       right window shows the logs from OpenIPMI.  Both windows are scrollable with page up and page down  keys,
       press  the  "F1"  key to choose the the left window to scroll, the "F2" key to choose the right window to
       scroll.

       Note that you must set your environment TERM variable properly for your terminal, or ipmi_ui will display
       garbage on the screen.

       Note that you can put two connection specifications on the  command  line,  and  ipmi_ui  will  make  two
       connection.   You  can  only  do  this  if  the connections are to the same IPMI domain through different
       management controllers.  Also, each LAN connection may have two IP addresses.  These  are  two  different
       addresses  to  the  same  management  controller.   So  you may have a total of 4 IP addresses to an IPMI
       domain, two management controllers and two IP adresses to each management controller.

OPTIONS

       -dmsg  Turn on message debugging, this will dump all messages to the log window.

       -dmem  Turn on memory debugging, this will cause memory allocation and deallocations to be checked.  When
              the program terminates, it will dump all memory that was not properly freed (leaked).

       -snmp  Enable the SNMP trap handler.  ipmi_ui must be compiled with SNMP code enabled for this option  to
              be available.

       -c     Run  the program in command-line mode.  This is useful for scripting.  All output goes to standard
              output, there is no windowing.

       smi-num
              The SMI number to connect to, for systems with more than on system interface.  Generally, this  is
              '0'.

       IP-addr
              The IP address of the LAN interface.

       port   The UDP port of the LAN interface, general 623.

       IP-addr-2
              Some  systems  support multiple IP connections, this specified the second address and is optional.
              If specified, OpenIPMI will use both IP addresses and fail over to the working one if one of  them
              fails.

       port-2 The port for the second IP connection, generally 623.

       auth   The authorization to use for the connection, either "none", "straight", "md5", or "md2".

       privilege
              The  privilege to use for the connection, either "callback", "user", "operator", or "admin".  Note
              that some IPMI operations will fail without the correct privilege.

       username
              The user name to use for the connection.  If using this anonymous user, this should be  the  empty
              string "".

       password
              The password to use for the connection.

ENTITIES

       Entities are listed by their entity id (the type of entity they are) and their entity instance.  Entities
       may  be  active  or  inactive  in  the  system, the standard IPMI algorithm for determining this is used.
       Commands on entities are:

       entities
              List all the entities in the system.  The output is the entity specifier, followed by an  optional
              entity name in parenthesis, followed by "present" or "not present".

       check_presence
              For the check of presence for all entities.

       fru entity
              List the FRU information associated with the entity.

       dump_fru is_logical device_address device_id lun private_bus channel
              Dump raw information from the specified FRU device.

SENSORS

       Sensors define input devices that OpenIPMI can monitor.

       sensors entity
              List  all  the  sensors  that  monitor  the given entity.  The output is the sensor specifier (the
              entity specifier followed by the sensor name, with spaces converted to ~). followed by the  sensor
              name.

       sensor sensor
              Pull up the given sensor and display all its information.  In full-screen mode, the sensor will be
              re-queried every second.

       rearm global [assertion-mask deassertion-mask]
              Rearm  the  given sensor.  If global is 1, then the whole sensor is rearmed.  If global is 0, then
              the assertion-mask and deassertion-mask must be specified telling which thresholds  or  states  to
              rearm.

       events_enable events scanning assertion-bitmask deassertion-bitmask
              Enable  or  disable events for the given sensor.  events turns events on or off from the sensor (0
              or 1).  scanning turns scanning on or off for the sensor (0 or  1).   assertion-bitmask  specifies
              the bitmask of thresholds or states that should be enabled or disabled when a thrshold or state is
              asserted.   It is a bunch of 0's and 1's, where the first one is for threshold/state 0, the second
              for threshold/state 1, etc.  deassertion-bitmask specifies the bitmask  of  thresholds  or  states
              that should be enabled or disabled when a thrshold or state is deasserted.

CONTROLS

       Controls are output devices that can control things like LEDs, power, reset lines and such.

       controls entity
              List  all  the  controls  that control the given entity.  The output is the control specifier (the
              entity specifier followed by the control name, with  spaces  converted  to  ~).  followed  by  the
              control name.

       control control
              Pull up the given control and display it's current state.

       set_control val1 [val2 ...]
              Change  the  value of a control.  Note that for controls with multiple values, every value must be
              specified.

EVENTS

       Events are asynchronous messages from sensors that tell the  user  that  a  sensor  has  done  something.
       Events  are generally stored in a system event log (SEL); OpenIPMI will fetch the events from the SELs in
       the system.

       Since multiple SELs may exist, an event is specified by the MC it  came  from  in  the  format  "(channel
       addr)" and a log number.  The same log number may exist in multiple MCs.

       Events  are  displayed  in the log window as they come in.  If they can be correlated with a sensor, they
       will be display with as much information as possible.

       delevent channel mc-addr log-num
              Delete the given event.  Note that many SELs do not support individual deletes, so this  may  only
              delete the local copy of the event, not the one in the SEL.  In this case, to delete events in the
              SEL, you must delete all the events in the SEL and wait about 10 seconds for OpenIPMI to do a full
              SEL clear.

       clear_sel
              Delete  all  events  in  the  SEL.   This  process  may take some time, so if you do this and quit
              immediately it may not be complete.

       list_sel
              List all events in the local copy of the SELs.  This is only the local copy, if the copies in  the
              actual have change, this won't be reflected.

       get_sel_time channel mc-num
              Get the time in the SEL for the given MC.

