ipmi_sim man page on DragonFly

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ipmi_sim(1)		    IPMI LAN BMC Simulator		   ipmi_sim(1)

NAME
       ipmi_sim - IPMI LAN BMC Simulator

SYNOPSIS
       ipmi_sim [-c configfile] [-f commandfile] [-d] [-n] [-x command]

DESCRIPTION
       The ipmi_sim daemon emulates an IPMI BMC simulator that may be accessed
       using the IPMI 1.5 or 2.0 LAN protocol, or via  various	serial	proto‐
       cols.   It is useful stand-along for prototyping, it may be used with a
       virtual machine such as QEMU to provide an IPMI BMC  emulator,  and  it
       may be used to implement an actual BMC (where it's not such a simulator
       any more)

       ipmi_sim supports the full authentication capabilities of the IPMI  LAN
       protocol.

       ipmi_sim supports multiple IP addresses for fault-tolerance.  Note that
       messages coming in on an address are always sent back out on  the  same
       address they came in.

OPTIONS
       -c config-file
	      Set  the	configuration  file  to	 one other than the default of
	      /etc/ipmi/lan.conf . See ipmi_lan(5) for details.

       -f command-file
	      Specify a command file to execute	 when  ipmi_sim	 is  starting.
	      This  is	generally  used	 to  set up the IPMI environment.  See
	      ipmi_sim_cmd(5) for details.

       -x  command
	      Execute a single command.

       -d     Turns on debugging to standard output (if -n is  not  specified)
	      and the debug output of syslog.

       -n     Disables console and I/O on standard input and output.

CONFIGURATION
       Configuration  is  accomplished through the file /etc/ipmi/lan.conf.  A
       file with another name or path may be specified using  the  -c  option.
       See the ipmi_lan(5) config file man page for more details.

COMMANDS
       When  ipmi_sim  starts  up,  it has an empty environment with no BMC or
       management controllers.	You have to execute commands to set things up.
       The  commands can also be used to set sensor states, inject events, and
       other things you might want to do  when	simulating  a  BMC.   See  the
       ipmi_sim_cmd(5) man page for details.

SECURITY
       ipmi_sim implements normal IPMI security.  The default is no access for
       anyone, so the default is pretty safe, but be  careful  what  you  add,
       because	this  is access to control your box.  straight and none autho‐
       rizations are not recommended, you should probably stick	 with  md2  or
       md5 if you are not using RMCP+.

PERSISTENCE
       Things  that  are supposed to be persistent in a BMC are kept in files,
       generall in /var/ipmi_sim/<name>, where <name> is the name of  the  BMC
       specified  in the configuration file.  The following things are persis‐
       tent:

       SDRs   - This is named sdr.<mcnum>.main and is the main SDR repository.

       SEL    - This is named sel.<mcnum>.

       Users  - This is named users.mc<mcnum>.

       LAN parameters
	      - This is named lanparm.mc<mcnum>.<channel>.

       SOL parameters
	      - This is named sol.mc<mcnum>.

       The <mcnum> is the hexadecimal number of the MC.

Serial Over LAN (SOL)
       ipmi_sim implements Serial Over LAN for hooking an RMCP+ connection  to
       a  standard  Unix  serial  port.	 This is configured in the ipmi_lan(5)
       configuration file.

       A SOL interface is done on a per-MC basis.  So if the MC is  set	 to  a
       non-BMC,	 you  can define a SOL interface on it and it will work if you
       reroute the commands to that MC.	 It's a little weird,  but  it	works.
       Only interface 1 is supported at the moment.

       A  SOL  interface can also hold history that is kept even if nothing is
       connected to the SOL interface from the LAN.  So if  you	 want  to  see
       what  has  happened  on the serial port, you can connect to interface 2
       and it will dump the history.  The history is optionally persistent, if
       the  program  terminates	 normally  and	is  restarted,	the history is
       restored if it is configured to do so.

       A SOL interface can create a FRU on the MC to let you fetch the history
       via the FRU interface.

SIGNALS
       SIGHUP
	    ipmi_sim should handle SIGHUP and reread it's configuration files.
	    However, it doesn't right now.  It might in the  future,  for  now
	    you	 will  have  to kill it and restart it.	 Clients should handle
	    reconnecting in this case.	If they don't, they are broken.

ERROR OUTPUT
       At startup, all error output goes to stderr.   After  that,  all	 error
       output goes to syslog.

FILES
       /etc/ipmi_lan.conf

SEE ALSO
       ipmi_lan(5),ipmi_sim_cmd(5),ipmi_ui(1),openipmish(1)

AUTHOR
       Corey Minyard <cminyard@mvista.com>

OpenIPMI			   06/26/12			   ipmi_sim(1)
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