How to use VirtualBMC¶
For the VirtualBMC tool to operate you first need to create libvirt
domain(s) for example, via virsh
.
The VirtualBMC tool is a client-server system where vbmcd
server
does all the heavy-lifting (speaks IPMI, calls libvirt) while vbmc
client is merely a command-line tool sending commands to the server and
rendering responses to the user.
Both tools can make use of an optional configuration file, which is looked for in the following locations (in this order):
VIRTUALBMC_CONFIG
environment variable pointing to a file$HOME/.vbmc/virtualbmc.conf
file/etc/virtualbmc/virtualbmc.conf
file
If no configuration file has been found, the internal defaults apply.
You should set up your systemd to launch the vbmcd
server on system
start up or you can just run vbmcd
from command line if you do not need
the tool running persistently on the system. Once the server is up and
running, you can use the vbmc
tool to configure your libvirt domains as
if they were physical hardware servers.
The vbmc
client can only communicate with vbmcd
server if both are
running on the same host. However vbmcd
can manage libvirt domains
remotely.
By this moment you should be able to have the ipmitool
managing
VirtualBMC instances over the network.
Configuring virtual servers¶
Use the vbmc
command-line tool to create, delete, list, start and
stop virtual BMCs for the virtual machines being managed over IPMI.
In order to see all command options supported by the
vbmc
tool do:$ vbmc --help
It’s also possible to list the options from a specific command. For example, in order to know what can be provided as part of the
add
command do:$ vbmc add --help
Adding a new virtual BMC to control libvirt domain called
node-0
:$ vbmc add node-0
Adding a new virtual BMC to control libvirt domain called
node-1
that will listen for IPMI commands on port6230
:$ vbmc add node-1 --port 6230
Alternatively, libvirt can be configured to ssh into a remote machine and manage libvirt domain through ssh connection:
$ vbmc add node-1 --port 6230 \ --libvirt-uri qemu+ssh://username@192.168.122.1/system
Note
Binding a network port number below 1025 is restricted and only users with privilege will be able to start a virtual BMC on those ports.
Starting the virtual BMC to control libvirt domain
node-0
:$ vbmc start node-0
Stopping the virtual BMC that controls libvirt domain
node-0
:$ vbmc stop node-0
Getting the list of virtual BMCs including their libvirt domains and IPMI network endpoints they are reachable at:
$ vbmc list +-------------+---------+---------+------+ | Domain name | Status | Address | Port | +-------------+---------+---------+------+ | node-0 | running | :: | 623 | | node-1 | running | :: | 6230 | +-------------+---------+---------+------+
To view configuration information for a specific virtual BMC:
$ vbmc show node-0 +-----------------------+----------------+ | Property | Value | +-----------------------+----------------+ | address | :: | | domain_name | node-0 | | libvirt_sasl_password | *** | | libvirt_sasl_username | None | | libvirt_uri | qemu:///system | | password | *** | | port | 623 | | status | running | | username | admin | +-----------------------+----------------+
Server simulation¶
Once the virtual BMC for a specific domain has been created and started you can then issue IPMI commands against the address and port of that virtual BMC to control the libvirt domain. For example:
To power on the virtual machine:
$ ipmitool -I lanplus -U admin -P password -H 127.0.0.1 -p 6230 power on
To check its power status:
$ ipmitool -I lanplus -U admin -P password -H 127.0.0.1 -p 6230 power status
To set the boot device to disk:
$ ipmitool -I lanplus -U admin -P password -H 127.0.0.1 -p 6230 chassis bootdev disk
To get the current boot device:
$ ipmitool -I lanplus -U admin -P password -H 127.0.0.1 -p 6230 chassis bootparam get 5
Backward compatible behaviour¶
In the past the vbmc
tool was the only part of the vBMC system. To help
users keeping their existing server-less workflows, the vbmc
tool
attempts to spawn the vbmcd
piece whenever it figures server is not
running.
Warning
The backward compabible behaviour will be removed in two-cycle time past Queens.