MANAGMENT CONTROLLERS (MCs)

       In  OpenIPMI,  you  normally don't deal with management controllers.  They are considered internal to the
       system.  However, for debugging, information about them is provided.

       mcs    List all the MCs in the system and whether they are active.   MCs  are  displayed  in  the  format
              "(channel address)".

       mc channel mc-addr
              Display a boatload of information about the MC, mostly coming from the get device id command.

       mccmd channel mc-addr LUN NetFN Cmd [data ...]
              Send an IPMI command to the given MC.  The MC must exist and be active to do this.

       mc_reset channel mc-addr [warm | cold]
              Send a warm or cold reset command to the given MC.  The action the MC takes is system-specific.

       scan channel mc-addr
              Scan  for an MC at the given address.  If the MC exists but OpenIPMI didn't know about it, it will
              be added.  If the MC no longer exists, then it will be removed.

       mc_events_enable channel mc-num enabled
              Enable or disable event generation for the given MC.

       mc_events_enabled channel mc-num
              Prints out if the events are enabled for the given MC.

LAN Parameter Configuration

       OpenIPMI has functions that make it easier to configure the LAN parameters of  a  LAN  connection.   Note
       that  the LAN parameters have a lock that OpenIPMI attempts to use.  If you read the LAN parameters, they
       will be locked until you either write them or clear the lock.

       readlanparm channel mc-num channel
              Read lanparm information from an MC and display it in the display window.

       viewlanparm
              Show current lanparm information in the display window.

       writelanparm channel mc-num channel
              Write the current LANPARM information to an MC.  Note that this must be the MC that the parameters
              were read from.

       clearlanparmlock [channel mc-num channel]
              Clear a LANPARM lock.  If the MC is given, then the LANPARM lock  is  directly  cleared.   If  not
              given, then the LANPARM lock for the current parms is cleared.

       setlanparm config [selector] value
              Set  the  given  config  item  to  the value.  The optional selector is used for items that take a
              selector, like "auth" or any of the items in "destination".

Platform Event Filter (PEF)

       OpenIPMI contains function to help manage the PEF settings on a BMC.  Note that the PEF parameters have a
       lock that OpenIPMI attempts to use.  If you read the PEF parameters, they will be locked until you either
       write them or clear the lock.

       readpef channel mc-num
              Read the PEF information from an MC.

       clearpeflock [channel mc-num]
              Clear a PEF lock.  If the MC is given, then the PEF lock on that MC is directly cleared.  If no MC
              is given, then the current PEF's lock is cleared.

       viewpef
              Show current pef information in the display window.

       writepef channel mc-num
              Write the current PEF information to an MC.

       setpef config [selector] value
              Set the given config item to the value.  The optional selector is  used  for  items  that  take  a
              selector, like anything in the event filters, alert policies, or alert strings.

       pet connection channel ip-addr mac_addr eft-selector policy-num apt-selector lan-dest-selector
              Set  up  the  connection  for  the domain to send PET traps from the given connection to the given
              IP/MAC address over the given channel.  This does all the LAN and PEF  configuration  required  to
              configure a system to send event traps.

CONNECTIONS

       OpenIPMI  can  maintain multiple connections to a single domain.  It will generally only use one of these
       at a time (although the other will constantly be under test).  This is the "active" connection.  You  can
       query and set which connection is active.

       The  connection  number  is the connection from the command line.  You can specify two connections on the
       command line (the part beginning  with  "lan",  "smi",  etc.).   The  first  connection  you  specify  is
       connection zero, the second is connection 1.

       is_con_active connection
              Print out if the given connection is active or not.

       activate_con connection
              Activate the given connection.

OTHER COMMANDS

       msg channel IPMB-addr LUN NetFN Cmd [data ...]
              Send  an IPMI command to the given IPMB address.  This is available in case the given MC cannot be
              found or enabled.

       sdrs channel mc-addr do-sensors
              Dump all the sdrs from the given MC.  If do-sensors is true, then dump the device SDR.  If  it  is
              false, dump the main SDR repository on the MC.

       scan channel IPMB-addr
              Perform  an  IPMB  bus scan for the given IPMB, to try to detect an MC at the given address.  IPMB
              bus scanning can be slow, this can help speed things up if you already know the address.

       quit   Leave the program.

       reconnect
              Attempt to disconnect and reconnect to the IPMI controller.  This is primarily for testing.

       display_win
              Set the display window (left window) for scrolling, just in case the "F1" key doesn't work.

       log_win
              Set the log window (right window) for scrolling, just in case the "F2" key doesn't work.

       help   Dump some terse help output about all the commands.

ERROR OUTPUT

       All error output goes to the log window.

SEE ALSO

       ipmilan(8)

KNOWN PROBLEMS

       Our name is legion.

AUTHOR

       Corey Minyard <cminyard@mvista.com>

OpenIPMI                                            05/13/03                                          ipmi_ui(1)