[Beowulf] Intel motherboard BMC
John Hearns
hearnsj at googlemail.com
Thu Jun 21 03:02:40 PDT 2018
Hello Jorg. As you know I have worked a lot with Supermicro machines.
I also installed Intel machines for Greenwich University, so I have
experience of setting up IPMI on them.
I will take time to try to understand your problem!
Also Intel provides excellent documentation for all its products. Really.
But you must get the correct part number and search for it.
I really recommend finding the BMC manual, as I recall that made things a
lot clearer.
One quick question - are you using the on-board ethernet interface for IPMI
or are you using the additional hardware module which has its own ethernet
port?
> It also has a InfiniBand card which does allow booting from it.
You can PXE boot over a Mellanox Infiniband card. As you probably know this
involves installing extra firmware on the card.
In my last job we had an IB only cluster, so booting over IB had to work!
I guess you do nto need to flash the card, but to be honest running the
utility is not scary. You just have to get the exact firmware for your card.
On 21 June 2018 at 11:20, Tony Brian Albers <tba at kb.dk> wrote:
> Does the BMC itself know its own hostname?
>
> /tony
>
> On 21/06/18 11:13, Jörg Saßmannshausen wrote:
> > Dear all,
> >
> > I got a bit of a confusing situation with the BMC of some Intel
> motherboards
> > which we recently purchased and I am not quite sure what to make out of
> it.
> >
> > We have install a generic user via the IPMI commands on the compute
> nodes and
> > I can access the BMC remotely, again via the IPMI command like this:
> >
> > $ ipmitool -H node105-bmc -U username -P xxx power status
> >
> > This is working, Also, this works:
> >
> > $ ipmitool -H 10.0.1.105 -U username -P xxx power status
> >
> > A nslookup of node105-bmc gives the right IP address as well.
> >
> > However, if I want to use the GUI for the BMC, i.e. opening my browser
> and
> > put:
> >
> > https://node105-bmc
> >
> > in the URL, I get the loging page When I enter my login credentials then,
> > which are the same as above, I have a problem to log in *IF* I am using
> the
> > hostname as address but not *IF* I am using the IP address. Just to add
> to the
> > confusion more, on one node the hostname was working.
> > With problems I mean the browser tells me my login credentials are wrong
> which
> > does not happen when I am using the IP address.
> > Also, I can only use https and not http and for now I got the generic
> self
> > signed certificates. I want to change them at one point but right now
> that is
> > more on the bottom of my to-do list.
> >
> > I find that really odd and I am not quite sure what is going on here.
> With all
> > the Supermicro kit I once had I never had these issues before. I was
> able to
> > log in regardless of using the hostname or IP address.
> > So clearly Intel does something here Supermicro did not (at the time).
> >
> > The boards in question are Intel S2600BPB ones.
> >
> > Has anybody seen this before?
> >
> > I got a second issue with these boards. I usually do the normal PXE/NFS
> boot
> > and the setup is working well for the other, older Supermicro machines.
> > However, with the new Intel ones, this is crashing.
> > The procedure is you are selecting in the boot-menu you want to do a PXE
> boot
> > and not boot from the local hard drive.
> > It then boots the initramfs which seems to be fine. From what I can see,
> both
> > during the boot process and from the log files of the DHCP-server, it is
> > getting the right IP address.
> > However, when the initramfs hands over to the kernel, it crashes with:
> > kernel panic! attempt to kill init
> > and you literally have to pull the plug on the machine, i.e. a hard
> reset.
> >
> > The only time I have seen that was when I did not specify the NIC and
> when I
> > had two NICs, it somehow decided to use the other one. I fixed that
> problem by
> > defining the interface in the boot-arguments and also the second NIC is
> not
> > connected anyway. It also has a InfiniBand card which does allow booting
> from
> > it. Again, it is not connected so in theory it should not matter.
> >
> > I am stuck here. I am using a 4.x kernel for the PXE boot, so a fairly
> recent
> > one. As I said, it works for the older machines but not for the newer
> ones.
> >
> > I upgraded the whole PXE/NFS boot and that is not working too.
> >
> > Does anybody have any ideas here?
> >
> > Sorry for asking 2 questions in one email but as they are related I hope
> that
> > is ok.
> >
> > All the best from a sunny London
> >
> > Jörg
> >
> > _______________________________________________
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>
>
> --
> Tony Albers
> Systems administrator, IT-development
> Royal Danish Library, Victor Albecks Vej 1, 8000 Aarhus C, Denmark.
> Tel: +45 2566 2383 / +45 8946 2316
> _______________________________________________
> Beowulf mailing list, Beowulf at beowulf.org sponsored by Penguin Computing
> To change your subscription (digest mode or unsubscribe) visit
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>
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