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playbooks/legacy/tempest-devstack-ironic-pxe_ipmitool-pyghmi-src | ||
pyghmi | ||
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CONTRIBUTING.rst | ||
LICENSE | ||
makesetup | ||
MANIFEST.in | ||
py27-constraints.txt | ||
python-pyghmi.spec | ||
python-pyghmi.spec.tmpl | ||
README | ||
README.md | ||
requirements.txt | ||
setup.cfg | ||
setup.py | ||
setup.py.tmpl | ||
test-requirements.txt | ||
tox.ini | ||
wheezy.patch |
pyghmi
Pyghmi is a pure Python (mostly IPMI) server management library.
Building and installing
(These instructions have been tested on CentOS 7)
Clone the repository, generate the RPM and install it:
$ git clone https://github.com/openstack/pyghmi.git
$ cd pyghmi/
$ python setup.py bdist_rpm
$ sudo rpm -ivh dist/pyghmi-*.noarch.rpm
Using
There are a few use examples in the bin
folder:
fakebmc
: simply fakes a BMC that supports a few IPMI commands (useful for testing)pyghmicons
: a remote console based on SOL redirection over IPMIpyghmiutil
: an IPMI client that supports a few direct uses of pyghmi (also useful for testing and prototyping new features)virshbmc
: a BMC emulation wrapper using libvirt
Extending
If you plan on adding support for new features, you'll most likely be interested
in adding your methods to pyghmi/ipmi/command.py
. See methods such as
get_users
and set_power
for examples of how to use internal mechanisms to
implement new features. And please, always document new methods.
Sometimes you may want to implement OEM-specific code. For example, retrieving firmware version information is not a part of standard IPMI, but some servers are known to support it via custom OEM commands. If this is the case, follow these steps:
- Add your generic retrieval function (stub) to the
OEMHandler
class inpyghmi/ipmi/oem/generic.py
. And please, document its intent, parameters and expected return values. - Implement the specific methods that your server supports in subdirectories in
the
oem
folder (consider thelenovo
submodule as an example). A OEM folder will contain at least one class inheriting fromOEMHandler
, and optionally helpers for running and parsing custom OEM commands. - Register mapping policies in
pyghmi/ipmi/oem/lookup.py
so pyghmi knows how to associate a BMC session with the specific OEM code you implemented.
A good way of testing the new feature is using bin/pyghmiutil
. Just add an
extension for the new feature you just implemented (as a new command) and call
it from the command line:
$ IPMIPASSWORD=passw0rd bin/pyghmiutil [BMC IP address] username my_new_feature_command