bmcdiscover.1¶
NAME¶
bmcdiscover - Discover Baseboard Management Controllers (BMCs) using a scan method
SYNOPSIS¶
bmcdiscover [-? | -h | --help]
bmcdiscover [-v | --version]
bmcdiscover [--sn SN_nodename] [-s scan_method] [-u bmc_user] [-p bmc_passwd] [-z] [-w] --range ip_ranges
DESCRIPTION¶
The bmcdiscover command will discover Baseboard Management Controllers (BMCs) using a scan method.
The command uses nmap to scan active nodes over a specified IP range. The IP range format should be a format that is acceptable by nmap.
The bmcdiscover command can also obtain some information about the BMC. (Check username/password, IP address source, DHCP/static configuration)
Note: The scan method currently support is nmap.
OPTIONS¶
--range
Specify one or more IP ranges acceptable to nmap. IP range can be hostnames, IP addresses, networks, etc. A single IP address (10.1.2.3), several IPs with commas (10.1.2.3,10.1.2.10), Ip range with “-” (10.1.2.0-100) or an IP range (10.1.2.0/24) can be specified. If the range is very large, the bmcdiscover command may take a long time to return.
--sn
Specify one or more service nodes on which bmcdiscover will run. In hierarchical cluster, the MN may not be able to access the BMC of CN directly, but SN can. With this option, bmcdiscover will be dispatched to the specified SNs. Then, the nodename of the service node that ‘bmcdiscover’ is running on will be set to the ‘servicenode’ attribute of the discovered BMC node.
-s
Scan method (The only supported scan method at this time is nmap)
-z
List the data returned in xCAT stanza format
-w
Write to the xCAT database.
-i|--bmcip
BMC IP address.
-u|--bmcuser
BMC user name.
-p|--bmcpasswd
BMC user password.
-h|--help
Display usage message
-v|--version
Display version information
EXAMPLES¶
- To get all responding BMCs from IP range “10.4.23.100-254” and 50.3.15.1-2”:
bmcdiscover -s nmap --range "10.4.23.100-254 50.3.15.1-2"
Note: Input for IP range can be in the form: scanme.nmap.org, microsoft.com/24, 192.168.0.1; 10.0.0-255.1-254.
- To get all BMCs in IP range “10.4.22-23.100-254”, displayed in xCAT stanza format:
bmcdiscover -s nmap --range "10.4.22-23.100-254" -z
- To discover BMCs through sn01:
bmcdiscover --sn sn01 -s nmap --range "10.4.22-23.100-254" -z
Output is similar to:
node-70e28414291b:
objtype=node
groups=all
bmc=10.4.22.101
cons=openbmc
mgt=openbmc
servicenode=sn01
conserver=sn01
- Discover the BMCs and write the discovered-node definitions into the xCAT database and write out the stanza foramt to the console:
bmcdiscover -s nmap --range "10.4.22-23.100-254" -w -z
SEE ALSO¶
lsslp(1)|lsslp.1